UNITED
NATIONS
General
Assembly
Dist.:
General
8
September 2000
Original:
English
Fifty-fifth session
Item 116 (c) of the provisional agenda*
Human rights
questions: human rights situations and reports of special rapporteurs and representatives
Situation
of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran
Note
by the Secretary-General**
The Secretary-General has the honour
to transmit to the members of the General Assembly the interim report prepared
by Maurice Copithorne, Special Representative of the Commission on Human Rights
on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, in accordance
with Assembly resolution 54/177 of 17 December 1999
* A/55/150
and Corr.1 and 2.
** In accordance with
General Assembly resolution 54/248, sect. C, para. 1, the present report is
being submitted on 8 September 2000 so as to include as much updated
information as possible.
Interim report of the Special Rapporteur
of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the
Islamic Republic of Iran
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Summary
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The present interim report covers
the period 1 January to 15 August 2000.
Those seven months have been
tumultuous ones in the Islamic Republic of Iran and human rights have been a dominant
feature in most of the issues. From one perspective, it might be said that
the Government is paying a high price for the transparency that the
Government itself introduced three years ago.
The most dramatic development was
the accelerating attack on the press, which by the end of the period under
review had led to the suppression of the entire reformist press and the
imprisonment of many journalists. At the time of writing, there were reports
that some of the press would be allowed to reopen.
The economic situation of the poor
and marginalized worsened during the period. On a significant number of
occasions, Iranians took to the streets to protest unemployment, inflation
and inadequate municipal services, as well as more political issues, such as the
freedom of the press, the treatment of students and other detainees and
government inaction in general. Paramilitary vigilantes often had a role in
the suppression of those demonstrations.
The status of women remained
largely unchanged, although there is the prospect that the new Majilis will
tackle some of the systemic issues, such as easier access to divorce and the
minimum age for marriage.
The promised reform of the
judiciary has not got off the ground and there are many indications that it
is being hotly debated behind the scenes. Prisons are vastly overcrowded and
executions remain suspiciously high. The evidence of the use of torture by
law enforcement agencies, usually in illegal detention centres, is becoming a
matter of public record.
The murders and disappearances of
intellectuals and political dissidents remains unsolved, with increasing
pressure on the Government to expedite the prosecution of those concerned and
to let the full truth come out.
The status of ethnic and religious
minorities remains largely unaddressed. The alienation of some minority
ethnic groups by the Government’s tacit policy of assimilation continues to
grow.
Electoral democracy continues to
grow, although major institutional obstacles to the exercise of the plenary powers
by the legislature are now coming to the fore.
On balance, the Special
Representative considers that certain tangible progress made to date in 2000
has been overshadowed by backsliding in some areas and stagnation in others.
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Contents
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Paragraphs
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Page
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Introduction.......................................................
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1–9
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4
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Special Representative’s activities and
sources........................
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10–11
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4
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Freedom of expression.............................................
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12–21
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5
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Media
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12–15
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5
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Student
protests
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16–21
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5
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Status of women...................................................
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22–31
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6
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Legal subjects.....................................................
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32–58
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7
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Reform
of the judicial system.......................................
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32–36
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7
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Rules
of fair trial and related matters.................................
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37–42
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8
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Independent
Bar Association.......................................
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43–46
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8
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Prisons
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47–48
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8
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Executions
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49–52
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9
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Torture
and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
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53–58
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9
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Murders and disappearances of
intellectuals and political dissidents.....
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59–62
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10
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Status of minorities................................................
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63–79
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10
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Kurds
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63–67
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10
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Azeris
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68–70
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11
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Religious
minorities: Sunnis and Baha’is
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71–76
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11
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Minorities
policy
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77–79
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12
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Other important matters............................................
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80–101
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13
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Economic,
social and cultural rights
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80–86
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13
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Democracy
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87–94
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14
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Guardian
Council
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95–98
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15
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Islamic
Human Rights Commission
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99–101
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15
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Correspondence with the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran...
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102
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15
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Conclusions.......................................................
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103–113
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16
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Annexes
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I. Denial of fair trial and related rights...........................................
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18
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II. Information on the situation of the Baha’is.....................................
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20
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III. Correspondence between the Special Representative and the
Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1 January-1 July 2000.................................
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21
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I. Introduction
1. The first seven months of 2000 have been
tumultuous ones in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Human rights have been in the
forefront, indeed frequently the core issue involved in events.
2. The most dramatic and far-reaching event
was the accelerating attack on the freedom of press, which led to the virtual
closing down of the entire reformist press. That event was especially
significant because the establishment of a culture of open discussion centring
on a free press had been at the heart of the President’s declared objective of
creating a civil society.
3. A number of economic, social and
political conditions underlie many of the recent developments in the country.
Their nature is perhaps most dramatically reflected in the surge of efforts by
Iranians to migrate. The brain drain is serious. According to press reports, 80
per cent of the Iranian students who have competed in international science
Olympiads in the last three years are now studying outside the country. Some
150,000 Iranian doctors and engineers now live in the United States. One
government official attributed those developments mostly to the lack of
security at the social level and the lack of attention to the most basic rights
of those elites. More generally, many foreign embassies in Tehran report a
sharp increase in immigration enquiries. The press reports that desperate
Iranians are turning up as illegal immigrants in many parts of the world.
4. Many of the social problems in the
Islamic Republic of Iran, most of which have human rights dimensions, can be
traced to the economic crisis, particularly in terms of rising unemployment and
still rampant inflation. The poor and the marginalized are bearing the brunt of
a mismanaged economy.
5. The governance structure in Iran is still
a major cause of the problems facing society rather than a mechanism for their
solution. Wasteful competition between the branches of government and the
incoherence and incompetence that characterizes much of the bureaucracy appear
to be standing in the way of movement towards a culture of human rights.
Personalities and factions have not yet ceded much ground to the rule of law
despite earlier promises of comprehensive reform. So much needs to be done and
yet so little is being achieved, particularly in addressing the systemic
obstacles to progress.
6. Equality rights have seen little
progress. Women and minorities remain seriously disadvantaged in law and in
practice. Neither the executive nor the legislature have taken leadership roles
in addressing the legal as well as the social obstacles, although there are
early signs of change on the part of the new Majilis, at least concerning
women.
7. In the present report, the Special
Representative has attempted once again to capture what he believes to be the
high points — and the low ones — in the effort to advance the cause of human
rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
8. Overall, the Special Representative is
reluctantly compelled by the record to state that in his view, such progress as
there has been to date in 2000 has been overshadowed by backsliding in some
cases and stagnation in others.
9. Finally, the Special Representative
wishes to note, as he has done many times in the past, that the Islamic
Republic of Iran is a complex, dynamic society. The pace of development, some
of it substantive, has accelerated in recent months. The Special Representative
believes that the country is changing and will continue to change. Significant
improvements in the enjoyment of human rights are certainly not out of
question, and indeed that climate might change markedly between the time the
present report is being finalized in mid-August 2000 and the time the debate on
the human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran gets under way in
the Third Committee.
II. Special Representative’s activities and
sources
10. In seeking to discharge his mandate, the
Special Representative has used many sources of information, including the
Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, other Governments, individuals,
non-governmental organizations and the Iranian and international media.
