Tag Archives: United Nations

Iranian Bahá’í Leaders Enter Third Year in Prison

On 14 May, the Iranian Baha'i leaders enter their third year of imprisonment without having been convicted of any crime. They are, top from left, Behrouz Tavakkoli, Fariba Kamalabadi, Vahid Tizfahm, and Mahvash Sabet; bottom from left, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Saeid Rezaie, and Afif Naeimi.
(BWNS) On 14 May, the Iranian Bahai leaders enter their third year of imprisonment without having been convicted of any crime. They are, top from left, Behrouz Tavakkoli, Fariba Kamalabadi, Vahid Tizfahm, and Mahvash Sabet; bottom from left, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Saeid Rezaie, and Afif Naeimi.

Tomorrow night the Bahá’í community of Newcastle-upon-Tyne will be having a special prayer meeting for the Bahá’ís in Iran, as the seven sacrificial souls pictured above enter their third year in prison and the Iranian Bahá’í community as a whole face continued persecution.

Referred to as leaders for ease of reference, the prisoners served as an informal body called the Yaran, or “Friends,” and attended to the spiritual and social needs of the Baha’is in Iran. The  seven have been held in Tehran’s Evin prison since they were arrested in 2008 – Mrs. Sabet on 5th March and the remainder of them on 14th May.



The Bahá’í World News Service reported on 10th May that:

As seven Baha’i leaders in Iran enter their third year of imprisonment, new details about the harsh conditions of their incarceration have emerged, prompting renewed calls for their immediate release…
 
“These innocent Baha’is have now been locked up for two full years in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, under conditions which clearly violate international standards,” said Bani Dugal, the principal representative of the Baha’i International Community to the United Nations. “We call on the Iranian authorities to release them now, and ask the international community to join us in this plea. The dictates of justice demand no less.”
 

“No court hearing was held until 12 January this year when they appeared in Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court. Charges including espionage, propaganda activities and “corruption on earth” were all denied. Further appearances took place on 7 February and 12 April.

“In the three trial sessions that have so far taken place, no evidence has been provided whatsoever of wrongdoing – making it all the more obvious that the prisoners are being held only because of their religious belief,” said Ms. Dugal.

“If their freedom is not immediately granted, at the very least they should be released on bail. Steps should be taken to ensure that their trial is expedited and conducted fairly, in accordance with international standards,” she said.

 

Severe prison conditions

Friday marks the second anniversary of the group’s imprisonment, and details continue to emerge about the severe conditions under which they are being held. It is known, for example, that the two women and five men are confined to two cells which are so small that they restrict adequate movement or rest.

“They have neither beds nor bedding,” said Ms. Dugal.


United4Iran, a human rights network, asked sympathizers around the world to replicate the dimensions of the cells in Evin prison and photograph themselves confined to the space.

The place has a rancid smell, and they are permitted to have fresh air for only two hours each week. They have a light that if turned off during the day makes it impossible for them to see anything.

“Contact with their loved ones is restricted to one 10-minute telephone call a week, or visits which are mostly conducted through a glass barrier,” Ms. Dugal said.

“Such inhumane conditions show no regard for the principles outlined in international agreements for the treatment of prisoners, which provide that no one may be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment,” she said.

“The prisoners’ own requests for modest improvements to their conditions remain unaddressed, and as a consequence their health is suffering.

“These people are innocent, and there is no reason they should be made to suffer like this,” she said.

According to the journalist Roxana Saberi – who shared a cell for three weeks with two of the Baha’i prisoners – the women are confined in a small space. “They roll up a blanket to use as a pillow,” she said. “The floor is cement and covered with only a thin, brown carpet, and prisoners often get backaches and bruises from sleeping on it. … When I was with them, we were allowed into a walled-in cement yard four days a week for 20 to 30 minutes.”

Commemoration of the UN Declaration on Religious Tolerance

The 25th anniversary commemoration of the adoption of the “UN Declaration on the Elimination of Intolerance and Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief” was held in Prague, and broadcast live over the Internet, on the 25th November.

Participants at the commemoration
The following is a report of the event from the Baha’i World News Service:

PRAGUE, 19 December 2006 (BWNS) — Although it was negotiated at the height of the Cold War, a 25-year-old international agreement on freedom of religion or belief remains as relevant today — and perhaps even more so — said speakers at a major United Nations-sanctioned observance here in late November.

Some 350 participants representing more than 60 governments, UN agencies, and various international non-governmental organizations — including the Baha’i International Community — gathered on 25 November 2006 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief.

