NEW YORK - In an ominous move, Iran's Ministry of Interior has ordered officials
throughout the country to step up the surveillance of Iranian Bahá'ís, focusing in particular on their community
activities.
The
Ministry has requested provincial officials to complete a detailed
questionnaire about the circumstances and activities of local Bahá'ís, including their "financial status,"
"social interactions," and "association with foreign
assemblies," among other things.
The
Ministry's order came in a letter dated 19 August 2006 and addressed to provincial deputies of the
Department of Politics and Security in Offices of the Governors' General
throughout Iran.
The 19
August letter, which was recently obtained by the Bahá'í
International Community, asks these deputies to order "relevant offices to
cautiously and sensitively monitor and supervise" all Bahá'í
social activities.The letter is the latest in a
series of threatening documents that outline a secret national effort to
identify and monitor Bahá'ís in Iran.
"The
emergence of this new letter highlights the gravity of the situation facing
Iranian Bahá'ís," said Bani
Dugal, the principal representative of the Bahá'í International Community to the United Nations.
"This
letter further confirms that Iran's government has targeted the Bahá'ís
for covert surveillance," said Ms. Dugal.
"It also reveals for the first time the type of information the government
strives to collect on both individuals and the Bahá'í
community as a whole-information that in most societies would be considered
private and highly sensitive.
"The
letter also contains elements of misinformation. For example, the letter asks
for information on the 'socio-political activities' of Bahá'ís-even
though it is well known to authorities that Bahá'ís are entirely
non-political in their activities, inasmuch as the Bahá'í
sacred writings stress the importance of non-involvement in politics, as well
as non-violence."
The 19
August letter follows the release earlier this year of a secret 29 October 2005
letter from the Iranian military headquarters to various Revolutionary Guard
and police forces instructing them to "identify" and
"monitor" Bahá'ís around the country.
News of
the 29 October letter, first publicized by Asma Jahangir, the UN Special
Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, in March 2006, stirred alarm among
international human rights groups. Ms. Jahangir
herself expressed concern that "the information gained as a result of such
monitoring will be used as a basis for the increased persecution of, and
discrimination against, members of the Bahá'í
Faith."
Another
letter, dated 2 May 2006, showed the degree to which the government has sought to implement
such surveillance at the local level. That letter, from the Trades, Production,
and Technical Services Society of Kermanshah to the Iranian Union of Battery
Manufacturers, asked the Union to provide a list of members of "the Bahá'í sect" in their membership.
Some
observers have compared the government's effort to identify and monitor Bahá'ís to the situation facing Jews at the beginning of
the Nazi era. In April, for example, the Anti-Defamation League said the orders
issued in the 29 October letter were "reminiscent of the steps taken
against Jews in Europe and a dangerous step toward the institution of
Nuremberg-type laws."
Throughout
the country, Iranian authorities have continued to arrest and detain Bahá'ís throughout Iran in recent months, subjecting them to a
"revolving door" sequence of imprisonment and release that is
apparently designed to harass and oppress the Bahá'í
community.
Over the
last two years, at least 129 Bahá'ís have been
arrested, released on bail, and are now awaiting trial throughout the country.
The bail demands have been high, in most cases requiring the Bahá'ís to hand over considerable sums of money, deeds to
property, business or work licenses.