11. During the
period under review, the Special Representative received written communications
from the following non-governmental organizations concerning the Islamic
Republic of Iran: Alliance for Defense of Human Rights in Iran; Amnesty
International; Baha’i International Community; Committee for Defence of Liberty
in Iran; Association for the Defence of Political Prisoners in Iran; Committee
to Protect Journalists; Constitutionalist Movement of Iran; Democratic Party of
Iranian Kurdistan; Human Rights Watch; International PEN American Center;
International PEN Writers in Prison Committee; Iranian Worker Left Unity;
National Council of Resistance of Iran; Organization for Defending Victims of
Violence; Reporters sans Frontières; Social Research; and the Society for the
Defence of Political Prisoners in Iran.
III. Freedom of expression
A. Media
12. In the period under review, the closing
down of the reformist press has perhaps been the biggest story in the Islamic
Republic of Iran itself, as well as the most evident mass suppression of a
human right. At the time of preparation of the present report, some 22
newspapers and journals have been closed, and at least an equal number of
publishers and writers have been convicted, jailed or fined, or served with a
summons by one of the various tribunals now exercising jurisdiction over the
press. Six months ago, authority over the press was by legislation, in the
hands of the press court, although other tribunals, including notably the
Revolutionary Courts and the Special Clerical Courts, were claiming an inherent
jurisdiction and getting away with it.
13. In March 2000, after the elections for the
sixth Majilis, the lame duck fifth Majilis passed press law amendments which
gave the various tribunals, including the Press Court, sweeping jurisdiction
and extraordinary procedural freedom that did away with even the limited
guarantees of fair trial provided for in the old press law. The result is a
truly draconian regime that has led to the silencing of the reformist press. In
a matter of a few days in late April 2000, 14 journals were closed by order of
the judiciary, apparently without hearings. The press court seems to have
become simply another control agency dedicated to the suppression of free
expression rather than the protection of that right. It now sometimes acts even
in the absence of complaints. One journal noted that in principle what people
expect is that the accused first be summoned to the court, charged with
specific crimes, and defended by a lawyer, and that the court would only then
deliver its verdict.
14. In August 2000, the new sixth Majilis made
an effort to undo the damage by preparing a number of amendments, but these
were taken off the Majilis agenda following an apparently unprecedented
intervention by the Supreme Leader. A few Majilis deputies objected, and the
chair of the Majilis Culture Commission tendered his resignation, declaring it
was his religious duty to defend the Majilis. Extrajudicial groups of
demonstrators camped outside the Majilis in an apparent attempt at
intimidation, and the state broadcaster, Iran Broadcasting, a noted proponent
of the conservative view, came under fire for spreading negative propaganda,
which led to a brawl on the floor of the Majilis.
15. There does seem to be a feeling in some
quarters that the pendulum may have swung too far, and there is evidence that
some of the closed papers will be allowed to reopen. In sum, things may be
changing for the better.
B. Student protests
16. In his report to the General Assembly a
year ago (see A/54/365, paras. 14-20) the Special Representative reported on
the student demonstrations of July 1999 in Tehran and Tabriz. It was clear that
extensive human rights violations had taken place at the University of Tehran
dormitories in the beatings of students by Iranian security forces and by
paramilitaries. Further human rights violations took place in the arrest of
students and non-students in the ensuing street demonstrations. In his report
to the Commission on Human Rights at its fifty-sixth session (E/CN.4/2000/35),
the Special Representative reported on the treatment of the arrested students
as well as members of the Iran Nation Party. Many facets of their detention
were in clear violation of international standards. Four students were
sentenced to death, but their sentences were subsequently commuted to various
terms of imprisonment. About two thirds of the 1,500 or so students initially detained
seem to have been released. Some of those have now testified to the harsh
treatment they received while in detention. One of the students has been
convicted of apostasy, about which the Special Representative has made
representations to the Government. To the Special Representative’s knowledge,
there is still no final accounting of all persons arrested in connection with
the July 1999 demonstrations.
17. In the case of those arrested in connection
with similar demonstrations in Tabriz, 21 persons, of whom 12 were students,
were sentenced to jail terms ranging from three months to nine years.
Reportedly as a result of the intervention of the Speaker of the Majilis, the
implementation of the sentences has been postponed. The Speaker has said that
the Majilis will be holding an inquiry into the Tabriz incident.
18. The trial of those who provoked the
demonstrations, that is, the instigators of the attack on the University of
Tehran dormitories, was much slower in coming. Charges were laid in February
2000 against 20 policemen and senior officers. A detailed account of the
conduct of the police and of the yet unnamed and uncharged paramilitaries came
out in the trial. The judge found that the incident had taken place on the
whole as charged by the students and that 34 of them should be compensated from
state funds but he then discharged all but two of the accused. That led to an
outcry from the students, who according to the press have launched an appeal.
There have now been calls for the Majilis to enact tougher controls on the
police in dealing with academic institutions.
19. Meanwhile, the first anniversary of the
July 1999 demonstrations prompted demonstrations in Tehran and in Tabriz and
the arrest of more students in both cities. In April and again in June 2000,
there were arrests of students.
20. A full accounting for the July 1999 raid on
the student dormitories, which had been promised by various leaders, remains
outstanding. The head of the judiciary repeated that commitment in the days
after the verdict in the trial of the police involved in the raid.
21. There is also an accounting to be made to
what appear to be the well-founded and widespread allegations of the torture of
student detainees and of the absence of a fair trial for those formally charged
before the Revolutionary Court (see paras. 53-56 below).
IV. Status of women
22. The situation of women in the Islamic
Republic of Iran has not noticeably changed in the period under review. In
fact, media attention appears to have significantly diminished, due perhaps in
part to the suppression of the reformist press during the period.
23. In the February 2000 Majilis elections, 424
women were candidates. A number of them were reported in the press as calling
for action, making such statements as “Our society and women must be freed from
cultural and social burdens, such as imposed marriages and inequalities in
Islamic laws” and “Until now, women’s rights and sensitivities have been
derided in the Islamic Republic of Iran and it is now our role and obligation
to restore those rights”. Nine women were elected, one of whom was subsequently
elected to the six-member Majilis Managing Committee.
24. According to press accounts, in July 2000
Tehran City Council received a report declaring that prostitution and drug
abuse were widespread among the youth of Tehran. The average age of prostitutes
had fallen from 27 to 20 a few years ago. Some 90 per cent of the girls who ran
away from home fell into prostitution. The principal cause of prostitution was
said to be economic hardship and social alienation.
25. There continue to be calls for more
attention to the condition of women through, for example, the election of women
to one third of the Majilis seats and the creation of special institutions as
distinct from advisory boards to promote women’s affairs. Frequent mention is
made of the access that women now have to education up to the highest level.
Less frequently, mention is made of the fact that many women cannot find
employment, usually due to patriarchal attitudes in the family and workplace.
Women currently make up just 14 per cent of the workforce.
26. During the period under review, the first
woman was appointed as the governor of a district; a fatwa was issued authorizing women to lead members of the same sex
in prayers.
27. Attention is beginning to be paid in the
Islamic Republic of Iran to the deleterious effect of the chador. It was recently targeted by the President of a Women’s
University as the cause of increasing osteoporosis among women.
28. In January and again in February 2000,
there were large demonstrations by students of the pilot programme, women-only
Fatimeh Medical University, demanding the dismissal of the Chancellor and the
Board and an improvement in academic standards.
