|
NEW YORK (14 May 2008) --
Six Bahá’í leaders in Iran were arrested and taken to the
notorious Evin prison yesterday in a sweep that is
ominously similar to episodes in the 1980s when scores of Iranian Bahá’í leaders were summarily rounded up and killed.
The six men and women, all members of the national-level
group that helped see to the minimum needs of Bahá’ís
in Iran, were in their homes Wednesday morning when government intelligence
agents entered and spent up to five hours searching each home, before taking
them away.
The seventh member of the national coordinating group was
arrested in early March in Mashhad after being
summoned by the Ministry of Intelligence office there on an ostensibly trivial
matter.
“We protest in the strongest terms the arrests of our fellow
Bahá'ís in Iran,” said Bani
Dugal, the principal representative of the Bahá’í International Community to the United Nations.
“Their only crime is their practice of the Bahá’í
Faith.”
“Especially disturbing is how this latest sweep recalls the
wholesale arrest or abduction of the members of two national Iranian Bahá’í governing councils in the early 1980s -- which led
to the disappearance or execution of 17 individuals,” she said.
“The early morning raids on the homes of these prominent Bahá’ís were
well coordinated, and it is clear they represent a high-level effort to strike
again at the Bahá’ís and to intimidate the Iranian Bahá’í community at large,” said Ms. Dugal.
Arrested yesterday were: Mrs. Fariba Kamalabadi,
Mr. Jamaloddin Khanjani, Mr. Afif
Naeimi, Mr. Saeid Rezaie, Mr.Behrouz
Tavakkoli, and Mr. Vahid Tizfahm. All live in
Tehran. Mrs. Kamalabadi, Mr. Khanjani, and Mr.
Tavakkoi have been previously arrested and then
released after periods ranging from five days to four months.
Arrested in
Mashhad on 5 March 2008 was Mrs. Mahvash Sabet, who also resides in Tehran. Mrs. Sabet
was summoned to Mashhad by the Ministry of Intelligence, ostensibly on the
grounds that she was required to answer questions related to the burial of an
individual in the Bahá’í cemetery in that city.
On 21 August 1980, all nine members of the National Spiritual Assembly
of the Bahá’ís of Iran were abducted and disappeared
without a trace. It is certain that they were killed.
The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Iran
was reconstituted soon after that but was again ravaged by the execution of
eight of its members on 27 December 1981.
A number of members
of local Bahá’í governing councils, known as local
Spiritual Assemblies, were also arrested and executed in the early 1980s,
before an international outcry forced the government to slow its execution of Bahá’ís. Since 1979, more than 200 Bahá’ís have been killed or executed in Iran, although none have been
executed since 1998.
In 1983, the
government outlawed all formal Bahá’í administrative
institutions and the Iranian Bahá’í community
responded by disbanding its National Spiritual Assembly, which is an elected
governing council, along with some 400 local level elected governing councils. Bahá'ís throughout Iran also suspended nearly all of
their regular organizational activity.
The informal
national-level coordinating group, known as the Friends, was established with
the knowledge of the government to help cope with the diverse needs of Iran’s
300,000-member Bahá’í community, which is the
country’s largest religious minority.
-end-
|