UNITED A NATIONS : General Assembly Distr. GENERAL 4/45/697 6 Novembor 1990 ENGLI SM ORIGINAl.: ENGLISH/SPANtSH Forty-fifth session Agenda item 12 REPORT O THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL Situation a! human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran Note by the Secretary-General The Secretary-General has IIo honour to transmit to the members of the General Assembly the interim report prepared by Professor Reynaldo Gelindo Pohi (El Salvador), Special Representative of the Conm%ission on Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, in accordance with paragraph 14 of Conmiission on Buman Rights resolution 1990/79 of 7 March 1990 and Economic and Social Council decision 1990/243 of 25 May 1990. 90—28544 1985—86e (E) I..
A/45/697 Engi ish Page 2 ANNEX Interim report on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic o Iran. prepared by the Special Representative of the Commission on Human Rights in accordance with Commission resolution 1990/79 and Economic and Social Council decision 1990/243 CONTENTS Paragraphs Page I • INTR0DUCTIO* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 — 5 3 II • CO *4UNICATXONS BETHEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN AND THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE .......... 6 - 26 3 III. INFORMATION RECEIVED BY THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE ....... 27 - 132 10 IV. REPORT ON THE SECOND VISIT TO THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN 133 - 263 36 V • OBSERVATIONS •...............................•. •.•....••. 264 — 291 62 Appendices I • NAMES AND PARTICULARS OF PERSONS ALLEGEDLY EXECUTED IN THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN, SUPPLEMENTARY TO THE LISTS CONTAINED IN PREVIOUS REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE .............................,.. 69 II. LIST OF PRISONERS HANDED TO THE DEPUT! MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS ON 9 OCTOBER 1990 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 III. OFFICIAL. PROGRANME OF THE SECOND VISIT OF THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE • 86 IV. LIST OF PRISONERS WHOM THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE REQUESTED TO SEE DURING HIS SECOND VISIT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 V. LIST PROVIDED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF EXECUTIONS CARRIED OUT BETHEEN THE BEGINNING OF THE CURRENT IRANIAN YEAR (21 MARCH 1990) AND THE SECOND VISIT OF THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE •...•...••.•...•. ........ 89 VI. GOVERNMENT REPLIES CONCERNING CASES OF EXECUTION LISTED IN PREVIOUS REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL REPREStNTATIVE ......•...•..•.••..•..... . 94 VII. MEASURES TAKEN BY THE AMNESTY DIVISION OF THE JUDICIARY FROM 23 SEPTEMBER 1989 TO 7 OCTOBER 1990 ........................ .. 95 VIII. CIRCULAR LETTER NO. 1/7553/9 DATED 4 AUGUST 1990 BY THE HEAD OF JUDICiARY TO ALL JUDICIAL UNITS AND AUTHORITIES . 96 / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 3 I. INTRODUCTION 1. At its forty—sixth session, the Commission on Human Rights decided, by its eso1ution 1990/79 of 7 March 1990, to extend the mandate of the Special Representative, as contained in omm 4 ssion resolution 1984/54 of 14 March 1984, for a further year and requested the Special Representative to submit an interim report to the General Assembly at Its forty-fifth session on the human rights situation in the Islemic Republic of Iran, including the situation of minority groups, such as the Baha'is, and a final report o the Commission at its forty-s ., ienth session. In its decision 1990/243 of 25 May 1990, the Economic and Social Council endorsed that resolution. 2. Previously, the General Assembly had decided, by its resolution 44/163 of 15 December 1989, to continue its examination of the situation of human rights in the Islamic RepubLic of Iran during its forty-fifth session in the light of additional elemQ its provided by the Commission for Human Rights and the Economic and Social Council. 3. In compliance with paragraph 14 of Commission on Human Rights resolution 1990/79 an 2 in response also to the General Assembly's decision to keep the question under consideration on the basis of additional information, the Special Representative submits herewith his interim report on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, 4 As in previous years, the interim report concentrates on oral and written communications with government officials and on allegations of human rights violations from non-governmental organisationa and individuals and very briefly reports on the second visit to the country. Some of the documents received are now under study aifid if the information they contain proves to be relevant, it will be considered in the final report. Owing to the short interval between the two reports, the interim report has been planned and written as the first part of the final report and the two documents should accordingly be regarded as one. 5. The structure of the interim report is similar to previous reports, and is accordingly divided into five sections: I. Introduction s II. Communications between the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Special Representative: III. Information received by the Special Representative: IV. Report on the second visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran; V. Observatior.s. There are eight appendices. II. COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN AND THE SPECIM.. REPRESENTATIVE A. Communications of a general nature 6. By a letter dated 24 January 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva transmitted the text of a news release by the Islamic Republic News Agency concerning the amnesty or reduction of the imprisonment term of a group of prisoners condemned by military / . . .
A/45/697 Ifl gliIh Pee 4 courts. According to the information provided, all those sentenced to year-long imprisonment by the military courts would be released and the terms of those with rno& than a year's imprisonment would be slashed by half. The letter specified that the pardon was decreed on the eve of the birthday of the Prophet's daughter Fatima As-Zahba by the Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, upon the request of the Head of the Judiciary. 7. On 6 February 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva transmitted a letter addressed to the Special Repreientative by Mr. M. t4ottaki, Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, who, in reply to a question raised by the Specia... Representative during his first visit to the country, submitted two examples of judgements in which the High Disciplinary Court had convictod judges of abuse of authority. The text of the judgement was as followsi “Judgement 1/67 dated 17/1/1368 in proceedings brought by the General Inepectorate against Hojjatolislasn Shaikh Mohammad Nasiri, President of thvs Islamic Revolutionary Court at Yasd. Shaikh Mohasnmad was found guilty of violating the rules of procedure while judging the case of Nc, Mohanmiad Ghoiami, who was on trial for possession of opium, opium extract and related apparatus. He sentenced the accused to 15 years' imprisonment, five of which would be suspended on payment of one million totnans. In this respect, his judgement was unlawful and rendered him liable to disciplinary sanctions, which the High Court decided should consist in the forfeiture of one third of the judge's salary and other monthly emoluments for five months, in accordance with article 4 of the relevant act. “Judgement 64/1.30 dated 3/6/1364 in proceedings brought by Messrs. Au Neiri and Vail Neiri against Mr. Hasan Latifi, former judge at the Islamic Revolutionary Court at Langroud. Following an investigation by the General Inapectorate, the judge was found guilty of handing down an unlawful judgement in the case of the brothers Neiri who were on trial for the hoarding of goods, in so far as he ordered the detention of Ali Held and the confiscation and sale of the assets of Vali Neiri. The High Court imposed disciplinary sanctions consisting in two years' imprisonment, exclusion from ptblic office for five years and compensation, in cash or in kind, for the losses suffered by Vail Neiri.” 8. By a letter dated 2 May 1990 the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva informed the Special Representative about the following clemency “On the occasion of Eid ul-Fitr, marking the end of the month of Rainadan on 26 April 1990, 260 convicts of the Islamic Revolutionary Court and 13 convicts of the Special courts of the Clergy were pardoned in 14 cities in Iran. “On 1st April 1990, the day of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 79 convicts of the Islamic Revolutionary Courts were released in various cities in Iran. / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 5 “On the occasion of the Iranian JIew Year, on 21 March 1990, 119 other convicts of the Islamic Revolutionary Courts were also pardoned.” 9. On 14 June 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations forwarded to the Special Representative the text of a message from Ayatollah Mohammed Taqui Ja'afari, inviting him ‘not in the cepacity of the Special Representative but as a scholar end a scientific and intellectual personality, to pay a visit to Iran prior to your official visit, during which you could participate in scientific and legal meetings arranged in your honour ...“. By a letter dated 20 July 1990. the Special Representative thanked Ayatollah Mohammed Taqui Ja'afari for the kind invitation explaining that, given the heavy schedule of academic engagements to which he had committed himself a long time ago, it would unfortunately not be possible for him to envisage an additional private visit before his second of 1 icibl visit. 10. By a note verbale of 22 August 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva informed the Special Representative of the statement delivered by Ayatollah Mohammed Y zdi, the head of the Judiciary of the Islamic Republic of Iran, on 10 August 1990, in which, referring to article 35 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Yasdi, “once again emphasized that the courts should be held in public and they must respect the right of every party in a case to choose his or her own legal counsel and even if the person cannot afford to secure legal counsel, it would be provided by the Judiciary”, Moreover, a circular letter by the Head of the Judiciary to all judicial units and authorities, dated 4 August 1990, stressing the right or the parties to a lawsuit to select an attorney i .i all civil and penal courts was handed to the Special Representative by the Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs at Tebran and is reproduced in appendix VIII to the present report. 11. On 11 September 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran sent to the Special Representative a copy of a note verbelo it had addressed on 13 August 1990 to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). In that note the Permanent Mission referred to paragraph 167 of the last report of the Special Representative 1,1 reflectinj a suggestion he had made to the Government concerning regular visits by ICRC to prisons throughout the country in order to ascertain the conditions of imprisonment and, in particular, to look into the situation of political prisoners. The note verbalo stated, inter al& , the fol1owing “With due regard to the co-operation of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran with the Special Representative of the Commission on Human Rights, the former invites the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the prisons”. 12. By a letter dated 28 September 1990 from the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran at Geneva, the Special Representative was advised of the following measures taken by the Islamic Reiublic of Iran in implementation of his recommendations i “ . The Islamic Republic of Iran nas officially ia ' ted ICRC to visit Iran. The invitation was submitted to the Committee through the note No. 2658 dated 13 August 1990 of this Mission. OEis invitation was renewed by
A/45/697 English Page 6 His Excellency Dr. Velayati, during Mr. Sommaruga's visit to Tehran. ICRC is presently planning for this visit. “2. The Islamic Republic of Iran has officially invited the Human Righti' Centre to rrovide technical and training assistance and, especially send an expert to give trainings on the preparation of periodic reports, that was announced in the note No. 2482 dated 30 July 1990 and underlined in Mr. Tabatabai's meeting with Mr. t4autner-Markhof. “3. OEe Heed of the Judiciary's general circular letter No. 1/7553/9 dated 4 August 1990, in which Principle 35 of the Constitution was reminded and underlined. This principle provides for the undisputable right of the accused to appoint a lawyer for the proceedings in the court. (See appendix VIII.) ‘ 4. A bill of law was prepared according to which the period of detention of the accused prior to the pronouncement of the verdict is inclt ded in their term of prison. “5. Clemency measures have been pursued and implemented on var1 us occasions. The details shall be presented during your visit to Tehran. “6. An academic seminar was held for ‘A Comparative Study of Islamic and Western Principles of Human Rights' in which Iranian scholars, authorities, and professors participated. Furthermore, as the Human Rights Centre has been already informed, an international seminar with the participation of Iranian and Foreign scholars, including personalities from the Human Rights Centre, will meet in Tehran for the same purpose in the near future. “7. Preparation of detailed and elaborate response to the accusations, allegations and claims presented to you by various groups, that were forwarded to the Islamic republic of Iran by you. OEese responses will be given to you during your next visit to Iran. “8. Expansion of judicial services and works to promote the living standard of the families of persons sentenced or accused; that includes the creation of a special fund with the financial support of the government and benevolent persons.” B. oinjmj njc etions conceriiing a2 ggtions received by the pe ciaJ. Representative and transmitted to the Government 13. Since the forty-sixth session of the Commission on Human nights, a great number of reports alleging human rights violations, including specific incidents and cases, have been brought to the attention of the Special Repr sentative. In accordance with the understanding reached during his first visit to the country, the Special Representative transmittc to the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva by letters dated 12 March, 7, 8, 11 and 23 May, 27 June and 9 July 1990, several individual cases ,...
A/45/ 697 English Page 7 of alleged human rights violations which, in his view, required the urgent attention of the Government. The Special Representative requested that the reported incidents or cases be investigated and that he be informed of the results of the Government's inquiries, as wall as of the situation of each of the persons concerned, in particular as regards the precise charges brought against them and all relevant details of their trials. 14. By a letter dated 26 April 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva forwarded to the Special Representative his Government's response on one of the individual casos transmitted to it (see para. 33 below). 15. By a letter dated 5 June 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva provided another reply by his Government on the case of 14 persons accused of espionage (see para. 37). 16. By a letter dated 31 May 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of ran to the United Nations Office at Geneva requested the Centre for Human Rights to provide him with all the information available about allegations of human rights violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran, so that the necessa y investigations could be conducted and responses provided. 17. In response to that request, by a letter dated 20 August 1990, the Special Representative sent to the Permanent Representative a memorandum containing the main allegations, both general and in terms of individual cases, that had been brought to his attention by various sources. OEe memorandum included a surary of the cases transmitted by previous letters, &s well as further allegations ..eceived by th.e Special Representative, it further recapitulated briefly earlier allegations as reflected in previous reports on which the Special Representative had never received the requested circumstantiated explanations. 18. By a letter dated 8 October 1990, a second memorandum was tranGmitted to the Permanent Representative of the elamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva containing further allegations received by the Special Representative, When communicating the two memoranda to the Government, the Special Representative expressed the hope that they would facilitate preparations for his second visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran and thus enable the authorities to discuss with him in a concrete manner the situations and incidents of which he had been seized. The allegations contained in both memoranda are reproduced in section II I of the present report. 19, fly a note verbal, dated 19 October 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva transmitted the translation of a letter which the Voice and Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran (Television) had addressed to the Movemer t for Freedom in reply to its telex dated 22 September 1990, concerning the televised “confession” of Mr. Behbehani (see para. p30). Relevant excerpts of the letter aie as follows: “1. Article 52 and paragraph b of Article 55 of the Law governing the policies of this organization clearly stipulate our policy as follows: ,...
A/45/697 English Page 8 “Article 52 ‘To enlighten the populace about the devilish plots of the world colonialists and their internal agents foz the weakening of deviation of the Revolution'. “Article 55, paragraph b ‘Denunciation of the activities, plots and working methods of counter-revolutionary groups and the enemy's fift! Column, and familiarizing the populace with the nature of their thinking and practice'. “2. It has been according to these Articles that the Voice and Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran has since the victory of the Islamic Revolution broadcast the trials and confessions of hundreds of members of the traitorous and counter-revolutionary parties, groups and grouplets which have conspired in various ways against the Is rmic Revolution and the interer. s of the people and the country or collaborateJ with the enemiec of tha Islamic Revolution and the Muslim people of Iran. It might as well be remembered that during the transitional Government which was in the hands of the Freedom Movement and one of whose members headed this organization, series of such interviews and confessions were broadcast on the Voice and Vision. As far as we remember and the records indicate, no response of the concerned elements has ever been broadcast. “3. Broadcasting by the Voice and Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran the interview with Dr. Farhad Behbehani represents one such example and is in line with Article 52 and paragraph b of Article 55 of our law. “4. Upon receipt of the telephone-gram No. 1-1-46/5400, dated 6/6/1369 (24 August 1990) of the Movement for Freedom, its content has been brought to the attention of Farhad Behbehani. While reconfirming his previous statements, he has expressed his readiness to participate in a televised round-table with his czitics and respond to their objections, and in his own words, ‘Raise the curtain on other plots'. In case of the willingness of the members of the Movement for Freedom, this organization will undertake to hold the round-table.” C. Communications relating to the second visit of the Special Representative to IIa Islamic Republic of Iran 1. Conversations with representatives of the Islamic Republic of Iran 20. On 12 July 1990, the Special Representative met with Ambassador Sirous Nasseri. Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva. At that time, the Special Representative mentioned that he would like to make a second visit to the country with a view to complying with the terms of the Human Rights Commission's mandate. He 1so expressed his appreciation to the Government for having allowed his first visit to the country in pursuance of Human Rights Commission resolutions 1984/54 and 1989/66. He stressed the importance of the meetings held with officials from the legislative, executive and judicial branch3s of the Government in the Islamic Republic of Iran. He added that the visit had enabled him to maintain meetings, , . . .
A/45/697 English Page 9 conversations and contacts with a number of individuals and organizatiOnB and that he considered them to be very useful in the implementation of his mandate. 21. The Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Natious Office at Geneva told the Special Representative that he would transmit his r” quest to make a second visit to the country to his Government and said that he was pleased to have had the opportunity to exchange ideas and opinions with the Special Representative on matters velating to his mandate. Furthermore, commenting on the request made by the Special Representative concerning the need to receive detailed replies to the allegations of human rights violations, he said that his Government had every intention to reply to those allegations. In that connection, he said that in order to expedite the investigation of the allegations and ensure a prompt reply, the allegations should be stated in the clearest and most unequivocal terms. Lastly, the Permanent Representative reiterated the assurance of hi Government's fI%ll co-operation in helping the Special Representative to i p1ement his mandate. 2. Written coni iunications 22. On 13 July 1990, the Special Representative sent a letter to the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva stating that: “... it would be my intention to carry out this vieit before drafting my report to the next session of the General Assembly and I propose as dates for the visit the week 5 to 30 August 1990”. 23. On 14 August 1990, a letter from the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva addressed to the Special Representative was received at the Centre for Human Rights, reading as follows: “1. With regard to the date of your second visit, the suitable date would be the 1 of September 1990. “2. While I also appreciated the occasion we had on 12 July 1990 to exchange views on matters concerning your mandate, I may however regret that for the lack of time, a certain number of sexious questions remained to be discussed. Therefore I asked for another meeting with you. Your proposed date i.e. two or three days before your departure for the Islamic Republic of Iran is too late. I am aware of your other coeunitinenta but for the seriousness of the matter, I would be willing to have a meeting with you as soon as possible and in any place which is convenient to you. “3. Concerning the communication of the Centre for Human Rights containing all the allegations which we were expected to receive by the end of July, you may note that we have yet to receive it.” 24. By a letter dated 20 August 1990, the Special Representative informed the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva that health reasons prevented him from travelling to Tehren on 1 September 1990, as suggested by the Government, and that he would propose as soon , . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 10 as possible new dates for the visit, which, for the above-mentioned medical reasons, could not take place before the end of September. The Special Representative assured the Permanent Representative that he would made every effort to arrange for another meeting with him as soon as feasible before his departure to Tehran. 25. By a letter dated 17 September 1990, the Special Representative proposed the period from 6 to 11 October 1990 as new dates for the visit, adding that he could meet the Permanent Representative at Geneva on 28 September 1990. By the same letter, he communicated a list of personalities and places that he would like to visit and reminded him that the terms of reference of his visit remained identical to those described in the . nnex to the letter addressed on 24 No 'ember 1989 to the Permanent Representative of the islamic Republi- of Iran to the United Nations. 26. 3y a note verbale dated 5 October 1990, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva confirmed its previous ore' reply that the visit could take place during the period from 8 to 16 OctobeL' 199C III. INF MATIOW RECEIVED BY THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE 27. The following paragraphs contain a.1]i.gations of human rights violations received by the Special Representative and transmitted to the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran by memoranda dated 20 August and 8 October 1990. OEe memoranda also reproduce taiose alleged incidents and cases which the Special Representative had transmitted by previous letters. Replies received from the Government w.th regard to the allegations have also been reflected in this section. A. Right to life 28. According to a report by the daily Abrar , a man condemned for fornication with a close relative was publicly executed in Mashed. Agenca France Pressa reported on 16 January that, according to news received from Tehran, a 31-year-old woman convicted for prostitution had been stoned to death in Bander Ansali. On 31 January Jombouri miami published a declaration of the Komiteh Commander of the rrovince of West Azerbaijan, according to which a ring of persons engaged in prostitution and corruption had been arrested and five of them had been stnned to death. According to a report by Ressalat on 15 February 1990, Gholam Resa t4asouri was hanged in Arak for pederasty. 29. IQ1JIIQj .LLLJ,JMj reported on 17 February 1990 that Bolouch Ismalel Zehi had been executed for drug trafficking. On 10 January Radio Tehran announced that 31 persons convicted of drug trafficking had been executed, 23 of them in Tehran, 3 at Shiraz, 3 at Sabzevar and 2 at Saveh. According to Ressalat of 11 February, a married couple accused of drug trafficking was sentenced to death in Saveh. 30. Dailies from variou. .. countries published the statement of Mitre Moazex (21), claiming that she had been forced to witness the death by burning of 37-year-old woman and two 18-year-old men in an Iranian prison. According to these reports, / . . .
