The Bahá'í World News service announced the following yesterday (16 December):
Read More on BWNS
Photo copyright Bahá’í International Community.
Ban on newspaper lifted
ILNA | AP | Nov. 23, 2009
Iranian authorities have banned the country's largest-circulation newspaper for publishing a photo of a Baha'i temple, state media reported Monday.
Iran's Shiite cleric-led regime views the Baha'i religion as heretical and has banned it since the 1979 revolution. The photo also gave Iran's leaders an opportunity to silence the Hamshahri daily, which mostly reports on social issues but which has been critical of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Hamshahri was ordered closed by the Press Supervisory Board, a government agency run by hard-liners, for printing an advertisement containing a photo of a Baha'i temple that encourages tourists to visit the shrine, the official IRNA news agency reported.
The newspaper's director, Ali Reza Mahak, said he has received no order to close and was preparing to publish Hamshahri's Tuesday edition. But Deputy Culture Minister Mohammad Ali Ramin later confirmed to Iran's state TV that Hamshahri has been ordered closed.
The IRNA report said legal authorities would investigate the newspaper, which is run by Tehran's municipality and supports the capital's mayor, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, a moderate conservative who has long been a rival of Ahmadinejad.
Iran's hard-line judiciary has shut down more than 120 pro-reform newspapers and jailed dozens of editors and writers on vague charges of insulting authorities since 2000.
The closure order was also a message to Iran's estimated 300,000 Baha'is.
Seven Baha'i leaders have been in jail since May 2008 on charges of endangering national security for allegedly proselytizing. Leaders of the minority faith, however, say they are being persecuted by Iran's government for their religious beliefs.
Earlier, from ILNA...
A week-long ban on Hamshahri newspaper was lifted after a few hours. The daily, which is affiliated with the Tehran Municipality, was due to be suspended starting today.
The Press Supervisory Board announced the ban earlier this morning, according to the Iranian Labour News Agency. The suspension order was reportedly issued because the paper ran a tourist advertisement with a photo of a Bahai sect center.
Open Letter to Mr. AhmadinejadSource: http://www.iranpresswatch.org/post/5327
December 3rd, 2009
Mr. President,
Your visit to Brazil, invited by President Lula, provokes reflection on the relations between the two countries. Both Brazil and Iran have attracted increased attention in the world stage: they are rapidly advancing countries, with enormous geopolitical influence, and populations marked by great diversity. Nothing would be more natural, therefore, than to promote this relationship, by which one could share in best practices and establish ties of cooperation.
In name of the above mentioned similarities, we call your attention to the following point: whereas Brazil has adopted a model of living together in diversity, with policies aimed at promoting participation and respect for human rights, in Iran one finds the arbitrary restriction of such rights in the persecution of minorities, in discrimination based on gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation and religious identity.
In Iran, the Bahá'ís (the largest religious minority in the country) face the severe consequences of religious discrimination, having their work licenses denied, as well as their access to education and justice. Their properties and sacred places have been confiscated and destroyed. In the last 30 years, more than 250 Bahá'ís have been executed for their beliefs; since 2005, more than 200 have been arbitrarily imprisoned, intimidated and harrassed – all because they would not deny their faith. Their seven national leaders have been arbitrarily imprisoned for more than 18 months, their defense being constantly impeded.
The government-controlled media offends the Bahá'ís with hundreds of articles, radio and television programmes, web posts and leaflets with speeches of hatred, promoted by clergymen and government officials – whereas Bahá'ís are prohibited from exercising their right to respond to the accusations.
Here in Brazil, the Bahá'ís take part in the construction of democracy and the development of their communities – activities recognized by the Brazilian Government and society. Here, they can practice their faith in freedom and safety, in consonance with the principles of the oneness of humankind, equality of race and gender, promotion of peace and service to humanity.
How, then, can this difference in treatment be justified? Why is it that the Bahá'ís, in most parts of the world, are seen as persons of good will, committed to the advancement of society, without any involvement in partisan politics; while in Iran, where their Faith was born in the nineteenth century, they receive such a degrading treatment?
It is the responsibility of governments to promote the common good, to defend the interests of their citizens and to stimulate human development with justice and dignity. We hope that the dialogue between both Presidents may stimulate reflection on the needs for new policies in Iran that would allow the followers of all religions, including the Bahá'ís, to contribute to the progress of their homeland.
Kidnapping and Torture of a Baha'i in Shiraz
Posted: 03 Nov 2009
A Baha'i has been kidnapped, persecuted, and tortured by unknown individuals in Shiraz.
According to HRANA [Human Rights Activists News Agency], based on reports from the Baha'i Committee of Human Rights Activists in Iran, Mr. Rouh'u'llah Rezaie, a 45-year-old Baha'i in Shiraz, was stopped, kidnapped, and moved to an unknown place as he was returning home, to his wife and child, from a gas station early in the morning on 8/8/1388 [October 27,2009]. There, he was threatened, insulted, and subjected to a simulated hanging in a show-execution. He was left naked in extreme cold, and different parts of his hands, chest, and forehead were burnt by cigarettes. Finally, he was released on a road in the suburbs of Shiraz.
It should be noted that Mr. Rezaie was imprisoned for five years in 1360 [1971], when he was 18, in Adel Abad prison in Shiraz. He has endured the most terrible conditions and all possible physical and psychological pressure due to his religious beliefs.
[Source: http://hra-news.info/news/8174.aspx; Translated by Iran Press Watch]
Posted: 29 Oct 2009
Although they had only attended one week of classes at the university, Ms. Mojdeh Nourani, Ms. Farahnaz Felfeli, and Mr. Aradalan Tebianian, who had passed the national university entrance examination in 1388 (2009), were expelled from Semnan University and deprived of their right to education by order of University Protection authorities.
