This report covers the period
January to December 1983
(Pages 332-336)
Amnesty International continued to be
concerned about the large number of executions; numerous allegations of torture
and other forms of ill-treatment of prisoners; the imprisonment of many
prisoners of conscience; and the denial of fair trials to political prisoners.
The organization recorded 399 executions during 1983, but regarded this as a
minimum figure; it was concerned that executions took place after summary or
arbitrary legal proceedings or, in some instances, after none. Information was
received concerning both the use of torture to obtain confessions and
information and whipping as a judicial punishment. The number of prisoners of
conscience was not known, but many of the thousands of political prisoners were
held because of their non-violent political or religious beliefs or activities,
or heir relationship with people who had engaged in opposition to the government.
Arrest, detention and legal procedures all appeared to be arbitrary. Detainees
were held for long periods before being charged and when trials did take place
they lacked the safeguards which would ensure a fair trial.
Throughout the year Amnesty International
frequently raised its concerns with the authorities. On 23 August 1983 in a letter to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini it stated:
"Amnesty International continues to be
most seriously concerned about reported human rights violations in Iran
in contravention of Iran's
obligations as a State Party to the International Convenant
on Civil and Political Rights and of many articles of Iran's
own Constitution. Amnesty International has accumulated since 1979 a large body
of material documenting these violations, including personal testimonies from
former prisoners and relatives of prisoners who have left Iran
. . . The usual practice of Amnesty International is to support all its
statements and claims with specific cases. This is not always possible in the
case of Iran, because much of the information Amnesty International receives
concerning individual cases is given in confidence, due to fear that the
revelation of names may endanger the prisoners or their families. Amnesty
International is, however, confident that the material in its possession
justifies its serious concern and would welcome an opportunity to present
further information to Your Excellency in person and to discus its concern with
you and members of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran."
No reply was received.
By the end of 1983 Amnesty International had
recorded 5,447 executions in Iran since the revolution of February 1979, of
which some 400 took place in 1983; the total number of executions was certainly
much higher,. with hundreds of executions reportedly
taking place unannounced.
Those executed included members of the Baha'i
faith, Kurds and members of political groups opposed to the government. In
June, 59 Kurdish prisoners were reported to have been executed in Mahabad prison in retaliation for an attack by members of
the Kurdish Peshmargah (Vanguard) forces, on the Mahabad garrison in May. Also in June, 17 Baha'is were
executed in Shiraz. Among them were
10 women, ranging from 18 to 54 years of age and including a mother and her
daughter. People were also executed on charges of espionage, murder, and sexual
and drug offences; from September to December 1983 more than 200 people
convicted of drug-trafficking were executed. On 28 June the Iranian daily
newspaper Jomhuri Eslami (Islamic Republic) reported that a man who had killed
his pregnant wife had been executed by his father-in-law in the city of Qom, was said by the newspaper to be the first to have been
carried out under the Law of Retaliation, which allows injured parties to choose
between financial compensation or a stipulated punishment and to carry out the
punishment personally if they choose to do so.
Amnesty International was particularly
concerned that the decisions to execute sometimes appeared to precede trial
proceedings; that in some cases no trial at all seemed to have taken place
prior to execution and that, in those cases where trials did occur, they lacked
the safeguards necessary to ensure a fair trial. In May 1983 Amnesty
International appealed to the Iranian authorities against the execution of
members of the Tudeh (Communist) Party following a
reported statement on 10 May by Mohsen Rezai, the head of the Pasdaran
(Revolutionary Guards) that; "We are in no hurry to execute them, they
still have much to confess, but by their confessions they have signed their own
death warrants." The trials of Tudeh Party
members did not start until December 1983.
As in previous years, some people initially
sentenced to terms of imprisonment were subsequently executed, in some cases
apparently without any further legal proceeding having taken place. Iraj Massali Markieh,
who had not engaged in political activities himself but was related to someone
actively opposed to the government, was arrested in April 1982. At his first
trial he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment. He was tried again in March
1983 and executed in July 1983. The charges against him were not known. As in
most other cases, his family did not learn of the execution until after it had
taken place.