29. Situations sometimes come to the attention
of the Special Representative which, despite their probable infrequency, do in
his view call out for urgent action by the Government, such as a recent story
in Resalat on 4 July 2000 reporting
the statement by an adviser to the Ministry of Health that consent for medical
treatment given by a single mother, even for emergency surgery, does not meet
the requirements of Iranian law. Reportedly, 15 per cent of Iranian households
are now headed by a mother as a single parent. The Special Representative urges
the Government to respond to this situation promptly in order to head off any
denials of access to health care.
30. On the topic of violence against women, the
Human Development Report of Iran, 1999,
declares that an age-old culture of male domination, coercion and violence
against women, generally regarded as chastisement, is mostly taken for granted
by society. The existence of discriminatory laws and the ambiguity of other
laws compound that attitude and make women vulnerable to violence, particularly
domestic violence. It should therefore come as no surprise that apart from a
few measures applied in extreme cases and some reasonably effective programmes
designed to identify the cultural, social and legal roots of violence against
women, no notable action has been taken to change prevailing attitudes or
reform the pertinent laws and regulations.
31. That reform of some of the most egregious
examples of discrimination is politically conceivable came in mid-August 2000,
when the Majilis voted by more than a two-thirds majority to consider a bill
that, in the absence of a court order, would likely raise the age of marriage
to 14 for girls and 17 for boys. According to the press, in May 2000 an adviser
on women’s affairs had said that there were 52,000 married girl students
between the ages of 10 and 14 and 617,000 between 15 and 19. According to the
same report, most married girls drop out of school early in their marriage.
V. Legal subjects
A. Reform of the judicial system
32. In his report to the Commission on Human
Rights (see E/CN.4/2000/35, para. 37), the Special Representative noted the
candid comments of the new head of the judiciary, Ayatollah Shahroudi, on the
condition of the Iranian judicial system. His call for reform seemed to be
widely welcomed. That theme has been reiterated on a number of occasions in the
period under review. However, there have been few concrete proposals for
substantive change.
33. In June 2000, Ayatollah Shahroudi was
quoted as saying that judicial development does not mean accepting models and
findings of judicial systems in the world today that are labelled as human
rights. At the end of July 2000, he declared that the judiciary system needed
to address poverty, discrimination and corruption in the country.
34. One of the problems faced by the Iranian
judicial system in recent years has been the negative consequences of a merging
of the procuracy into the judiciary. It was announced in June 2000 that a
separate procuracy would be re-established as of March 2001. At a meeting in
June 2000 of the Tehran Justice Department, the head of the Department
reportedly called for a new criminal code covering all aspects of the criminal
law system. After that, the structure of public and revolutionary courts would
have to be revisited.
35. There remain shadows over the process of
reform, one of them being the role of extrajudicial groups. In December 1999,
Ayatollah Shahroudi was quoted in the Iranian press as declaring that the
Basiji had legal authority to prevent crimes and preserve the security of the
country. Such a legitimation of a group that has been in the forefront of the
violent suppression of peaceful public demonstrations can only run counter to
the evolution of the rule of law. Sooner or later, in the name of civil society
the Islamic Republic of Iran will have to address the proliferation of
tribunals and law enforcement agencies that often compete in zealotry and
provide a labyrinth for private citizens to traverse in their daily lives. The
Government at least is aware of the problem. The Minister of the Interior said
recently that no one has the right to hold a demonstration without a permit,
even in support of religion or religious beliefs.
36. The Special Representative wishes to recall
General Assembly resolution 54/163 on human rights in the administration of
justice, in which the Assembly urges a number of relevant measures upon
Governments.
B. Rules of fair trial and related matters
37. In his report to the Commission on Human
Rights (see E/CN.4/2000/35, paras. 34 and 35) the Special Representative set
out his understanding of the elements of a fair trial. By all accounts, these
rules continue to be ignored by the judiciary in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
38. One of the prominent cases that came to
light during the period under review was the treatment by the courts of the
students and others arrested in connection with the demonstration of 5 July
1999. Quite apart from their treatment in pre-trial detention, they were tried
in a closed court without benefit of counsel.
39. The trial of Jews and Muslims in Shiraz
came to a head in the period under review, with the conviction of 12 persons,
who received sentences from 2 to 13 years, and the acquittal of 5 others. There
were some extraordinary twists in this prolonged and agonizing process for the
Jewish accused and their families. It is quite clear that despite the
statements of Iranian representatives to the contrary and indeed the lively defence
mounted by one of the defence counsel parties, those trials were in no way
fair. A fuller description of the deficiencies is set out in annex I.
40. There was also the case of the police
general sentenced to eight months in jail for misconduct in the treatment of
the arrested Tehran mayor and deputy mayors several years ago. The convicted
general has at last report not yet seen the inside of a jail even though the
findings of the military court were upheld on appeal.
41. Illegal detentions and persons simply gone
missing in the justice system have begun to attract public attention. The
Islamic Human Rights Commission is now publicizing its so far unsuccessful
efforts to trace such persons.
42. In a freedom of the press case reported in
the press in June 2000, a newspaper was suspended prior to a court hearing on
the grounds that publishing the objections of two detained journalists about
the food and hygiene conditions in jail, even though it was followed by the
printing of a denial by officials, was a basis for closing down the newspaper
for disparaging Islam and the religious elements of the Islamic revolution.
C. Independent Bar Association
43. Not much has been heard from the
Independent Bar Association (IBA) in the period under review despite the
turmoil regarding freedom of press and the conduct of the courts, particularly
with regard to the rights of fair trial.
44. The Special Representative notes that the
Union of Iranian Journalists met with the Speaker of the Majilis to express its
concern about the treatment of journalists by the courts, and he wonders why
IBA apparently did not take similar action over the detention of three of its
members, Mehrangiz Kar, Shirin Ebadi and Mohsen Rohami. The detention of
lawyers, even for a limited period, is clearly an act of intimidation towards
both the lawyers concerned and the bar as a whole. The Special Representative
recalls that several years ago, after its first Council election, IBA expressed
itself clearly and publicly on the matter of law reform, and wonders why it has
been apparently silent on the important current issue of the detention of
lawyers.
45. The Special Representative has recently had
brought to his attention an extract from an issue of the Official Journal of the Islamic Republic of Iran (No. 15985 of 26
November 1998), which records Majilis approval of a provision giving the
judiciary the power to confirm the competency of law graduates to receive a
license as a lawyer. As the bar cannot be beholden to the judiciary, that
provision clearly offends international standards for the independence of the
bar, as well as the reputation of the 90-year-old Iranian institution.
46. Finally, the Special Representative notes
Commission on Human Rights resolution 2000/42, in which the Commission noted
the various international instruments relevant to the independence of the bar.
D. Prisons
47. The Iranian prison system is under severe
strain. According to press reports of statements in the period under review by
the Director General and Deputy Director General of the Prisons Organization,
as well as a former Deputy Prosecutor General, some 185,000 persons are
currently in jail, perhaps two thirds of them for drug-related offences, and
prison camps are being opened at the rate of five a year. In July 2000, an
Iranian newspaper was reported as saying that a prison population of 2.5 per
1,000 was a catastrophe for a society which is dedicated to its values.