According to HRANA, based on reports from the Higher Education Committee of Human Rights Activists in Iran, these students repeatedly appealed to various levels of authorities, including the President of the university, to no avail. The only response they received was: "orders from above". It is important to note that university authorities have expressed that they have been instructed not to present any document or any evidence showing that the students were expelled from the university.
[Source: http://hra-news.info/news/7953.aspx]
GENEVA — Although the trial of seven Baha'i leaders imprisoned in Iran for more than 17 months was scheduled for today, when attorneys and families arrived at the court offices in Tehran they were told it would not take place. No new trial date was given.
"The time has come for these seven innocent people to be immediately released on bail," said Diane Ala'i, the Baha'i International Community's representative to the United Nations in Geneva.
"The seven, whose only 'crime' is their religious belief, are once again in legal limbo, held with no idea of the legal process ahead of them. The whole charade cries out for an end to their unlawful detention," she said.
The seven are Mrs. Fariba Kamalabadi, Mr. Jamaloddin Khanjani, Mr. Afif Naeimi, Mr. Saeid Rezaie, Mrs. Mahvash Sabet, Mr. Behrouz Tavakkoli, and Mr. Vahid Tizfahm.
Official Iranian news accounts have said the seven are to be accused of "espionage for Israel, insulting religious sanctities and propaganda against the Islamic republic." They have also been charged with "spreading corruption on earth."
Last week, it appeared likely that the trial would indeed be postponed again, since attorneys for the seven had not yet received the proper writ of notification.
"The fact that their attorneys did not receive proper notification and that there is no new date for the trial is just one among many gross violations of Iran's own legal procedures, not to mention the violations of due process recognized by international law, that have marked this case from the beginning," said Ms. Ala'i.
Source: http://news.bahai.org/story/734
In their country, in Iran, the Baha'is are not allowed to freely practice their religion and they are exposed to constant persecutions.
The religion is not against anyone or anything. The Baha'i Faith is a world religion whose aim is to unite all the people of the earth.
Hungarian Parliament condemns persecution of Bahá'ís in Iran from Bahá'í Magyarország on Vimeo.
Parliament Palace, Budapest, Hungary
Photo credit: Public domain http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Parliament_Building_Budapest_Hungary.jpg
Baha'i Students Deprived of Higher Education Posted: 07 Oct 2009 Editor's Note: Upon its founding over 30 years ago, the Islamic Republic of Iran adopted a policy of barring Baha'i students from universities and all institutions of higher education. Occasionally, a few Baha'is have been allowed entrance; however, in almost all cases they were identified as being Baha'i during their first or second year of education and were then expelled without any further explanation. Below is a letter written by a group of Baha'i students deprived of higher education with respect to their appeal to the Court of Administrative Justice of Iran, as published by Human Rights Activists News Agency, which IPW is pleased to publish in translation. A Letter by Baha'i Students In previous years, dozens of Baha'i students who were deprived of higher education made their appeal to the Court of Administrative Justice of Iran, submitting complaints against the Ministry of Science, Research and Technology for prohibiting them from entering universities, hoping that their grievances would be heard and the restrictions lifted. The students filed complaints after their repeated attempts to contact the Ministry of Science, Research and Technology proved fruitless. Throughout the years, Baha'i students have faced many obstacles in their desire to receive higher education. They have contacted the appropriate authorities at different offices in relevant ministries and organizations, including the Organization for Testing and Evaluation, the Ministry of Science, and the Ministry of the Interior. However, despite the cooperation and expressions of sympathy by many of those in charge, the authorities have always conjured up excuses for breaching the legal rights of these Baha'is in their native land. Unfortunately, the Court of Administrative Justice of Iran has proven to be no exception in its treatment of Baha'i students' cases. The judges of this court, based on the article of law, do not have the power to rule against previously approved policies of the Supreme Council of Cultural Revolution. Since, by a ruling of the Supreme Council, Baha'is are forbidden from obtaining higher education, the judges of the Court of Administrative Justice are unable to serve justice and to uphold the rights of Baha'i students. One of the judges of Branch 5 of the Court of Administrative Justice showed the text of the Supreme Council's ruling to a Baha'i student before apologizing and telling him that he was unable to help him with his plea. Even on occasions where cases of Baha'i students are accepted by the Court of Administrative Justice, no favorable result has ensued. In response to the request that it "overturn the deprivation order by the Ministry of Science", the Court of Justice announced the "rejection of the requested appeal" and communicated an outcome which read in part, "based on article number D.M. dated February 25, 1980, of the Supreme Council of Cultural Revolution, sanctioned by the Supreme Leaders, your appeal is hereby rejected". Baha'i students who, like their own parents who were denied the opportunity to finish their studies in the early 80s — many had as few as two credits remaining to complete their college studies and obtain university degrees — have had no choice but to believe that the rhetoric of "religious freedom" in their homeland is nothing other than meaningless chatter. A Baha'i student's religious convictions are considered an offence that is counteracted by denying him education. What can be the reason for depriving an 18 year old from entering university, a youth who has done nothing wrong, who by the testimony of his classmates has been a moral leader and a role model, who based on his beliefs has a religious obligation to obey his government and to wholeheartedly serve his country? Is there any rational justification for this blockade? With shock and disbelief, the sympathetic employee of the Organization for Test and Evaluation searched through files of outstanding students with high marks, trying to uncover the reason why they were denied access to education. After an hour of investigation yielded nothing, he wrote "Baha'i" on the file and said, "This is an issue that we have had with Baha'is for over twenty years". If there is a reason for this action, why isn't it communicated by the Ministry of Science? Why should a Baha'i student have to wait for hours to meet with the authority in charge of minorities affairs, only to finally hear an apologetic employee say, "The responsible authority is on vacation, come back in 20 days"? Most painful of all is the effort to justify the obvious oppression inflicted on Baha'i students by accusing them – or to say it more accurately, by accusing every Baha'i, from toddler to bed-ridden elder – of being a spy or being stirred up by foreigners. This is the same accusation because of which the seven previous informal leaders of the Baha'i community of Iran have been languishing in confinement for months. These are the Baha'i leaders who for years tried to reinstate Baha'is' rights to education — leaders who, like other Iranians, love their homeland, and who have been yearning and still yearn to serve their country, the birthplace of their faith. Signed Fada Mahmudi, Afruz Mirzaei, Masoud Mahmudi, Rozita Tashakor and Jila Keshavarz Rahbari. Below is a copy of a notarized letter from the Court of Administrative Justice of Iran, in response to the appeal of Rozita Tashakor, one of the above mentioned Baha'i students, rejecting her appeal based on article number D.M., dated February 25, 1980, of the Supreme Council of Cultural Revolution, sanctioned by the Supreme Leader.