. A/45/697 English Page 11 they had been thrown into a furnace by guards, named Jamehid Sohrabi and Mojtaba Halvai. Reportedly, she had been imprisoned from 1981 to 1984 for having taken part in an anti-government demonstration and had been tortured for 85 days before being interrogated. When she was freed, she visited the family of one of the young men, named Asghar Ghorbani t4aleki, who told her that prison guards had brought them a box containing Asghar's ashes and that, as a consequence of the shock this had caused, the young man's father had committed suicide. 31. Abbas Raissi, navy officer stationed at Chah Bahar was said to have been arrested around September 1989 in Chah Bahar on unknown charges. The source of the information presumed that his arrest, as well as the arrest of a group of other persons, related to an incident in which a Government opponent, of whom Mr. Raissi was a close friend and distant ..elative, was smuggled out of the Islamic Republic of Lran. The group arrested at the same time included two of the opponent's nephews as well as his bro .her, Mohammed Karim Naroui, who was the Read Postmaster at Chah Bahar, and was executed at Zahedan on 28 January 1990 (8 Bahman 1368), reportedly having been sentenced to death at a trial the previous day. Mr. Raissi, who was detained at either Chab Bahar or Zahedan prison, was said to be at imminent zisk of execution; the charges brought against him were not known and no information was available as to whether he had been tried. By a letter dated 12 March 1990, the Special Representative requesttd information about the charges brought against Mr. Raissi, whether he had been tried and, in the affirmative case, asked that all relevant details concerning his trial and sentence be provided to him. The Special Representative also appealed to the Government, in case Mr. Raissi had been sentenced to death, to consider granting clemency or at least to ensure that all safeguards stipulat.d in the International Covenant on Civil end Political Rights, particularly in its article 14, had been fully respected in the preceding trial. 32. According to a cable from Nicosia, Cyprus, that appeared in the International Herald Tribui on 29 March 1990, Abbas aissi and Abmed Jtrnghi Rasni were convicted of espionage, robbery and c unter-revo1utionary activities and hanged in south-western Iran, in the region of Seistan, according to reports by the Islamic Republic News Agency. 33. By a letter dated 26 April 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva replied that Mr. Ralesi had been tried on spying charges for collaborating with Iraq during the imposed war end had been condemned to death. The death sentence was carried out after due judicial process end all solemn rites were performed. OEe Permanent Representative added that the relevant judicial file would be made available upon request. 34. By a letter dated 7 May 1990, the Special Representative thanked the Government for its reply and requested the relevant judicial file concerning this case. Re reiterated his interest in examining the files in the meeting with Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Mr. M. Mottaki, held at Tehren on 9 October 1990. 35. On 28 April 1990, the newspaper Kayhan published a report by the Islamic Republic News Agency to the effect that the Prosecutor General of the Tebran Revolutionary Court had announced that 10 persons accused of espionage would be / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 12 . executed in thu next f ow days. Other sources reported directly to the Special Representative that Mr. Jamshead Amiry Bigvand, formez, Director of the Marodasht Shires Petrochemical Laboratory, and 13 other persons had allegedly been convicted on the charge of espionage for the United States of America, an offence for which capital punishment might be applied. Reportedly these persons had been held for months in solitary confinement at Evin prison, and had not been allowed to avail themselves of legal assistance of their own choosing. It was further alleged that confessions had been extracted under torture and that some of them had been compelled to make extrajudicial confessions which were broadcast by the Iranian television. The Special Representative requested to the Government by a letter, dated 8 May 1990, that all 14 persons be enabled to benefit from all the procedural safeguards provided for in articles and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and also safeguards 5 and 6 of the annex to Economic and Social Council resolution 1984/50 of 25 May 1984, entitled “Implementation of safeguards guaranteeing the rights of those facing the death penalty'. The Special Representative further requested infnrmation on the precise charges brought against these persons and all relevant details of their trials. Finally, the Special Representative appealed to the Government that, in the event that all legal remedies had been fully exhausted, every possible consideration be given to the granting of clemency to those persons. 36. On 11 May 1990, the Special Representative, pursuant to his letter dated 8 May 1990 and reiterating the requests expressed therein, communicated to the Permanent Representative 10 more names of persons allegedJy belonging to the above-mentioned group of 14 as followsi Dr. Bahman Agahy, Legal Advisor of the Iranian Foreign Ministry; Hooshang Amjadi Bigvand; General Ardeshear Ashraf; Nanochehr Asar, Attorney; Masoud Deadehvar, Planning Advisor for the Iranian Oil Company; Navy Captain Kyanoosh Hakeamy; Colonel Bahrasn Ikany; Heahmatolah Magsoody, Clergyman/Attorney; Captain Gabraman Maleksadeh and Colonel Masoud Payaby. 37. By a letter dated 5 June 1990, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva forwarded to the Special Representative the following response of the judicial authorities of the Islamic Republic of trans “According to the article 37 of the Constitutln of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and as contained in the second paragraph of article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, no person shall be considered guilty by law unless the accusation against him is proved by a competent court end the courts are naturally obliged to act accordingly; “In the light of information received by the Islamic Revolutionary Court, those people were arrested and tried in accordance with the law. In addition, they were entitled to appoint a legal counsel ane they duly and friely defended themselves during the trial; “With regard to the right of the accused to resort to higher court, it should be mentioned that the sentences issued in accordance with law could be reviewed in the Supreme Court. Consequently, after the issuance of the verdicts all the accused requested for a review by the court of appeal. - /..•
A/45/ 97 English Page 13 Investigation, therefore, was conducted on their request and the verdicts of the two of the accused were referred to another court for re-examination.” 38. On 19 February Radio Tehra announced that 31 persons had been executed for drug trafficking and organizing prostitution in the oitiea of Tehran, Sabeevar, Karaj, Arak, Kerman, Boushahr, Sari, Qom, Bakhtaran and Rashat. Radio Tehran supplied the names of those executed in each of those cities. Other sources stated that the charges were formation of and participation in international drug-trafficking bands, importing, transporting, purchase and sale of opium, heroin end hashish, corruption and establishment of prostitution centres, perverting girl. end married women and corrupting the younger generation. Accotding to an article which appeared on 20 February 1990 in the newspaper a communiqu issued by the Office of the Prosecutor General stated that decisive legal action against the drug traffickers will continue. The article also indicated the names of the 30 executed persons (see appendix I). 39. It has also been reported that 18 prisoners were executed on 17 and 27 April 1990 in the City of Sanandaj. It was asserted that they were militants who attended May-day celebrations in Sanandaj last year. The names of 14 persona belonging to this group were given as follows: Hehdis Bolur-Forush, Jamal Cheragh-Disi, Nader Fat'hi, Seid Saleh Hossieni, Naser Jalali, Ahmad Mohamadi, Mi Ashraf Noradi, Mohsen Othman Pour, Abmad Parvizi, Mohamad Rozaii, Naser Sobhani, Anver Shariati, Roya, Bakhtiari. 40. It has further been reported that on 14 February 1990 a judicial panel sent to Hemaden on behalf of the Head of the Judiciary issued the following sentences: (a) Gholamhoasein Golsar, 27 years old, discharged employee of the Agricultural Bank of Hamadan; 74 lashes for conuititting robbery: 92 lashes for participation in a forbidden act, bad decapitation by the just sword of the ‘ Imam Au; (b) Gholainhassan Goizar, aged 28, discharged employee of the Hamadan MunIcipality: 74 lashes for coanuitting robbery: 14 lashes for participation in a forbidden act, and decapitation by the just sword of Imem AlL; (c) Resa Khanian, 23 years old, fruit and vegetable centre clerk: 74 lashes for coiamitting robbery; 50 lashes for participation in a forbidden act; amputation of hand for convnitting assault and battery and hanging by scaffold. 41. The newspaper Kayhan announced on 3 January 1990 that Khodakaram Zamani, given a retributory death sentence for the murder of Morad-Ali Resai, was executed on the main square of Khorramabad. 42. Th, newspaper announced the following executionsi Gholwn Zanbgian and Raghid Noor-Mohammadi, in Bakhtaran, on 6 January 1990, for murder, Ahmad Souri. for murder, on 9 January; two persons whoa. names were not announced, in Mashed on 1 January 1990, for murder: and the murderer of a 13-year-old girl, hanged in khwaz. / ...
A/45/ 697 !ngliah Page 14 43. The Special Representative has been particularly shocked of the news of the assassination on 24 April 1990 in Coppet, Switzerland, of Mr. Kazem Rajavi, who repreaented the National Council of Resistance before various United Nations bodiee. All those who knew Mr. Rajavi were deeply moved by that ill-fated occurrence. On behalf of himself and his colleagues, the Special Representative wishes to zpress his condolences as well as his profound concern and most forceful repudiation of the use of blind violence in lieu of free discussion and the interplay o ideas. Numerous communications were received alleging that the assassination was carried out by agents of the Iranian Government. According to the Tehran Times of 26 June 1990, Foreign Ministry spokesman Morteza Sermadi had expressed the hope “that the Swiss judicial officials through their thorough and fair investigation of the case conducted away from any pre-judgement, prevent materialization of conspiracies end plots of enemies of the nation and the Governnien ”. In $ his connection, the Special Representative, by a letter dated 19 September 1990, drew the attention of the Permanent Observer of Switzerland to the United Nations Office at Geneva to resolution 1990/8 adopted on 30 August 1990 by the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. In that resolution, the Sub-Commission had expressed the wish that all facts and circumstances of the assassination of Mr. Kazem Rajavi would be fully investigated and that the Special Representative include information available to him on the investigation in his next report. The Special Representative requested that he be provided by the Government of Switzerland with any information that it would be able to make available to him with regard to the investigation of the case. At the time of the finalization of the present report, the Special Representative had not received the requested information. 44. The assassination of Mr. Rajavi generated fear in persons visiting the Palais des Nations to give information about human rights in the Islamic Rdpublic of Iran. They took extraordinary precautions so as not to draw attention to their lives and their beliefs and asked for special police protection, in some cases notifying the competent authorities in advance of their movements in Geneva or requesting interviews outside the Palais des Nations, 45. It has also been widely reported that the Iranian Government has endorsed the death sentence pronounced by Ayatollah Khomeini against the British author Salman Rushdie. On 5 June 1990, the Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Au Khameue'i, reportedly stated that the fatwa (religious verdict) of the late Imam Khomeini concerning the author was based on divine rulings and remained irrevocable. 46. In many communications the Special Representative has received, it has been asserted that the families had never been officially notified that their relatives had been executed. In addition, those that were notified were often not told where their relatives had been buried. 47. It has been reported that as of January 1990 per oris have been executed in the Islamic Republic of Iran for their homosexual or lesbian tendency. It was asserted that at least five suh executions took place in January 1990. . / . . .
Ai'45/697 English Page 15 48. The Special Representative has repeatedly received expressions of fear that the serious accusations formulated against the co-signatories of the open letter which Mr. Mehdi Bazargan, Prime Minister of the first provisional Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, had addres ed to the President of the Republic, could result in executions. Particular concern was expressed over a televised ‘ confession' by Mr. Farhad Bebbehani, a member of the dissolved Association for the Defence of Freedom and Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation, in which he reportedly admitted connections between the association and foreign Governments. In this connection, the Special Representative wiahes to emphasixe that such extrajudiolal confessions are contrary to internationally recognised standards of due process. 49. Other individual cases were reported as followsi (a) Mr. BizhanAbmadian It has been reported that he was shot in a street in Babol and that the authorities refused to return his body to the family. Subsoquently, his parents and some other members of his family were allegedly arrested; (b) Mr. Mohanunad FadaUs It has been reported that he was sentenced to five years imprisonment. At the end of his prison term, which was spent in Meshed prison, he was released. In 1988, allegedly without any reason, he was again arrested, subjected to several kinds of torture, and executed; (c) Mr. Aniir Taavoni-Ganjis It has been reported that in 1987 Mr. Taavoni-Ganji, his wife and daughter. left Iran out of fear for their safety and liberty. When he returned for a short visit in 1988, he was immediately arrested and taken to Evin prison. In November 1989, the prison authorities asked his family to collect his clothes and other belongings, as he had been executed; (d) Mr. Mohanunad Ansin Daneabs It has been reported that he was executed on 12 January 1986 in Iranshahr and that his body was burned by the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution; (e) Mr. Davoud )lohanuwadis A former veterinarian working in the Veterinary Office of Arak city. It has been reported that he was executed in October 1989 on charges of drug trafficking, but that the real reason for his execution was to be found in his political activities opposing the Government. 50. Further names of persons who were allegedly executed, updating the lists which the Special Representative annexed to his previous reports, wer.i included in annexes to the two memoranda. OEey are reflected in appendix I to the present report. The Special Representative requested the Government to provide him with detailed information on the relevant charges and trial proceedings for all persons mentioned. , . . .
A/45/ 697 !nglieh Page 16 B. Right to freedom from torture or cruel. inhuman or degrading treatment or unishmenti allegations concerning torture, ill-treatment and pxison conditions 51. Reports on torture and ill-treatment during imprisonment have continued to be received since the first visit of the Special Representative to the Islamic Republic of Iran. It was also alleged that mutilations and corporal punishment are being applied. In this context, it is pertinent to note that gence France Presse reported that, according to Kayhan , a person convicted for robbery suffered the amputation of four fingers on his right hand in Ghasr prison at Tehran. On 20 January 1990, the same news agency reported that two persons condemned for robbery had suffered the amputation of four fingers on their right hands. The sentence was reportedly executed in front of a large crowd that had assc.mbled for Friday prayers. 52. By a letter dated 23 May 1990, the Special Representative inquired about the situation of Dr. Au Reza N siri, reportedly being detained on unknown charges at a prison situated at 21, Mohsangi/Asadi Street in Mashad nd suffering from an acute eye disease, resulting from diabetes, which urgently required surgery. According to the information received by the Special Re resentative, Dr. Nasiri was arrested by the Pasdaran in Mashad in 1989. The Special Representative asked to be informed of the charges brought against Dr. Nasiri, as well as of the relevant details of his trial proceedings. He also requested the Government to ensure that Dr. Nasiri receives every medical treatment required for his condition. 53. By a letter dated 15 June 1990, the Special Representative inquired about the situation of Mr. Nouz -eddine Kianouri, former First Secretary of the Tudeh Party, whom he met at Evin prison during hia first visit to the Islamic R public of Iran. According to the allegations received, Mr. Kianouri had been placed in solitary confinement shortly after the departure of the Special Representative from Tehran and had no longer been allowed to receive visits. 54. The Special Representative has also been informed that Mr. Kianouri's wife, Mrs. t4eriam Feirouz, was placed in solitary confinement, despite her advanced age and poor health. 55. In addition, the Special Representative received the following allegationsi (a) Jamehid Amirl-Bigvand , 52 years old, former Director of Marodasht Shiraz Petrochemical Laboratory. was arrested on 18 September 1988 in front of the above-mentioned laboratory. Mr. Amiri was placed in solitary confinement in Evin prison and was allegedly torturedi (b) Paryin Ainiri-Bigyand , 51 years old, wife of Houshang Amjadi-Bigvand , was arrested in November 1988 at her residence in the city of West Kota with her husband and her children. She was placed in solitary confinement for eight months and then released. She was allegedly tortured during her stay in solitary confinement, . / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 17 (c) Housnang Amjadi-Bigvand , 51 years old, self-employed, was arrested in November 1988 at his residence in the city of West Kots. His children and his wife were also arrested at the same time. He was placed in solitary confinement in Evin prison where he was allegedly tortured. Although his general r'r ndition of health was reportedly poor, owing to a bleeding stomach ulcer, Mr. A ijadi had eported1y not been permitted to receive medication from outside the prison; (d) Raza Arbabi , 38 years old, was reportedly arrested in 1983 and kept in Mashad prison. On 22 June 1984, he was sentenced to 15 years' imprLsonment by the Mashad Court. Later he was transferred to Gohardasht prison, allegedly in a serious condition. Since 1988, his family have had no news about him; (e) 1x . Yagoub ahramy . It has been reported that he was repeatedly subjected to beatings in Ghasr prison; (f) t4x Ae QJ .1ah_Ba ,yat. It has been reported that he was repeatedly beaten with cables in Ghasr prison, resulting in mental problems; (q) M A d shir Bojw n . It has been reported that he was arrested in December 1989 for refusing military service. H was reportedly beaten up and his jaw broken; (h) Mr. Kern n nj. It was reported that he had 5tstributed pictures of the late Shah and displayed the former Irazian flag in Valiehd Square and Pole-Seyyed Khandan. Reportedly, he had been arrested by the revolutionary guards at the house of a certain Mr. Misaghieh at Shemiren and taken to the Komiteh in Jamaran District, where he was allegedly tortured; as a result, his jaw and teeth were broken; (i) Mr Asian Fadavy . It has been reported that at Euin prison he suffered severe beatings; (j) Mr. Masood Farjad. angina . Security officers allegedly used burning cigarette butts to inscribe on his back “death to opponents of Velayate Faghih” (religious guide); (k) Mr. Navabali Gh eji maghami . It has been reported that he was subjected to various forms of sexual abuse and psychoJogical torture in Ghom prison. He wee allegedly forced to watch other prisoners being tortured. Several times, his clothes were reportedly soiled with the urine and excrement of other prisoners; (1) t' s._OEhere Hadadian anjani, aged 53, reportedly spent more than five years in prison, partly in solitary confinem v P. As a result of being flogged on the soles of her feet with cables, and other kinds of alleged torture, she had to undergo surgical operations; (m) 1s. Sora a H gbi1iefls . It has been reported that the Procurator of Tabriz prison allegedly ordered her arrest when she refused his sexual advances. In prison she was allegedly flogged and forced to witness other prisoners being tortured, / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 18 (n) Mr. Ahmad Khanzaanapouz . It has been reported that he was imprisoned from 1981 to 1986 in Evin. Gohardasht and Ghezel-Hesar prisons. Despite the fact tha he has epilepsy, he was allegedly subjected to different kinds of torture. In particular, it was reported that ne was beaten with cables, that his genital organs were connected to electric wires and that he was forced to witness other prisoners being tortured. Allegedly, the prison guards used to confiscate the drugs he needed to treat his epilepsy, and whai he had epileptic fits, medical care was not provided except in the most criticel situations; (o) t4r. Habib Maffj . It has been reported that the p ison guards in Tabriz broke his teeth during beatings. Reportedly. he also suffers from severe mental problems as a result of torture: (p) Mr. Ebrahim Mazrg.j.j . It was alleged that he was unlawfully imprisoned end tortured. He reportedly filed a complaint with the authorities, but to no avail: (q) Mr. Afrasiab Pakzaddgan . It has been reported that, on two occasions at Ohom prison, he was tied to a chair while dogs were incited co attack him; (r) John Paths , citizen of the United Status of America. It is reported that he has been held in Evin prison for four years. The prison doctors have allegedly stated that he is suffering from severe anaemia due to malnutrition, from weight loss, baa of hair and that his skin has a green hue: (8) Mr. Eahim Rahseparian . It has been alleged that he was forced to perform various sexual acts in Tabriz prison: (t) LIIM&d Rashed-Maz andJ , 32 years old. He was arrested in 1981 at Tehran and sent to Evin prison, where he allegedly was under constant torture. In 1983, he was sent to Ghasr prison at Tehran. Since 1989, the prison g .iards have not allowed any meetings with him. Since then there has been no news of Mr. Rashed-Marandi; (u) Mr. Mpstafa Salehyar . It has been reported that four prison guards sexually abused him and that he was beaten on his genitals: (v) Mohai' mad Raze Sedaghat , former manager at ne of the Government offices. It has been reported that he is in prison without any charge and trial, and that he has suffered from torture many times, resulting in serious damage to hi feet; (w) Ms._Fatema1e .i i-Asj1.. It was reported that she was arrested in 1981 on the accusation of being a Mojahedin syi pathizer. While in prison, she was allegedly subjected to torture, resulting in serious mental disorder. She was released in 1988, after six years of imprisonment: (x) ni bid Torabi , 37 years old, was arrested in 1982 and taken to Evin prison. There he was given a brief trial, reportedly without the presence of a lawyer for his defense. He was sentenced to an undefined period, from 15 to 17 years' imprisonment. Later he was transferred to Goharda3ht pris n, where he / . . .
A/ 45/697 Eng 11 sh Page 19 was held until the spring of 1989, when he was transferred back to Evin prison. Allegedly he has been severely tortured several times during his years of imprisonment; (y) ML Mehrang,i . Q n j% . It ha been reported that she wa arrested in 1981 snd charged with being a Mojahedin sympathizer. She was imprisoned for two and a hale years in Tabria prison. It was asserted that in prison she was subjected to different kinds of torture anc. rape. Allegedly as a result of having been raped repeatedly, her intestines were damaged and she had to undergo a surgical operation. She was hospitalized for 18 months, first in the hospital of Tabriz prison and then in an ordinary hospital. It is alleged that she has not yet fully recovered. C. Administration of justice 56. It has been reported that, although the Administrative Regulations Governing the Revolutionary Courts and Public Prosecutor's Offices stipulate that an Islamic revolutionary court should be presided over by a religious judge and that it should be composed of as many as five members, in practice, such courts have consisted of only one judge discharging his duties in t summary fashion. Allegedly, hearings before such courts have in many instances been a matter of minutes only. 57. It has also been re orted that trials before Islamic revolutionary courts have usually taken place in secret, sometimes inside prisons, that defendants have not enjoyed the right to be re2resented by a lawyer, and often have not even been made aware that the proceedings were in fact a trial and not an int.irrogation session. 58. It has been reported that prisoners may be held in indefinite pro-trial detention. The principle of presumption of innocence is allegedly not respected, particularly when the subject is accused of baing a member of an armed opposition group. It was said that lawyers generally do not accept cases of such a nature in order not to be suspected of being armed opposition sympathizers themselves. The absence of lawyers in political trials has been considered as one major shortcoming in the procedures of revolutionary courts. Others were said to consist in the denial of the right of the accused to call witnesses in their own defence, and in the absence of the right of appeal against verdict and sentence. In this connection, it may be recalled that, during his first visit, the Special Representative was informed by the President of the Supreme Court of Justice that the right of appeal is recognized and that no exception is made in cases under the jurisdiction of the revolutionary courts. However, Article 11/2 of the Administrative Regulations Governing the Revolutionary Courts and Public Prosecutor's Offices precludes the possibility of any revision being made to the judgements of Islamic revolutionary courts. (For the explanations received from the authorities in this regard see para. 206.) 59. It was also said that, in the proceedings of revolutionary courts, the requirement for adequate time and facilities for the preparation of a defence is generally not met. Reportedly, during the period of investigation 1 persons to be tried before revolutionary courts are frequently held in solitary confinement and ,...