The commemoration was marked by speeches, workshops, and an end-of-the-conference statement. They echoed a common theme: that the 1981 Declaration remains a critical document for the protection of freedom of religion or belief, especially at a time when religious conflict seems on the rise.

“These days, we live in a globalized world,” said Piet de Klerk, Ambassador-at-Large of the Netherlands on Human Rights. “This means that different cultures, including different faiths, meet each other more frequently and in a more intense manner than during previous periods of time.”

Mr. de Klerk said that although it was initially negotiated at a time when issues of freedom or religion or belief concerned the ideological struggle between Communism and the West, the Declaration is nevertheless today helpful in addressing the challenges posed by global diversity because it is “based on the conviction of many that the freedom of religion or belief itself offers a way forward for fighting intolerance.”

Asma Jahangir, the UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, said the principles of the Declaration remain “pivotal” in the current “polarized climate.”

“We all need to join our efforts to disseminate the principles contained in the 1981 Declaration among lawmakers, judges and civil servants but also among non-state actors,” said Ms. Jahangir. “We need to eliminate the root causes of intolerance and discrimination and to remain vigilant with regard to freedom of religion or belief worldwide.”

Ms. Felice Gaer, chair of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, also said the Declaration has become more important over time.

“The right of everyone to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion is universal, as the unanimous adoption of the Declaration on Religious Intolerance showed – even in 1981,” said Ms. Gaer. “Regrettably, violations of this universal right continue to be committed across the globe.

“The occasion of the 25th anniversary is a call to all governments to intensify their efforts to protect freedom of religion or belief at home and to advance respect for religious freedom abroad. The ability of people throughout the world to live in peace and freedom depends on it.”

Other speakers included Diane Alai, the Baha’i International Community’s representative to the United Nations in Geneva, who co-presented at a workshop on the right to “change” one’s religion, along with Ms. Jahanghir. In that workshop, Ms. Jahanghir noted that although the Declaration does not specifically mention the word “change,” it is clearly implied in an article that says everyone has the “freedom to have a religion or belief of his choice.” As well, Ms. Jahangir said, other UN treaties and statements have clearly upheld this right.

Ms. Alai said upholding the right to change one’s religion is of “practical importance” overall in the regime of religious freedom, in that the denial of such a right also essentially denies all of the other rights guaranteed in the Declaration, as well as rights guaranteed in other international treaties, such as the right to freedom of association, the right to privacy, freedom of expression, and minority rights.

Yet the right to change one’s religions is not always upheld, said Ms. Alai, because some governments today want “to preserve the popularity stemming from a particular state-religion relationship” and so they restrict the right to change one’s religion through particular laws and policies.

This is of critical importance, said Ms. Alai, because there are some countries where the right to “change” one’s religion is consider apostasy, which is punishable by death under some interpretations of religious law.

Ms. Alai pointed specifically to the situation of the Baha’i communities of Iran and Egypt, which currently face persecution and discrimination over religious belief, and where Baha’is have indeed been labelled as apostates, a “crime” which is punishable by death in Iran.

“People are known and respected for risking imprisonment, torture and even death because they uphold a certain political ideology, however, this is not yet fully recognized when it comes to a religious belief,” said Ms. Alai.

Other workshops at the commemoration considered issues relating to freedom of religion versus freedom of expression, freedom of religious for the individual versus society at large, and freedom of religion in the context of the propagation of religion.

A final statement, titled the “Prague Declaration on Freedom of Religion or Belief,” was announced by the gathering. “We consider it essential for governments and international organizations, such as the UN and various regional organizations, to give priority to the protection of the freedom of religion or belief and to the eradication of all forms of intolerance and of discrimination based on religion or belief,” said the Prague Declaration.

Adopted by the United Nations on 25 November 1981, the 1981 Declaration spells out and delineates the right to freedom of religion or belief, which was initially recognized in the 1948 Universal Declaration on Human Rights.

The 1981 Declaration indicates, for example, that the right to freedom of religion or belief includes the right to “establish and maintain” places of worship; to “write, issue and disseminate” religious publications; to “observe days of rest and to celebrate holidays”; and to “establish and maintain communications with individuals and communities in matters of religion and belief at the national and international levels.”

Dr. Nazila GhaneaThe Prague commemoration was sanctioned as the official, international commemoration of the adoption of the 1981 Declaration by the UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief. It was organized by Mr. Jan Ghanea Tabrizi of Tolerance 95, an NGO based in the Czech Republic, and Dr. Nazila Ghanea of the UK-based Centre for International Human Rights, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London. Funding was provided by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Full article and pictures available here.
Further picture

s and transcripts available here.