[Posted on September 30, 2009, at hra-news. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
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Posted: 07 Oct 2009 Editor's Note: The following is a letter written by a Baha'i college student upon expulsion from the university at which she had been studying. This letter appears below in translation. I, Mona Rezai, born in 1989, participated in the National College Entrance Exam during the academic year 2008-2009, and was admitted to Mashhad's Sajad University, majoring in electronic engineering. After completing the administrative steps of the registration, I started my studies with my fellow non-Baha'i students in this university. After a year, I was summoned by the Students' Affairs Department and was questioned about my religion. Subsequently, I was informed that Baha'i students are not allowed to continue their higher education. On September 12, 2009, when I returned to school to register electronically for my third semester, the webpage for course selection was blocked, and I was not able to continue the registration process. Therefore, I returned to the Students' Affairs Department. The Director of this department explained that they had received a new protocol from the National College Entrance Exams Organization, and according to this protocol I was barred from continuing my education. However, he added that I had the right to refer the matter to the National College Entrance Exams Organization, or the Department of Faculty and Students Admission in Tehran, for further investigation. I also received the same explanation from the Security Department. I have submitted a letter to the Educational Council of the University in order to investigate my status. Although this is not the first time that Baha'i students have been deprived of their right to receive a higher education, it is hoped that this issue will be resolved in the near future. We have been promised that one day Iran will be an example of a paradise where people can live with no prejudice and all will have important roles in improving and developing this country. Mona Rezai [Posted on Thursday, October 1, 2009, at hra-news. Translation by Iran Press Watch.] |
Washington, D.C. – Sept. 12, 2009
Speaking to a crowd of over 1,400 people packed into The George Washington University's Lisner Auditorium on September 12, Dr. Azar Nafisi, best-selling author; Ms. Shohreh Aghdashloo, Oscar-nominated actress; and Dr. Dwight Bashir, Associate Director for Policy at the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, joined the swelling worldwide chorus speaking out for human rights in Iran. On this particular evening, their message focused on Iran's long-suffering Baha'i religious minority.
In a moving and impassioned presentation, Dr. Nafisi spoke about the common humanity of all people and the suffering of one being the suffering of all. She reflected on the significance of the fact that her beloved country, which she grew to love, with its ancient heritage, its beautiful language and its poets, the homeland of great religions and an early pioneer of human rights and religious freedom, should be diminished in the way it has because of its mistreatment of its Baha'i citizens. She said their struggle is an existential struggle, because in many ways they are being systematically denied the opportunity to exist.
Dr. Bashir began his presentation by quoting from President Obama's speech to the Muslim world in Cairo: "People in every country should be free to choose and live their faith based upon the persuasion of the mind and the heart and the soul. This tolerance is essential for religion to thrive, but it's being challenged in many different ways … Among some Muslims, there's a disturbing tendency to measure one's own faith by the rejection of somebody else's faith ..."
"The last part of President Obama's statement is exactly what we are witnessing in Iran today," Dr. Bashir said.
He then provided a snapshot of the deplorable status of human rights and religious freedom in Iran, including deteriorating conditions for Baha'is, Christians, Muslim minorities and dissidents. Bashir urged the U.S. government to raise religious freedom and related human rights in any future bilateral or multilateral discussions with Iran.
Dr. Bashir also cited a letter addressed to the Commission from Iranian-American journalist Ms. Roxana Saberi, which urges the Obama Administration to speak out in support of seven Baha'i leaders who have been imprisoned in Iran on false charges, some of which could carry the death penalty. Ms. Saberi shared a prison cell with the two female Baha'i leaders when she was detained in Evin prison earlier this year..
Ms. Shohreh Aghdashloo addressed the gathering via video from Los Angeles. She began by voicing her support for the Iranian Baha'is and expressing her desire to see more freedom in her beloved homeland. Ms. Aghdashloo also said that although she is not a member of the Baha'i community, she has great admiration and respect for Baha'is and for the teachings of the Baha'i Faith. She also read a monologue from her upcoming film entitled Mona's Dream — the true story of a 16-year-old Iranian girl who was executed in 1983 for teaching Baha'i children's classes.
Another highlight of the evening was a dramatic presentation by seven Baha'i children from the DC Metro area, each of whom expounded on the life of one of the seven imprisoned Iranian Baha'i leaders while the prisoner's picture was projected behind them. The Metropolitan Washington Baha'i Chorale led by Van Gilmer also performed several songs, including a prayer that was originally taught by Baha'u'llah, the founder of the Baha'i Faith, to fellow prisoners while they were incarcerated in a dungeon in Tehran in the 1850's.
