Monday, December 22, 2008

Iran police shut down Nobel laureate's office

TEHRAN (AFP) — Iranian police on Sunday shut down the office of a human rights centre headed by Nobel peace laureate and lawyer Shirin Ebadi on Sunday, in a sign of a toughening crackdown against rights campaigners.

"They have sealed off the office and are telling us to leave the premises without resistance," the deputy head of Ebadi's Human Rights Defenders Centre, Narges Mohammadi, told AFP. "We have no choice but to leave."

Ebadi, who won the Nobel peace prize in 2003 for her campaigning, was in the office at the time of the raid and condemned the police action but vowed that human rights advocates in Iran would be unfazed.

"Shutting down the office without a warrant is illegal and we will protest," she told AFP.

The semi-official Mehr news agency said the centre's closure was based on a judicial decision taken because it did not have an interior ministry permit to conduct its activities.

Political parties and associations must have such a permit to be legally recognised in Iran.

Mohammadi said dozens of policemen had gathered outside the centre's office in northwest Tehran and that the officials had not "shown a judicial warrant but only provided the number of a warrant."

She said uniformed and plain-clothes police had raided the office and made an inventory of its contents, and that some had insulted members of the centre.

The closure marks a renewed crackdown on rights campaigners by the Islamic republic, which Ebadi's group accuses of "systematically violating" human rights in Iran.

"Obviously such a move does not have a positive message for other rights activists in Iran, but my colleagues and I will fulfil our duties under any circumstances," Ebadi said.

The group had been scheduled to hold a belated celebration marking the 60th anniversary of the universal declaration of human rights on December 10. That very day, a woman rights campaigner was prevented by the authorities from leaving Iran to receive a prize in Italy and her passport seized.

Founded by five prominent lawyers and headed by Ebadi, the group is a vocal critic of the human rights situation in Iran and has defended scores of prisoners of conscience, including high-profile dissidents and student activists.

In an annual report in May, Ebadi's group complained that "freedom of expression and freedom of circulating information have further declined" since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to office in August 2005.

"The lack of a real and effective observance of human rights deepens the gap between the people and the government and breaks the pillars of peace, stability and development in the country," it warned at the time.

On Human Rights Day, Ebadi delivered a speech in Geneva calling for non-governmental organisations to be given a greater role in the UN's Human Rights Council and other bodies.

The group holds frequent meetings on what it deems to be human rights violations. At one recent gathering, it renewed calls on Iran to stop executing people convicted of offences committed when they were minors.

In November, Ebadi criticised Iran's new Islamic penal code, saying it remained unfair to women and used an "incorrect" interpretation of Islam.

In April, she said she had received death threats pinned to the door of her office building, warning her to "watch your tongue."

Ahmadinejad subsequently ordered that Ebadi be protected and that the threats be investigated.

In 1974, Ebadi emerged as the first female judge in Iran, but after the 1979 Islamic revolution, the government decided that women were unfit to serve as judges.

She chose to become a lawyer and devoted herself to human rights, women and children.

Ebadi and her colleagues also represent the family of Canadian-Iranian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi, who died while in custody in 2003 after being detained for photographing a demonstration outside a Tehran prison.

news from

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

report fromTEACHING team
please visit regularly this site for information of the Bahais in Iran

http://www.iranpresswatch.org/

Discrimination Of Minorities In Iran

There are at least 28 Baha’is in jail in different parts of Iran who are imprisoned because of their religion. At any given moment, there may actually be more than this number, but sometimes Baha’is are detained overnight and released, or they may be allowed out on bail after depositing with the court a sum in cash or surrendering business licenses or titles to property.

Among those in prison are all seven members of the Baha’i coordinating committee, and three young adults in Shiraz whose case was the subject of an internal investigation — the results of which completely vindicated the prisoners.

Read More »

Posted in Persecution | Leave a comment

INTERNATIONAL: A brief look at Iran’s Bahá’í religious minority

By James Gilman

Since 1979 revolution, persecution of progressive faith has intensified

The Bahá’í Faith is a monotheistic religion founded in mid-nineteenth century Persia (present-day Iran) by Mirza Hoseyn Ali Nuri, also known as Bahá’u'alláh (Glory of God), and is one of the youngest independent religions in the world. The Bahá’í Faith grew out of the Babi movement, which split from Shia Islam earlier in the nineteenth century.