48. The Special Representative notes that apart
from building new prisons, the only other measure is to reduce the intake of
prisoners. One move to that end is impending legislation to place women and
children on probation rather than having them serve time in jail.
E. Executions
49. Executions continued at a reportedly high rate
in the period under review. According to information received by the Special
Representative based on press reports, some 130 executions occurred from
January to the end of July 2000, including the execution of a woman in front of
her two children. Eleven executions were held in public. In three other cases,
individuals sentenced to death were pardoned from execution by the family of
the victim at the execution site. The Special Representative finds it hopeful
that in March 2000, a Ministry of Justice spokesman was quoted as saying that
some of the hangings envisaged in Iranian laws were not necessary from a
religious point of view and the system could replace them with other sentences.
50. The Special Representative notes that a
public debate about the death penalty got under way in 1999 before strong
official opposition extinguished it. In August 2000, the Supreme Court
confirmed the sentence of three and a half years in prison for the
editor-in-chief who had published the story that had set off the debate. He was
convicted of “hurting Islam”.
51. The Special Representative notes that the
Commission on Human Rights has regularly called upon States in which the death
penalty has not been abolished to comply with their obligations in this regard
under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and to keep in
mind the safeguards and guarantees set out in certain Commission on Human
Rights resolutions, such as Commission resolution 2000/31.
52. The Special Representative wishes to
reiterate that the statistics mentioned above are drawn from press accounts,
with all the margin of error that implies. He calls upon the Government once
again to make official figures publicly available.
F. Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment
Torture
53. That torture continues in the Islamic Republic of Iran —
and in its most primitive form — was confirmed in the period under review by
the personal testimony of students and others arrested in the aftermath of the
July 1999 demonstrations and subsequently released, or on the basis of letters
from convicted students apparently smuggled out of prison, some of which have
been published in the Iranian press. They make shocking reading. The Special
Representative has sent to the Government the details of some of the
allegations, with a request for comments. The allegations focus mostly on
treatment in Towheed prison, an institution reportedly belonging to the
so-called Joint Committee Against Subversion, that is to say, it is outside the
official prisons organization. There have been calls for the head of the
judiciary to address seriously the issue of torture, particularly in such
institutions of doubtful legitimacy as Towheed. One of the officials of the
prison, when questioned, reportedly told a prisoner that torture was carried
out in the prison on the verdict of the judge and the court, and was therefore
legal.
54. It has now been several years since it
began to be acknowledged that torture did exist in the Islamic Republic of
Iran, notwithstanding article 38 of the Constitution. In 1999, what is believed
to have been the first indictment for torture was brought against a police
general and 10 colleagues. All were acquitted of torture but convicted of
mistreatment of prisoners.
55. No information has come to the Special
Representative’s attention suggesting the Government is as yet addressing this
blight on the international reputation of the country and the Government. The
Special Representative notes Commission on Human Rights resolution 2000/43 on
the subject of torture; in which, among many provisions, the Commission calls
upon all Governments to implement fully the prohibition of torture, to address
the need for investigation and documentation as set out in the principles
annexed to the resolution, and to address the issue of impunity for those
responsible.
56. The Special Representative urges the
Government to comply in full with the above-mentioned Commission resolution.
Stoning
and amputation
57. Stoning, surely a barbaric punishment, appears finally to be
declining in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Only one such sentence came to the
attention of the Special Representative in the period under review and that was
apparently overturned on review. In March 2000, the press quoted the Ministry
of Justice spokesperson as stating that stoning may not be in the country’s
interest, and that the head of the judiciary believes that it should avoid acts
which could insult and taint the country’s image.
58. Amputations appear to continue unabated.
VI. Murders
and disappearances of intellectuals and political dissidents
59. One of several issues that appears to have
severely damaged confidence in public security and in the Government as well has
been the string of murders and disappearances of intellectuals and dissident
political figures during about three months in late 1998 and early 1999, which
became known as the chain or serial murders, the implication being that they
were all related. By some reports, the chain stretches much further back, as an
explanation of earlier suspicious events, such as the murder of three Christian
clergy in 1994. Some suggest that it also covers mysterious deaths and
incidents that have occurred since early 1999, including most recently the
murder of the doctor known as the father of vasectomy in the Islamic Republic
of Iran.
60. The central very tragic cases in this
matter, the murders of Daryoush and Parvaneh Forouhar, were discussed in the
Special Representative’s last report to the General Assembly (see A/54/365,
paras. 39-43). By all accounts, their memory remains very much alive for many
Iranians inside and out of the country.
61. The investigation of these cases has been
appallingly slow. At one time, 10 persons were arrested, 9 of whom were
subsequently released on bail. It seems that the cases have not been pursued.
The sixth Majilis has set up its own Commission to look into the murders.
Another investigation is under way, reportedly under the direct management of
the President and the head of the judiciary. Since the Special Representative’s
last report on the subject, some fairly certain details as well as much
speculation has been placed in public debate. Yet, some 20 months after these
horrendous acts took place, no clear progress has been made in bringing the
perpetrators or their masterminds to justice.
62. In March 2000, Saeed Hajjarian, a newspaper
editor, adviser to the President and Tehran City Councillor, escaped an
assassination attempt that was subsequently linked to other recent murders. In
May 2000, a revolutionary court sentenced the man alleged to have shot
Hajjarian to 15 years and his accomplices to shorter sentences. This event was
accompanied by more allegations of torture, and complaints concerning the
court’s successful efforts to prevent public exposure of the masterminds.
VII. Status of minorities
A. Kurds
63. Iranian Kurds have traditionally lived in
the north-west of the country. They define “Kurdistan” as including all or
parts of the provinces of Kermanshah, Iyllam, West Azerberijan and Kurdistan
proper. The Kurdish population in this area is said to be in the order of eight
million, with perhaps another two million in other provinces, such as Khorasan,
where Kurds had been forcibly resettled in earlier centuries.
64. The Kurdish language is an autonomous
language of the Indo-European group. The vast majority of the Kurds are
Muslims, about 75 per cent Sunni and 25 per cent Shiite.
65. There has been a long history of tension
between the Iranian Kurds and Tehran. Relations since the Islamic Revolution
have been marked by one short period of unsuccessful negotiations in 1979-1980.
Scholars lay blame for the failure on both sides. They note the areas of mixed
ethnicity that the Kurds included in their claim, as well as the fact that
there was a reference to the various ethnic minorities in the draft
constitution, and that there was subsequently a proposal for a clause
protecting Sunni religious practices.
66. Following the breakdown of negotiations,
prolonged periods of violence ensued both in the Islamic Republic of Iran and
abroad. Guerrilla warfare has continued in spurts, with civilian Kurds
suffering the most in terms of direct casualties as well as economic
dislocation. While military action in Kurdistan appears to be at a low ebb at
present, violence continues on the part of both the law enforcement agencies
and armed Kurdish activists.
67. Iranian Kurdistan is by all accounts a
fertile area and should be prosperous. In fact, according to the Human Development Report of Iran, 1999,
the four provinces mentioned rank in the lower half of the provincial scale by
the human development index; two of them, West Azerbaijan and Kurdistan, being
among the very lowest. This now seems to be recognized by the Government. In
the course of a recent visit to Kurdistan, the President referred to widespread
poverty and unemployment, and declared that more funds would be made available
for development in the area. The Special Representative has been informed that
the primary demand of the Kurdish people is to be recognized as Kurds, which
implies full recognition of their cultural rights, including the registration
of Kurdish names. A major complaint is over the obstacles in the way of Sunni places
of worship.
