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KurdistanObserver.com
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Public Statement
AI Index: MDE 13/010/2005 (Public)
News Service No: 052
3 March 2005
Iran: Threats Against Kurdish Human
Rights Defenders Must Stop
Amnesty International is alarmed at reports
that human rights defenders in Sanandaj, Iranian Kordestan, working on children
and women's rights are facing threats in connection with their human rights
work. It is feared that such harassment may increase towards International
Women's Day on 8 March.
The organisation appeals to the Intelligence Section of the Law Enforcement
Forces (LEF, or Hefazat-e Ettela’at-e Nirou-ye Entezami) in Kordestan to
stop its apparently unjustified interference with these activists and to work
towards protecting human rights.
In recent days members of the legally recognised non-governmental organisation
(NGO), Association for the Defence of Children's Rights (ADCR, or Kanoun-e
Defa’ az Hoqouq-e Koudekan) and the unrecognised Association of Kurdish
Women Defending Peace and Human Rights (AKWDP&HR or Kanoun-e Zanan-e Kord-e
Modafa’ Solh va Hoqouq-e Bashar) have endured summons, interrogation,
telephone threats and harassment, apparently in connection with their human
rights work.
Azad Zamani (m), a member of the ADCR, has stated that the activities of the
group, which received legal recognition as an NGO from the Ministry of the
Interior around two years ago, have been carried out in the open and have
concerned all Iranians without regard to race or religion. The organisation has
raised concerns about the administration of criminal cases of minors and
expressed opposition to the use of cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment on
children. Referring to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), to which
Iran is a state party, it has called for the prohibition of the use of the death
penalty on juveniles and, latterly, the total abolition of the death penalty.
It has been reported that the Intelligence Section of the LEF in Sanandaj, which
issued the summons and carried out the interrogations of Azad Zamani, Diba
Alikhani (f) and other board members of the ADCR, may seek to have the
organisation's license revoked, possibly in advance of International Women's Day
on 8 March, when the ADCR is expected to take part in events marking the day.
The Association of Kurdish Women Defending Peace and Human Rights has had its
application for NGO status rejected (rad-e salahiyat) by the Intelligence
Section of the Sanandaj LEF, although the grounds are not clear. Amnesty
International has repeatedly campaigned against the use of vague gozinesh,
or selection and approval criteria which are frequently used to limit citizens'
freedom of association. Activist Doctor Roya Tolou'ie, a founding member of the
organisation has also faced summons in connection with her activities.
Background
According to a report on the internet news site, Payk-e Iran on 2 March
2005, Diba Alikhani has been summoned and interrogated in connection with her
defence of women's and children's rights. It also said that over the past month,
the frequency of the summons, interrogations and pressures on civil society
activists has increased.
In an unrelated incident in Tehran, in the evening of 1 March 2005, a fire
bomber attacked the premises of Roshangaran Publishers, which publicises works
on women's issues. The director, Shahla Lahiji, is a former prisoner of
conscience. She was detained, charged and imprisoned in connection with her
participation at a conference on Iran, which took place in Berlin, in April
2000. |
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