A/45/697 Bngl iah Page 20 incommunicado and are not informed sufficiently in advance of the date of their trial. It was further alleged that in practice the Islamic revolutionary courts give greater priorit.y to handing out exemplary punishments than to ensuring that the accused receive fair trial. 60. Other reports alleged disregard ot court sentences by arbitrary extension of the terms of imprisonment, execution of inmates sentenced to life or imprisonment of various durations or rearrest of persons who already completed their prison terms. 61. With regard to the administration of justice in cases of drug trafficking, it has been reported by the newspaper Abrar that, in conformity with instructions given by the Deputy Chief of Intelligence of the General Committees Command, since the entry into force of a new law against drug trafficking, 50,000 drug addicts have been arrested, including 19,822 heroin addicts, 22,963 opium addicts, and 7,215 hashish addicts. According to figures provided by Radio Tehraz on 10 January 1990, out of a total number of 800,000 drug addicts in the country, 50,000 have been arrested. On 24 January 1990, Radio Tehran announced that 335 drug traffickers and pushers had been arrested on 21 January, as well as 2,231 addicts, and that all had been handed over to the judicial authorities. 62. OEe Special Representative has been apprised of the following specific cases of alleged irregularities in the administration of justice, which were reported as follows: (a) Ms. MLtraAmeli , aged 36, widow, medical doctor, daughter of Ziaedin and Aghdas. It has been reported that she was ar .ested on 9 October 1984 and sentenced to seven years' impriso ment. Her husband, Mr. Anoushirvan L.ofti, one of the leaders cjf Pha Organization of Iranian People's Fedeyan. was arrested in 1983 and executed in 1988. Her daughter, Khatereh, was born in prison on 30 March 1984. On 28 April 1984, the child was given to Mitra Ameli's mother for care outside the prison. It was reported that Ms. Anieli's release, due in 1990, had been made contingent upon her publicly denouncing the activities of her late husband; (b) Mr. Roge.r. Cooper , British, aged 55, businessman. It has been reported that he was arrested on 7 December 1985, apparently for overstaying his iisa. He was allegedly held without charges, and was refused any consular visit until August 1986. During the early months of his detention he was described publicly as a British spy and was portrayed in a television interview as confessing to vague spying charges. However, no charges have ever been announced and no public trial held. Consular access has allegedly been inadequate. Ha has received only six consular visits from members of the British Interests Section and four from members of his family since his detention. His right to send and receive mail has reportedly been seriously limited, although this is said to have improved in recent months. Rumours were reported according to which he had been sentenced to two terms of impri onnient on spying charges, with the result that he would not be eligible for release until about 2003; (c) Jamahid. Fadac was reporte.ily executed in the city of t4asjed Solaiman after four months of imprisonment and without a trial. During his time in prison his family was not permitted to visit him; / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 21 (d) Mehrdad Fadac . It is reported that he was executed in the city of Masj.d Soliaman after 4 months of imprisonment and without a trial. During his detention his family was not permitted to visit himi (e) Mr. aeed accountant in the Office of the Justice Ministry in Tonekabon. It was reported that on 3 December 1989, 10 Guardians of the Islamic Revolution went to his house, took away some of his private documents and intimidated his wife and children. Later in the day, two Guardians of the Islamic Revolution came to his office and took him to Nashteroud prison, blindfolded end handcuffed. The Guardians told him that his arrest warrant had been issued by Mr. Raniexanipour, Public Prosecutor of the Islamic Revolution in Tonekabon. In prison, Mr. Firoos was asked to sign some prepared texts incriminating certain officials of the Justice Ministry end secular judges in Tonekabon who had sentenced some Guardians of the Islamic Revolution to death for having carried out assassinations. Mr. Firoos refused to sign the papers and as a consequence was allegedly tortured. His wife reported the matter to the Office of the Inepectorate General at Tehran. Two inspectors came from Tehran and reportedly confirmed that the prison authorities had tortured Mr. Firoos and other prisoners. However, later the inspectors returned to Tehran as a result of pressure exercised by higher religious authorities without concluding their investigation. When Mrs. Firoox tried to pursue the matter in Tehran with the Office of the Inspectorate General, Guardians attacked and confiscated her car. Mr. Firoos subsequently menagod to escape from prison: (f) Ms. Hura Fuladp ux , aged 38, married, teacher, daughter of Ghauem and Sedigheh. It was reported that she was arrested in February 1983 in Tehren and sent to Evin prison. She has allegedly not been informed of the reasons and duration of her imprisonmenti (g) Ma. Zohrah ..Q .a j , aged about 35, widow, high school teacher and editor of a young women's newspaper of the Youth Orgenisetion of the Tudeh Party, Azar&khaij . It is reported that she was detained as e' e wee going to a meeting at the Party's offices in Tehran in early 1983. Her husband, Mr. iumare Zarshenas, and another 50 people were arrested on the same day. For about six months after Zohreh Ghaeni's arrest, there was no news of her whereabouts and no one wee able to see her. Subsequert to televised confessions by several Tudeh Party leaders, she was able to telephone her family. Two or three months later, the euthoriti. at Evin prison notified her family that they would be permitted to visit her once every two weeks. She was allegedly not tried until about three and a half years after her arrest. Her trial reportedly consisted of her being brought before a mulleh who sentenced her to eight years' imprisonment. This sentence was to run from the date of trial and did not take into account the period of pre-trial detention. The precise charge against her is allegedly still not known. Reportedly, she was told by the prison authorities that she must divorce her husband. as he was a communist end an atheist. She refused to comply and her husband wat executed in autumn 1988. During the time of the Government of the Shah, Ms. Ghaeni spent one end a half years in prison as a result of her political activitiei ; (h) Mahmoi d.kiu.s,azi.j was reportedly sentenced to seven years' imprisonment end executed shortly before completion of his prison term, ,...
A/45/ 697 V nglish Page 22 (j) 5ussan HppseLnspdeh-Arabj , born in 1962 in Rasht, was reportedly detained on 15 September 1981 and executed in the city of Rasht on 14 September 1989, allegedly without any trial; (j) j4s. Fatemeh Hosseinsadeh-Tussi Moghadam , also known s Giti Azareng, aged about 40, widow, employee of an insurance company. It has been reported that she was arrested in April 1983 with her two-year-old son, who was imprisoned with her but later released and handed over to relatives. She was sentenced to 13 years' imprisonment, apparently for having links with the Tudeh Party. Her husband. Saeed Azarang. was executed in the latter part of 1988: (k) . jDtemeh .Js ,. dj, aged approximetely 40, widow, medical doctor. It was reported that she had beeu a political prisoner under the Shah's r gime and was again arrested in February 1983, at the same time as her husband, Mr. Faribors Salehi, for activities in support of the Organization f Iranian People's Fedeyan. Her husband was executed in 1988. She was sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment after a summary trial. While in prison, she has allegedly contracted tuberculosis: (1) Mahin Jahangji.j , 26 years old, was reportedly imprisoned in 1981 in Semiron. After approximately 35 days in prison, she was allegedly executed without trial: (m) MQ i ITILTIg Gholi Jahangiri , 24 years old, was imprisoned in 1981 in Semiron, and allegedly without any trial, was executed after 35 days in prison, (n) Mt niHQJ sh ngi mLani. It has been reported that he was arrested in 1984. In 1986 he was sentenced to 30 years' imprisonment. Since 1988 he has not been allowed to receive vi*iits. His present whereabouts are unknown; (o) Ms. Malekeh Mohammadi , aged about 65, widow, journalist and editor of the Tudeb Party newspapers Mardoni and P nya. She was arrected in April 1983, along with Meriam Firouz, and sentenced to death, but the sentence was later commuted. The charges on which she was convicted are unknown. She was married to Mohanz ed Pour-Hormozan, a leading Tudeh Party figure, wno was executed in the autumn of 1988; (p) ffieyyed-MehdLi1 a.i.y , 64 years old. It has been reported that he has been detair... d since 24 April 1988 without any charge or trial, allegedly because his son was a Mojahedin supporter; (q) Mr. t4ohammad-Taghi Rahimp our , assistant lieutenant in the Army. It was reported that he was arrested in 1981, allegedly because the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution were unable to arrest his wife, Ms. Zahra Noun, accused of being a Mojahedin sympathizer. In 1982, he was sentenced to life imprisonment In a summary trial which reportedly lasted five m nutes; (r) Au Reza Rajaj , born in 1957, was reportedly executed in 1989 after six years of detention in Evin, Gohardasht and Ghezel-Hesar prisons. Reportedly, he had been sentenced to only five years: ,...
A/45/697 English Page 23 (s) Ms. t4wiijeh Riazi , aged 36, married, utudent, daughter of Jaber. It has been reported that she was arrested in June 1981, sent to Evin prison and sentenced to two years' imprisonment At the end of the two years, she was tgain questioned but not released. She has allegedly not been told why and how long she must remain ‘n prison; (t) Ms. Faezeh Sabat ahromi , aged 33, married, student, daughter of Fathali and Ehteram. It has been reported that she was arrested in 1983 in Heser k, Karaj, with her six-month-old son. The child was In prison up to school age. Ms. Sabetjahromi was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment. She is the wife of Mr. Ebrahim Avakh, leader of the Organization of Revolutionary Workers of Iran; (u) Ms. ?ateme jZohreh) Sadigh Tonekaboni , widow, teacher. It was r ported that she had spent over five years in prison during the Shah's Government, but had been released at the time of the revolution. She was re-arrested in 1983. it is not known whether she has been tried or sentenced since then; (v) Mahamjnad Raza Sedaghat . It has been reported that he is in prison without any charge or trial; (w) Mej 4i Vosooghijj was reportedly arrested in 1985 and sentenced to four years' imprisonment. After the first year he was tried again and convicted for 12 years. In June 1988, he was reportedly executed. D. Freedom of opjj n. expiassion. press and association and right to peaceful assembly 63. It has been reported that the Government continuously intervenes in the free flow of information in the form of letters, telegrams, telexes and telephone conversations. In this connection it wee alleged that a large number of disabled veterans have been hired and placed in the communications offices throughout the country to monitor telephone conversations between citizens. L.et..era coming in and going out of the country are allegedly routinely opened. 64. It has also been reported that printing houses are required to obtain the previous formal permission of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance for all publications and that printing paper is attributed by the Ministry only to those publishing houses whose publications have been approved. 65. On 27 June 1990, the Special Representative sent a letter to the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva expressing concern about reports received according to which a number of co-signatories of an open letter which Mr. Mehdi Bazargan, Prime Minister of the first provisional Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, together with 89 other persons recently addressed to the President of the Republic, had been arrested. The names of some of the detained co-signatories of the open letter were given as follows Abdol All Bazargen (son of Mebdi Baxargan), Ezzetollah Sahabi (former Director of Planning and Budget), Reza Sadr (former Minister of Trade), Hussein Beni Assadi (former Vice-Prime Minister), Shams Shahshahani (former , . . .
*/45/697 English Page 24 Prosecutor of Tehran) , Nour AlL Tabandeh (lawyer and former Vice-Minister of Justice), Yadollah Chemse Ardallan, AU Ardalan, Rochan Ardalen. Farhad S& ibahani. Abbes Ghaem Sabehi, Rhosaro Mansourian, Heehem Sebeghian, Ezetollah Hamede Sahabi, Mohaswnad Tavaseoli and Akbar Zarrinebbaf. The Specia 1 Representative requested the Permanent Representative of the Islemic Republic of Iran to provide him with information about the arrest of these persons, the charges brought against them and about the Association for the Defence of Freedom and Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation, which had been alle edly dissolved as a consequence of the open letter. The Special Representative requested assurances that any persons arrested in the above context would receive humane treatment while in detention and benefit from all procedural safeguards provided for in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 66. On 9 JUSy 1990, the Special Representative transmitted the following additional names of persons allegedly arrested as a consequence of the open letter* Mr. Habib Davaran, Mr. Maim Pour, Mr. Amir Tavakol Ebrahimi, Mr. Hossein Shah Ho aeini, Mr. Nezamedine Movahed, Mr. Mahmoud Maleki, Mr. Hormos t4omayezi, Mr. Said Sadr, Mr. Hamid Sadr, Mr. Khosrow Parse, Mr. Ahmad Shayegan, Mr. Mahmoud Habibi. Mrs. Shahin Parsa and Mrs. Azar Sadr. He also reiterated the requests made in his letter of 27 June 1990. On 8 October 1990, the following additional names of allegedly airested persons were communicated to the Governmentsz Mr. Abedi Rahim, Mr. Ghaemossabahi-Aobas, Mr. Yekta Habib, Mr. Gorgi Au and Mr. Gharavi Asghar. 67. On 12 July 1990, the Special Representative he ird the testimony of Mr. Aboulfas Khorassani Nejad, who said he was a political science graduate and a reporter for an evening newspaper. He said that his journalistic activities had caused him serious problems on the one hand, his articles were often censored or not printed and he was not entirely free to practise his profession. On the other hand, because of his articles, he received many letters containing threats from the Mojahedin, which considered him a collaborator of the Government without realizing that his articles were often rewr.ttten. In 1981, he and his wife were assaultad by two individuals armed with revolvers who shot at them. As a result of that attack, his wife died. 68. Another person interviewed the same day said he 4 tad belonged to the Tudeh Party and carried out political activities in the north of the country on the border with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. In September 1983, he had been arrested and had been in prison until February :988. 69. Many press reports. publications of opposition groups abroad and reports from Iranian sources told of clashes between demonstratorr and PaRdaran on the ou'.skirts of Shiroudi Stadium in Tehran. The incidents were apparently ret off by the cancellation of the soccer games and the fans' protests turned into political protests. The people demonstrating shouted their opposition to the Government and hurled stones against cars and buildings. Official sources acknowledged the arrest of some 30 demonstrators and added that they were released after interrogation. However, information from other sources accused the Revolutionary Guards of shooting into the crowd indiscriminately in addition to arresting many demonstrators and added that 10 persons di d in those incidents and were secretly buried in unmarked graves in Behesht-Zhara Cemetery. / . . .
‘4/45/597 English Page 25 70. On 17 April 1990, OEe Times of L.ondon printed a cable from Tehran saying that the police had arrested 65 people in the northern quarter of Tehran because they were shouting political slogans end disturbing public order. The same dispatch told of the arrest of a group of alleged hooligans attending the funeral of Aref Valizadeh, who had been killed by the police on Monday, 16 April, when they tried to arrest him. 71. The National Resistance Movement of Iran announced that Mr. Shapour Rakhtiar had called for peaceful marches along the main avenues of all Iranian cities on Friday, 18 May, from 10 a.m. to noon to demand that the Government hold free elections under United Nations supervision. On 21 May 1990, Mr. Shapour Bakhtiar told the Director f the Centre for Human Rights that peeceiul demonstrators who had responded to hi, call to march for Lee elections had been attacked and beaten by groups supporting the Iranian r4gime although they had not shouted slogans of any kind. 72, On 19 February 1990, Keyhan Intern tiona.t published a report that the Ministry of the Interior had authorized three political parties and associations to function: Hedayet-e-Islami (Islamic Guidance), headed by Darius Zargari Marandi, the Islamic Association of Graduates of the India-Pakistan Uubcontinent, whose president's name was not given; and the Society of Zoroastrien Priests, headed by Ardeshir Azarghoshasb. S. Freedom of movement: right to leave one's country and to return 73. It has been reported that the Government is maintaining a computerized list of nearly 35,000 names of :ranian citizens who are forbidden to travel abroad. Those Iranians allowed to travel abroad have to pay heavy exit duties avd passport fees in addition to airport tax. The reported amounts are as follows: exit duties, $US 625; passport fees, $US 275; airport tax, $US 2,500. A person leaving for a second time during a calendar year is reportedly obliged to pay double the amount of exit fees. Travel agencies, when issuing tickets, are reportedly required to register the travellers' name and address, their destination and place of sojourn, and to report it to the sacuritj authorities. 74. The Special Representative has received the following complaints of an individual character: (a) Ba ieh Shabidi , 75 years old, housewife. In August 1988, while departing Mehr-Abad to the United States of America, she was reportedly prevented from boarding the aeroplane. Her passport was confiscated under the charge of being a Baha'i, irrespective of the fact that in her passport application she had declared herself as Moslem. She was allegedly told by the authorities that she would be permitted to leave the country if she was willing to sign a statement that she was not a Baha'i. She signed such a statement, but the confiscated passport was never returned to her and she was not permitted to leave the country. All her children are living in the United States of America; / . . .
A/ 45 / 697 English Page 26 (b) Be. a Iladipanah , Iranian resident in the United States of America, sent his passport (or renewal to the Iranian Interest Section at the Algerian Embassy in Washington, D.C. in November 1984. He received a letter from the Interest Section stating that his passport had been confiscated because he had participated in enti-governn%I nt protests. F. Allegations of intimidation or reprisal 75. In its resolution 1990/76, adopted on 7 March 1990, the Commission on Human Rights condemns all acts of intimidation or reprisal, in whatever form, against private individuals and groups who seek to co-operate with the United Nations and representatives of its human rights bodies, or who have sought to avail themselves of procedures established under United Nations auspices for the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms. It further requests all representatives of United Nations iuman rights bodies reporting on violations of human rights to the Commission c r to the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, in the exercise of their respactive mandates, to take urgent steps, in conformity with their mandates, to help prevent the occurrence of intimidation or reprisal, and to devote special attention to the question in their respective reports to the Commission or the Sub-Commission. 76. The Special Representative has received the following complaints about cases of intimidation or reprisals (a) 1 i _Ai mad.i. It is reported that the family of this person, who was executed in mid-1988, was warned by the prison authorities of the consequences they would face in case news of the execution was made public; (b) t4oj. raddin Kianoj j , former first secretary of the Tudeh Party, and his wife t4eriam Feirous . It is reported that, shortly after his meeting with the Special Representative at Evin prison, during which, jzzter al& , he asserted to have been subjected to torture, Mr. Kianouri was placed In solitary confinement and has no longer been allowed to receive visits. It was also reported that the same treatment has been applied to Mr. Kianouri's wife; (c) It was also alleged that, during the Special Representative's first visit, several persons who had tried to contact him at the UNDP Office at Teh an had been prevented from doing so by Government agents who took them for questioning to various KomLeh installations. In particular, it was reported that a husband and wife (names provided to the Special Representative) had been taken in this manner to a Komiteh at t4ottahari Avenue in central Tehran, where they were questioned, intimidated and asked to sign a written commitment not to contact the Special Representative or any member of his team. According to the report, these persons subsequently received several death threats over the telephone and were repeatedly summoned by the Komiteh. It was also said that a great number of potential complainants (former political prisoners or relatives of executed persons) were also threatened over the telephone or summoned to Komiteh installations or the revolutionary prosecutor's office and ordered, under th ate of imprisonment or execution, to keep away from the Special Representative. / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 27 77. In a letter dated 23 March 1990, Mr. Baza . gan. former Prime Minister of the first provisional Government, told the Special Representative that in letters dated 15 and 16 February 1990 to the Prosecutor General of Tehran and the Minister of the Interior respectively, Mr. Tavassoli had reported that he and his family had received threats and abusive telephone calls in the days following his conversation with the Special Representative. He had attached copies of the letters. 78. On 13 July 1990, the Special Representative had an interview with a witneos who ruquested that his name be kept confidential. The witness stated that after the Special Representative had left Tehran, family members and relatives of witnesses who had testified before the Special Representative had received threats or been arrested. He stated further that some prisoners who had appeared before the Special Representative had been tortured and received death threats. At the request of the Special Representative, the witness undertnok to provide specific and detailed information about the acts he had denounced. 0. Situation of women 79. According to reports received by the Special Representative, women in the Islamic Republic of Iran have suffered from various acts of discrimination. Unequal treatment meted Out to women has been alleged in the following particular areas. 80. Tn the family context it has been reported, intexalia , that a husband, father or brother may kill his wife, daughter or sister when she commits an immoral or unchaste act. Further, in case of dissolution of marriage, a mother's right of custody over her children was said to be limited to the son under two years of age and the daughter under 7 years, even when the father ha died. 81. In the area of equal opportunities for women, it was alleged that women have no access to certain fields of study, e.g. graphics, visual communications and cinematography. Promotional opportunities for women were said to be few, with practically no women in managerial or supervisory positions. 82. With regard to the administration of justice, it was reported that a woman's testimony in court was considered to be worth half that of a man. Thus, it would take two women witnesses to offset a single male's testimony. it has also been alleged that a virgin woman condemned to death goes thiough forced matrimony and is deflowered before the death sentence is carried out. H. Situation regarding the rights of children 83. It has been reported that, according to Clause 1 of Article 1210 of the Civil Law, the age of puberty for girls has been determined to be nine lunar years (equivalent to eight years and r ine months). At that age, the father or the paternal grandfather reportedly has the right to marry off his young daughter to anyone he consid irs su*table, in exchange for a sum of money, the so-called “Shir Baha”. / . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 28 84. It baa also been reported that, according to Article 32 of the Law dealing with Islamic punishment, physical punishment of children is permitted to the limit of maiming them. I. Testimonies concerning acts of violence against the civilian po Iation 85. On 23 February 1990, aix witnesae members of the Organization for Defending Victims of Violence. an organization eutablished in the Islamic Republic of Iran, requested to be heard by the Special Representative in Geneva. They asked that their names be kept confidential. 86. One witne3a stated that ha used to be a teacher of English and had neve- engaged in political activities. Since he was bearded, the Mojahedin suspected him of being a fundamentalist and Government agent end made an attempt on his life which resulted in the death oC his wife. They advertised the incident as ‘having executed a Government agent”. The witnesa stated that he had not been in his wife's company when the killing took place. He further stated that in Tehran he had tried to see the Special Representative witnout success. He promised to send a list with the names of 12 people who, according to him, were also killed by the Mojahedin. He stated that his trip to Geneva had been financed by the families of people who had died in similar circumstancqs. 87. Another witness stated that he wee an ex-member of the Mojahedin. He had joined the movement after the Revolution, as he had been attracted by its propaganda. For two years he was trained in political activities, such as organizing of public demonatr tions and social upheaval. Afterwards he went through a military training period. In the year following his military training he was arrested by the Government and taken to Evin prison. He stated that he never had participated directly in military activities. He was condemned to 10 years in gaol but was released during the general amnesty in 1986 after serving 4 years. He had knowledge of at least three assassinations perpetrated by Mojahedin agents: the victims were a grocer, a taxi driver and a watchmaker. 88. Another witn.g stated that he “as a medical doctor by profession and an ex-member of the Democratic Kurdistan Party. He had belonged to that party two years before and one year after the Revolution. He alleged that the Democratic Kurdletan Party had received money from the Government of Iraq before the war. In fact, each family involved in this party had received 5,000 dinara from the Iraqi Government. The Iranian ag.nt for the distribution of money was a man called Abdullah and was presently very influential with the Party. Although he was in exile now, he continued his activities from abroad. According to the witness, the Eurdist&n party told their members after the Revolution not to hand in the weapons used in their fight against the Shah. One year after the war with Iraq had started, a group of people from the Party went to Iraq and brought back arms to fight the Iranien Government. The witness expressed the view that the present Gover nent has been lenient and has accepted many facts of Kurdish life, auch dS publications in their own languages. Although courses in Government schools are taught in Farsi. privat, schools which conduct their teachings in Kurdish are . ,...