Bahá’u'alláh was believed to be a new messenger of God, following in a line of divine prophets that included Abraham, Jesus, and Muhammad. Bahá’u'alláh’s teachings stress the unity of religions and mankind, as well as a progressive vision of God. The Bahá’í Faith places emphasis on social equity, including the equality of genders. It has no clergy, and its administrative institutions are all democratically elected.

In 1852, Bahá’u'alláh was arrested by Iran’s ruling Qajar dynasty and imprisoned after a government crackdown on the Babi movement. While incarcerated in Tehran, Bahá’u'alláh first came to believe he was the next prophet. A year later he was exiled to Baghdad, where he spent the next decade, before being further exiled to Constantinople. He was later exiled for a final time by the Ottoman Empire to the penal colony of Acre, in the then-Ottoman province of Palestine, where he died in 1892. It was there, near modern-day Haifa, Israel, that the Bahá’í’s supreme governing institution, the Universal House of Justice, was established.

Read More »

Posted in Persecution | Leave a comment

Iranian press targets Nobel Prize winner Ebadi

By James Gilman

McGill University has been at the centre of a number of allegations made by the official media of the Islamic Republic of Iran this year.

The Islamic Republic News Agency, the Iranian government’s official state media outlet, published a pair of articles earlier this year attacking Nobel Prize-winning lawyer and human rights activist Shirin Ebadi.

The IRNA also targeted Ebadi’s daughter, who is a former McGill LL.M. student, McGill law professor Payam Akhavan, and the McGill Association for Bahá’í Studies, a Students` Society club. Ebadi, her daughter, and Akhavan have all been the targets of threats for their opposition to certain policies of the Iranian government.

Read More »

Posted in Persecution, Support by Non-Baha'is | Leave a comment

Brazilian Congressman on Baha’is in Iran

The following is a speech provided by Congressman Geraldo Resende at the October 16th, 2008 Session of Congress in Brazil. Translated by Sam Cyrous.

BAHÁ’ÍS: MORE THAN A RELIGIOUS QUESTION — A QUESTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS

Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen of the Congress: Iran astonishes the world with its Nuclear Program and, above all, with the intransigence of its President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in not allowing members of the United Nations Organization — the UN — to inspect its nuclear facilities, but what I wish to bring up here is another issue regarding Iran which has not received the attention that it deserves from the rest of the world — the persecution of the followers of the Bahá’í religion and the imprisonment of its believers who have been falsely charged with espionage.

Since May 14th, seven Iranian Bahá’ís have been kept in captivity, without access to lawyers and without any communication with their families. They are people of goodwill who have committed the “crime” of belonging to a religion unrecognized by the Iranian State. These seven Bahá’ís, who make up a group that took care of the interests of more than 300 thousand Iranian Bahá’ís, were arrested arbitrarily and taken from their homes and commercial establishments by the Iranian police. This group’s work consisted of providing help to the Baha’i community through the establishment of regular prayer meetings, children activities, funerals, weddings, and a few other community activities. And what is even more worrisome, Mr. Chairman, is that after four months, these Bahá’ís continue to be incarcerated in a completely arbitrary way, and have now been accused of espionage and of belonging to an anti-Islamic and anti-Iranian group. More recently the situation of the Bahá’ís has worsened. This June, three Bahá’ís of Iranian origin, all with successful businesses and families established in Yemen, had their houses attacked and their documents, CDs, photographs and even computers confiscated.

Read More »

Posted in Support by Non-Baha'is | 3 Comments

Letter of Mrs. Moslemi to Iran’s Judiciary

Translated by Ahang Rabbani

The wife of Anvar Moslemi, who is a member of the Baha’i community of the province of Mazandaran, has written a letter to the Court that has jurisdiction over her husband’s case, outlining the injustices inflicted upon Mr. Moslemi and the violation of the legal rights of their family.

At the beginning of her letter, she states:

Respectfully I submit that I am Farzaneh Shahbahrami, the wife of Mr. Anvar Moslemi. I have been confronted with a serious problem which not only has caused complications for me, but has brought to question the principles of justice and jurisprudence in our society.

please visit

http://www.iranpresswatch.org/