B. Azeris
68. While reliable demographic statistics are
hard to come by in the Islamic Republic of Iran, it seems that the Azeris are
the largest minority in the country, with estimates of their numbers reaching as
high as 25 per cent of the 60 million total population. The Azeri language
belongs to the Turkic language group and is thus unrelated to Farsi. In the
Islamic Republic of Iran, the Azeris have traditionally lived in the
north-west, where in many places they mixed with Kurds and Armenians. That
relationship would seem to have been traditionally tempestuous. Today, Azeris
are also found in most other parts of the Islamic Republic of Iran, with
reportedly as many as a million in Tehran. Many Azeris have been absorbed into
mainstream Persian society. The Azeris are principally Shiite. The Qajar
dynasty of Iran was of Azeri stock, as indeed are reportedly many of today’s
Iranian elites.
69. For some time, there has been a demand by
some Azeris for greater cultural autonomy. They speak of a national and
cultural identity. The principal complaint against Tehran is that Azeris have
been denied cultural recognition, in particular the exercise of basic cultural
rights as set out in article 26 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights.
70. The arrest of Mahmudali Chehregani, a
lecturer at the University of Tabriz and a prominent Azeri activist, has drawn
attention to the Azeri cause. Dr. Chehregani has previously demanded for the
community the cultural autonomy rights provided for in article 15 of the
Constitution. He had been elected to the fifth Majilis but had been
disqualified, reportedly because of his campaign for the exercise of cultural
rights by the Azeris. Following a large demonstration in April 1996, during
which 600 persons were reportedly detained, Dr. Chehregani and some followers
were arrested. It is alleged that Dr. Chehregani’s subsequent arrest in
December 1999 was to prevent him from being nominated for the sixth Majilis.
The Special Representative has made enquiries of the Government in this matter.
C. Religious minorities: Sunnis and Baha’is
Sunnis
71. The Special Representative has written in
the past of the sense of injustice felt by many Sunnis in the Islamic Republic
of Iran over treatment they view as discriminatory. One of the principle
complaints has been the official and unofficial obstacles put in the way of
building or rebuilding Sunni mosques. The example most often raised is Tehran
itself, where a reported one million Sunnis have no mosque of their own. This
matter was raised in the Majilis in June 1999; there is no information as to
what if any reply was made by the Government. The Special Representative has
also received several complaints about transmigration policies carried out with
the acquiescence of the Government, under which large number of Shiites are
settled in predominantly Sunni areas of the country with the apparent objective
of reducing the ethnic Sunnis to a minority in their homelands.
Baha’is
72. The concern about the human rights
situation of the Baha’is remains on the agenda of the Special Representative,
with reports on situations of discrimination and persecution. The Baha’i
community continues to experience discrimination in areas of, inter alia,
education, employment, travel, housing and the enjoyment of cultural
activities.
73. Eleven Baha’is are imprisoned in the
Islamic Republic of Iran, four of whom are subject to the death sentence (see
annex II). The Special Representative received a letter dated 25 February 2000
from the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United
Nations Office at Geneva, stating that the spokesmen of the judiciary had
denied confirmation of the death sentences against Hidayat Kashifi Najafabadi
and Sirus Dhabihi-Muqaddam. The Special Representative has received conflicting
information as to the current status of this matter.
74. Acts of intimidation carried out in order
to prevent Baha’is from participating in religious gatherings or educational
activities have also been reported. According to information reaching the
Special Representative, there seems to have been an increase in the number of
short-term arrests and “suspended sentences”, to be applied only if the accused
participate again in those gatherings.
75. A welcome development was the elimination
of questions regarding the religion of spouses at the time of the registration
of a marriage. According to information submitted by the Permanent
Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at
Geneva, the Registration Department has issued a circular in this regard. This
opens up the possibility of registering Baha’i marriages, a development which
will have positive implications for the rights of Baha’i women and children,
who have until now been exposed to charges of prostitution and denied the right
to inherit. There is now the prospect that university entrance will be the next
sector in which religious discrimination of this nature will be removed.
76. The Special Representative wishes to
reiterate his appeal to the Government of the Islamic Republic to implement his
outstanding recommendations (see A/53/423, para. 45) as well as those of the
Special Rapporteur on religious intolerance (see E/CN.4/1996/95/Add.2).
D. Minorities policy
77. The basic international statement of the
rights of a minority is contained in article 27 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, which establishes the rights of ethnic, religious
linguistic minorities to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practice their
own religion or to use their own language (for a discussion of the term
“minority”, see E/CN.4/1998/59, paras. 32-35). In addition, in its general
comments on the guarantee of equality in article 26 of the Covenant, the Human
Rights Committee has stated that in a State in which the general conditions of
a certain part of the population prevent or impair their enjoyment of human
rights, that State should take specific action to correct those conditions.
Thus, a State is enjoined to protect certain rights and to assist disadvantaged
groups in certain circumstances. A proactive policy is clearly required to
discharge those international responsibilities. In the same context, certain
international best practices are emerging, such as the creation of an ombudsman
to monitor the protection of minority rights (for a more detailed discussion of
international and Iranian norms, see E/CN.4/1999/32, annex II).
78. In the Special Representative’s view, the
articulation of a minorities policy in the Islamic Republic of Iran is long
overdue. Without going over the uneasy and sometimes violent relationships that
most minorities have had with the central Government dating from the nineteenth
century, it is self-evident today that certain minorities are among the poorest
and most disadvantaged peoples in the country. It is also clear that most
minorities are not enjoying the rights set out in article 27 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The history of such
treatment can perhaps be partly attributed to strategic circumstances but that
cannot today stand as a justification for disregarding the rights clearly
articulated in article 27 of the Covenant, as well as indeed to a limited
extent in the Iranian Constitution itself.
79. There is talk in the Islamic Republic of
Iran today of the rights of citizenship. It was following a decision of the
Expediency Council to endorse such a concept that the Registration Department
abolished the requirement for the declaration on religion on application to
register a marriage. The concept was described in a letter from the Permanent
Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations as applying
“especially” to people whose religions are not among the religions recognized
by the Constitution. This would, therefore, seem to apply primarily to the
Baha’is. As a concept however, the rights of citizenship should be equally
applicable to groups seeking to benefit from provisions of the Constitution,
such as article 15 on the right to the use of regional and tribal languages.
VIII. Other important matters
A. Economic, social and cultural rights
Economic
conditions of workers
80. A number of conditions, particularly those
affecting workers, have grown sharply worse recently. The combination of
stagnation in some industrial sectors, the continuing rise in inflation and the
growing unemployment rate have all aggravated the condition of workers.
According to a press report, a senior official of the Health Ministry stated
that 12 million persons now live below the poverty line and 20 per cent of the
population controls 80 per cent of the wealth, and that by the end of 2010
another 15 million persons will have migrated from the countryside to the
cities.
81. A senior official in the Labour Ministry
informed the press in July 2000 that 720,000 workers are entering the job
market annually, 2,800,000 are currently looking for work and the current
unemployment rate is 16.2 per cent. In the first two months of 2000, only
20,000 of the required 80,000 new jobs were generated.