A/45/697 English Page 29 permitted. This was not the case during the period of the Shah. He further stated that frequently he had received death threats and that many of the people who had a relationship with the central Gov rr.ment had been assassinated. He stated that he knew of the assassinaticn of a woman who was five months pregnant when she was killed on suspicion of co-operating with the Government. 89. Another witness stated that she had joined the Mojahedin for a period of three years through her husband who was a Mojahedin leader. Both had received military training and she had served as a deputy to her husband. They were arrested together and her husband was executed. As his deputy she had initially been condemned to prison for life, but her sentence was later reduced to 10 years. She was released in 1989, after having served six years. The witness further stated that, as an ex-member of the Mojehedin, she could testify to the fact that they were a terrorist group. She hat. . been told by the Mojahedin that certain people were considered as essential to the Government and that if they were killed the Government would coflaps'... Now ehe realized that this system of struggle was not rational. One terrorist he had known personally was Mr. Radjavi, who had served in the group of her husband. In 1982 Mr. Radjavi had killed a yrocer at Dj'an Houri whose name was Hossein Mehrabanian. Mr. Radjavi had also received the order to kill a wood carver, called Davood Nazeur Baka, who h d left the Mojahedin orgenizat on. Two other members of her husband”; group, who were later caught, had killed a seller of textiles by the name of Haji at Narmak. Another killer belonging to the group was Ali Soleamani who lived at Djevedeeh and had assassinated a housewife. Another terrorist she knew had killed two people, one of whom owned an electricity shop in Jajreeah Street and the other, by the name of Mahmoud, had lived in Tejreesh Street. OEe witness statt d that it was not easy for a member of the Mojahedin to leave the organization and asked the Special Representative's help in this regard. The witn as also stated that, while in prison, she had met a girl by the name of Mozgan Momayoum Far who was a member of the Mojahedin. Her foot had been amputated as a result of an accident she suffered while carrying out a Mojahedin mission: after the accident, the driver had left her without organizing help. Later the Mojahedin publicized the case, alleging that she had lost her foot during her stay in prison. 90. Another witness stated that she had been arrested in September 1971, as she had held responsibility for the protection of one of the private hiding places of the Mojehedin. Five or six persons were living there; one was called Mohammed and was the perpetrator of several assassinations. In 1981 a fruit seller was killed by Mohammed because he supported the Government. Other members of the organization, called Ali-Reza Medani and Reza Ostad Hossein, had killed two college students by the names of Reza Darrsh Vand and Naserh Salem. OEe entire group was arrested in September 1981. OEe witness stated that when new members joined the Mojahedin they were promised all kinds of facilities, but all the promises proved to be lies and, little by little, they were induced to conxnit crimes. OEe facts related should be considered only as samples of the activities of the Mojahedin. She said she did not understand how it was possible that members of the organization were allowed to move freely in Switzerland and in the United Nations. The witness stated that dhe had first been condemned to a life sentence but that she had bcen released after six and a half years. / . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 30 91. Another witness, an employee with the Iranian Television, stated that when his wife was 16 years old, she had contacts with the Mojahedin organization. After their engagement she left the organization at his request. When they got married, she received threatening letters from the Mojahedin asking her to return to the organization. In 1982, a woman who used to be a friend of his wife, accompanied by three men, went to their house and violently attacked his wife, who was pregnant at that time. As a consequence theii child was born disabled and his wife suffers from speech problems. 92. In addition, on 12 July 1990, the Special Representative heard the testimor.y in Geneva of other persons who had requested hearings and who gave testimony on this question. Some of them asked that their names be kept confidential. 93. Mr. Gazam Faripoor said that his father was killed in 1981 by terrorist groups despite the fact that he was not politically involved. Thus his family became one of the many families victims of terrorism. 94. Another person stated that he had worked with the Mojahediri organization. As a result of his political activities he had served four years in prison, from 1981 to 1985. He is now working in his father's business, but he intends to resume the medical studies he was forced to interrupt to serve his prison term. His applications for readmission to the University have been rejected. He charged that the groups belonging to the Mojahedin, as well as other political, social and religious groups, were trying to exploit and take adventage of the forthcoming visit by the Special Representative to Iran. Nevertheless, he said that during the first visit, many families victims of terrorism had not been able to speak with the Special Representative. He added that many people, including children, were being held p isoner by the Mojahedin. 95. Another person stated that he had been a member of the Mojahediu organization since 1979, the year when he was recruited. At the beginning, he was assigned simple tasks such as distributing propaganda leaflets. Later, he was given more important political tasks, but never military tasks. He stated that in 1981, the organization decided to step up its terrorist activities with the aim of eliminating those it considered to be key people, mainly officers of the army and the security forces. The chief of his cell was Mohammed Moghaddam, who did take part in terrorist activities. The witness says he had to go into hiding and live in a house with his weapons at the ready. In 1983, his house was razed by the security forces and he received a gunshot wound. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He appealed the sentence and the term was reduced to 15 years. In 1987, after four years and three months in prison, he was released under the amnesty decreed that year. 96. Another person stated that his son was killed ine years ago after receiving a number of threats from members of the Mojahedin organization. 97. Another person, a university student, stated that his younger brother had been killed by members of the Mojahedin despite the fact that he was not politically involved. He said that he tried unsuccessfully to peak with the Special Representative during his first visit. He added that many members of the families / ...
A/45/697 gnglish Page 31 of victims of terrorism had not been able to see the Special Representative either at that time. J. Freedom of religion 98. It has been reported that the Iranian Bible Society was dissolved by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance in February 1990, and has failed in numerous attempts to get approval to re-open. The Iranian Bible Society has operated legally and openly for the last 10 years. After its dissolution, its files were confiscated and its staff locked out of the premises. In addition, its executive secretary, Mr. Sadegh Sepehri, his wife and his son, have allegedly suffered harassment and threats of imprisonment. 99. It has been reported that, starting with the academic year 1983-1984, religious education was prohibited in all Christian Armenian schools. New books in Farsi prepared by Muslim theologians were reportedly introduced. It has also been said that as of 1985-1986 all Christian Armenian schoolgirls were forced to wear an Islamic veil, irrespective of the fact that they were already wearing scarves covering their hair and neck. It has bean also reported that Armenian clergymen, including the Archbishop, have been prohibited from entering school compounds, while Muslim clergymen have free access. It was also alleged that messages to the students on the occasion of religious holidays have to be submitted in Farsi for approval by the authorities two weeks in advance. 100. It was also reported that the Ardak Manoukian Armenian School was forcibly taken from the Armenian community and transformed into a Muslim school. 101. It was alleged that, in April 1990, Guardians of the Islamic Revolution entered the Sipan Cultural and Athletic Club of the Armenian community, closed the club and detained three members of the board and the office clerk. They were reportedly accused of allowing girls to be present in the premises without head scarves. The four detained persons were reportedly sentenced to 74 lashes for violating the Constitution. Allegedly, they were allowed to “purchase” the lashes by paying 70,000 rials each. K. The situation of the k3aha'i conuqunity 102. Although the number of Baha'is reported to be imprisoned has declined from 13, as at 28 November 1989, to 9, as at 30 June 1990, it was alleged that the overall policy of discrimination towards the Beha'i community has not changed. The termination of discrimination and persecution ia reportedly conditioned on the Bahe'is recanting their faith. Some improvements that were brought to the attention of the Special Representative reportedly relate only to the situation of certain individual Baha'is but not to the community as a whole. 103. On 12 July 1990, the Special Representative received a person who requested to give testimony with regard to the situation of the Baha'is, but asked that his name be kept confidential. He said that he converted to the Baha'i faith in 1973. He / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 32 stated that the Baha'is mix religion with politics. He was forced to attend all the meetings, which drained his physical and psychological energy. In 1988, he converted to the Muslim faith. He stated that nowadays, the Bahe'is were free to develop their activities with the consent of the Government. Indeed, he said, it was better to say you were a Baha'i to get work or get a passport more promptly. In his view, there was no discrimination against Baha'is in education, whether in school or in the university, or in medical or hospital care. 104. Three other persons asked to speak with the Special Representative on 12 July 1990 and requested that their names be kept confidential, They stated that as a result of the Special Representative's first visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Govcrvnent had released several followers of the Baha'i faith who were being detained, hao lifted the ban on the travelling in the country without permission, had facilitated their access to farm property and established special preferences enablinu; them to obtain passports. According to their reports, one had only to say he/she belonged to the Baha'i to get a passport immediately. The attitude towards the Baha'is in the communication media had also changed for the better. However, they stated that some Daha'is still maintained a posture of confrontation and were trying to create tensions. 105. Written information on the sifuation of the Baha'is has also been received by the Special Representative, accompanied in many instances by official Iranian documents. The information received has been divided into the following categories: 1. Dismissal of government employees 106. In a letter dated 22 February 1990, addressed to Izzatu'llah Nazari, a retired employee of the Saha'i faith, the National Iranian Oil Company stated: “As you have already been informed, i accordance with Civil Court verdict No. h.b. 1236/7 of 15 Ordibehesht 1362 (5 May 1983) and because you belong to the misguided Baha'i sect, you have been permanently disqualified from exercising Government functions and from serving in any Government-affiliated organization”. 107. In a letter dated 13 Tanuary 1990, the Department of Social Security stated that, in accordance with the decision of the Town Committee of the Manpower Section of the Ministry of Health, Manuchihr Shirvani and Au Akbar Nawruziyan had been sentenced to permanent dismissal from their pasts because they belonged to the misguided Baha'i sect. 108. On 10 Dc—amber 1989, the Department of Social Security informed the Office of Social Services for the Employees of the Ministry of Labour that, in accordance with the relevant decision, Dhabihuillah Fada'i had been permanently dismissed from his post because of his membership in the misguided Baha'i sect and that payment of his pension continued to be suspended on the basis of verdict No. 28827/6 of 14 September 1983. 109. In a letter dated 25 October 1989, Primary Section of the Administrative Court handed down decision No. 1002 upholding an earlier decision concerning Mrs. Issat Ha'i Najafabadi who was dismissed from the Ministry of Education and deprived of her retirement because of being a Baha'i. The charges against her were . I...
A/45/697 English Page 33 based on Section 2 of Act No. 19 containing the Regulations on Administrative Offences and the decision was declared final, since the plaintiff did not submit any grounds or evidence to change it. 110. In a letter dateci 30 September 1989 from the Office for the Investigation of Administrative Offences of the Ministry of Agriculture to Mr. Payduilla'h Ali-Tabar, who had been dismissed fzom his post, it was stated that the fact that he belonged to the misguided Baha'i sect had been proved on the basis of his confession and statement of 7 April 1982: that the decision relating to his dismissal from his post was therefore valid; and that it was legally unnecessary to submit the case for review. 111. On 12 September 1989, a judge of the Administrative Court handed down a ruling in connection with the consideration of a complaint against the Ministry of Health, stating that Mr. Hushang Gulistani's considered himself a member of the misguided Baha'i sect, that an administrative decision of 21 March 1981 had ordered his dismissal from his post and the suspension of his pension payments and that, as that decision had been based on the law, it could not be changed. 112. On 19 February 1989, verdict No. 855 of the Central Council for the Investigation of Administrative Offences described the case in question in the following terms: Mrs. Qudsi Ridvani was registered as a member of the Baha'i sect and acknowledged that she belonged to a Baha'i family and had given that group financial assistance. The Court found her guilty and requested her to return the funds she had sent abroad: and, since the charges against her had been proved, she was sentenced to permanent dismissal from her post. 113. On 6 November 1989, Section 7 of the Administrative Court handed down the following decision: Mrs. Surayya Samimi “admits to having been born in a Baha'i family, but hab not made any statement recanting her faith. The Tobacco Products Company has sent her a reply number 42749, 24 Mordad 1366 (15 August 1987), stating that she is accused of membership in the misguided Baha'i sect and through the verdict of the Civil Committees and the review of the Reforming Councils, she has been sentenced to permanent dismissal from work and her salary has been cut off. Considering the above ... as well as the fact that her being a Baha'i is confirmed, her objection is overruled and rejected. This is a final verdict and may not be reconsidered in this court”. 2. Refusal of withdrawal of work permits 114. In a letter dated 31 October 1989, the National Veterinary Organization informed the Director of the Inspection Group of the Ministry of Agriculture that it was not possible to give a permit to Jamshid Farsi because, in his request of 2 November 1988, he had acknowledged that he was a member of the misguided Baha'i sect; and that sect was an agent of foreign interests and Governments. 115. A letter from the Central Council of Trades of Simnan, dated 20 January 1990, informed a Baha'i, Mr. Afrasiyab Subhani, that his work permit had not been approved and that, as from 21 January 1990, he would have to close his business and / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 34 return the original permit to the Council. It also stated that, if the order was not complied with, he would be treated in accordance with Act No. 72 of the Union Regulations. 116. In a letter dated 4 May 1989, the Trade Union for Repairs of House Equipment in Gurgan intormed Mr. Massud Masudi that, following the investigation which had been carried out confirming that he belonged to the Baha'i sect, the Trade Union was ‘inable to give him a work permit and he would therefore have to close his bud mess. 3. Sapensionof pension or salary pavoea t 117. On 11 March 1989, the Bank of the People gave the Secretariat of the Banks the following information: “With regard to letter No. 342 dated 16 February 1982, Mrs. Bihidukht Tibiyani has confessed that she belongs to the Baha'i sect and the payment of her retir'ment pension has therefore been cut off”. 118. On 23 July 1989, the local Health Department in Khurasan sent a letter to the Office of Personnel of the Ministry of Health indicating that Mr. Dhebihullah Dhabini-Muqaddaoe was a member of the misguided Baha'i sect and that the payment of his salary had therefore been discontinued. 4. Eri on.sentenca 119. In a letter dated 12 March 1989, the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Combed referred to the case of Mrs. Bihidukht Tibiyani belonging to the Baha'i faith in the follo”idg terma: “ihe cise concerning the accusation that you take part in Beha'i activities h s L ,een considered by the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Combed and, in accordance with verdict No. 1684-7 o 26 February 1989, you have been sentenced to one year's imprisonment: the verdict as hbnded down in your absence since you di not appear before the court”. 5. Invalidation of ration ca 120. On 27 ,ptember 1989, the Islamic Council on Supervision and Distribution of Goods of the Department of Commerce issued the following notice: “We hereby respectfully inform you that the ration card of Mrs. Ishrat Shahriyari has been confiscated and invalidated because she is a Baha'i”. 6. Denial of education 121. On 30 August 1989, a secondary school in Tankabun wrote a letter to the Department of Education regarding Mr. Mahmud Mukhta'ri, a father wishing to enrol his son: “According to his clear statement, they are members of the Baha'J sect. OEis school is exempted from having to accept the student in question in accordance with t ie rules of the Islamic religion”. , . . .
A/45/697 Engi i ah Page 35 122. On 9 November 1988, a committee to investigate cases of expelled students informed Miss Farzanih IIIusravi Hamadani by letter that her case had been considered and that, since she had been bannod from continuing her education becuse she belonged to the Baha i sect, she would have to publish three announcements in major newspapers recanting her Bahe'i faith and that, if she did not do so, her situation would remain unchanged. 123. In mother case at the Univ rslty of Allamih Tabatabai, which was considered and decided on 2 October 1989, Miss Farzanih Khusravi Hamadani was prohibited from continuing her studies because of being a Baha'i. 7. Baha'is who have bean ordered to return Balarie4 received as public employt as 124. Hushang Tabish, an employee who had worked for the Sadirat Bank was arrested because he refused to return the salary he had received. After being in prison for some time, he agreed to pay monthly amounts of 3,000 tuniana as from October 1988. When he had made seven monthly payments, he decided to stop them. Reportedly the prosecutor is currently dealing with his case. 125. Mrr. Tal'at Maziumi, a former employee of the Departm .t of Education was ordered to return the salary that she had received while she was in Government service. The order came from the Prosecutor's Office of Section 1 at Evin prison. The prosecutor's last order that the former employee should provide a guarantee of payment was dated 28 January 1990. 126. Col. Muhtashlmi, a retired army officer received a summons to appear before the Prosecutor's Office of Section 1 at Evin on 18 February 1990. A piece of lend IIat belonged to him was confiscated as compensation for the pay he had received during his ervive in the army. . 127. T.fandiyar Ghedanfari, Nadir Ghadanfari and Nadir Vehid have beer summoned repeatedly. They were taken to Section 13 at 5v3.n prison because they have not provided a guarantee that they would pay back the salaries they received during the time they were in Government service. 128. Mr Manuchihr t4ishn Chi war: reported to be held in Evin prison because ha woul' not. or could not pay back the salary he had receiveti. 129. Mr. Yusuf Ahmada i, whose case is with Section 4 at Evin, agreed to provide a guarantee that he would pay back the nalary he had received. Re has already made two payments. 130. Vahid Sabuhiyan, a former army officer who received an order for the repayment of 153,000 tumans agreed to pay back that amount, but later dec 1 ded not to do so and to await official reaction. 131. Mrs. Faridih Ahmadiyyih, a former employee of the Tijarat Bank r .iceived a summons concerning the repayment of salaries from the prosecutor of Section 12 at Evin, dated 5 August 1989. ,...
A/45/6ti Engi i sh Page 36 8. Confiscation of property 132. It has been reported that Mr. Enayetollab Eshraghi. Mrs. Esnat Eshraghi and Miss Roya Eshraghi. members of the Baha'i community of Shiren were executed in June 1983. The family home of Mr. Enayatollah Eshraghi, at 105 Palestine Street, in Shiras, was confiscated by the Government and will reportedly be auctioned in the near future. IV. REPORT ON THE SECOND VISIT TO THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN A. Introduction 133. OEe iecond visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran was made from 9 to 15 Octobv 1 r 1990. The exchange of letters and notes concerning this visit has been referre 1 to in paragraphs 22 to 26. The Special Representative was accompanied by Mr. Georg tdautner-t4arkhof, Chief of the Special Procedures Section of the Centre for Human Rights, Mr. Miguel de le Lema, Human Rights Officer, Miss Carmen Cueves, secretary and Mr. Mohammed Tainmami, a United Nations interpreter. The Special Representative acknowledges and expresses his appreciation to those members of the Secretariat for their efficiency and co-operation. He also wishes to mention the co-operation of Mr. Per Janvid,. Resident Representative of the United Nations Deve1opn ent Programme (UNDP), who, as he had done on the first visit, spared no effort to assist the Special Representative and his team members in accomplishing their task and in achieving their objectives. 134. Dy a letter dated 17 September 1990, the Specl6l Representative had requested the Government to arrange for the following appointments with official or religious pereonalitiess the Ministers for Foreign Affairs, Interior, and Culture and Islamic Guidances the Head of the Judiciary, the President of the Supreme Court of Justice, Ayatollah Montaseri and Ayatollah Jeafari, the Special Prosecutor for Drug Tiafficking, and a senior president of a revolutionary court. By a letter dated 5 October 1990, the Special Representative added the Minister of Intelligence to the libt of requested appointments. 135. The Special Representative also requested the Government, by a letter of 17 September 1990, to arrange a visit to Evin prison and pointed out that he would ask to viait one or two other prisons in the Tebran area, if considered necessary. He further indicated that it would be his intention to conduct hearings, in private, with prisoners of his choice, the names of whom would be communicated in due urse. The Special Representative also stated that he would appreciate being given the opportunity to be present at trial proceedings of a revolutionary court concerning an offence for which capital punishmert may be pronounced. 13 . In the fiist •i eeting with II. Deputy Min .ster for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Manouchehr Motteki, the Special Representative was handed a programme based on his aforementioned requests. In the course of the visit, the programme underwent a number of changes, some of which w e requested by the Special Representative, who asked, in particular, that Saturday, 13 October 1990 be entirely devoted to the hearing of prisoners. The meeting foreseen with Ayatollah Montanan. at the / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 37 latter's reque 4t, had to be postponed from Wesdne dey, 10 October 1990 to Friday. 12 October 1990 end was eventually cancelled by the Ayatollah. The Special Representative, therefore, requested, in line with the written indication given in his letter of 17 September 1990, that he be permitted to vieit Gohardasht prison in the afternoon of 10 October 1990. However, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs informed the Special Representative that it wa not possible to comply with the request. The Special Representative further asked for assistance of the authorities in enabling him to meet Ayatollah Seyed Abolfeal Musevi Zanjani. It did not prove possible to have this vieit arranged through official channels. The Special Representative was, however, able to make arrangements for a meeting with the Ayatollah directly and met him on 9 October 1990. 137. The prograim e of official meetings that took place during the visit is reproduoud in appendix III. 138. On 9 October, the Special Representative and his teem members co-ordinated their own progr unme of work with official proposals and incorporated the activities they would conduct without official contacts or assistance. This programe was considered chiefly with a view to allotting time for the examination of specific cases, mainly of prisoners and for interviews with a number of personalities in Iranian public life and individuals who, through contacts in Geneva, seemed willing to provi(.a information on their experiences and observations concerning human rights. B. Meeting with representatives of the executive and judicial branches of governmen . . l 9. The following paragraphs suivuneries the highlights of the interviews conducted by the Special Representative with governmental authorities. They are in chronological order. . 1. Meeting with the Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairi 140. The Deputy Foreign Minister, M x. M. Motteki, thanki4 the United Nations mission or coming end said that the first visit had opened a new chapter in the relations between the Islamic Republic of 1r6i1 ni1 the United f etfone. ifie point4d to the expanded role of the United Nations in world affairs end said that the end of the cold war would open a new chapter in international relations. Disarmament and huwan rights will be the two basic issues of the new age. The Islamic Republic of Iran is strengthening its spirit of co-operation with all nations and with the United Nations. The search for negotiated solutions to all international problems is another feature of the new age. The issue of human rights figures prominently among the concerns and goals of the Islamic Republic of Iran. 141. Mr. Mottaki said that the Islamic Declaration of Human Rights had been adopted by experts at the Islamic Conference and that the Declaration was taken up and a• opted at the meeting of Ministers of the members countries of the Islamic Conference held at Cairo. / . . .