What, ultimately, may have heralded the demise of the conspiracy paradigm, ironically, is its unfalsifiability. The paradigm proved so convenient that it was soon exploited by everybody to attack everybody. The Islamic regime, in particular, has made ample use of the paradigm since its very inception 30 years ago to attack opposition groups, critics, intellectuals, and finally, in the course of recent events, the general public. The result has been a gradual corrosion of the whole paradigm, and the emergence of a common sense of identification among the victims of these attacks. Hopefully, this can in time signal the end of the era of conspiracism and a move towards a reality-oriented understanding of history. Today, most Iranian intellectuals, as well as many well-educated middleclass individuals, are no longer willing to succumb to extravagant conspiracy theories. For anti-Baha'i propagandists, this implies that the old spy stories will no longer be effective.
Baha'is, Superstitionism and the Iranian Identity (Part 1)
Posted: 23 Sep 2009
Until recently, whenever the word "Baha'i" was mentioned in Iran it was simply to reinforce the claim that the members of the country's largest non-Muslim religious minority were foreign agents. During the past few years, however, the Baha'i religion has increasingly been linked to an altogether new subject: superstitionism. Increasingly, Baha'i teachings are ridiculed as naïve and irrational, are linked to rising superstition in present-day Iran, or are alleged to be part of an ongoing 160-year-old plot by Western Imperialists aimed at spreading Millennialistic opiates in the form of foolish beliefs and practices. The rapidly increasing speed with which such news and analysis are turning up suggests that Iranian anti-Baha'i propaganda is entering a new phase.
Today, the unfortunate fact that everything bad happening in Iran has to be, somehow, glued to Baha'is isn't much of a surprise. Seven decades ago, when the Baha'is of Iran were first accused of espionage, they responded with astonishment. Until then, they had constantly been accused of corruption, blasphemy, and atheism but not of being Russian or English spies. During the course of the Iranian constitutional revolution and its aftermath, however, Iranian society had become increasingly skeptical of the negative role played by foreign powers, and had decided that its problems were rooted, not in atheism, but in imperialism. This gave rise to new, often grossly illogical, conspiracy theories, many of which implicated Baha'is. Thus, the old enemies were redefined to suit the new understanding. It took some time before Baha'is came to realize that anti-Baha'ism has indeed gone through a paradigm shift and was now defining its self-confessed enemy, the Baha'i Faith, as a foreign conspiracy against Iran and Islam.[1]
Baha'i writers, who were often prominent scholars of Islam and adept at defending their beliefs from within the framework of Shi'ite thought, now faced accusations that, in practice, rendered all their knowledge of the Qur'an and the traditions of Shi'ite Islam useless. Gradually, however, they began to adapt, and to respond, to the new allegations. Unfortunately, Iranian public opinion had already found satisfactory and reached consensus upon the assumption that Baha'is were involved with foreign powers. In fact, even those individuals who took pride in their liberal values and thoughts, and who chose not to shun Baha'i acquaintances, were often unwilling to abandon this assumption, despite all the evidence to the contrary. Indeed, the claims put forth from within the new anti-Baha'i paradigm were almost non-falsifiable. Every argument presented by Baha'i scholars against these claims would serve as further evidence that the whole scam was carefully being directed by foreign masterminds. Every conviction demonstrated by the followers of the Faith would reinforce the claim that the whole show had so shrewdly been unfolded that even its main actors, the Baha'is, seemed convinced that theirs was an authentic religion.
What, ultimately, may have heralded the demise of the conspiracy paradigm, ironically, is its unfalsifiability. The paradigm proved so convenient that it was soon exploited by everybody to attack everybody. The Islamic regime, in particular, has made ample use of the paradigm since its very inception 30 years ago to attack opposition groups, critics, intellectuals, and finally, in the course of recent events, the general public. The result has been a gradual corrosion of the whole paradigm, and the emergence of a common sense of identification among the victims of these attacks. Hopefully, this can in time signal the end of the era of conspiracism and a move towards a reality-oriented understanding of history. Today, most Iranian intellectuals, as well as many well-educated middleclass individuals, are no longer willing to succumb to extravagant conspiracy theories. For anti-Baha'i propagandists, this implies that the old spy stories will no longer be effective.
Thus, in practice, we are gradually shifting towards a new paradigm. Once again, the shift is precipitated by the immediate experience of Iranians. During the past few years a faction within the Iranian regime has come under attack for its strict adherence to an illogical, wishful, and even superstitious worldview. Stories abound about government officials' self-professed communications with the Hidden Imam, about their intimate conversations, in front of the incredulous eyes of astonished onlookers, with an invisible and inaudible Mahdi, about their preparations for His imminent advent, or even about their speculations regarding the His future war plans. If true, these stories are indeed disturbing. What, however, may be even more distressing for the long-wronged members of the Baha'i Faith in Iran is the fact that some critics are now using terms such as "New Babists" to refer to the members of the above faction, and are actively drawing parallels and exploring the possible links between their worldview and those of the Babi-Baha'i religions.
These critics can be divided to two groups. First are those who have chosen an anti-religious stance, who ridicule Shi'ite beliefs, and believe that Shi'a millennialism is best understood as a socio-cultural disorder. For them, both the advent of the Babi and Baha'i religions in the 19th century, and the rise to power of Iran's president Ahmadinejad are the outcomes of a deep-rooted malaise of Iranian society. Others choose a strictly Shi'ite stance; they insist that the Hidden Imam was indeed born in the year 255 A.H. and that He still lives among us, but they paradoxically argue that belief in His imminent return or in the possibility of direct contact with Him is simple superstition. In any case, both groups proceed to conclude that what is now going on in Iran, and what happened some 160 years ago, are both expressions of religious superstitionism. What they have all chosen to ignore is the fact that, unlike what we are witnessing in Iran today, the 19th century Babi-Baha'i movement was based, not on the assumption of the factual validity of seemingly irrational Islamic/Shi'ite traditions, but on a totally new understanding of the symbolic significance of those traditions.
