Monday, March 23, 2009

Australian MPs, Interfaith Council call on Iranian government to respect rights of Bahá'ís in Iran

Two articles from iranpresswatch.org and www.bahai.org.au respectively.


Australian MP speaks in support of Yaran

Posted: 22 Mar 2009 04:44 PM PDT

Editor's Note: In the ongoing struggle for civil and human rights of the Baha'is in Iran, Australian Member of Parliament Andrew Robb delivered a speech calling on the Australian government to urge the release of the now-dissolved Yaran and to implore the Iranian government to allow Baha'is the right to 'freedom of thought, conscience and religion'. The speech was delivered in the House of Parliament on the 12th of March, 2009. Readers may note that Australian MP Luke Simpkins had raised the same issue at the end of February, also in the House of Representatives. (See Luke Simpkins' speech - PDF)

The Baha'i community acknowledged the speeches: "We appreciate that these MPs have spoken out so strongly on this shameful abuse of human rights in Iran," said Tessa Scrine, a spokesperson for the Australian Baha'i Community. "The whole world, and the Iranian authorities themselves, know the charges are false". Three of the Baha'is falsely charged with offences in Iran have close relatives in Australia.

To the House of Representatives

I rise to speak on the persecution of people of the Baha'i faith in Iran-in particular, the seven believers who have been incarcerated in Tehran's Evin prison for eight months. Article 18 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states:

Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion …

Here in Australia, section 116 of our Constitution prohibits the government controlling or mandating a particular religion. However, such is not the case in Iran. On 18 February this year, I met with two representatives of the Bayside and Glen Eira Baha'i communities, Mr Murray Davies and Ms Niloufar Zamani. Mr Davies and Ms Zamani shared with me what they called 'the continuing abuse of the fundamental human rights of the Iranian Baha'i community' and what they saw as 'a renewed wave of persecution and control similar to that which occurred in the 1930s in Nazi Germany'.

Founded in 1844, the Baha'i faith is the youngest of the world's independent religions. Today the faith has more than five million believers. The largest population of Baha'is live in India, numbering around 2.2 million. The next largest population exists in Iran, at roughly 350,000 people. Since the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979, the Baha'i community has suffered the effects of a systematic campaign orchestrated by the Iranian government. The government's aim is to eliminate the Baha'i community as a viable entity in Iran, despite Iran being the birthplace of the faith. To begin, the Iranian constitution does not recognise the religion. Baha'is are not permitted to meet, to hold religious ceremonies or to practise their religion communally. Holy places, shrines and cemeteries have been confiscated and demolished. According to Amnesty International, hundreds of Baha'is have been executed for refusing to recant their faith and embrace Islam. Since the election of President Ahmadinejad in 2005, dozens more have been arrested.

Amongst those who have been recently arrested are seven leaders of the Baha'i organisation known as Friends of Iran. The organisation is believed to have served as an ad hoc coordinating body representative of Baha'is in Iran, apparently to the full knowledge of the Iranian government. Recently, however, the government labelled the organisation illegal and arrested its seven leaders-one in March 2008 and the other six in May 2008. They are expected to go on trial shortly on charges of espionage for Israel, insulting religious sanctities and propaganda against the system. Amnesty International considers the charges to be politically motivated and those held to be prisoners of conscience, detained solely because of their conscientiously held beliefs or their peaceful activities on behalf of the Baha'i community.

The accusation of spying has been used as a pretext to persecute Baha'is for more than 75 years. They have been accused of being tools of Russian imperialism, British colonialism, American expansionism and, most recently, Zionism. The seven imprisoned leaders are being held in section 209 of Tehran's infamous Evin prison, run by the Iranian ministry of intelligence. After eight months, no evidence has been brought to light by the prosecutors. The five male detainees are said to be held together in one cell of about 10 metres squared without any beds. All have been permitted access to relatives but none has been granted access to their lawyer. The lawyer is said to have been harassed, intimidated and threatened since taking on the case. The trial is expected to take place shortly in the Iranian revolutionary court. If convicted, the seven will face lengthy prison terms or even the death penalty.

This is not the first time the plight of the Baha'i community in Iran has been raised in this House. In 2006, the members for Macmillan, Boothby and Stirling, with strong support from the other side of the House, spoke with heavy hearts as they recounted stories of persecution passed on to them from their local communities. As they did then, I today call on the Australian government to continue to raise this matter with the Iranian embassy and urge the immediate and unconditional release of the seven prisoners. I appeal to authorities to ensure that the seven prisoners are protected from torture and other ill treatment and to ensure that they are given regular access to their relatives and lawyer. Finally, I implore the Iranian government to stop persecuting the Baha'i people and allow their citizens the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.

[Source: http://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/genpdf/chamber/hansardr/2009-03-12/0108/hansard_frag.pdf]

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Sydney, 26 March 2009
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The call by Australia's peak interfaith body to the Government of Iran to respect the human rights of Baha'is has been welcomed by the Australian Baha'i community.

The Australian Partnership of Religious Organisations (APRO) said today that it shared the Australian Government's deep concern for the seven Baha'i leaders imprisoned in Iran for nearly a year.

The signatories to the statement included Australia's major Christian ecumenical organisation, the National Council of Churches, and national representatives of the Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, and Sikh communities.

"We welcome the statement by APRO," said a spokesperson for the Australian Baha'i Community, Natalie Mobini.

"This follows a statement by the Australian Government delegation to the UN Human Rights Council on 17 March expressing deep concern at the discrimination against Baha'is in Iran and calling on Iran to adhere to its international human rights obligations," Dr Mobini said.

APRO said the detention of the seven Baha'i leaders without access to lawyers or the laying of formal charges is in clear breach of their rights under international law.

"They must be allowed to communicate with their lawyers and either released or allowed fair and open trial," APRO said.

"Freedom of religion and belief is a right guaranteed to all people under the International Conventions on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a state party," it said.

Charges

In February, an Iranian spokesman said the seven Baha'i leaders would face charges of espionage for Israel, insulting Islam and propaganda against Iran.

Dr Mobini said all the charges are strongly denied by the Baha'i Community.

"It is a fundamental principle of the Bahá'í Faith that its followers strictly refrain from involvement in any partisan political activity and are obedient to the law of the land in which they live," she said.

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said in February 2009 that it is "hard to believe that there is any basis to the charges or that they will receive a fair trial."

On March 12, 2009, Andrew Robb MP told the House of Representatives: "I implore the Iranian Government to stop persecuting the Baha'i people and allow their citizens the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion."

On 25 February 2009, Luke Simpkins MP told the House of Representatives: "This issue is about persecution. It is about the withdrawal of the right to freely practise religion, it is about religious intolerance, and it is about the extreme practice of politics. These Baha'is are on trial for their lives. It should never have come to this."

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Please visit www.bahai.org.au for full story with photographs and links.

Copyright 2009 National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Australia Inc.

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