A/ 45/697 English Page 38 142. Mx. Mottaki said that the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran had examined closely the recommendations of the Special Representative. The Iranian Government was now in a position to refute the false allegations made by its political enemies. A Human Rights Department has been established in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Two seminars have been held in Ir - one locally, dealing uith a comparison of human rights in the West and in Islam, and another dealing with Islam and Christianity from a human rights perspective. Preparations are under way for a third seminar in co-operation with the Centre for Human Rights slated for late January or eari.y February 1991. 143. Mr. Mottaki considered eight categories of recommendations issued by the Special Representative and said that they have all been considered by the Government. Substantial action has been taken on each recommendation. A letter addressed to the Special Representative summarizes the measures taken (sea pare. 12). 144. Mr. Mottaki referred to a pending matterm visits to prisons by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The Red Cross has already been notified that the Government is prepared to allow visits by ICRC. The Special Representative could visit any prison he liked. 145. The Islamic Republic of Iran abides by the teachings of Islam and wishes to co-operate with the international community, but this does not mean that it is prepared to disregard I3lamic principles. The United Nations should distinguish between those States which systematically violate human rights and whoce conduct derives from high-level policy and those countries which occasionally commit a few violations. 146. The Special kepresentative expressed the hope that the discussions with IC RC with a view to reaching a concrete agreement on visiting prisons could be concluded very soon. Mr. Mottaki replied that his Government. saw no problem whatsoever in reaching an agreement with ICRC and hoped that visits to the prisons would begin very shortly. 147. The Special Representative referred to two memoranda submitted recently and reiterated the importance of receiving official replies. Mr. Mottaki announced that the Special Representative would begin to receive specific replies in the course of his visit. 148. The Special Representative gave Mr. Mottaki a list of 202 prisoners in connection with whose whereabouts, arrest or possible sentencing (see appendix II), information had been requested and submitted the names of 26 prisoners he wished to visit. This list of 26, reproduced in appendix IV of this report, contained names of persons abou.. whom the Special Representative had received Information during or after his first. visit to Iran. 149. The interview concluded with an official statement by the Government that it would co-operate fully with the United Nations in general and the Commission on Human Rights in particular. ,...
A/45/697 English Page 39 2. Interview with the Minister of Intelligence 150. On Wednesday, 10 October, at 9.30 a.m., Hojatolislam Fallahian, the Minister of Intelligence, was interviewed. The Special Representative requested clarification of certain matters which had arisen in the course of the investigations. In particular, he asked questions concerning the fol1owing the role played by information or intelligence officers and agents in the trial of prisoners, chiefly in cases submitted to the revolutionary courts; the specific role of intelligence agents who worked with the prosecution and, particularly, their participation in interrogations; the hierarchical relationship between intelligence off iciers, Komitehs and Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guards); and the degree to which intelligence agents could act on their own init'ative without express orders from their immediate superiors. 151. The Minister spoke of plots against the Iranian nation and then referred to observations in th' Special Representative's reports, which, in his view, did not do justice to Iran With regi rd to the activities of his Ministry, he recounted many incidents of past years and referred to the hostile attitude of the foreign media. He said that the function of his Ministry is to prevent and bring to light cases of espionage and to preserve the culture and integrity of the Iranian nation. According to the Constitution, the people's rights must be respectad and intelligence agents oeust act within the law both in making arrests and during trials. He then referred to bands of smugglers who attack private homes and mentioned cases oC persons who had recently been killed by smugglers. 152. The Minister went on to say that the Constitution establishes three bra ches legislative, judicial end executive. In the executive branch, the revolutionary Komitehs and the Pasdaran maintain publ .c order and security and are accountable directly to the President of the Republic; however, they perform their duties in respect of citizens' rights under the supervision of judges. The Pasdaren are under the Ministry of the Interior for matters of public order, under the Ministry of Defence for militaty matters. The Komitehs are under the Ministry of the Interior, and the intelligence officers, under the Ministry of Intelligence. Co-ordination takes place at the highest level, that of the President of the Republic. 153. Commenting on the role of intelligence officers at trials, he said that it was not true that judges consulted them during the trials. In many cases, the judges do not accept tes9.mony by intelligence officers and deny them permission to arrest suspicious persons. Indeed, while intelligence officers did participate in interrogations, they do so under the supervision of the judges. It is not true that they use any means, including violence and torture, to obtain confessions. 154. Intellir'gnce officers take orders; they ar not independent agents. In certain cases, they may take initiatives, for example, when they see someone trying to enter the country with a false passport or someone planting a bomb. In such cases they can errest the culprits. However, they must so advise the judge within 24 hours and he rnuat decide whether or not there are legal grounds for the arrest. There is a department which oversees the activities of these agents and is responsible for punishing them. In some cases, they are referred to an / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 4 administrative tribunal and, in very serious cases, to a military tribunal. Many agents have been dismissed or sentenced to prison terms. 155. The Minister reported that in addition to the Pasdaran, the Islamic Revolutionary Committees, the officials of his Ministry, the po!ice and the gendarmerie were responsible for preventing and investigating ordinary crimes like homicide and robbery and ensuring the safety of the citizenry. Roth police forces were under the supervision of the Ministry of the Interior. Lastly, the Minister of Intelligence said that, in his view, the Special Representative should focus the attention of world public opinion on the acts of aggression committed against the Iranian nation and adopt a clear stance denouncing and condemning acts perpetrated by terrorist organizations. He added that the family and relatives of the martyrs and victims of terrorism shared thst feeling. 156. Responding to a question from the Special Representative, the Minister said that. there was no prison attached to the premises of the Ministry of Intelligence and that all detainees were subject to the authority of the Prison Organization. He then invited the Special Representative to visit the building complex where the Ministry has its offices so that he could make sure that there was no prison attached to or included in the building complex where the Ministry is located. s. Interview with the Special Prosecutor forj4arcotic Drjag. 157. The Special Representative submitted the following questions to the Special Prosecutor, Hojatolislam Zargar (a) How many drug traffickers have been executed in 1990? (b) Row many are currently tried? (c) How many of those being tried may be condemned to death? (d) How many of those condemned to death have seen their sentence commuted? (e) How many executions in public or mass executions have taken place during the last few months? In reply to these questions, the Prosecutor stated the fol1owing 158. He said that the number of traffickers who have been arrested since the first visit, including traffickers and consumers, comes to of 9,201, 6,898 of whom are addicts and have been sent to rehabilitation centres. Rehabilitation centres are still inadequate and, for that reason, the Government has requested assistance from international organizations. The remaifling 303 are traffickers. Not all of the 303 traffickers can be given the death penalty; some will be sentenced to prison. Of the groups previously sentenced to death, six have had their sentences con muted. 159. The Special Prosecutor said that the 1990 capital punishn ent figures are lower. In 1989, 4,113 persons were pardoned. Of those, 2,259 were released and 1,854 had their sentences commuted. Many obtained permission to live at home for three days and some were already enjoying this benefit for the sixth time. 160. He also stated that there had been no public executions since the first visit. At times 15 or 20 persons were executed in the prison courtyard. The Special Representative emphasized two points; the need to guarantee due process of law to traffickers and to reduce significantly the number of death sentences pursuant to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. ,...
A/45/697 English Page 41 161. The Sperial Prosecutor referred to opium t. at is being cessed into codeine at laboratories under his supervision. The codeine will be transferred to the Ministry of Health. A total of 1,320 kilos of heroin and 9,090 kilos of opium were confiscated in the first six months of 1990. Those drugs were largely intended for European countries. 162. The Special Prosecutor sali that he would obtain an exact figure showing the number of persons executed in 1990 for the Special Representative through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs because he did not have it available at that time. The Special Representative asked whether consideration had beer given to transferring jurisdiction over such crimes from the revolutionary courts to the ordinary courts, and the answer was no. 163. At the suggeistion of the Special Prosecutor the Speci 1. Representative briefly met two detainees convicted on drug trafficking charges who were working on the premises. One of them, who had admitted carrying 20 kg of opium from Kerman to Tehran, had been convicted to 18 years of imprisonment. The trial before the revolutionary court took place two years after his arrest. His sentence was later commuted to five years. The other prisoner had admitted carrying 7 kg of opium end was first convicted to a penalty of 1 million riala. The Special Prosecutor, however, hal protested against the senta ce and one year thereafter, •he was sentenced a .ew to 16 years of imprisonment. In 1987, the sentence was commiuted to 15 years. Both were tried before revolutionary courts without the assistance of a lawyer. One of them stated that the interrogators had beaten him during the period of investigation in order to obtain his confession. Both prisoners stated that their condition hod improved, since they could now work on the premises of the S ecia1 Prosecutor. Once a month they were granted leave, usually fo a period of three days. 4. Interview with the Commission on article 10 of the Constitution 164. The Chairman of the Commission, Deputy Asgharaadeh, exp. ained that the Commission on article 10 is composed of representatives from the three branches of government. The purpose of the Commission is to apply the conetAtutlonal principle of the people's right to form associations in general and political parties in particular. The Commission is made up of two members of Parliament, tWo from the judicial branch and one from the executive branch. The Secretary of the Commission is independent and the Minister of the Interior carries out the detisions of the Commission. 165. The procedure is as follows: whenever a certain number of citixens wish to form a political party, they register the members' names and the leaders submit their personal documents and a charter of principles and objectives. The Commission considers such requests at its weekly meetings. The applicants' background is investigated, on the basis o reports from the security and judicial authorities. 166. The Commission has four divisions: (a) The religious division, which places restrictions, for example, on autonomous groups or sects, which do not have the / . . .
A/45/697 Bngiieh Page 42 right to form associationsg (b) The trade union end crafts division; (c) The division that deals with political groups wishing to function as political parties which a:. subject to restrictions relating to public security and co-operation with foreign political parties, and Cd) The division that handles associations of groups engaged in social activities - i.e., cultural or technical activities. Requests are considered in the order that they are received end authorization is granted to associations that are not political more promptly than to political parties. In the past year and a half, 20 to 22 associations were approved. Seven requests from minorities (Armenians), and a request from a political group in Tehran and another in the province of khusestan are being considered. 167. Replying to a question from the Special Representative, the Chairman of the Convnission said that the request from the Association for the Defence of the Freedom and Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation is under review. As long as some leaders of this group are having security problems, this association cannot be authorized. Some members of this group are on trial and in prison on charges of espionage. 168. The Special Representative also inquired abiut the reasons for the dissolution of the Bible Society. The answer was that it had been asked to appear before the Conm iseion several times and bring its activities into compliance with the law. The Society a1 o required authorization from the Ministry of Culture. Since it failed to submit that authorization, its activities were suspended. The Special Representative learned from a well-informed source that the Ministry of Culture and Islasiic Guidance had refused to grant the authorization. 169. The Special Representative explained his ideas on the responsibility of individuals and societies and suggested that the doctrine which clearly distinguishes between the responsibility of individuals and the responsibility of associations should be accepted and applied. In his view, he continued, Iranian law projected onto associations what was exclusively the responsibility of the individual members. He was told in reply that this theory would presumably be taken into account when Parliament reconsidered the law on political parties. 170. The Secretary said that the Commiss on has had difficulty in applying the law in force and that revisions have been considered and proposed for submission to Parliament. 171. A discussion ensued on whether activities for the protection of human rights are considered political. The answer w s that this topic has been debated time and again. The defence of human rights is in the interel3t of the people; however, certain groups claim to be defending human rights in order to mask political activities - at times, political activities designed to destabilize the Government. 5. Interview with IIe Deputy Minister of the Interior 172. Deputy Minister Atrian-Far said that it was natural that the Special Representative should have identified a number of ambiguou. situations on his first visit; he hoped that any such situations would be cleared up during the second visit. Some ambiguities concerned the revolutionary courts, while others concerned political p rties. . / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 43 173. Concerning the unification of the police, Pasdaran, Komitehs, Gendarmerie and judicial police, their co-ordination had been entrusted to the President of the Republic with a view to improving their functioning and thereby guaranteeing citizens' rights. A bill for the integration of those security and protection forces had been approved. A thousand hours of work with experts had been devoted to the issue and the act was being implemented. 174. The Ministry of the Interior must provide an organizational chart and job descriptions in order to implement the act within a year. Two months had gone by and the integration of all police forces would be complete within 10 months. Their integration would considerably enhance efficiency. 175. The Special Representative asked about the press. The Deputy Minister told him that the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance would give him more information on that subject. He then gave some details. Anyone that was qualified to do so could publish ideas or news with his own resources and means. The Government considered it its duty to provide facilities to people who wished to engage in news activities and it therefore gave permission for the import of machinery and paper. The Government welcomed anyone who wished to engage in journalism, and also accepted criticism if it was presented “earnestly and truthfully”. Newspapers and magazines contained abundant criticism of the Government. The same approach was taken with political parties. The Government could not renounce that principle. Everyone must adhere to one basic, inviolable principle, namely, respect for the Constitution. The press and political parties must accept and adhere to the Constitution. That imposed certain responsibilities on writers. The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance was responsible for applying the Constitution and therefore monitored publications and associations. It was lenient with them, however, even when there was cause for severity. 176. No newspaper sent its articles for prior review by the authorities, but it an article was published containing erroneous or untrue information or if someone was insulted, the newspaper must give equal space to a correction. Otherwise, the complainant could take legal actign. 177. In the past 10 years, over 50,000 books on different topics had been published. The organization which had oversight of books monitored publishers' activities. It also studied books before they were published and if it found them contrary to the Constitution or liable to corrupt or offend public dignity, it could ask the authors to correct the inappropriate or detrimental parts. The problem wa almost always solved by negotiation and the authors were satisfied with the outcome. 6. jnt. y.jey. j.th the Depj&ty Jjjn tei QZ Culture and Islamic Guidance 178. Deputy Minister Aminzadeh said that he was sceptical about the activities of iiternrtional organizations and that it would be a long time before Iran solved its international problems. , . . .
A/45/697 8ngliah Page 44 179. The Ministry of Culture and Islamic 3uidance was the product of the merger of two ministries, the Ministry of Art and Culture and the Ministry of Information and Tourism; the merger bad been designed to enhance their functioning. The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance worked with cinema, theatre, the performing arts, music, publications, books, art (painting, drawing, etc.). press, radio, television, printing, tourism, and pilgrimages to holy places. Radio and television were under the joint supervision of the three branches of Government. 180. The Government had never been opposed to foreign films and television but had put a stop to propaganda that caused moral corruption. The same was true of musics the Government had never been opposed to music but had eliminated certain kinds of music which encouraged prostitution and corruption. The same had happenod wiII other forms of artistic expression such as painting. Iranian films had won international prizes. Artists were aware that limits had been drawn to prevent corruption and that they must not overstep those limits. 181. Before the Revolution, many books had been banned. After the Revolution, the number of books published had increased enormously. OEere were sometimes arguments about permission to publish a book. When a book contributed to prostitution and c orruption, its publication was not permitted. 182. The press enjoyed protection and freedom, but anything that was contrary to Islam and public order was inadmissible. The press promoted Islamic vnlues, opposed colonialism, promoted morality and upheld the policy of “neither East nor West”. The couviiittee that granted permits for the founding of newspapers was made up of representatives of the three branches of Government, the universities, publishers and the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance. There were 15 daily newspapers and 300 monthly, weekly or bimonthly magazines. 183. The Special Representative asked what action the Ministry took with regard to the day-to-day activities of newspapers. He was told that if a newspaper insulted Islam, the Leader or the Government, it could be penalized by cancellation of its operating permit. 184. The Special Representative referred to the distribution of paper. The Deputy Minister replied that his Ministry distributed paper. Any authorized newspaper was entitled to the paper it needed. There were limitations on the allocation of paper. For instance, Kayhan and were daily papers with the potential to increase their circulation but there were limits on the amount of paper the Government could distribute at a relatively low price. No limitations had been placed on the amount of paper that the opposition press could receive. 185. The Sr,ecial Representative asked about the conditions for distributing paper fur books. Paper was supplied to printers or authors. Books needed authorization before they could be published. There had been criticisms when the publi'ation of some books had been allowed, but the only criterion for authorization had been moral, never political. 186. The official interview over, the Special Representative talked to working Iranian journalists in the same building. . ,...
A/45/697 ‘ English Page 45 7. Interview with the President of the Supreme Court of Justice 187. The President of the Supreme Court of Justice, Ayatollah t4oghtadaei. said that according to Islam, judges were answerable before God and sat among the prophets and that the place of trial was the place of God. Under Iranian law, a defence lawyer was necessary and mandatory and both the accused and the lawyer were given certain facilities. Sentences could be brought to the Supreme Court on appeal or for review. When the accused had not had a lawyer, the Supreme Court revoked the sentence. Parliament had just adopted an act on procedures under which, once the case was concluded, it was considered ran judicata . The act enabled the President of the Supreme Court to consider the case and decide whether it needed to be reviewed. 188. Under the Islamic judicial system, all individuals were equal. Only recently, at an annual nation-wide seminar, the President of the Republic had expressed satisfaction that the judiciary judged law—breakers strictly and equally. The Islamic legal order had special features with regard to respect for human rights. Iran was prepared to exchange views on those matters, to pass on its experience to others and to learn from the experience of others. 189. Under the Islamic legal order, the purpose of bringing a person to trial was not punishme it but rehabilitation. If the prisoner showed that he was sorry and could be rehabilitated, he was included in the list of those eligible for amnesty, even if much of his sentence remained to be served. Amnesty was granted to groups and individuals. Only rarely did prisoners remain in prison for the full term of their sentence. 190. No one was ever arrested because he adopted a different ideological line from the Government. Baha'is were not arrested because they were Bahais. but for specific of fences. The same wag true of political prisoners: if they were arrested and executed it was because they had been involved in acts of violence. If the detainee or accused repented, he could be amnestied, even if he had ccnmitted horrendous crimes. . 191. Another question related to the campaign against drugs. Th. judiciary was determined to take vigorous action in that regard. Drugs were a problem in the country. Cases came to the Supreme Court, where they were reviewed. A sentence could be applied only with the approval of the Supreme Court. 192. The Special Representative asked about cases in which a number of years elapsed between the guilty verdict and the actual sentencing. The President replied that that sometimes happened because further investigations were conducted. On other occagions, the prisoner could not be informed of the sentence because the case was awaiting review. The sentence was made known only when the Court had approved it. The prisoner could appeal once he was informed of his sentence. Prisoners sometimes did not know that their case had been passed on to the Supreme Court, which was why they complained and felt that an excessive period of time was elapsing between the guilty verdict and the sentence. / . . .
Ai'45/ 697 English Page 46 8. Interview with the Political Di 1ktLt Qi Jjead oLt J ,t jQL 1 193. The Political Depdty, Mr. Badamc iiun, sa.d that the ‘reedom Movement and the Aseociation for the Defence c f FreRenn and th'. Sovereignty of the Ir nian Net on had pub1is wd their manifesto zee.Ly during t 'e war, even when the dealt with sensitive jqgues that fe cec natio l secutity. The Freedom Movement had riot been authorized, but It hi*c b en ct..ve recevi'.ly. 1r. Bazargan an.1 othe members were at liberty; other me be ,. o ! the F ,eed' ri ‘ ij,ement had beer errusted on serious charges. 194. The Association f r the Lefe ce of FrqvCom and the Sovereirn v of the Iranian Nation had been o eralL g without athorizi to . ‘t had c ec1ared its exi3tence without authorizatior &i d had publi. h i 1lXeg doclarations many of its members were actively involved in o.Litcs. Some o.. tt memt ers were being tried on iarious charges. The A so iat on ha'. iu t been up to defend huiwtn rights but as a cover for illegal potittc activities 195. The Special Repreeuntative s td that, according to the informution he had bean given, the two groups had eubmitteo ,ppiicati ins in dt?e form but: had been denied authorization. Their pzope':ty 4 be n confi5 atdd or frozen, since the authorities had occupi:.d them, *nd thr r docu 1 onts had beefl seized. The Freedom Movement had existed priuz to the Revolutio: end ktc d simply been required to adapt to the n i; legal statute. The Mo'i'ernent bud filed an application and documents with the Ministry of the Interior and sifico the Ministry had not raised any objection within three months, th Movement had been tacitly authorized .*nder the law in force. 196. The Political t' eput'y replied IIat the Movement had engaged in sabotage end had had contacts with the country's enemies abroad. While it was true that it had been recognized before the promuleration of the new act on political parties and after it had filed n application wiU che Ministry, the application had not met the necessary legal requirements an the Movement could not be authorized. The members of the Movement had not been acting in good faith. The act which said that if no objection was raised within three months, the applicant organization was automatically recognized did not apply in that case. 9. Intt view with the Head of the Judiciary 197. OEe Head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Yazdi, said that the main source of Iranian law was the Holy Scriptures, which wera intended for mankind's salvation. The Koran said: “I respect and honour mankind”. 198. The Special Repreeentative drew the following situations to the attention of the Head of the Judiciary: (a) public trials were impossible in prisons; (b) some people who had been condemned to death had not had lawyers, and a pe: son accused of spying, for which he could be sentenced to death, had been tried two years previously and btill did not kncw his sentence; (c) the question of the applicability or the repeal of article 11/2 of the Admivdstrative Regulations governing the Revolutionary Courts and Public Prosecutor's Offices of 1979.
