UN urges Iran Government to halt execution of 5 activists
Iran: UN rights experts urge Government to halt the execution of five Ahwazi activists
GENEVA (25
January 2013) – A group of United Nations independent
experts on Iran, peaceful assembly and of association,
extrajudicial executions, torture and minorities today urged
the Iranian authorities to halt the execution of five Ahwazi
activists, who are at imminent risk after their death
sentences were recently upheld by the Supreme Court.
According to reports, Mr Mohammad Ali Amouri, Mr Sayed
Jaber Alboshoka, Mr Sayed Mokhtar Alboshoka, Mr Hashem
Shabain Amouri and Mr Hadi Rashidi, all founding members of
Al-Hiwar, a scientific and cultural institute, were
sentenced to death on charges including Moharebeh
(“enmity against God”), Mufsid-fil-Arz
(“corruption on earth”) and spreading propaganda against
the system in 2012.
“It is absolutely unacceptable for individuals to be imprisoned and condemned to death for exercising their rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, association, opinion and expression, and affiliation to minority groups and to cultural institutions,” stressed the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ahmed Shaheed.
On his part, the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association, Maina Kiai, reminded the Iranian authorities of their international obligations, recalling that “Iran is party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights*, which guarantees the rights to free expression, free association and peaceful assembly.”
The five activists were arrested in their homes in Ahwaz in 2011, ahead of the sixth anniversary of widespread protests by the Ahwazi community, and were reportedly convicted following unfair trials.
“Under
international law, the death penalty can only be employed
when very strict conditions are met, for example only in
respect of the most serious crimes and only after a trial
and appeal proceedings that scrupulously respect all the
principles of due process,” noted the Special Rapporteur
on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Christof
Heyns, expressing serious concerns about the way these
trials were conducted.
“Also of grave concern,
are allegations that the five individuals were subjected to
torture and other ill-treatment in detention and were forced
to sign confessions,” added the Special Rapporteur on
torture, Juan E. Méndez. “This is not only in breach of
Iran’s international obligations under the international
covenant, which imposes an outright prohibition on torture,
it is also in breach of Iran’s Constitution that
explicitly forbids the use of all forms of torture for the
purpose of extracting confessions or acquiring
information.”
“The number of cases of individuals belonging to minorities being sentenced for their activities related to their minority rights is a cause for serious concern,” said the UN Independent Expert on minority issues, Rita Izsák. “I urge the Government of Iran to halt these executions and to review the decisions of the courts to ensure that all human rights, including minority rights, are fully upheld and respected in practice.”
(*) Check the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/ccpr.htm
ENDS