(to be continued …)
Endnotes:
[1] Mohammad Tavakoli-Targhi; "Anti-Baha'ism and Islamism in Iran, 1941-1955", http://www.iranpresswatch.org/post/4531
Posted: 23 Sep 2009
The Muslim Network for Baha'i Rights reported the following on September 19, 2009:
A recent visitor in Ardestan, Isfahan province, took these photographs that show insulting graffiti sprayed on Baha'i houses. These messages were written on the walls of Baha'i houses all around town. Some of the houses were sprayed with messages of "impurity" (Nejaasat) of the residents, others said "this is an official house of the spies for Israel", a common accusation leveled against Baha'is in Iran. On other walls, the names of the Baha'is were listed, followed by accusations of being liars, etc.
[Posted on September 19, 2009, at Muslim Network].
"Crime" of being a Baha'i is paid in jail
Posted: 23 Sep 2009
Editor's Note: Publico (www.publico.pt) is considered the most influential daily newspaper in Portugal. Last week, its Foreign Desk senior reporter, Margarida Santos Lopes, interviewed Mr. Iraj Kamalabadi, the brother of imprisoned Fariba Kamalabadi, regarding the situation of the incarcerated Yaran and his report was published on Saturday: Publico. The front page of the newspaper also had a reference to this article. The article describes the situation of the Yaran in vivid terms and a translation was provided to Iran Press Watch by Mr. Marco Oliveira. This translation appears in 3 parts, corresponding to the three parts of the article.
By Margarida Santos Lopes
Iran: Islamic Regime denies citizenship rights to a community of 300 thousand members.
The seven leaders of the largest religious minority in Iran – five men and two women – have been held for more than a year without trial. Some charges carry the punishment of death, but the regime knows that they are innocent.
At 3:30 AM on May 14, 2008, intelligence agents arrived at the home of Fariba Kamalabadi in Tehran. They had a search warrant. It took them three or four hours to search the rooms. They arrested her and confiscated several items, from computers to family photos. Iraj Kamalabadi, one of five brothers, who lives in California, complains: "It was a concerted plan to arrest all the Baha'i leaders. Their houses were raided at the same time."
Psychologist Fariba, 46, was taken to Evin Prison on the same day that the entrepreneur Jamaluddin Khanjani, 75, industrialist Afif Naemi, 47, the agricultural engineer Saeeid Rezaie, 51, the former social worker Behrouz Tavakkoli, 57, and optometrist Vahid Tizfahm, 37. Professor Mahvash Sabet, 55, has been detained earlier, on March 5, 2008, in Mashhad, where she had been summoned by the Ministry of Intelligence, under the pretext of answering questions about a funeral at the Baha'i cemetery.
After months of isolation, the seven leaders of the largest religious minority in Iran only recently knew the formal charges against them: "spying on behalf of Israel", "insulting religious sanctities", "propaganda against the Islamic Republic" and "corruption on earth." Iraj Kamalabadi, in a phone interview with Publico, does not accept these charges: "They are innocent and have only been arrested for being Baha'is."
The law provides the death penalty for espionage and "corruption on earth", but the Center for Human Rights in Iran, whose president, Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, is part of a team of lawyers, ensures that there is no evidence to condemn them, and recommended that the trial, scheduled after several postponements for October 18, be open to the public.
Iraj hopes that international pressure will save his sister and the other detainees from the fate of the National Spiritual Assemblies of the Baha'is of Iran (advisory boards of nine members, elected by the believers that govern community life, without any clergy) after the 1979 Islamic revolution. On August 21, 1980, the nine members of the first Assembly were kidnapped. "No one ever saw them again, they are probably dead," said the consultant, who in 1977 went to study in Boston, and could no longer return home.
On December 27, 1981, only one member of the second Assembly survived the firing squad. In 1984, four out of nine members of the third Assembly since the Revolution were executed.
"In the mid-1980s, the government ordered that Baha'i Spiritual Assemblies should be dissolved," says Iraj. "Because Baha'is are obedient to the laws of the countries where they live, the community dissolved all its institutions at the local and national level. An informal association was then established, with the consent of the authorities, called the Yaran [in Persian, meaning "Friends"], to administer the basic needs of the Baha'i community. "The seven leaders arrested in March and May were the Yaran."
The blanket on the floor
The persecution is not new to Fariba Kamalabadi, a mother of three children who dreamed of becoming a doctor but who, like all Baha'i youth, during the 30 years since the revolution, could not enter university. "It's the third time she has been arrested," said Iraj. "The first was about five years ago; the second was three and a half years ago. Our father also spent some time in prison. They arrested him at home and took him wearing his pajamas. He was severely tortured, and died shortly after being released, due to heart problems aggravated by abuse."
Iraj believes his sister is not being physically abused, but warns against the deterioration of conditions under which she and six others leaders are living. "In the first months of isolation, they were subjected to harsh interrogation," he says. "Their cells have no ventilation or natural light. They were given a blanket and a pillow. They fold the blanket; the bottom serves as a mattress and the upper part as a cover. The food is horrible, and the portions have been gradually reduced. The utensils with which food is cooked and served have not been washed. Even the bread is moldy."