In some cases those executed were people
under the age of 18. Article 6(5) of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights specifically prohibits the imposition of the death penalty for
crimes committed by persons under 18 years of age.
During the year Amnesty International
interviewed many former political prisoners who were living outside Iran.
In every case they reported the widespread use of torture in prisons throughout
the country. The most frequently reported forms of torture were whipping with
woven leather whips, electric cables, hosepipes and flexible wooden strips
bound with wire. Amnesty International also learned of relatives having been
tortured in order to induce confessions or to obtain information from prisoners
and of mock executions. One of the former prisoners interviewed was Hossein Dadkhah who was arrested
in December 1982 and alleged that he had been tortured first in the Pasdaran headquarters in Shahrood
and subsequently in Evin prison in Tehran.
He escaped from custody in February 1983 and eventually arrived in Paris
where he was examined on 19 March 1983
and eventually arrived in Paris
where he was examined on 19 March 1983
by two doctors from Amnesty International's French Section Medical Commission.
In their detailed report they concluded that there was a strong likelihood that
the injuries they observed were the result of the torture described by Hossein Dadkhah.
The use of torture to obtain information or
to induce confessions is prohibited by Article 38 of the Iranian Constitution, but
whipping as a judicial punishment is officially sanctioned and carried out on a
large scale throughout the country, sometimes allegedly resulting in death.
Amnesty International regards this as cruel,
inhuman and degrading punishment, as prohibited by Article 7 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The Human Rights
Committee, set up to monitor observance of the Covenant, has held that corporal
punishment is prohibited under the terms of Article 7.
Among the thousands of political prisoners
held in Iran
during the year many had been involved in violent opposition to the government,
but amnesty International believed that many others were prisoners of
conscience, imprisoned solely because of their non-violent political or
religious activities, or in some cases just because they were associated with
people actively opposed to the government. It was not possible to arrive at
even a rough estimate of the number of prisoners of conscience, because of the
difficulty of obtaining information, because of the imprecision of the charges,
even when these were known, and because of the lack of fair trials, which in
most cases prevented Amnesty International form assessing the validity of the
charges with any accuracy. Among those prisoners the organization believed to
be prisoners of conscience were Abolfazl Ghassemi, one of the leaders of the Iranian National Front
and Secretary General of the Iran Party, who was elected to the Iranian
parliament in the first elections after the revolution (see Amnesty
International Reports 1981, 1982, 1983), and Mohammad Taqi
Damghami, a member of the Iranian Bar Association who
had been detained without trial since January 1982.
Amnesty International also appealed for the
release of Esmail Movassaghiyan,
a 72-year-old writer, who was arrested together with other members of his
family in 1981, all having been apparently suspected of membership of, or
sympathy for, Rahe Karegar
(Way of the Worker), a non-violent left-wing party. Esmail
Movassaghiyan was sentenced to death, which was
commuted to life imprisonment. The date of his trial and the charges brought
against him were not known. He was reported to be paralyzed in both legs, to
suffer from serious stomach and kidney problems and near blindness in both
eyes. Amnesty International believed that he had been ill-treated early in his
imprisonment.
Following the banning of Baha'i institutions
on 29 August 1983, 390
members of the Baha'i religion were arrested bringing the total of imprisoned
Baha'is in the country to more than 700. The Baha'is are
the only substantial religious minority not recognized under the Iranian
Constitution. Those arrested were usually accused of espionage and Zionism,
apparently because the Baha'i international headquarters are in Israel,
but Amnesty International believed that the only reason for their imprisonment
was their religious belief, which is regarded as heretical by the Iranian
authorities.
The situation of most prisoners of
conscience, as of all political prisoners in Iran,
was exacerbated by their total lack of recourse to legal protection. Amnesty
International believed that the guarantees necessary for a fair trial were
lacking in cases heard by Islamic Revolutionary Tribunals, which dealt with all
political cases. Defendants were not usually told the exact charges against
them; they were not allowed defense counsel of their choice or to call defence
witnesses or to question witnesses against them; most trials were closed to the
public; there was no effective right of appeal and no effective presumption
that defendants were innocent until proved guilty. Many detainees were held for
long periods without charge or trial.