82. Research brought to the attention of the
Special Representative records 244 cases of labour unrest in the period May 1999
to April 2000; 46 per cent of those cases were protests about unpaid wages, in
some cases for as long as 24 months, while the second most frequent reason for
labour unrest was concern for job security. It is reported that over 400
factories have been closed in recent years and that the textile sector alone is
facing the loss of 500,000 jobs, the result primarily of the lack of
reinvestment in an ageing industry.
83. Certain government measures are said to be
aggravating the suffering of workers, including changes in eligibility for
assistance by the social service organization and hotly debated legislation now
in effect which exempts from the application of the Labour Act all workshops
and businesses with five employees or less. The prospect of this legislation
being adopted was the subject of widespread worker demonstrations over the past
18 months and was opposed by the Ministry of Labour. It is said to affect 2.8
million workers.
84. The deteriorating situation of Iranian
workers is receiving growing recognition in the Iranian press and elsewhere.
The Human Development Report of Iran,
1999, discusses the conditions, including government policies, that have
led to the rising rate of unemployment. It calls for policies to prevent
further deterioration in people’s living standards. However, nothing has come
to the attention of the Special Representative suggesting that the Government
itself attaches priority to tackling the conditions of workers other than the
urgent attention that is being called for by all sides to address the economic
problems facing the country. The human rights of workers are at stake.
Social
conditions
85. The period under review has been marked by
significant social unrest. In June 2000, the press carried a report that some
4,000 women burned tyres and blocked a road in Islamshahr to protest poor
living conditions, including lack of water, gas and electricity. In early July
2000, there were press reports of violent demonstrations in Abadan, objecting
to the salinity of local drinking water. The Special Representative has
received reports of rallies that occasionally turned violent in 10 or 12 other
cities. In early July 2000, in connection with student rallies to mark the July
1999 student demonstrations, a gathering that the press reported consisted of
out-of-work youth, women and old men swelled to an angry mob of several
thousand who clashed with police and Islamic vigilantes in several locations in
Tehran.
Development
and human rights
86. In the Islamic Republic of Iran, the areas
of highest development are in general located in the central regions of the
country. Those with the lowest tend to be towards the frontiers of the country,
where the minority peoples, that is non-Persians, traditionally and to a
significant degree still live. According to the Human Development Report of Iran, 1999, the three provinces at the
bottom of the human development index are Kohgilooye and Boyer-Ahmad,
Kurdestan, and Sistan and Baluchistan, three provinces with a high percentage
of minority peoples. It should not be surprising that according to the same
source, these three provinces rank at or near the bottom in terms of adult
literacy, life expectancy, infant mortality, education, consumption
expenditure, the gender empowerment index and the human poverty index. The
correlation between underdevelopment and minority peoples is clearly recognized
by economic planners but the Special Representative is not persuaded that the
Government as a whole understands the importance of the problem and its connection
with the enjoyment of human rights.
B. Democracy
87. The Special Representative is mindful of
the fact that “democracy” is a term that is difficult to define in normative
terms. Certainly it includes free and fair elections. A useful statement of
what constitutes free and fair elections is the Declaration on the subject by
the Inter-Parliamentary Council dated 26 March 1994.
88. The elections for the sixth Majilis were
held in February 2000. The nomination process was marred by a sharp exchange
between the Interior Ministry on the one hand and the Guardian Council on the
other as to the role of the Council in the vetting of candidates. The Council
disqualified over 600 candidates, most without explanation. The widely held
view was that many candidates were disqualified because they were viewed as
reformists, including all 12 members of the Freedom Party, an unregistered but
tolerated political grouping that has been trying for years without success to
be accepted as a recognized player in the political process.
89. Statements and estimates of the voter
turnover ranged from 57 per cent to 83 per cent. The press carried a number of
stories about voting irregularities.
90. The Iran Nation Party, another unregistered
political grouping and the inheritor of the mantel of Mohammed Musaddiq as well
as the political home of the murdered Daryoush Forouhar, suffered severely
during the period under review — three of their leaders, Bahram Namazi, Khosrow
Sayef and Farzin Mokhber, were sentenced to 13 to 15 years in prison for
“promoting anti-regime propaganda” and “activities against the internal
security of the Islamic Republic”. The charges had arisen out of the
participation of the accused in the second phase of the student demonstration
in July 1999.
91. The Guardian Council’s subsequent action of
annulling the results in a number of electoral divisions without presenting
evidence to support their action was sharply condemned by some officials.
According to the press, the winners in two of those divisions were pro-reform
Sunni personalities. The same response greeted the Council’s action in ordering
a recount in a number of constituencies, particularly Tehran itself, despite
the fact that the Interior Ministry, which has legislated responsibility for
the supervision of elections, had found no reason to do so.
92. The new Majilis convened in late May 2000,
but much of its time up to early August 2000 was taken up with procedural
matters. In June 2000, the major groupings among those members generally
described as reformists declared their legislative priorities to be the reform
of the press and electoral laws, the enactment of authority for the creation of
private radio and television stations, and the enactment of a guarantee that
those charged with political offences would have the right to trial by jury.
Meanwhile, the view began to be heard, mainly from conservative quarters, that
the Majilis should concentrate on economic issues, including inflation and
unemployment. In late July 2000, a controversy broke out between the Majilis
and the judiciary as to their respective authority to carry out investigations.
The insistence of the judiciary on its exclusive jurisdiction over a recent
incident provoked charges that the exercise of rights of the Majilis, as set
out in the Constitution, was being impeded by the non-cooperation of the
judiciary reflecting the sensitivity of the system to the activism of the new
Majilis in trying to investigate the complaints it is receiving from many
quarters.
93. At the end of July 2000, the President was
reported by the press as declaring that the Islamic Republic of Iran accepts
democracy in principle but that it must be based on a respect for the values
and goals of Islam. The following day, a leading reform member of the Majilis
was quoted in the press as declaring that in the Islamic Republic of Iran,
being a majority does not necessarily bring power. A week later, the Supreme
Leader, in what was described as an unprecedented move, declared that the press
reform legislation being finalized by the Majilis was not to proceed.
94. In the Special Representative’s view, it is
clear that while the February election of the sixth Majilis had certain flaws,
it was nevertheless another important step on the road to accountable democratic
governance. Since then and despite efforts to confine the agenda of the Majilis
to economic matters and most importantly the intervention of the Supreme Leader
to block the press reform bill in the Majilis, that body has taken a
significant step in re-establishing its own human rights committee and is
pressing ahead with several important legislative initiatives to improve the
human rights situation in several key areas.
C. Guardian Council
95. On the occasion of the twentieth
anniversary of the Guardian Council in July 2000, the Supreme Leader met the
members of the Council, and in a public statement emphasized the importance of
the Council in protecting the form and conduct of the Islamic system through
checking conformity of laws with Islam and the Constitution. He stated that the
Council had the duty to prevent the infiltration of impure elements into the
pillars of the system.
96. The Special Representative sees many
difficulties with the actual operation of the Council. One is its trespass into
the election process, where its refusal to approve certain candidates and its
annulling of the results in certain electoral divisions is widely viewed as an
attempt to block the election of persons holding certain political views,
including a number usually described as reformist as well as members of the
Freedom Party. The Council’s refusal or reluctance to issue clear, legally
based reasons for such action has provided significant credibility to the
charges brought against it.