Since the protests against the results of presidential elections in June, says Iraj, the cells "have been overcrowded with new detainees. Many have contracted diseases. Before being arrested, my sister was taking medication for cholesterol and an irregular heartbeat. In prison, they do not allow you to treat yourself. She is seriously ill. When my mother was allowed to visit her, three months ago – the first time – she could not recognize her own daughter – only skin and bone. They all suffer from malnutrition. Their skin shows signs of not being exposed to the sun. Because most of their time is spent sleeping or sitting on the floor, they also have bone problems."
In the midst of adversity, Fariba experienced a small miracle. "One day, when the 14th birthday of her youngest daughter [Taraneh Taef] was near, not having anything to give her, she noticed that the meal that was served had a rotten carrot," says Iraj. "She also noted that the base of the carrot had roots growing. She wrapped it in paper moistened with water, and the plant began to grow, even without sunlight. When the family went to visit, she offered the carrot to her daughter as a birthday present. It was a very moving moment." (See: IranPressWatch)
Iraj repeats that there is utterly no reason why the seven leaders – the Yaran – should not to be immediately released. The authorities "know that the accusations are false, but they inflict pain due to a deep hostility towards Baha'is."
Aside from all that, he is encouraged by the changes of mentality that Persian society has shown. "In February, a group of academics, writers, journalists, artists, and Iranian activists published an open letter entitled "We Are Ashamed". In an unprecedented move, they admitted having ignored, for 150 years, the plight of the Baha'is.
Questioned about her expectations for the coming negotiations between Iran and the Group of 5+1 (U.S., UK, France, Russia, China and Germany), Diane Ala'i, the Representative of the Baha'i International Community at the UN in Geneva, tells Publico that she has only one request: "Put human rights in the agenda, and do not sacrifice it on behalf of other interests."
"...the fate of the Iranian Baha'is should not be eclipsed under the cloud of other civil rights abuses [in Iran], for they represent much more than their own small community. ..."While other religious minorities are specifically protected under the Constitution of the Islamic Republic, this is not the case for the Baha'is.
"Article 13 of the Constitution has specifically and exclusively recognized Zoroastrian, Jewish and Christian Iranians as "the only recognized religious minorities, who, within the limits of the law, are free to perform their religious rites and ceremonies, and to act according to their own canon in matters of personal affairs and religious education."
"The word "only" in this article seems specifically designed to exclude the Baha'is from this clause. ...
The experiences of Muslims as a minority here in the United States, or in Europe for that matter, gives them a unique position to raise their voice against the abuse of non-Muslim minorities in Iran and the rest of the Muslim world. ...
The fate of Iranian Baha'is is not only a matter of their fundamental civil rights in the context of any republic, Islamic or otherwise. It is the very cornerstone of democratic citizenship without which the Muslim majority of Iranians is denied their constitutional protection. Watch the fate of the Iranian Baha'is carefully.
The day they are free to practice their religion without fear, Iranians at large will have finally secured their civil liberties."
When Baha'is are free, then all Iranians will be
Posted: 16 Sep 2009
Editor's Note: Prof Hamid Dabashi is the author of Iran: A People Interrupted. He is Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York. The following commentary appeared on CNN on September 16, 2009.
By Hamid Dabashi
Story Highlights
(CNN) — In their latest communique regarding the fate of seven arrested members of the Baha'i religious minority in Iran, Amnesty International has expressed grave concern they may face the death penalty if they are found guilty of the charges of "espionage for Israel," "insulting religious sanctities," and "propaganda against the system."
As the Islamic Republic of Iran experiences the most serious challenge to its legitimacy in its 30-year history, the vulnerability of religious and ethnic minorities is the most accurate barometer of the crisis that all Iranians face in these dire circumstances.
Of all the various Iranian minorities, the Baha'i community historically has been the weakest and most vulnerable. The world's attention is rightly drawn to the fate of prominent reformists charged with treason, and to the arbitrary arrest, torture, rape and murder of young Iranians. But the fate of the Iranian Baha'is should not be eclipsed under the cloud of other civil rights abuses, for they represent much more than their own small community.
Minorities have always been at the mercy of belligerent authorities, particularly when they face a crisis of legitimacy. Kurds in western Iran, Arabic-speaking communities in the south, Azaris in the north, as well as Turkmans and Baluchis in the east have been at the forefront of such discriminations, which has in turn instigated chronic separatist movements in these areas.
At the same time, Iranian Zoroastrians, Jews and Armenians have also faced varied degrees of discrimination, at official or cultural levels and registers, as they have joined their Muslim brothers and sisters in opposing domestic tyranny and foreign intervention alike.
Among all these minorities, the Baha'is remain the most fragile in part because of intra-Shia sectarian hostilities that go back to mid-19th century and the rise of a vastly popular messianic movement known as Babism, of which the contemporary Baha'is are an offshoot. Its adherents consider themselves the followers of an entirely new religion, in fact the very latest Iranian monotheistic faith with over five million followers scattered over 200 countries.
While other religious minorities are specifically protected under the Constitution of the Islamic Republic, this is not the case for the Baha'is.
Article 13 of the Constitution has specifically and exclusively recognized Zoroastrian, Jewish and Christian Iranians as "the only recognized religious minorities, who, within the limits of the law, are free to perform their religious rites and ceremonies, and to act according to their own canon in matters of personal affairs and religious education."
The word "only" in this article seems specifically designed to exclude the Baha'is from this clause. Having the same effect, Article 14 of the Constitution stipulates the constitutional protection of the minorities to be exclusive to those "who refrain from engaging in conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The location of the Baha'i holy sites in Haifa, Israel, has been a principal source of harassment and intimidation against the Baha'is. This goes back to the late Ottoman period and obviously predates the establishment of the Jewish state in 1948. It's also something over which the Baha'is have had no control.