A/ 45/697 English Page 47 199. The Head of the Judiciary said that there was a principle whereby the interests of society must prevail over the interests of the individua . The international cr mmunity paid little attention to that principle because the i aue of human rights had been politicized. Such politicization u dormined the enjoyment of those rights. In eight years of war, the international community had never concerned itself with the crimes perpetrated against the Iranian people. He then referred to recent events in Palestine and to the Gulf crisis. 200. The Head of the Judiciary went on to say that no legal system protected human rights as thoroughly as Islamic law. The best evidence of that was the existence of groups which were opposed to Islamic principles, expressed their views publicly and wete left in )eace as long as they did not engage in armed action. 201. Concerning the openness of trials, he said that uourt sessions were held at the Palace c Justice in the city centre and that no less than 20 trials were held each day, all of them public. When citizens were interested in a case, larger premises were used. At Evin prison there were restrictions on access, but the principle of public trials was in force. In any case, the judge could prohibit access for reasons of public order. 202. Everyone was entitled to defence counsel and when the accused could not obtain it, the court provided it. Since that was the accused's rigP ., if the accused said that he considered himself better equipped than the lawyer to conduct his defence, he was not forced to accept the lawyer. The Special Representative said he had observed that, in practice, accused persons tried by the revolutionary courts did not have a lawyer. 203. The Head of the Judiciary said that in the case of rdinery of fences, when the parties reached e compromise, the proceedings ended. In cases of espionage, after the accused had been arrested and th ac usation substantiated, the inv.stigaUon anti gathering of evidence began. Evidence as weighed by the judge. If it we. deemed adequate, sentence was passed. 204. Crimes could be commi' ed by individuals or groupe tn the latter case, the accused could not be infor of the charges against them during the investigation stage because that would p Judice the outcome of the investigation. Concerning the applicability of erticle 11, he said that decisions of the revolutionary courts were not finalt the accu3ed could appeal them or requifiet that they be reconsidersd and the Supreme Court could review them. 10. Interview with the Judicial Deputy to the Head of the Judiciary 205. The Judicial Deputy, Dr. Mehrpoor, referred to the Islamic Declaration of Human Rights and to the Special Representative's previous report. He said that comparative study of the Islamic system and the international system had begun with particular reference to human dignity and the right to life, drawing comparisons between Islam and Christianity. Concerning the need for defence counsel, he said that the Constitution provided that a lawyer must assist the accused in court. OE Head of the. Judiciary had made a statement on that point. Concerning the crediting / . . .
A/4 5/697 English Page 48 of the period of pre-trial detention to the term of imprisonment imposed by the sentence, he said that under a bill currently being drafted detention prior to the date of the verdict would have to be credited to the term of punitive detention. He added that many people had been amnestied, and provided a list: which is reproII ced in appendix VII. He said that the rules of Islamic law could not be repealeU the penalty of flogqing, for instance, was provided for in Islamic law. However, it was being imposed less and lass frequently, for it was usual y replaced by a fine or imprisonment. The Special Representative said he hoped that flogging would be replaced by fines In all cases. 206. Concerning the revolutionary courts, the Judicial Deputy said that the sentences passed down by those courts could be appealed, or reviewed by the Supreme Court of Justice. The act allowing for the possibility of appeal or review hed been promulgated two years previously. Article 11/2 of the Administrative Regulations governing the Revnlutionary Courts and Public Prosecutor's Offices of 1979 which provides that “judgements of the revolutionary courts shall be final and no revision be ,.ade thereon”, had been tacitly repealed because the 1988 act on appeal procedures took precedence, particularly its article 5 which stated “With regard to the decisions of penal 1, legal 1, military 1. special civil and revolutionary courts which have been reversed by the Supreme Court, the authority for revising and passing a new judgement is a court equal to the court which had passed the first judgement”. 11. Interview with the Minister for Foreign Affair s 207. On Monday, 15 October, the last day of his visit, the Special Representative was received by .he Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Au Akbar Velayati. The Special Representative summarized the main points of his visit and thanked the Iranian Government for its co-operation. The Minister said that it was his Government's policy to continue its co-operation with the Special Representative. He said he hoped that by now, at the end of his becond visit to the cou' try, the Special Representative was able to see that the allegations of human rights violations were false and that the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran was comparatively better than in other countries of the so-called “third world”. The Minister expressed surprise that the Commission on Human Rights should have decided to examine the situation of human rights in his country and not the situation In other countries where respect for those rights was known to be much worse. He said he hoped that such discriminatory treatment was not politically motivated or designed to put pressure on his country. He also hoped that the Special Representative had not been pressured by other Powers or groups. 208. The Special Representative replied that he had not been pressured by any Government - neither the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran nor other Governments or by individuals or groups. In any case, his sense of duty would make him reject any attempt to pr ssure him. 209. The Minister said he hoped that at its next session, the Commission on Human Rights would change Its attitude to the Islamic Republic of Iran. Otherwisc, a sector of national public c i ion might interpret the official attitude of . ,...
A/46/697 English Page 49 co-operation with the Special Representative and the Commission on Human Rights as a mistake. In any event, international monitoring of the human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran should not continue indefinitely. The country could not tolerate such monitoring for long. If the Commission on Human Rights did not change its attitude to the country, some hard-liners within the country would argue that the conclusions of the Special Representative's reports and his visits to the country, as well as the voting within the Commission, were politically motivated. 210. The Special Representative expressed satisfaction that the Gove nment had acted on one of the recommendations made in his barlier report and had invited the International Crsmmlttee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to viait Iranian prisons. However, an agreement would have to be concluded with ICRC so that prison visits co 1d begin as soon as possible. The Minister said that a high-level ICRC delegation had already visited the country and that a director would be arriving shortly to work out the details oC the agreement. Once the necessary arrangements were made, ICEC would be able to begin its work immediately and make regular prison visits. The Minister mentioned that the S ecia1 Representative had been bble to interview, in private and in complete freedom, many of the prisoners he had asked to see. That was a demonstration of the Government's trust, for he had even been allowed to interview people convicted of supplying information on national security to foreign Powers. . 211. The Special Representative then asked the Minister for a detailed Government response to all the liegations of human rights violations contained in his earlier reports and in the two memorandums submitted in 1990. Such replies were crucial to the performance of is mandate. He also asked that the Government respond to his req asts made on purely humanitarian and non-political grounds. The Minister answered that his Government would provide such replies, some of them before the end of his visit, and that it would consider his ht'manitarian requests. 212. Lastly, the Minister expressed satisfaction at the holding at Tehren University of a seminar on human rights in international law and Islamic law, which had been attended by eminent lege experts and philosophers from )ermany and a number of Islamic countries and had formulated valuable conclusions. 12. Fiz.1 interview with the Deputy Foralyn Minister 213. After the meeting with the Minister for Foreign Affairs, the last official meeting of the visit took plc..ce. Deputy Foreign Minister Mnttaki recalled that during the Special Representative's first visit there had been a diacussion of the particular features of Islamic human rights principles ant the Government's attitude of co-operation with the Special Representative end the Commiesion on Human Rights had been confirmed. It was in keeping with that attitude of co-operation that the Special Representative had been invited to visit the country a second time. One practical result of that co-operation was that talks had begun with senior ICRC officials on authorizing members of ICRC to make regular prison visite, as recommended by the Special Representative. A specific agreement o that effect would be reached shortly. / . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 50 214. Concerning the Special Representatives recommendation that the right of all accused persons to legal counsel must be guaranteed, he said that a bill to that effect, which would expand on the relevant provision in article 35 of the Constitution, had been presented to Parliament, Legal counsel would even be available before the oral proceedings. in other words, during the investigation of the detainee. 215. The Deputy Foreign Minister also said that, in keeping with the role played by compassion in Islam and with the Special Representative's recommendations, the policies of amnesty and pardon had been developed and expanded. Moreover, concerning the recommendation that comparative studies and seminars be conducted on the international system for the definition and protection of human rights and the Islamic system, he said that the progress made included the recent holding of a seminar at Tebran University. Further to another of the Special Representative's recommendations, the Government had decided to request assistance from the Centre for Human Rights, under the latter's programme of advisory services, for a comprehensive, long-term project. 216. Concerning the number of executions, he said that further to one of the Special Representdtive's recommendations, the number of executions had declined significantly since 21 March 1990, the .iate of the Iranian New Year. The purpose of executions was not only to punish criminals but L lso to deter others from committing of fences. however, executions were being carried out only for the most serious crimes, such as drug trafficking, espionage and murder. In that connection, he handed over a list of 113 executions carried out since the Iranian New Year (21 March 1990). According to that list, 32 people had apparently been executed for ordinary crimes, 71 for drug treffickinq, 4 for activities contrary to national security, co-operation with armed groups and drug traffickers, 3 for terrorist acts, 2 for espionage end 1 on unspecified charges. 217. Concerning replies to the allegations transmitted by the Special Representative, the Deputy Foreign Minister said that the Government would do its best to reply to all the allegations “ede. However, those allegations would have to refer to problems in applying the law, the severity of penalties in relation to the crimes committed, or consistency between the penalties imposed and the laws in force. They could not be allegations questioning the Islamic legal system, laws or, specifically, the provisions of the Penal Code of the Islamic Republic. Those were 4 .esues which must be dealt with in other, primarily academic, forums and in other circwiu tances. The Deputy Foreign Minister also announced that the Government ha presented to Parliament a bill under which the time spent in prison before sentence was passed must be credited to the term of punitive detention. The Special Representative expressed satisfaction at that initiative. 218. The Deputy Foreign Minister also s.iid that the Islamic Republic was open to anyone who wished to examine the situation of human rights there. In that connection, he announced that the Govrnmant was giving favourable consideration to a request by Amnesty International to visit the country. He also reported that the Head of the Judiciary had replied to many letters containing allegations. He said that there was complete freedom of expression in the country and that a wide variety of views existed on domestic and international issues. No one was being
A/45/697 Eng 11 a h Page 51 investigated or detained simply because of his political views and any citizen could express his political views openly every day in the mass media, on the street or In the mosque. Parliament reflected the diversity of political views in the country. 219. The Deputy Foreign Minister next eferred to the bpecial Representative's visit to Evin LLison. He said that the Special Representative had been able to interview in complete freedom most of the prisoners he had asked to see, including those accused and convicted of spying for enemies of the nation a d of attempts on the security of the State. He added that the reasons why he had not been able to interview the other prisoners had been explained to him at the timei they had been released, they had been on temporary leave from the prison, or their trials were at the investigation stage and the prosecutors had not given the necessary authorization. In any case, the Government had trusted the Special Representative enough to let him interview people who had supplied foreign Powers with hiahly strategic internal information, even in wartime. That demonstrated the Government's attitude of co-operation towards the Special Representative and the Commission on Human Rights. If that co—operation was to continue, however, p.ejudiced attitudes and preconceptions about the situation of human rights end fundamental freedoms in his country would have to be abandoned, the remaining obstacles would have to be removed and there would have to be n end to the double standard whereby the human rights situation was investigated in some countries but not in others where there were more serious and systematic human rights violations. He hoped that the meetings of the Third Committee of the General Assembly would mark the opening of a new chapter in co-operation between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United Nations. 220. Lastly, the Deputy Foreign Minister handed over to the Special Representative a list giving official Government information on the alleged executions of 3,620 people mentioned in different reports of the Special Representative (E/CN.4/1988/24, B/CN.4/1989/26, A/44/620 and E/CN.4/1990/24). The information in the list had been compiled by the Statistics Department of the Ministry of Justice, the Police Identification Unit and the Registry and Statistics Organization. A summary of the list is contained in appendix VI. 221. OEe Special Representative thanked officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Government for the facilities and co-operation extended to him during his visit. C. tj aringQf rJ.eonexa at Evin pritQ 222. The visit to Evin prison took place on 13 October 1990. The Special Representative was received by the Chief of the prison administration for the Tehran area, his deputy, the director of Evin prison and an official of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. OEe Chief of the prieon administration explained that there were presently some 2,000 prisoners detained at Evin, of whom 60 per cent had been sentenced on charges relating to the use or trafficking of narcotics, 35 per cent were common criminale and only 5 per cent (between 100 and 105 persons) were pLlltical prisoners. He added that all political prisoners of Tahran province ,...
A/45/697 English Page 52 were detained at Evin. The Director of Evin prison again stressed the special character of the Iranian priuon system which was aiming at the rehabilitation and re-education of offenders. That explained the frequency of amnesties as well as the possibility for many prisoners to be granted leave which could range from three days up to a year. Leave could be granted both to common and political prisoners. The prison officials expressed regret that the Special Representative had chosen mainly persons who were known as opponents to the 0over unent, or had been newly arrested, because there had been little time for the authorities to influence in a positive manner their misguided convictions. He further stressed that the prison administration must be given an opportunity to defend itself against any unjust accusations that might be voiced by any prisoners the Special Representative would see. 223. Since the Special Representative had already visited various installations at Evin prison, he requested that his visit be devoted this time exclusively to a hearing of IIe 26 prisoners he had selected. The 26 names given to the authorities on 9 October 1990 concerned cases on which the Special Representative had received particulai y detailed information. Th y can be classified into the following categoriest (a) prisoners allegedly convicted and sentenced to execution; (b) prisoners allegedly subjected to torture; (c) prisoners who allegedly suffered reprisals after having met the Special Representative during his first visit ; (d) prisoners of foreign nationality; (e) prisoners belonging to the group of persons who had signed the open letter of former Prime Minister Bazargan to the President; (f) prisoners belonging to the Baha'i community; and (g) a group of female prisoners, two of whom the Special Reprdsentative had seen during his firat visit. 224. The Special Representative was told upon arrival at Evin prison on 13 October 1990 that, fo various reasons, it would not be possible .o see all 26 persons. The Special Representative, therefore handed to the authorities an additional list of six persons. 225. The Director of Evin prison explained that two persons appearing on the first list had been released, four persons had been granted leave, and that two parsons were deta1ned at Arak and Karaj, respectively, and could, therefore, not be met at Evin. For a group of 10 prisoners (six on the first list and tour on the second) he had not received euthorizaPion from the prosecutor to present them to the Special Representative, since their cases were still under investigation. The Special Representative pointed out that the cases of other prisoners whom he would be allowed to meet were alsc under investigation, in some instances even in connection with the same offence of which other prisoners whom he would not be permitted to see were charged. 226. Appendix IV of the present report contains the names of all those prisoners which the Special Representative had requested to see, as we1 as the reasons given by the authorities with regard to those with whom he could not meet. 221. Among the persons who were not available for a hearing by the Special Representative was Mr. Roger Cooper, whom the Special Representative had unsuccessfully tried to see during his previous visit. Asked about the reasons, - /...
A/45/697 English Page 53 the Director of EvtA replied that the trial of Mr. Cooper was still, pending. The Special Representative recalled that, on his first visit, he had been told that Mr. Cooper had been sentenced to 10 years in prison and that his sentence was being translated into English. The Director said that the trial was not over because the sentence had been appealed. The Special Representative said he did not consider this a valid reason for refusing to let Mr. Cooper see him, for the interviews were neutral and had nothing to do wit the status of trials. Moreover, some of the other prisoners he was going to interview had appealed their sentences and he did not see why Mr. Cooper's case should be handled any differently. The Director replied that a new accusation had been made against Mr. Cooper and another triel had begun, related this time to moral issues. He then confirmed tha Mr. Cooper had been sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment. 228. During the ensuing nterviews, which took place in an office of the administration of Evin prison without the presence of Iranian officials, the Special Representative spoke briefly with the following personat Mr. Jamehid Amiri-Sigvand , 4r. Bahman Agahy, Mr. Hooshang Abmadi Rigvand, Mr. Noureddine Kianouri, Ms. Meriam Feirous, Mr. John Fattia, Mr. Nour Ali Tabandeh, Mr. All Ardalan, Mr. Farhad Behbahani, Mr. Hossein Shah Hosseini, Mr. Bad ul1 h Sobh ni , Ms. Sakineh Sedaghat, Mr. Ezzatollab Sahebi and Mr. Khosuro Mensourian. 229. The Special Representative first received Mr. Klanouri, the former Secretary-General of the Tudeb Ferty, whom he had already seen during his first visit and who, on that occasion, had made serious allegations of torture. He also saw his wife Mortem Feirous. Concerning both persons, allegations have been received that they had suffered reprisals subsequent to the Special Representative's first visit (see peru. 76). Mr. Kianouri stated that the permission given to him to see his wife and daughter once a wook for one hour had been reduced to one telephone call to his wife every four weeks and one visit from his daughter every two weeks. However, he had not been placed in solitary confinement, as alleged, and three weeks before, the previous rhythm of visits was again being applied. He appeared. to be in better physical condition than in January 1990. Mr. Kienouri further stated that he had requested that permission be given to his wife to urdergo surgery out ido the prison, but that the authorities had so far not acceded to this request. Mrs Meriin Feirous referred to various types of torture inflicted upon her at the beginning of her detention, which started in 1982. This torture had resulted in the loes of hearing in one ear, considerable difficulty in swallowing food and various other consequences as a result of heavy beatings. She requested that she be allowed to give her statements standing, as she suffered pain when sitting. Given her physical condition, she had equeated the prison authorities not to oblige her to share a cell with others and this had been granted. On the other hand, the lack of company had resulted in serious psychological strain. She also said that during the eight years of her detention, and particularly during the past three years, she had received sympathetic treatment from a number of persons within the prison. 230. The Special Representative then met Messrs. rdalan, Behbahani, Mensourien, Sahabi, Shah Hossolni and Tabandeh, who had signed the open letter of former Prime Minister Mr. Bazargan to the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The.. / . . .
A/45/697 Eng 118 h Page 64 persons eta & d that they had been arrested in June 1990, some 20 days after the publication of the open letter, and since then had been kept in olita y confinement, some at Tohid prison (formerly called Central Komiteh Prison) and at Evin prison. While some of them stated that they had ..eceived written charges, others said that they had learned of the accusations indirectly through questions put to th '. by their interrogators. According to the detainees, the charges varied from case to case, such as ‘rneasures offending national interest and sovereignty”, ‘participation in activities against the revolution and national Interests”, ‘publication of the open letter and dissemination of its content abroad', etc. In several instancea, the interrogators alleged that there had been a co-operation between the group of signatories of the open letter and a foreign int.el]igence agency and that by publicizing the letter abroad the group had played into the hands of the enemy, Mr. Ardalan, the Chairman of the executive committee of the Association for the Defence of Freedom and the Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation, categorically denied that the Association had attempted to become a political alternative to the present Government or had ever engaged in activities that could be construed in any way as espionage. If any of the co-signatories of the open letter had had contacts abroad, this was a private initiative of the individual concerned and not a policy of the Association. Mr. Behbahani stated that the authorities had resented that the open letter had reached foreign media. In this connection, he was questioned about a visit to the United States where he had met friends nine months before his arrest. He stressed, however, that he • ad neither been accused of, nor had he confessed to, any charges of espionage. When he appeared on television on 6 August 1990, he had simply admitted to have realized that the position taken by the group of signatories was in conformity with the policy of a foreign Power and that, as such, their position was wrong. He also expressed himself in favourable terms with regard to prison conditions, He said that the treatment was satisfactory and the food superb. This contrasted sharply with statements by others who complained about the extended duration of solitary confinement (at Tohid prison in cells not bigger than 3 x 1.17 metres) for which there was no legal limit as long as the case remained under investigation, the very rare occasions on which contacts with relatives had been permitted and the lack of legal counsel. In one case, severe beatings were alleged. Generally, most of the persons belonging to this group appeared to be under great stress. Some of them requested Fpecialized medical treatment from outside the prison, in view of their ailments, advanced age and the difficult conditions of four months of solitary confinement. 231. The Special Representative also met Messrs. Amiri-Bigvand, Agahy and Ahmadi Bigvand, all accused of espionage (see para. 35). The first two persons confirmed that they had been tried and sentenced to execution, whereas the third ierson de 'lared thai his trial had taken place two years ago and that he was still awaiting to be informed of the sentence. Their trials had taken place beforo a revolutionary court, without foEmal charges or defence counsel. One of them stated that hi trial had lasted only 15 minutes. The two convicted persons had made confessions on television enu had appealed against the verdict. They had not been informed of the follow-up to their appeals. 232. The Special Representative also saw Mr. John Pattis, a United States citiran sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment on spying charges. Mr. Pattis said that hc had , . . .
A/45/697 Eng ii Bh Page 55 admitted having worked for a foreign intelligence agency. During the investigations he had never been presented with formal charges and was held for three months in solitary confinement. In September 1986, he made a public confession on Iranian television. His trial before a revolutionary court took place in March 1987 before one judge, one representative of the prosecutor and one Interpreter. There were three witnesses of the prosecution and the court session lasted approximately four hours. He had not benefited from legal counsel and the sentence was passed with the annotation that it could not be reduced. Since then, he had received three consular visits, in 1987, 1988 and 1989, from the United States Interest Section at the Swiss Embassy. He had not been tortured but had received threats. He was being held in a tell with two other foreign6rs (M L. Cooper and a prisoner of German nationality) and affirmed that prison conditions had improved significantly before the Special Representative's two visits. 233. Mr. Sobh ni , a retired employee of the Ministry of Education, stated that he had been arrested a month before, as he was unable to repay the pension he received during the past 14 years. This had been requested since he was a Baha'i. He was simply told by the authorities that, as long as his family could not pay his bail, he would remain in prison. He had never been formally charged, nor had he been presented to a judge. Since he had no hope of ever being able to pay the requested sum, he feared that he would be imprisoned for the rest of his life. 234. The Special Representative also received Me. Sakineh Sedaghat Reshdi, who was arrested in 1988 while trying to leave the country illegally. 3he was sentenced by a revolutionary court to three years' imprisonment, without access to legal counsel and stated that she had recently received permission to leave the prison for one week and was receiving visits from members of her family. D. Trial proceedings at Evin priaon 235. The Special Representative had requested the opportunity to be present at trial proceedings of a revolutionary court concerning an offence for which capital punishment may be pronounced. On 14 October 1990, he was invited to attend trial proceedings at Evin prison which, however, appeared to concern an offence (armed robbery and banditry) that doeb not fall into the compet nce of revolutionary courts. According to official information received from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, revolutionary courts are competent for the following casess “All crimes committed against the internal and external security of the state, or related to corruption on earth or war against Allahi attempts against the life of political authorities; all crimes related to narcotics and smuggling; all cases related to murder, massacre, imprisonment and torture with the purpose of consolidating the Pehlavi r gime and suppressing the strugg1 of the Iranian people, both as perpetrator and abettor; misappropr .etIcn of public funds and profiteering and hoarding of foodstuff”. 236. A judge presided over the herring in the presence of nine accused and five victims. There was a defence lawyer who asked to speak. at the end of the heating, before sentence was passed. The judge read out ver ee from the Koran and then , . . .