UN Commemoration to be Webcast

The 25th anniversary commemoration of the adoption of the UN Declaration on the Elimination of Intolerance and Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief, being held in Prague on the 25th November this year, will be broadcast live on the Internet.

For more information visit the event’s web site.

On Saturday 25th November the webcast will be available from this link.

Links:
1981 Declaration, including live broadcast

UN Concern over Human Rights in Iran

On November 21st the Third Committee of the United Nations’ General Assembly, which considers human rights issues, approved a draft resolution expressing “serious concern” over the human rights situation in Iran, including the escalation of violations against Iranian Baha’is. The resolution, which was put forward by Canada, passed by a vote of 70 to 48 and will now go to the General Assembly plenary for a vote in December.

The adopted draft resolution would have the General Assembly call upon the Government of Iran to ensure full respect for the rights to freedom of assembly, opinion and expression and to eliminate the use of torture and other cruel forms of punishment, as well as discrimination based on religious, ethnic, linguistic and gender grounds.

Sources / Links:
Full story on Baha’i World News Service
UN Press Release on Draft Adoption

Europe Calls on Iran to Lift Ban on Baha’is

Thursday 16th November, the European Parliament adopted a resolution that calls “on the Iranian authorities to eliminate all forms of discrimination based on religious grounds” and notably “calls for the de facto ban on practising the Baha’i faith to be lifted”.

The extensive resolution states that the exercise of civil rights and political freedoms has deteriorated notably since the presidential elections of June 2005 and expresses concern over many matters including political prisoners, juvenile executions, human rights and freedoms. The full resolution can be read on their web site.

Link: European Parliament resolution on Iran
Photo Credit: Cédric Puisney [cropped]

Trick or Treat for UNICEF

Baha’i children in the United States are being encouraged to take part in Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF, a fund raising endeavour for the United Nations Children’s Fund.

56 years ago a group of children in Philadelphia went door-to-door on Halloween collecting money for children overseas as a result of seeing reports of children suffering after World War II. Then it was just five children who wanted to make a difference, this year it is hoped that children across the country will help to save the lives of their poverty stricken peers around the world.

The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of the United States was accredited to the United Nations in 1947, the same year that UNICEF was. Jeffery Huffines, U.S. Baha’i representative to the United Nations, has said that “By partnering with UNICEF, Baha’is have the opportunity to put our moral principles of compassion and reducing poverty into practice.”

Children taking part in the project will carry the special orange box pictured right, so if you’re in the USA and spot a witch or a monster carrying this box on October 31st, chances are that they are not at all evil.

Link: Creating Compassion and Fighting Poverty… for UNICEF

Baha’is host UN panel on violence against women

Source: Baha’i World News Service

On 8th September, as part of the 59th Annual United Nations Department of Public Information/Non-Governmental Organization conference, The Baha’i International Community and the International Presentation Association hosted a panel discussion on the theme “Beyond Violence Prevention: Creating a Culture to Enable Women’s Security and Development.”

The panelists were agreed that violence against women remains a severe problem in almost every nation and culture.

Letty Chiwara from the Africa section of the United Nations Fund for Women stated “We all know that at least one out of every three women around the world has been beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in their lifetime.”

The consensus of opinion was that progress requires changes in deeply rooted attitudes that for the most part transcend culture and national borders.

Layli Miller-Muro, lawyer and founder of the Baha’i-inspired women’s advocacy organization, the Tahirih Justice Center, said that “Religion has the capacity for good, to inspire, to motivate, to transform human behavior”… “People are willing to change their behavior for a higher power, not for a World Bank loan.”

The full story can be read here

UN Fears for Baha’is in Iran

UNITED NATIONS, 20 March 2006 (BWNS)

Representatives of the Baha’i International Community reacted with alarm today to a United Nations official’s statement about actions of the Iranian government against the Baha’is in Iran.

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Asma Jahangir, stated that she was highly concerned and expressed her apprehensions in a press release posted today about “a confidential letter sent on 29 October 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forces in Iran to a number of governmental agencies.”

“The letter,” she said, “which is addressed to the Ministry of Information, the Revolutionary Guard and the Police Force, states that the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, had instructed the Command Headquarters to identify persons who adhere to the Baha’i faith and monitor their activities. The letter goes on to request the recipients to, in a highly confidential manner, collect any and all information about members of the Baha’i faith.”

“We are grateful that Ms. Jahangir has brought this activity to light,” said Bani Dugal, the Baha’i International Community’s principal representative to the UN. “We share her concern for the welfare of the Baha’is and shudder to think what this might mean. Because of the unprecedented character of the government’s action, we are addressing a request to the Ambassador of Iran for an explanation.”