Read the reminder of the article at CNN
For the past 30 years, followers of the Baha'i Faith in Iran have been lynched, falsely imprisoned, vilified and driven out of their homes. Baha'i children have been deprived of their right to an education, adults have been prevented from earning a livelihood and thousands of families had their properties illegally confiscated by the government.
But the Iranian regime would have us believe that its the innocent party in these circumstances. It continues to deny that it harbors any intentions to eradicate the Baha'i community, while employing all possible means to slander and denigrate the memories of its victims. We need to fight for their human rights.
Posted: 28 Aug 2009
The following news items were reported on the Persian page of Baha'i World News Service on August 26, 2009.
Hamadan (BWNS1):
Mrs. Mehrangiz Husayni, a resident of Hamadan, who was arrested last year on October 24, 2008, was convicted and has been sentenced to one year of imprisonment on the charge of "propagation of the Baha'i Faith", commenced her incarceration on August 16. [See IPW1]
Karaj (BWNS2):
The trial of Shahram Safajoo, who was summoned to the Revolutionary Court of Tehran, Branch 28, on August 22, 2009, has been postponed to October 18, which coincides with the anticipated trial of the former Yaran ("Friends" – informal leaders of the Baha'i community of Iran). Mr. Safajoo was arrested on April 26, 2009, after his residence was searched; he was released on bail on May 18. [See IPW2]
Kashan (BWNS3):
On August 19, Mr. Vahid Haqiqi and his son, Sina, and Mrs. Mona Rouhani – all three residents of Kashan in the province of Isfahan – were summoned to the Ministry of Intelligence in their native town. They were arrested the next day, and released on August 22 after providing bail. [See IPW3]
Qa'emshahr (BWNS4):
Mr. Sohrab Laqa'i, a resident of Qa'emshahr, who was arrested on July 8, 2009, has been allowed only a single telephone conversation with his children ever since. The residence of Mr. Laqa'i was searched by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence on January 4, 2009, along with the homes of four other Baha'is. [See IPW4].
Sari (BWNS5):
On August 18, 2009, agents of the Ministry of Intelligence raided the home of Mrs. Didar Hashemi, a resident of Sari in the province of Mazandaran, and confiscated certain personal items after a search of the home. The agents had a court order for the search of the building, but not for her arrest. They returned the following day and arrested Mrs. Hashemi. [See IPW5]
Yasuj (BWNS6):
Ali-Askar Ravanbakhsh and his wife, Zulaykha [Musavi-]Ravanbakhsh, who are residents of Mehryan, and Mrs. Ruhiyyih Yazdani (Bagha'i), a resident of Yasuj, were given family leave from prison starting on August 11 (see IPW6). The three Baha'is are completing their 4-year prison sentences, of which 2 years have been reduced to 5 years of probation. They were tried and found guilty on charges of "propagation [of speech] against the Islamic Republic" and "participation in the formation and organization of illegal groups". For the first charge they received 3 years, and for the second were sentenced to a one-year imprisonment. [Their sentence commenced October 28, 2008.]
Posted: 03 Sep 2009
The following report was filed by the online site of Human Rights Activists News Agency on Thursday, September 3, 2009:
A Baha'i couple was tried after a year on the charge of promotion of their religion.
On July 29, 2008, security agents went to the home of Fayzu'llah Qanvatian in the town of Ahwaz and after a research of the residence and confiscation of his books and personal items charged this family with "promotion of the Baha'i Faith" and "propaganda against the regime".
At the same time and while still at their home, security agents compelled Mr. Qanvatian and his wife, Mrs. Nushin Ruhani, to answer a series of written questions. They were then escorted to the interrogation office, where bail and surety was arranged for them and they were freed that day pending their trial.
During this past year, the couple have been summoned several more time and interrogated by officers of the Ministry of Intelligence.
The case of this couple was sent to the public prosecutor of the city of Ahwaz. During the court session, the prosecutor asked for maximum penalty under the law. The court then decided to pass the case to the city's Revolutionary Court for adjudication.
On August 31, the said court met and reviewed the case. It then announced that in days ahead it would rule on the merits of the charges and the case before it.
[Posted on Thursday, September 3, 2009, at hra-news. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
Posted: 29 Aug 2009
Earlier today, the following news was reported by the online site of Human Rights Activists News Agency:
Independent and reactionary elements have set on fire the farm-produce of a Baha'i.
On August 20, 2009, the farm products of Mirza Aqa Fanaian, who is the only Baha'i resident of the village of Darjazin, located 5 miles north of Semnan, was set on fire. These products consisted of barley and hay. Mr. Fanaian is an elderly person and this farm is the sole source of his livelihood and was valued at 10 million rial [equivalent of US$1,000].
The province of Semnan has seen considerable increase in anti-Baha'i activities during the current year by independent and reactionary forces. The Baha'i appeals to law enforcement agencies to prevent these elements from perpetrating these violent acts have not produced any results and have fallen on deaf ears.
[Posted on Saturday, August 29, 2009, at hra-news. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
Posted: 29 Aug 2009
Iran Press Watch has previously reported on the arrest of Mr. Zabiu'llah Raufi, a Baha'i resident of Sanandaj (IPW). Further details are provided by the online site of Human Rights Activists News Agency on Saturday, August 29, 2009:
Mr. Zabiu'llah Raufi, a Baha'i resident of Sanandaj, has been given the sentence of a year imprisonment and exile to the town Minab [near Bandar Abbas in south of Iran].
On August 19, 2009, he was summoned before the Revolutionary Court and arrested at the same time. He continues to be incarcerated. It should be noted that the actual date that the court convened is not known, nor was he provided legal representation, or was there formal legal proceedings. It was at this trial that his sentence was communicated to him.