Al 45 / 697 English Page 56 asked the accused to introduce themselves and answer questions. The prosecutor read out the accusation, mentioning eight different acts of armed robbery committed by the nine accused. The six victims then testified. 237. The prosecutor asked each of the accused whether they admitted to having committed the offences, and all of them answered in the affirmative. The judge repeated the question, asking the accused whether they admitted to the of fences; they again answered in the affirmative. The judge asked each of them what he had to say in his own defence and they all answered that they simply begged forgiveness. He then asked one of them why he had committed the offence and the answer was one words “stupidity”. The judge asked whether they were ready to apologize to the victims and some of them simply said no. 238. The judge turned to the victims. The first of them said that he held to his version that the attackers had used weapons, even though they denied this. One of the plaintiffs said that one of the accused had apologized to him but the other two had not, and that if they apologized he would withdraw his complaint. Each plaintiff in succession then described his reactions and wishes. B. jnform tiQz1 received by the Special Representative from non-governmental sources 239. The Special Representative was informed by the Minister for Foreign Affairs that a number of Iranian non-governmental organizations had requested the Ministry to arrange for meetings with him during his stay in Tehran. The Special Representative accepted this request and, on 12 October 1990, met representatives of the following organizations: Organization of Iranian Women; Workers' House; Organization for Defending Victims of Violence; Association of Families of Martyrs; Teachers' Ass iation; Writers' Association; Association of High School Students; and Organization for the Defence of Victims of Violence. 240. The Organization of Iranian Women stressed that women enjoy id freedom in absolute terms without any limitations. They stated that women had freely chosen the law of Islam and that their only complaint was that not all Islamic rules were as yet fully implemented. They thought it a cruelty to preteiid that men and women are equal, since the two sexes had very distinct characteristics. 241. The representative of Worxers' House explained that that organization was the principal trade union of the country and participated in the work of the International Labour Organisation. He stated that many of its leaders had been assassinated by counter-revolutionary groups and that they still feared for their safety. The most recent assassination had taken place at Sanadaj some two weeks before. He described the union's relationship with the Government as satisfactory, although not all promises had been fulfilled end difficulties with regard to housing and the level of salaries still existed. However, the organization had realized the limitations that the Government was facing in this regard in view of the consequences of the war that had been imposed upon it. . ,...
A/45/697 ng ii sh Page 57 242. The Organization for Defending Victims of Violence presented several witnesses, three of whom stated that they had been former members of the Mojahedia Organization. They had subsequently been imprisoned and amnAstied. All of them stated that they had received “humane and Islamic treatment” while in prison. At present they did not have problems with the authorities but were living in constant fear of reprisals by the Mojahedin Organization. One of them said that he had been given a job in the administration. A fourth witness said that he was a former communist but had realized that his activity as a journalist for communist publications was equivalent to the crime of spying. Two persons presented by the Organization, Ismail Asghar-Nejad and Mohammed Shabanzadeh, stated that their names had been included in a list published by the Mojahedin Organization of persons allegedly executed y the Government. They showed their identity cards, of which photocopies were taken. The name of the first person appears in the list of alleged executions annexed to the Special Representative's report to the forty-fifth session of the Commission on Human Rights. ai The name of the other person does not figure in any list available to the Special Representative. 243. The Association of Families of Martyrs requested the Special Representative to devote particular attention in his report to the problem of terrorist acts committed by the Mojahedin Organization and, in this connection, reported se', ral killings. The Special Representative was also asked to reaffirm the specific rights of the martyrs of terrorism. The Association further referred to the Baha'i community, which they accused of financially supporting the State of Israel. Those Baha'is who refrained from such activity did not suffer any discrimination in the country. 244. The Association of Teachers referred to certain problems that those in their profession were facing, which they, nevertheless, fully a cepted. The difficulties they mentioned concerned economic restraints for schools, limitations for women with regard to puz 'Aing certain university studies and limitations for Armenians and Kurds regarding the teaching of their respective languages and culture in their schools. They also complained that it was not admissible to criticize the Government for such situations. 245. The Writers' Association, represented by three women, referred to the strict control to which they had been subjected during the Government of the Shah. The main problem they were facing at present was the fact that they were not allowed to write about non-religious subjects. Numerous members wished to describe the problems of present-day Iranian society in the form of a story. This was, however, not permitted. All literary works required the approval of ‘ -he Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance and it was impossible to have paper allotted by the Government and have literature published without such approval. The association considered itself in opposition to the Government, but wanted to underline clearly the distinction between themselves and any oppositicn groups existing outside the country. They stated that the Government did not prevent unarmed opposition. 246. The Association of High School Students informed the Special Representative that an organization of guardians of the Islamic society had been established in every high school, which resulted in certain limits with regard to the freedom of expression and instruction. Generally, they complained that standards of teaching
A145/697 English Page 58 were low end that classes were over-crowded. Although secondary education was free of charge, important expenses had to be incurred by the families for books and teaching material. For that reason, they had decided to leave the organization of Guardians and to create their own association. This did not mean, however, that they were political opponents of the Government or that they sympathized with the Mojahedin Organization, whose members they considered as terrorists. 247. The Association of Students explained their objectives as encompassing the struggle for freedom of expression, the promotion of sound intellectual and political activities, and a campaign against oppression and anti-human movements. The Association presented various allegations concerning the activities of the t4ojahedin Organization. 248. The Association for the Defence of the Victims of Violence also denounced several attacks by the Mojahedin Organization. 249. At the request of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Special Representative also paid a brief visit to the Institute for International Studies. The Director of the Institute explained that, already in the late nineteenth century, a similar institution was founded which was later incorporated into the University of Tehran. In 1973, a new Institute, separate from the University, was created. It was seized in 1980 and re-established in 1983. At present 380 students studied at the Institute, of whom 100 were staff members of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Four permanent professors and several invited professors gave courses on the practice of diplomacy and negotiations. Every year a number of students attended the session of the General Assembly. Owing to the lack of time, the Special Representative briefly greeted the students, but was not in a position to give a lecture to them, as had been requested. F. Information received from private persons 250. During his stay at Tehran, the Special Repr sentative once again paid a visit to Mr. Mehdi Bazargan, first Prime Minister of the Provisionc 1 Revolutionary Government, who received him in the company of Dr. Yazdi, former Foreign Minister of the same Government. Mr. Bazargan expresRer.L great concern over the detention of signatories of his open letter to the President and emphasized the illegality of both the arrests and the fact that the authorities had voiced accusations in public, in particular, such serious charges as espionage. The latter violated the principle of presumption of innocence of the accused. Mr. Bazarqan pointed out that, after the arrest, he had sent a series or additional letters to the authorities, in particular the Head of the Judiciary, of which he handed copies to the Special Representative. He said that he had never received any reply to those letters. 251. The open letter criticized the Government for the worsening economic and social situation and the lack of fceedom and security in the country. It accused the Government of mismanagement and of an extremist foreign policy which has led to the country's isolation in the interi.ational community. The aignutories of the 1 tter invited the President and his G vernznent to take the following measures and policies: / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 59 “(a) To prevent the perpetration of violations and destructions in the country and to avoid signing subjugating and not nationally supervised agreements with foreigners; “(b) To restitute the legitimate rights of people stipulated in chapters 3 and 5 of he Iranie.n Constitution and to stop suppressive policies of some [ government) institutions and organs: “(c) To safeguard and guarantee freedom of activity for those political parties and associations and press wtiich have legal and open tivities; “(d) To provide opportunities for free and undisturbed debates, talks and exchange of views for the purpose of resolving problems of the country and seeking sincere cc-operation of people and eventually paving the way for establishing the legitimate rule of the people.” 252. Mr. Sazargan f'4rther stated that none of the arrested persons had been allowed to avail themselver. of legal counsel, that virtually all were held in isolation and that their contacts with relatives and friends had been extremely limited. As he had stressed in various letters to the authorities, it was illegal to detain persons without informing them of the charges held against them within 24 hours and keep them In solitary confinement for such extended interrogation by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence without passing the cases to the competent courts. He also drew the Special Representative's attention to the precarious health situation of some of the detainees. lie further mentioned that the offices of both the Freedom Movement (the party of which he was president) and the Association for the Defe. ce of Freedom and the Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation had been closed by the authorities and that all their files had been confiscated. According to an announcement of the revolutionary prosecutor, the Association for the Defense of Freedom and Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation had been prohibited. However, the revolutionary prosecutor was not competent to make such a statement and a ruling concerning the dissolution of a political party or association, in accordance with the existing laws on political parties and associations, could only be made by a special court of the Ministry of Justice upon a complaint by tne Minister of the interior. With regard to his own party, the Freedom Movement, no formal decision had been taken, but since its building and files had been confiscated, its activities were ?_factQ restrained. The Freedom Movement had provided all the information required by the Ministry of Interior in accordance with the L aw on political parties and the Minister had not declared its functioning iliegal within the three-month period stipulated by the law. 253. Mr. Bazargan further mentioned that on numerous occasions the authorities had officially recognized the right to criticize the Government and an example of this were the discussions in the Majlis (Parliament). Ho'wbver, a number of deputies had publicly declared that they did not feel safe to say everything they wanted to say. He cited several names of deputies who had been eliminated from the Majlis as a consequence of critical statements. ,...
A/45/697 English Page 60 254. Other private persons, including Ayatollah Sayed Abolfazi Musavi Zanjani, the euthor of a comparative study on Islamic principles and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. complained about the lack of freedom of expression. According to assertions by several persons, the manner in which this manifested itself varied from case to case, ranging from intimidation and threats by members of the revolutionary guards or other orqanized groups, dismissal from employment, exclusion from public activity to detention and indictment or de facto isolation or house arrest, such as in the cases of Ayatollah Qomi In Mashad or Ayatollah Roheni in Qo14. These persons also referred to a variety of strict measures of control over any opposing views, such as the ins ection of correspondence, the tapping of telephone conversations, and a network Oi inquisition exercised by the revolutionary guards and agents of the Ministry of Intelligence. 255. Relatives of Mr. Amir Taavo% i reported that he was arrested together with his wife and his four-year-old daughter in 1982, on charges of sympathizing with the Mojahedin Organization. His daughter was released after 40 days of detention and he was sentenced seven months later to five years of imprisonment. The relatives affirmed that he was tortured and that as a result of beatings he could hardly stand on his feet when they visited him at Evin prison. He was released in 1986 and, since he could not obtain a passport, he fled the country together with his wife and daughter. He was rearrested at the frontier in 1987 and, after 10 months of imprisonment, without trial, was executed at Evin prison. 256. One person, who requested that his name be kept confidential, alleged that some 50 former members of the Mojahedin Organization were kept in Incommunicado detention at Evin prison in the so-called “Section 209”. The names of these prisoners did not appear on the prison register and the persons detained in this Section required the urgent attention of the Special Representative. A similar assertion was received from a 1 ormer detainee at Evin prison, Since t iis information was given to the Special Representative on the last day of the visit, he had no occasion to follow it up with the authorities. 257. Nehid Araba]i, Effat Bahrololousn, All Jajarmi, Maryam Rahmanian-Kooskak.t and Mahshid Shakernia stbted that the Mojahedin Organization had reported their execution. They presented their identity cards and it was later established that the names of the first and third persons appear in a publication by the tdojahedin, that the names of the second and fifth persons are listed in the annex of the Special Representative's report to the General Assembly at its forty-fourth sessio (A/44/620), and that the name of the fourth person Is included in the annex to the report to the Commission on Human Righta at its forty-fifth session. 1/ It should be noted, however, that the lack of personal data other than the name, as well as discrepancies in the spe1 Ing of names do not permit one to establish with certaint ' that the listed persons are identical with those who appeared before the Special Representative. 258. Several persons said that they were Iranian prisoners of war in Iraq and alleged that they had been inIItced by the Mojahedin Organization to join their ranks. The Special Representative considers these situations outside the framewo: of his mandate and, therefore, refrains from reporting on the numerous detailed descriptions )“ eceived on such cases.
A/45/697 nglish Page 61 259. Co-ordination between Islamic law and international law was the subject of a private conversation with Ayatollah Yafari, who long before had invited the Special Representative to discuss that matter with him. The Ayatollah expressed the view that a truly universal order of the rights of human beings should be based on the common principles of Judaism, Christianity and Isiwn. In this connection, ho suggested the creation of an “Abraham Society” in the framework of which the implementation of these principles could be studied. 260. Hundreds of letters and written communications were again received by the Special Representative during his visit. Since most of them were received in Farsi, they could not be translated and analysed in time for the completion of the present report. The Special Representative, thexefore, Intends to revert to these communications in his report to the next session of the Commission on Human Rights. C. Meeting with members of the Baha'i community 261. The Special Representative also met three members of the Baha'i community, who essentially confirmed the allegations received earlier. At the same time, they recognized the willingness of the Government to solve the outstanding problems and stated that discrimination, in particular business and occupational deprivation, although still existing, had been somewhat relaxed, that confiscation of property had been limited in the present year to one case only and that petitions regarding confiscation of farms and orchards had met with some positive reactions, though so far with little tangible results. Nearly 300 Baha'is had applied for passports but only 2( had obtained them, as well as the necessary exit permits, and some more had been summoned to interviews, possibly leading to the issuance .f passports. Daha'i students rere still not admitted in colleges and universities, but those who were denied admittance in primary or secondary schools were now permittLd to continue their education at pre-' ollege levels. The courts of justice still did not accept heredity petitions presented by Baha'i heirs end many Beha'ia were deprived from entering into business transactions. However, in some localities Baha'is were now being granted business liconces, With regard to the problem of cemeteries, there were still no formal ownership rights given to the Baha'is guaranteeing their places of burial. Medical doctors could only exercise in private practices and could not take part in the national insurance scheme; and Ba.ha'i lawyers were not admitted in the bar association or in courts. Reference was also made to the enormous financial pressure to which members of the community were subjected , to the impossibility of obtaining credit, or to accede to higher positions, even in cases of academic qualifications acquired abroad. A person who had been involved in scientific research for many years related how she had been ousted from Tehran University, together with other Baha'i professors ‘who were now trying to survive as truck drivers or flower salesmen. 262. Some positive developments were said to consist in the pnrtial lifting of the ban on meetings, allowing a maximum of 15 Baha'i to attend their 19-day feasts. For Baha'i funeral meetings there were no restrlcUons on the nuzrber of persons attending. Furthermore, Baha'i families received food allowance booklets and coupons and were given permission to connect their telephones, which had been interrupted for many years. Finally, the regulations affecting married conscripts were now also being applied to Baha'is. / . . .
A/45/697 Bug ii sh Page 62 H. Meeting with the Armenian community 263. On Sunday, 14 October 1990, the Special Representative attended mass at th Armenian Orthodox church and met Archbishop Artek Manookian. Allegations received prior to the visit in connection with the situation of the Armenian community are reflected in paragraphs 98 to 101. The Archbishop deplored in pat ticular the extremely limited possibility of language training in the Armenian schools - only two hours per week at the primary school level and none at the secondary school level - as ‘well as the lack of religious education. In the latter respect, some progress had been made in reaching an agreement with the Government in the question of the catechism, but the implementation of the agreement was still being awaited. V. OBSERVATIONS A. General observations 264. Following the submission of his final report to the Commission on Human Rights, 4/ the Special Representative received copious 1 diverse information on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic vi: Iran. Encouraged by his fii at visit to the country, Iranian exiles of all political persuasions, relatives and friends of people with police or judicial problems and non-governmental organizations working for the protection of human rights all provided such information. Hundreds of letters were received, some of them in English or French but most in Farsi. During his second visit to the country 1 the Special Representative also received information about specific cases and heard the Government • s views. 265. Charges and counter-charges, allegations and counter-allegations are alluded to briefly in the relevant chapters of the provisional report. Often conflicting data and views have been included, giving an idea of the diversity of opinions, some of them extremely polarized, as to th situation In the Islamic Republic of Iran. There are virtually no accounts of situations or specific cases whose accuracy and veracity are not disputed. 266. This final chapter summing up the provisional report contains general or specific observations, depending on the matters at issue. In a way, the observations are the forerunner of the conchasions which the Special Representative will submit in his final report to the Commission on Human Rights, but they are separate and distinct from those conclusions. The recommendations addressed to the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran in earlier reports therefore remain valid. 267. In preparing the programme of work for the second visit, It was necessary to select cases which were sufficiently important and on which sufficient details wer available for them to benefit from on-site investigation. It was possible to take up most, but not all, of the cases salectel on previous occasions the cases of 10 prisoners accused of espionage or similar o fences could not be investigated because the Government. would not allow the prisoners to be interviewed. The Special Representative deeply regrets that he was not allowed to interview thsse ,.. t
A/45/697 English Page 63 prisoners, for he believes that they could have given him information about due process of law and the prison system. The Special Representative was also unable to visit Gohardasht prison, where he had planned to request an interview with four prisoners. The Government was given only a few hours' advance warning of his desire to visit Gohardasht and he was not informed of its reasons for refusing permission. 268. On his second visit, the Specal Representative did not have to contend with the crowds who obstructed his first visit. On some days, relatively small groups of people blocked the entrance to the office where he generally heard witnesses, but even so he was able to receive witnesses at the office and to question others at the Esteighial Hotel and in private homes. Of course, the rule of confidentiality was observed with regard to the names of people who requested it. 269. The information he received concerned executio.is, ill-treatment and torture, lack of defence counsel in trials before the revolutionary courts, failure to notify detainees of the charges against them immediately after their arrest, difficulties iii ensuring public trials, restrictions on the press, on the publication of books and on artistic creation, problems with the right of petition and obstacles to forming associations in general and political parties in particular. 270. In general, witnesses and observers often seem to seem the S eci&l Representative's visit to the country a operatiDq as some kind of panacea, and they tend to expect spectacular results from it. That, after all, is the attraction of the panacea which, since time immemorial, has been sought after both as a cure for individual diseases and as a solution to social problems. It is very difficult, in one or two visits, to change a situation as if by magic, or to investigate thousands of cases when only a sample can be obtained of such cases and their Implications must be enalysed by means of logic. Visits are but a rtage, though obviously an important and essential one, in the process of verifying the human rights situation in a given country, and evidence of a Government's desire to co-operate with the competent United Nations organs. B. Action taken by the Iranian Government 271. As a result of recommendations made in earlier reports and matters discussed during the first visit, senior officials said that the Government had taken steps to implement some of the recommendations. In uarticular, they mentioned the decision to allow !CRC to visit prisons. The official notification of the decision to allow prison visits imposes no restrictions whatsoever as to the prisons that can be visited or tne kinds of prisoners or their offences. The Special Representative pointed out that in order to implement the decision, the Go,ernment would have to reach a working agreement with ICRC because IRC begins to make prison visits only after such agreement has been obtained. The Special Representative urged the c3mpetent officials to conclude such an agreemer t as soon as possible so that regular visits to prisoners accused of ordinary and political offences could begin. The competent off ic als said they were ready to conclude a definite agreement with ICRC as soon as possible. On his return to Geneva, the Special , . . .
A/45/697 English Page 64 Representative was informed that ICRC had submitted to the Government on 24 October 1990 details of its traditional procedures for prison visits. 272. The Iranian Government has requested technical assistance from the Centre for Human Rights. It has also brought together experts from various countries and regions to consider ways of co-ordinating Islamic law with the obligations imposed by international law. The Government has also granted a number of amnesties which have benefited many prisoners (see appendix VII). Iranian officials said that they had taken steps to improve conditions for accused or convicted prisoners and that a special fund had even been set up, financed by the Government and philanthropists, to provide them with financial aid. 273. Another noteworthy development is that the Government has begun to reply to the allegations transmitted to it. It 9resented a long list of people allegedly executed over a number of years (see appendix VI) and a list of execut. 1 .ons carried out since the beginning f the current Iranian year (21 March 1990) (s.e appendix V). The Government noted that there had been a decrease in the number of executions as a result of the recommendations made in earlie.. reports. 274. In recent months, the Government's co-operation with the Special Representative has improved and has come closer to, although it has yet to reach, what could be considered a desirable level. The provision of information on executions is a positive step, but a detailed response has yet to be forthcoming on numernus allegations of human rights violations. The Government has reiterated its willingness to reply to all these cases. It is therefore necessary to reiterate to the Government the request that it reply in detail to all allegations regardless of the date on which they were made, in other words, without drawing any distinction between old and new allegations. C. Specific observations 275. Concerning the most important right, namely, the right to life, it should be noted that according to estimates from non-governmental sources based, Inter alI , on statements by the Assistant Attorney-General, the number of executions between January and May 1990 was relatively high. Moreover, before completing his second vi Jt to the country, the Special Representative was given an official list indicating that 113 executions ha been carried out since 21 March 1990. The figures provided by sources abroad are considerably higher than the official figures. In any case, the official figures are still higher than can be considered compatible with the restrictive and exceptional circumstances in which the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights authorizes Governments to apply the death penalty. 276. The Special Representative has continued to receive many reports about the absence of a lawyer at trials heard by the revolutionary courts. On his second visit, in the course of interviews with prisoners at Evin prison, he was able t ..' confirm that in five cases the accused had appeared before the revolutionary courts without defence lawyers. Two prisoners who had been condemned to death had not benefited from defence counsel, and had not even requested It because they knew it ,...
