Arbitrary Arrest of Haleh Esfandiari Coincides With a Week of Crackdowns
(Washington, DC,
May 12, 2007) – Iran
should immediately release Iranian-American academic Haleh
Esfandiari and allow her to return to the United
States, Human Rights Watch said today. Human
Rights Watch expressed concern that Iranian authorities have subjected Esfandiari to arbitrary detention and coercive
interrogation.
On May 8, officials at the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence
summoned Esfandiari for questioning, arrested her
without warrant or explanation, and transferred her to Tehran’s
notorious Evin prison, where Human Rights Watch has documented cases of torture
and detainee abuse. Prior to Esfandiari’s arrest,
ministry officials had repeatedly interrogated her in their offices on Africa
Street in Tehran,
and subsequently in their main building on Khaje Abdollah Ansari Street.
Esfandiari, who is head of the Middle East
program at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center
for Scholars in Washington, had
traveled to Iran
in December to visit her ailing mother. On December 30, prior to her planned
departure from Iran,
armed and masked men stopped her taxi and seized both her Iranian and US
passports. Since December, Iranian authorities have failed to replace her
passport and instead have subjected her to repeated and protracted
interrogation sessions.
In a statement on May 10, the Wilson Center
said that during interrogations, Esfandiari “was
pressured to make a false confession or to falsely implicate the Wilson
Center in activities in which it
had no part.”
“President Ahmadinejad is desperately trying to
discredit his government’s many critics as American pawns,” said Joe Stork,
deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Haleh Esfandiari is a well-known
advocate of dialogue between Iranian and American scholars, and the Iranian
authorities are trying to coerce her into making a false confession to
incriminate Iranian writers and activists.”
Human Rights Watch said the Iranian government’s mistreatment of Esfandiari recalls that of Ramin
Jahanbegloo, a Canadian-Iranian philosopher whom
Iranian authorities arbitrarily arrested in April 2006. After nearly four
months of detention and interrogation, Jahanbegloo
“confessed” that his scholarly works had contributed to the planning of a
“velvet revolution.”
Iran’s decision
to increase its pressure on Esfandiari by detaining her
comes at a time when the authorities have also escalated repressive campaigns
against Iranian women’s right activists and student leaders.
On May 9, three students from Tehran Polytechnic
University – Pouya
Mahmoudian, Majid Sheikhpour and Majid Tavakoli – responded to a summons to appear before a Revolutionary
Court in Tehran.
Authorities then arrested and transferred them to Evin prison. At least four
other students from Tehran Polytechnic
University are also arbitrarily
detained in Evin. All are active in student organizations. None has been
charged with any offense.
Student and women’s rights activist, Zeynab Peyghambarzadeh, is also being held in Evin prison. She was
among the 33 women arrested by security forces on March 4 when they gathered
before a branch of Tehran’s Revolutionary
Court where other women’s rights activists were
being prosecuted. On May 7, authorities detained Peyghambarzadeh
for failing to provide the bail the court recently set in relation to her
pending case. She is currently being held in Unit 3 (youth section) of Evin
prison. When Peyghambarzadeh’s father and lawyer
arrived at the Revolutionary Court
on May 8 to put up her bail, court authorities prevented them from entering the
court.