It should further be noted that in recent days, 18 friends and acquaintances of Mr. Raufi have been summoned to the Ministry of Intelligence of Sanandaj and they have been forced to sign assurances that they would not associate with the family of Mr. Raufi.
[Posted on Saturday, August 29, 2009, at hra-news. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
Posted: 28 Aug 2009
Editor's Note: The following report was posted on Friday, August 28, 2009, by the Committee of Human Rights Reporters and appears below in translation:
The trial of three Baha'i citizens by the names of Vesal Yusufi, Payam Yusufi and Anvar Moslemi was convened on August 17.
The condition of Mrs. Vesal Yusufi has been reported as most worrisome. She is unable to stand and suffers greatly from pains in her stomach and back. Because of her grave condition, after the repeated insistence of her family during the past several days, the authorities have consented for a physician to see her.
According to various reports, her 18 year old son, Payam Yusufi, has been physically tortured in order to exact from him various confessions and to compel him to sign documents. So far, the files of these prisoners have not been shared with their lawyers and they remain in prison without charges formally brought against them. ... (Read the full story here)
[Posted on August 28, 2009, at: http://chrr.us/spip.php?article5224. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
Posted: 26 Aug 2009
On Saturday, August 22, 2009, Khabar Navard shared the following news, which appears below in translation:
In a continuation of the widespread arrests of Baha'is throughout Iran, on Wednesday, August 19, 2009, at 12:30 pm, five (5) agents in plain clothes raided the home of Mr. Vahid Haqiqi in Kashan. After they search his residence, agents confiscated his computer, CDs and various religious materials and took both Mr. Haqiqi and his 17-year old son, Sina, into custody. (Read the full story here)
Posted: 25 Aug 2009
On Saturday, August 22, 2009, Khabar Navard shared the following news, which appears below in translation:
In continuation of widespread arrests of Baha'is throughout Iran, Mrs. Mehrangiz Husayni was arrested in Hamadan. According to a court order issued on October 24, 2008, she was sentenced to a year incarceration and on August 16, 2009, was arrested by the security agents and conducted to prison to start her sentence.
The authorities have stated that the charge against her is, "propagation of the Baha'i Faith".
It should be noted that Iran claims freedom of expression for its citizens, but people are not at liberty to express their convictions. What is being charged by authorities against the Baha'is as "propaganda against the regime" is in reality free expression of beliefs and convictions, which Baha'is carry out despite the high cost of imprisonments, fines, and large property or cash bails.
[Source: Khabar Navard. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
Posted: 18 Aug 2009 04:06 PM PDT
Editor's Note: Iran Press Watch regrets that due to the pressure of work it failed to report on an important development in Semnan, as reported through Mihan site on Tuesday, April 14, 2009. For the sake of the completeness of our historical records, that report is now shared in translation:
In mid February 2009, Murteza Hamidi [presumably a Muslim] was arrested by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence in Semnan.
Previously, on December 15, 2008, his home was raided at the same time as the homes of 20 Baha'i families were attacked by agents of the same Ministry in a widespread operation.
The charge against Mr. Hamidi is "possession of Baha'i books and materials", and "relationship with Baha'is". It should be noted that his grandfather is a Baha'i, as are many other members of his family; therefore it is perfectly natural and understandable for Hamidi to have Baha'i printed materials in his possession and to have interactions with Baha'is.
Repeated efforts by his family to secure his freedom have remained futile, and Mr. Hamidi continues to languish in prison without any recourse. The other point that adds to the anxiety of this situation is that Mr. Hamidi and his family have been extensively pressured by the Ministry of Intelligence to file complaints against some Baha'i residents of Semnan for promoting the Baha'i Faith to him and his children. Through this method, the authorities hope to create a legal pretext for further harassment and persecution of the Baha'is of Semnan.
Is this effort not another step in an organized and systematic campaign to eliminate the Baha'is of Semnan? This would then be an effort which could serve as a dangerous and inhumane model for the rest of the nation to entirely eliminate the Baha'is.
[Posted on http://emails.mihanblog.com/post/125. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
A Baha'i Sentenced to Imprisonment
Posted: 18 Aug 2009
According to Human Rights Activists News Agency, the Revolutionary Court of Semnan has convicted a Baha'i resident to 18 months imprisonment.
According to the court ruling, Mrs. Susan Tebyanian[-Jabbari], a Baha'i resident of Semnan was convicted to 18 months imprisonment. In the course of her sentencing, the court noted that because of lack of appropriate facilities in Semnan (given her background), one of the prisons in Tehran would be designated for her by the court.
It should be noted her trial took place about a month ago, but the present ruling was issued and communicated on August 12.
[Source: August 18, 2009, hra-news]
The Persian page of the Baha'i World News Service provides further details:
On June 2, 2009, the trial of Mrs. Susan Tebyanian, a Baha'i of Semnan, took place. She had been arrested on April 27, 2009, and released on bail and surety on May 1. The court sentenced her to 18 months imprisonment on the following charges:
[Source: BWNS. Translations by Iran Press Watch]
Posted: 18 Aug 2009
According to Baha'i World News Service, on July 29, 2009, the home of Mr. Nader Munzavi in Delijan, in the province of Makazi, was searched and his computer and Baha'i books were confiscated. Mr. Munzavi is the sole Baha'i resident of this small town. Last year, he was summoned by the Ministry of Intelligence for interrogations.
[Posted on Tuesday, August 18, 2009, at BWNS. Translation by Iran Press Watch.]
He is God!
O God, Thy sincere servants are afflicted by the malice and cruelty of such as oppose Thee: do Thou deliver them! ...