97. A second problem as seen by the Special
Representative is that some of the members are noted for the intolerant
attitudes they occasionally express. One member of the Council is in effective
control of an extrajudicial organization, Ansar-i-Hezbollah, noted for its involvement
in a wide variety of violent, terrorist-like activities against student and
other elements in Iranian society, who are seen by this self-appointed band as
threats to the nation’s virtue. The same person was quoted in the press in
early August 2000 as saying that Islam could not be saved with liberation and
tolerance, and declaring that the closure of the newspapers was the best thing
the judiciary had done since the revolution.
98. In short, without calling for the
disbandment of the Council as it operates at present, the Special
Representative believes it to be a major obstacle to the further development of
democracy in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
D. Islamic Human Rights Commission
99. Little information about the work of the
Islamic Human Rights Commission has come to the attention of the Special
Representative in the period under review. However, in an important interview
with the press at the beginning of April 2000, the Secretary of the Commission
said it had now been confirmed that illegal detention centres continued to
exist in the Islamic Republic of Iran. In addition, the Commission is
reportedly trying to investigate illegal detentions and persons gone missing in
the justice system (see para. 41 above).
100. Internationally, there have been important
developments. The research-oriented International Council on Human Rights
Policy has recently published a report incorporating several case studies of
national human rights institutions and the conclusions to be drawn from them.
Among the most important are the need to acquire social legitimacy, the need to
become proactive and programme-oriented rather than strictly complaints-led,
and the need to emphasize accessibility not only in the widespread location of
offices but also in simplified procedures and the offering of services in
minority languages. The report contains a number of detailed recommendations,
all of which would seem to be relevant to the Commission. They provide an
excellent series of targets for the Commission.
101. Finally, the Special Representative notes
Commission on Human Rights resolution 2000/76, in which among other things the
Commission reaffirms the importance of developing national institutions that
are in conformity with the relevant principles adopted by the General Assembly
in 1993.
IX. Correspondence with the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran
102. For correspondence between the Special
Representative and the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, please see
annex III.
X. Conclusions
103. The period under review has been disastrous
for the freedom of the press, a freedom that developed in large part to
facilitate the implementation of government accountability. This freedom is an
integral component of a civil society. The Special Representative urges the
three branches of the Iranian Government to work together to accomplish this
vital goal.
104. The student demonstrations of July 1999 were
a signal event in the life of the Islamic Republic of Iran. It should have been
an occasion to celebrate the exercise in freedom of expression. The judiciary
moved quickly against the student leaders, but apart from an unsatisfactory
trial against certain police officers has apparently done nothing to bring the
extrajudicial vigilantes to justice. In Tabriz as well, students have paid a
heavy price for exercising their right of expression. The Special
Representative calls on the Government to accelerate its efforts to bring the
provocateurs in both cases to trial.
105. The major systemic impediments to the full
enjoyment by women of their human rights have not yet been addressed. The
Special Representative calls on the Government to do so.
106. The legal system requires urgent attention.
To begin with, the Special Representative calls on the judiciary to accelerate
the introduction of the reform programme that was promised a year ago when the
head of the judiciary took office. The Independent Bar Association has failed
to meet the expectations that were held out for it when its first elected
council came into office. IBA is not yet living up to its name or the
international guidelines for bar associations. The Special Representative urges
the Government, perhaps the Majilis, to study the re-establishment of the Bar
Association to meet the commitments of the President to the rule of law, in
particular to a truly independent bar.
107. The number of executions continues to be
high. The Special Representative urges the Government to comply with existing
international standards in this respect.
108. It is now generally and publicly acknowledged
that torture exists in the Islamic Republic of Iran and that it is certainly
not an isolated phenomenon. The Special Representative urges the Government as
a whole to commit itself to uphold the ban on torture that appears in the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the various international
norms in that regard.
109. The murders and disappearances of
intellectuals and dissident politicians seem no nearer to being solved, which
has given credibility to the widely held view that an open enquiry or trial
would lead to persons in high places. The Special Representative calls on the
Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, in the fulfilment of the commitment
to the protection of human rights as well as its specific undertaking in the
case, to prosecute as soon as possible those concerned, in open court and
without concern as to where the evidence may lead.
110. The rights of minorities, both ethnic and
religious, remain another area largely neglected by the Government. The Special
Representative urges the Government to:
(a) Address
the concerns of the Sunnis with regard to the building and/or refurbishment of
dedicated Sunni mosques;
(b) Address
the concerns of the Baha’is and certain Christian groups with new confidence-building
measures, following upon the recent relaxation of marriage registration
requirements, so as to fully and expeditiously implement the “rights of
citizenship” policy approved by the Expediency Council;
(c) Extend
to all religious and ethnic minority groups the cultural rights articulated in
the Constitution.
111. With regard to the fuller enjoyment of civil
and political rights as well as economic, social and cultural rights, the
Special Representative believes it imperative that the Government address the
socio-economic problems that are causing so much distress to the poor and the
disadvantaged.
112. The Islamic Republic of Iran continues to
make progress towards democracy, but sooner or later the arbitrary,
untransparent and perhaps even capricious conduct of the Guardian Council must
be addressed. As it stands now, it is an obstacle to making the Government of
the Islamic Republic of Iran more accountable to the Iranian people.
113. Finally, the Special Representative notes
with regret that he continues to be unable to visit the Islamic Republic of
Iran. He calls on the Government to return to full cooperation with the
Commission on Human Rights in this regard.
Annex I
Denial of fair trial and related rights
Case
of Iranian Jews and Moslems in Shiraz
A. Arbitrary arrest and extended detention
without charge
In violation of:
1. Iranian
laws:
• Article 32 of the Constitution;
• Article 32 of the Procedure of the Public and
Revolutionary Costs in Criminal Affairs (1999) (Criminal Procedure Code);
• Article 33 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
2. International
norms:
• Article 9 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights;
• Article 9.1 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
Accused held for nine months without judicial
arrest order or temporary detention orders. Thereafter, by temporary detention
orders but apparently not in accordance with law.
B. Indictment: failure to specify charges
under law
In violation of:
1. Iranian
laws:
• Article 32 of the Iranian Constitution;
• Article 132 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
2. International
norms:
• Article 92 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
Up to the date of judgement, no indictment known to
the Penal Code of the Islamic Republic of Iran was made.
C. Extra-legal confession
In violation of:
1. Iranian
laws:
• Article 30 of the Constitution;
• Article 129 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
2. International
norms:
• Article 14 (3) of the International Convention
Civil and Political Rights.
The accused were obliged to testify against
themselves without free access to lawyers or family members.
D. Right to counsel of choice and to
presence of counsel
In violation of:
1. Iranian
law:
• Article 35 of the Constitution;
• Article 128 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
2. International
norms:
• Article 14 (3) of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
Accused allowed to appoint counsel only after one
year in detention, and even then only the four “friendly” lawyers assigned by
the Court.
Accused denied right to have lawyers present during
meeting with judge, prosecutors and media.
Annex II
Information on the Situation of the Baha’is
The following is based on information
received by the Special Representative.
1. Of the three Baha’is arrested in Isfahan
for their involvement with the Baha’i Institute of Higher Education and who
received verdicts on 16 March 1999, only Ziaullah Mizapanah is still under
house arrest. Sina Hakiman, Farrad Khajeh and Habibullah Ferdosian have been
released.