Ms. Jahangir also “considers that such monitoring constitutes an impermissible and unacceptable interference with the rights of members of religious minorities.”

“The Special Rapporteur’s concern that such information could be ‘used as a basis for the increased persecution of, and discrimination against, members of the Baha’i faith’ is clearly well-founded,” said Ms. Dugal.

Such actions come in the wake of mounting media attacks on the Baha’is, the nature of which in the past have preceded government-led assaults on the Baha’is in Iran. “Kayhan,” the official Tehran daily newspaper has carried more than 30 articles about the Baha’is and their religion in recent weeks, all defamatory in ways that are meant to create provocation. Radio and television programs have joined in as well with broadcasts condemning the Baha’is and their beliefs. In addition, the rise in influence in Iranian governmental circles of the Anti-Baha’i Society, Hojjatieh, an organization committed to the destruction of the Baha’i Faith, can only heighten the fears for that beleaguered community.

“We well know what hateful propaganda can lead to; recent history offers too many examples of its horrific consequences. We make an urgent appeal to all nations and peoples on behalf of our Iranian coreligionists that they not allow a peace-loving, law-abiding people to face the extremes to which blind hate can lead,” said Ms. Dugal. “The ghastly deeds that grew out of similar circumstances in the past should not now be allowed to happen. Not again.”

Statement by Bani Dugal, Principal Representative of the Baha’i International Community to the United Nations, in the wake of the announcement of the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief concerning treatment of followers of the Baha’i Faith in Iran
20 March 2006 New York City

The statement of the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief about recent actions taken by the Government of Iran concerning the Baha’is arouses grave apprehension in the Baha’i International Community about their fate. The Baha’is have been the victims of an unrelenting persecution ever since the revolution of 1979, and one hesitates to think of what horrors could be implied by the combined effort of intelligence, military and police agencies to identify Baha’is and monitor their activities, as has been ordered by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forces at the direction of the Head of State. We are dreadfully afraid for the lives of our fellow Baha’is in Iran.

Because of the unprecedented character of the Government’s action, we are addressing a request to the Ambassador of Iran for an explanation.

Such actions come in the midst of mounting media attacks on the Baha’is, the nature of which in the past have preceded government-led assaults on them. “Kayhan,” the official Tehran daily newspaper, has carried more than 30 articles about the Baha’is and their religion in recent weeks, all defamatory in ways that are meant to create provocation. Radio and television programs have joined in as well with broadcasts condemning the Baha’is and their beliefs.

We know what hateful propaganda can lead to; recent history offers too many examples of its horrific consequences. We make an urgent plea to all nations and peoples on behalf of our Iranian coreligionists that they not allow a peace-loving, law-abiding people to face the extremes to which blind hate can lead. The ghastly deeds that grew out of similar circumstances in the past should not now be allowed to happen. Not again.


Background

Recent media attacks on the Baha’is in Iran
In recent months, Iranian newspapers and radio stations have been conducting an intensive anti-Baha’i campaign. From September through November 2005 alone, the influential, state-run “Kayhan” newspaper ran nearly three dozen articles defaming the Baha’i Faith with the clear intention of arousing in readers feelings of suspicion, distrust and hatred for the Iranian Baha’i community. The articles engage in a deliberate distortion of history, make use of fake historical documents, and falsely describe Baha’i moral principles in a manner that would be offensive to Muslims.

Before the onset of previous government campaigns of persecution against Baha’is, such as in 1955 and 1979, similarly defamatory articles and radio programs were run against the Baha’is, stirring up animosity and prejudice, apparently to prepare the public for what was to come.

For more information, including copies of the “Kayhan” articles in Persian and summaries in English, please click here.

The Anti-Baha’i Hojjatieh Society
Founded in 1953 as a specifically anti-Baha’i organization by a charismatic Shiite Muslim cleric, the Hojjatieh Society has today reemerged in Iran as an influential if secretive faction that has been linked in news articles and Web blogs with the current Iranian administration.

During the 1979 Iranian revolution, the Society played an important role in stirring animosity against Baha’is. However, in part because of differences in theology — among other things the Hojjatieh believe a truly Islamic state cannot be established until the return of the 12th Imam — the Society fell into disfavor and was banned by the regime in 1984.

Outside observers have connected the Society’s reemergence with the return of hardliners to positions of power in the government, including the president who has frequently stated his expectation that the 12th Imam will return soon.

For more information on the Hojjatieh, please click here.