2. Manuchehr Khulusi, a resident of Khurasan
who was reportedly arrested on 9 June 1999 and transferred to Mashhad with no
clear indication as to the charges brought against him, has also been released.
The status of the verdict against him, however, is unclear.
3. Baha’is remaining in Iranian prisons
include Bihnam Mithaqui and Kayvan Khalajabadi, arrested on 29 April 1989 for
“Zionist Baha’i activities” and sentenced to death; Musa Talibi, arrested on 7
June 1994, charged with apostasy and sentenced to death but now being processed
for commutation of sentence; Dhabihu’llah Maharami, arrested on 6 September
1995, charged with apostasy and sentenced to life, following commutation from a
death sentence by the Supreme Leader; Mansur Haddadan, arrested on 29 February
1996, charged with holding a children’s art exposition and sentenced to three
years in prison; Sirus Dhabihi-Muquaddam, Hidayat Kashifi Najafabadih and
Ata’u’llah Hamid Nasirizadih, arrested in October/November 1997, charged with
continuing “family life” meetings and sentenced to death in the case of the
first two and to 10-year imprisonment in the case of the third; Sonia Ahmadi
and Manuchechr Ziyai, arrested on 1 May 1998, charged with holding meetings for
youth and sentenced to three years’ imprisonment.
Annex III
Correspondence between the Special Representative and the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran, 1 January- 1 July 2000
1. On 18 February 2000, the Special
Representative addressed a letter to the Minister for Foreign Affairs
requesting information on the cases of Hidayat Kashifi Najafabadi and Sirus
Dhabihi-Muqaddam, reportedly arrested for their Baha’i activities and whose death
sentences had allegedly been confirmed. The Special Representative received a
letter dated 25 February 2000 from the Permanent Representative of the Islamic
Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva, stating that the
spokesmen of the judiciary had denied confirmation of the death sentences. By
another letter dated 27 March 2000, the Permanent Representative further
informed the Special Representative of the following:
(a) In
accordance with article 23 of the Constitution, no-one is subject to inquiry
simply for holding a certain belief in the Islamic Republic of Iran;
(b) Hidayat
Kashifi Najafabadi, Sirus Dhabihi-Muqaddam and Ataollah Hamed Nasirizadeh were
arrested in 1997 on charges of action against national security and spying and
sentenced to death by the primary court;
(c) The
Supreme Court rejected the case and sent it back to another primary court for
reconsideration;
(d) The
second primary court sentenced the first two persons to death and the third one
to 10 years’ imprisonment. The Supreme Court rejected the case because of some
deficiencies and sent it back for rectification.
(For an update
on the case, see main report, para. 73.)
2. A letter dated 30 March 2000 from the
Permanent Representative contained the following information in response to the
Special Representative’s letter dated 21 June 1999 drawing the urgent attention
of the Iranian authorities to the reported arrest in the Islamic Republic of
Iran of 13 persons, all said to be Iranian Jews, suspected of spying for Israel:
(a) In
accordance with relevant laws and regulations, accused persons enjoy the right
to be defended by a lawyer of their own choice. A competent court in Shiraz had
announced that no lawyer had been chosen. In the absence of any chosen lawyer,
the court would ask the Bar Association to appoint a lawyer;
(b) The
first hearing of the trial would begin on 13 April 2000.
3. On the same case, the Special
Representative sent a second letter to the Permanent Representative on 4 April
2000. In response to this communication, the Permanent Representative, by a
letter dated 4 July 2000, informed the Special Representative as follows:
“Referring
to your letter regarding the trial of a group of people (including Jews and
Muslims) on charges of espionage, I would like to inform you that they were
tried by the Court of Shiraz in the presence of lawyers of their own choice.”
“In
accordance with the relevant law, the Court acquitted five persons, due to
insufficient evidence and sentenced 12 persons to imprisonment due to clear
evidence and confession of the accused. The duration of detention would be
included in prison terms. However, the case is still open and the accused and
their lawyers have the right to appeal during 20 days after the issuance of the
verdicts.”
4. The Special Representative joined the
Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of
opinion and expression in sending an urgent letter to the Minister for Foreign
Affairs concerning the case of Latif Safari, Director of the banned daily Neshat, and Akbar Ganji, journalist for
the daily Sobh-e-Emrooz, imprisoned
on 26 April 2000. In the letter, a joint appeal was made to the Government to
ensure everyone’s right to freedom of opinion and expression. No response has
been received from the Government.
5. The Special Representative addressed two
urgent letters to the Minister for Foreign Affairs concerning a number of
Iranian citizens who were reportedly arrested and held in incommunicado
detention in relation to their participation in a conference in Berlin
organized by the Heinrich Boell Institute on 7 and 8 April 2000. In this
regard, on 11 May 2000, he joined the Special Rapporteurs on the promotion and
protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression and on violence
against women and on torture, as well as the Chairman-Rapporteur of the Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention, in an urgent appeal concerning two women’s
activists, Mehrangiz Kar and Shahla Lahiji, and a representative of the student
organization Office for Strengthening Unity, Ali Afshari. The three were
subsequently released.
6. In this context, the same signatories,
except for the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, sent a second
urgent appeal on 30 June 2000 regarding the cases of Ezzatollah Sahabi, a
70-year-old journalist, and Khalil Rostamkhani, a translator. No response has
been received from the Government. In both letters, while referring to
Commission on Human Rights resolution 1999/32 with regard to incommunicado
detention, the authors of the above-mentioned letters appealed to the
Government to ensure that the rights of the above-named persons to physical and
mental integrity, to be free from arbitrary arrest and detention and to freedom
of opinion and expression be protected.
7. A letter dated 24 March 2000 from the
Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations
Office at Geneva contained the following information in response to the Special
Representative’s letter dated 13 July 1999, written in conjunction with the
Special Rapporteur on the promotion of the right to freedom of opinion and
expression, concerning the student demonstrators who were reportedly attacked
by members of the armed forces and members of the vigilante student group in
the University dormitory of Tehran University:
“Considering
the students’ clashes in Tehran, there is a difference between those who came
to the streets because of their legitimate appeals and those who rioted.
According to our information, the students did not participate in the riot.
There were others who rioted in the streets when the students’ sit-in ended.
“The
Islamic Republic of Iran’s government policy is to study and examine the
above-mentioned issues. The judiciary, within the framework of its legal duties,
is following it up independently.
“During
the riots, 50 members of illegal groups were arrested, 30 of whom were released
on bail. The cases of another 20 arrested persons, including Seyed Djavad
Emami, Forough Bahmanpour and Nasiri, were referred to the Revolutionary Court.
“Criminal
charges related to the law enforcement forces for entering the students’
dormitory without permission in spite of the rejection of any request for
entering the dormitory by officials in charge were referred to the judiciary
organization of the armed forces.
“To
date, most of the perpetrators of the illegal actions have been brought to
justice. The trial of the 20 members of the law enforcement forces, including
Brigadier-General Farhad Nazari, former Deputy Chief of Tehran’s law
enforcement forces, on charges of illegal entry into the dormitory and
attacking the students, is under way.
“With
the goal of rooting out the future possibility of any such incident, the case
of any other perpetrators of illegal actions, including any person who might
have planned and ordered the attack, is still open.”
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