A/45/ 697 English Page 65 was not allowed in revolutionary courts. A third prisoner, who was tried two years ago and still has not been informed of his sentence, also did not have a defence lawyer. In the first two cases, the sentence was the death penalty, and the sante penalty is expected in the third case. These cases confirm that, in practice, compliance with this essential element of due process of law is inconsistent and uneven. 277. Public trials are another element of due process. According to the information received, the Gover qnt has ruled, without mentioning any exceptions, that trials must be public. Based on this, the Special Representative pointed out that facilities for a public trial did not exist in prisons. When he attended a trial in Evin prison, it was obvious that prison trials can not really be public because access to them is subject to the restrictions inherent in prison security. Entry to Evin prison is heavily supervised and restricted, while a public trial requires access by the press and the public as and when they desire. The room in which the trial was held was also too small for a genuinely public trial to be held, for with nine accused, five plaintiffs and various court officers, it was almost full. 278. The Special Representative found that in many cases the constitutional obligation to inform an arrested person of the charges against him iimi ediately after his arrest had not been fulfilled. Some prisoners had never been informed of the charges, while others were informed two or three weeks after their arrest. A number were not informed in writing and quite a few realised what the accusation was from the questions asked during their interrogation. These cases would also seem to bear out similar allegations received from different sources. 279. Special mention should be made of televised confessions. The Special Representative talked to three people at Evin prison who had appeared on television and confessed to the crime of espionage. All denied having acted under pressure or in response to threats or promises. However, two of them said that it was known from earlier cases that people who confessed their guilt in public had their sentences reduced end were treated more leniently, and that they therefore expected something in return. Televised confessions have aroused considerable scepticism and they are seen as lacking spontaneity and authenticity. In view of this situation, the practice does not contribute to the proper administration of justice. Rather, it undermines and obscures the administration of justice for purposes alien to it, particularly when the practice takes place in the course of the investigation. 280. Citizens who have availed themselves of the right of petition have not received a reply from the officials petitioned. It should be recalled that the right of petition imposes on the authorities en obligation to respond to the petition, although not necessarily to grant it. 281. Concerning associations in general and political parties in particular, it should be noted that the laws regulating them impose conditions which, in theory, are supposed to ensure that the Constitution and moral and religious principles are upheld. In practice, however, they have the effect of ensuring that associations whose purpose is political propaganda and electioneering or the protection of human / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 66 rights are not legally recognized. Problems arise for individuals when associations are in the process of being formed, since there is no clear distinction between the individual responsibility of members and the responsibility of the associations themselves, or indeed of associations whose activities are authorized. Morecver, until an association is recognized, no judicial remedies are available to it. Two groups outside the Government have attempted to form legally recognized associations and have made the corresponding applications to the Minister of the Interior. These are the Freedom Movement and the Association for the Defence of Freedom and the Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation. Neither of these groups has been formally authorized and their situation recently became more precarious when accusations were rn viq against some of their members. The authorities say that they h ive been git en de facto authorization, a aituation which perpetuates the uncertainty about their activiti s and leaves the right of association open to interference. Moreover, while they are allowed to publish Itateifi.ents and manifestos, the authorities can at any time seize a publication which provokes their displeasure. OEis tolerance does not extend to participatiox in elections. OEe Bible Society, which has a long tradition and has existed for many years, has also been dissclved and its papers confiscated. 282. In earlj June 1990 0 former members of the first Revolutionary Government end eminent persons i i very broad ape..trum of professions and occupations signed an open letter, the text of which e. .rculated world wide, in which they called on the Government to adhere to the Constitution and criticized its economic policies. The Special Representative was able to interview some of the letter s signatories, many of them members of the Freedom Movement and the Association for the Defence of Freedom and the Sovereignty of the Iranian Nation, at Evin prison. They claimed that the open letter was the sole reason for their detention and that the accusation of eipionage was a fabrication. One of the prisoners intqrviewed, who had appeared on television, admitted that on a trip abroad he had met with friends an6 that during the investigation he had acknowledged that the views of the or enization to which he beloiged coincided with the position of foreign news agencies, but said that he had neither committed nor admitted to committing espionage. He said he had appeared on television of his own free will and that no promises had been made to him. The other people interviewed vigorously denied having engaged in espionage and said they hoped that each of them would be judged in terms of his individual responsibility. 283. Some prisoners had been able to deduce from their interrogation that t' e accusalion was based on two facts: first, that foreign news agencies had published the contents of the letter before it was made known in Iran and, secondly, that the contents of the letter coincided with the customary position of two foreign radio stations. None of the detainees admitted guilt and one of them said that he had been severely beaten in prison. 284. The trial of these people will be a test case for the application of the rules of due process. It should be noted that the rules governing the Iranian judicial system establish that during the period of investigation the accused remains in complete isolation. As r.intioned above, the authorities allowed the Special Representative to interview number of the accused. The sequence of events shows that the publication of the letter prompted and msrked the beginning of the , . . .
A/45/697 English Page 67 judicial proceedings. The real reason for the official reaction may therefore be the Government's displeasure at this kind of criticism. As a result, most - it not all - of the prisoners can be considered dissidents and prisoners of opinion and described as prisoners of conscience. During interviews, Government officials said that calling on the Government to adhere to the Constitution implied, by definition, that the Constitution was not being adhered to. As subsequent events have ohown, however, freedom of expression and the right of petition are indeed being flouted. 285. From talking to journalists and writers, the Special Representative was able to obtain information about restrictions on the press, on the publication of books and on artistic creation. For the press, problems begin with the distribution of paner, which is in Government hands. The Government can use this to put pressure on he mass media, giving them less than they need if they deviate from the accepted or tolerated line. After this comes personal pressure on journalists whose work is not, for one reason or another, in line with dominant official opinion; such pressure has the effect of bringing the journalist somewhat into line. 286. According to the information received, books require prior authorization from the competent authority. The authorities say that such authorization is granted or denied strictly on moral grounds, but the fact is that, by law, books are also evaluated in terms of their adherence to the Constitution. Since the Constitution iq a political and legal insl:ument, political criteria therefore also come into play. The writers and artists interviewed feel that artistic freedom is being impaired. The Special Representative was told of the case of a women writer who published a book which apparently did not meet the necessary requirements, was put in prison and has only just been released after serving her sentence. The owner of the publishing house was also convicted. Writers and artists want more room for artistic expression and say that the cvrrent regulations inhibit their freedom of expression, both in literature and in the arts. . 287. The information received about associations, the press.. books and artistic creation, the truth of which does not appear to be in doubt, is consistent and coherent with the laws governing those matters which senior officials explained in the course of interviews. Given the prevailing legal and administrative situation, it does not appear possible to exercise the right to disagree with the Government because that right presupposes an atmosphere of social and political tolerance and adequate gudrantees of legal security. 288. The Special Representative talked privately, in private homes, to people who have no ties to the Government and have led a normal life, without police or judicial complications. These people, however, agreed to be interviewed only after taking numerous precautions to preserve their anonymity. They said they feared reprisals if it became known that they had given information about the situation in the country. They fear irregular groups and Kosniteh and Pasdaran agents who use intimidatory tactics. Many people interviewed at the UNDP office and the hotel voiced the same fears. This is further evidence of people's uncertainty about the consequences of their actions. This uncertainty is felt even by members of Parliament, as can be seen from a statement made in Parliament by Haeri Zadeh, representative of the Province of Birjand: ‘I am not secuz e enough to say .ihat I want to say”. / . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 68 289. Concerning the situation of the Baha'is, nine of them are still in prison, but none has been executed in recent months. Many documents signed by administrative authorities have been received, providing evidence of discrimination, confiscation, rejection by universities, suspension of pensions, demands for the return of pensions earned and paid, denial of passports and other irregularities. Such measures are not taken everywhere, nor in all administrative offices, and it would seem that the attitude towards the Baha'is and their situation depends on the temperament and personal convictions of individual officials. OEis keeps t e Baha'is in a perpetual state of uncertainty about their activities. The Government should therefore be requested to take effective action to ensure that these Iranian citizens enjoy the same civil and political rights as the rest of the population. 290. It can be concluded from the specific cases that have been confirmed IIat the investigation of other cases would yield similar results, in other words, evidence of further human rights violations. The enormous quantity and variety of allegations and complaints eceived from very diverse sources, even allowing for the fact that they may contain errors or exaggerations, provide a credible factual basis for the belief that human rights violations occur frequently in the country and that government action to prevent and remedy such violations has not been eufficiont to put an end to them. We do not have the information to judge whaP might be their conunon denominator. This explains the fear shown by independent citizens who, when they talk, try to conceal their identity and what they really think, and the uncertainty felt by private individuals and senior officials alike, which makes them extremely cautious about expressing their opinions end about how they act in general. 291. The above observations all point to the seine conclusion! that it is both useful and appropriate that international monitoring by the competent United Natio *s organs with a view to ensuring compliance with international human rights instruments in the Islamic Republic of Iran sho'ald continue, that efforts should be made to ensure the uniform end proper application of the appropriate norms, and that a climate of confidence and legal end political, security in which people can exercise their individual rights without adverse consequences should be promoted. Notes ) / E/CN.4/1990/24. Z' E/CN.4/1989/26. / Ibid . 4/ E/CN.4/1990/24. / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 69 APPENDIX I Names and particulars of persons allegedly executed in the lelemic Republic of Iran. supplementary to the lists contained in previous reports of the Special Repreaentetiva Surname Name Data A'yer li Fathe Babol Abbas-Ali Ravanipoor 05.02.1981 Abedini Eamalel 1981 Abrendi 1988 Evin prison Adibi Mabmoud .&984 Afeari Au 1982 Afehar Masawneb Afaheri Esat 1981 Afahari Au Aghaei Hamid 1982 Aghai Ahad 01.1990 Abmad Pour Noh nvnad Birjand Abmadi-Nejad Saee d 1989 Abmadi-Neabad Seed 1989 Ahmadian Bi han 1985 Babol Ahznedy Khosrow 1981 Ahmedy Pariba 09.1988 Amnady Mohaimnad 09.1988 Ahmady Farahnas 09.1988 Ahmady Mensour 09.1 88 Ahrari Leyla 1981 Aimyari Abdolmejid 1988 Akberzad-Yousef I Nasser 1981 Tabris prison Alami Mahnas 08.1931 Alamaadeh Batoul Alemi Mohenvnad-Resa 1981 Alemi Mohaimnad-Hadi 1981 All Seyed 01.1990 / . . .
k/45/697 Engi I eh Page 10 Surname Name Data Place Ali-Nejad Abdoighader 25.07.1988 Alien-Hashed t .lehri Bander-Gas Alidoust Masoud 1988 Alipour Hosein 19.02.1990 Sabsevar Ameli All 1982 Evin prison Amendi Vahid MOhBUmIadk 19.02.1990 Tehran Amin Saleh Amirapanehi Hoesin Evin prison Atniri Abdollah 19.02.1990 Keraj Aneri All Asghar 1981 ArakSadeghi Balakhen 19.02.1990 Arek Ashar Akber Esne 1988 Aehraf I Maryam S dro1 1981 Ashtari Mehrad 08.1987 Ashtiyani Sedegh Azah Hamid 1981 Asimi eveh 08.1989 Assani Faraaneh 1984 Bahadori ianoosh 1983 Masad Soleiman Behnian Mashalah 1981 Bahrami Ahmed 19.02.1990 Bouehehr Bekhsheli Mehdi Bakhtiari 04.1990 Sanandaj Banaf shah All Ouseti 1989 Barash Moheen 1983 Tonekabon Baseri All 1982 Tehran Bashiri Mansour 19.02.1990 Tehran Ba argan Bijen 09.1988 Basazan Hossin 1981 Behdervand Parvin 1982 Behneni Assado leh 1983 . Tehran Belivand Kumars 1982 / . . .
A/45/697 Eng livh Peqe 71 Surname Name Dirany All Reza 1981 A&dbil city Bladi Rogheyeh 15.12.1983 Bolur-Forush MehdiB 04.1990 Sanandej Bordbari All 1984 Bordbari Reza 1984 Borghei Nehdi . Chegini HaBG8n Cheragh-DiBi Jamal 04.1990 Senandej Dadgar Esmaeel 1983 Eafehan Dahangiri Yafar 12.1988 Danesh Hohammad-Amin 12.01.1986 Irenahehr Darabi Sayeed 1981 Noshar Darabi Saman 1982 Hamedan Darabi Mehrdad 1989 Boroujerd Darvishi Hahmoud Daryaii Mohainmad-Hosein 1988 Dehchi Nader 19.02.1990 T.hran Dehghan Glee 1981 Derakhenfar Hehrdad 08.1989 Dinkhah Hamid 1988 Ourinieb Doulatebadi t4ahmoud . 1984 Dowlat-Abadi Moheninad-Dareb 19.02.1990 Arak Dowlatsehi Sewne l lah 19.02.1990 Tehran Ebrahim-Abadi Salatin 19.02.1990 Sebsevar Ebrahimi Aelzo l lah 1989 Boroujerd Edulati Parvie 1981 Tehran Eesad-Ehah Kermani Maseoud Eliasi Nemat Tonekabon Esfahanian Hojgan 1981 Evin prison Eemaieli Javad E madi Tassebeh 1989 Evin prison Fadaii Mohammed Mished prison ,...
A/45/ 697 English Page 72 Surname Name Data Place Fadee Jam hid tdasjed Soliaman Fadee Mehrdad Haajed Soliaman Fanny Ebrahim 1981 Farahmand Mohammed 1988 Adelabad prison Farahrnandian Javad 1981 Farahmandian Esmet 1981 Farhad 1988 Farhangi-Sabet Katayoun 19.02.1990 Sari Fat'Hi Nader 04.1990 Sanandaj Gaffarian Iray 1983 Ghafoury Mohammad Sadegh 19.09.1981 Goliadeh Chajar kzdonloo Maeomeh 10.1982 Ghanemati Mostabah 1989 Ohavaini t4ousa 1988 Oholam Raze K lakjory 1988 Golijan-Moghadam Fardin 1984 Tonekabon Golijan-Moghadam Au 1984 Tonekabon Goizar Gho leznossein 02.1990 Goizar Gholamhaasan 02.1990 Gorbani Hussein 1981 Goreishi Semen 1981 Bandar, Abbas Hedadan Isa 1983 Zanjan city Haddadi Mohemmad-Saiid 1988 Hadidi Arya 07.1981 Hadipour Babak 1981 Haffarl. A1i-Akbar 19.021990 Tehran Haj-Mohsen Hosuin 1988 Hainini Daryoush Hemzeii Au 19.02.1 90 Arak Henry Majid 1981 . Raaht Hariry Massoud 1982 Evin prison / . . .
A/45/ 697 English Page 73 Surname Name Date Place Henry Shohreh 1981 Rasht Hariry tdanaoor 1988 Gohar-Dasht Hassani Mabmoud Hassani Ahmad Bi.jand Hassein Asimi Birjand Hayeti Taszebeh 1989 Evin prison Hedayati Zie Qahaem Shar Heidari Jorsumeb He at lah Oholemy 1984 Hematti Mashaa'l lah Hamedan Heydar-Fakouri Seyyed 19.02.1990 Sabzevar Ho abre Cyrous 1981 Suary Hojabre Seemin 1981 Tehran Hoseini Ai 27.03.1988 Hoseini Fanideh 2.07.1988 Hossaini Hossain Hoasain Mohammed 08.1981 Hosseinpour Hossein 06.1981 Hosseinsadeh-Mabi Susan 14.09,1989 City of Rasht Hossieni Seid Seleh O4. 90 Sanendej HydasJ Amir 06.09.1981 Izedshenas Mehdi Jabarzadeh Rasoul 1988 Jafani Mehdi 1985 Jahen-Bigleri Kamyat 1981 Jahangiri Mohammed-Oholi Jahangiri Abolgasem Jahangini Mahin 1981 Semiron Jahanian Hemid 1981 Evin prison Jahanshahi Seyad Gholasn Resa Jalal L.ayghy 1984 Jalali Maser 04.1990 Sanandaj / . . ,
A/45/697 Ingi Lab Pegv 74 Surn a N ne Date Place Jelisi Mebideel Javan Vanid Kaki 1982 Javeni Fridon 1985 Evin prison Javasadeb AlL Kaikavousi Farideh Keissi Abbas 28.03.1990 Seistan Kalangari Mebmod 10.09.1984 Kelat-Oharbi Moha iiad-Reae 19.02.1990 Sabsevar Kargar Sine Evin prison Kerimi Asghar Ramsar Katosian Sadegh Kasem Assadi Kha-Keroeani Neahed 09.1981 Khabbaai Moataf a Khakbas Ahinad Khakbaz Ahmad Khanian Resa 02.1990 Khakbasi , Abnad Ohasem-Abad Khatibeni Mohanmiad R. 24.05.1984 Soum'e Sara Kheradmand Zakieh 1989 Adelbad Khor Nosein 1989 Evin prison Khosrevi Nabiolah 1982 Kiaie Massoud Evin prison I etif Moshgan 1989 Evin prison I4adadi Hosein 1983 Madani 1989 Tonekabon Nab joub Nehdi 1988 Mabmodi Aref 1988 Adel Abad Ma1 noudi Abbas-Ali 19.02.1990 Tehran I4akvendi Mabmood 20.06.1981 Makvandi Bijen 1988 t4a leki Maryain 1988 / . . .
*/45/697 Engli8h Page 75 Surn8m Name Data Place Maleki Jamahid Aligoudars Marei3i Gbavamn 1982 Marendi Besen Jafarzadeh 12.1981 Vaiin Geid Maraban Fehimeh 1983. Mashkouri 1989 Ramsar Mashoiif Javad 1988 Masoumi Hamnid-Reza 1989 Boroujerd Massoumi t4ehmoud 1985 Mazji Bahieh 1988 Mehrizi Ghassem Meshkinfamn Shokrol lah 1981 Mash Meshkinfam Shokro lleh 1988 Meshkini Sedigeh 1982 Mir—Areb 1988 Mofarrahi Seeed 1984 Khoy Mogharrabian Parvaneh Bander-Gas Moghrazi Au Birjand Mohe mnadi Ahmnad 04.1990 Sanandaj Mohamedi Akber 3981 Mohasm ia6i Abdo l lah 19.02. 1990 Bakhtaran Mohanunadian Rosa 1289 Tonekebon Mohkami Au Asgar 13.10.1982 Mohaeni Au Reze Moini Mohaivm%ed Mojeher Au Mojtabaie Fakhri 1988 Molavi Jelal Hamedan Moradi Masoud Masyide-Soleiman Moradi Au Ashraf 04.1990 Sanandaj Mc sa1ey Jaffar 1981 l orshed Au 19.02.1990 Sabsevar 4osanna Mi 19.09.1981 ,...
A/45/697 Kilgi ish Page 76 Surn& Name Date Place Motaghi-Talab Amir 1983 Rasht Motahayeri Mansour Motahhedin Saeed 03.08.1981 t4ouaavi Enayatollah 19.02.1990 Tehran Moussavi Hashem Madadi Murtese Lebas 1984 Muesavi Mohesen 1981 Sarri Naddafien Iraj 1989 Ramsar Naderi Manouchehr Evin prison Nad•ri Ziaoddin 1988 Najjeren Ebrahim 1988 Gohardasht Najjarian Ali-Reza 19.02.1990 Boushehr Namvar Sgagruar 1984 Tonekabon Naroui Mohammed K. 28.01.1990 Narouyi Houshang 19.02.1990 Tehran Nasser Barariy 1984 Nassirian Zari Nasari . Abdol Mohammed Naaarsadeh Mohammed Hosein 1984 Nasemi Zebra 1988 Negarestani Javad 19.02.1990 Kerman Negarestani Meehaa l lah 19.02.1990 Kerman Nemati Mousse 19.09.1988 Nemovi Abbas 01.1984 Nilou Akbar 02.09.1981 Othman Pour t4ohsen 04.1990 Sanandaj Pah levandoo Mohazumad Rezh 1982 Mashhad Parrar Abmar Parsiana Majid Parvaneh Abolgh sem 1981 Ramsar Parvizi Ahmad 04.1990 Sanandaj Pastegar Reza , . . .
A/45/697 Eng lie h Page 77 Surname Name Date Place Peerhadi HoaGin 1982 Evin prison Pin Au 19.02.1990 Tehran Poladi Hadi 1988 Qadaksaz Rahim Rafati-t4ogadam Nahid 01.1982 Tehran Rafati-Mogadam Hanen 1984 Rafeie Mohammat' 19.02.1990 Arak Rehim Saide 1981 Rahimi Ahmad 1981 Ramsar Rahimian 1981 Remsar Rahimian 1981 Ramser Rahimian 1981 Remser Rahmani Ezatollah 19.02.1990 Karaj Rabmati Harsieh 09.09.1988 Rajabi t4essoud 07.1982 Rajai AlL Reza 1989 Gohar Dasht Rajavi Nasrim Ramehani Astollab Ranjbar Mohammed 19.02.1990 Rasht Ranjbaran Ameno lleh 198g. Evin prison Ranjbaran Amenolleti 1982 Evin prison Ranjbaran Amen-Allah 07.08.1981 Rashed-Marandi Feriba Ra5bi Ahmad-Janghi 28.03.1990 Seistan Reza Felanik 1984 Re ei Serder 1985 Evin prison ReEai Fesed Rezaie Yarali Qorgan Razaiian Behrouz 1988 Roknama Afagh 1989 Evin prison Roudgari Essat Roudgari Nemat / . . .
A/45/697 English Page 78 Surname Name Date Place Roye 04.1990 Sanandaj Ro5aii Mohasnad 04.1990 Sanandaj Sadaghi Hasan 1988 Sadegh Mohasnmad Sadeghi Baiakhan 19.02.1990 Arak Sadeghi Rahznan Sadeghi. Jamshid 1989 Tonekabon Saaeghi Yousef 1981 Sadeghpour Named Birjand Sadehqi Parvin 1981 North Sedigh Habib 1989 Ramsar Safaran Mohsen 1983 Evin prison Setatian Hosein 1989 Ramsar Safer! Khamran 1988 Gohar Dasht Safer! Gho lazn Gohar Dasht Setfaran Hassan Saffaran Hassan 11.1989 Safiden . Namor 1984 Saghar Massoud 1985 Salali Saeed 04.1985 Samad-Nosrati Hosein 19.02.1990 Qom Sed. ighat Mohasnadtaghi 1988 Seyedi Majid Shaebani Fraidoon 15.04.1984 Adel Abed Shademani Sosan 1981. Rasht Shah-Abed! Mah in 19.02.1990 Tebran Shah—Mansourj 1981 Re- sar Shahi Al! Raza Shahroukh 1984 Shamsin Isfahan Syavoush 198]. Bandar, Abbas Shapor Irantalap 1984 Shariati Anvar 04.1990 Sanandaj Shekarnezhad Washaa l lah ,...
A/45/697 English Page 19 Surname Name Date Place Shirmohainmedi Davood 1989 Evin prison Shirvani Shiva Shojaie Nasrin 1988 Sfahen jail Shojaie Mehran Shokraneh Sorraya 1981 Sobhanl Maser 04.1990 Sanandaj Soleimani Ali-Asghar Aligu darz Sotoudeh Tahmineh 1989 Evin prison Sulemani Noarat 1981 Suliki Behruz 1981 Semiron Teati-Asil t4asoud 1988 Evin prison Taavoni-Ganji Amir 11.1989 Evin prison Tadainia Iloman 1981 Taherpour Bahram 1988 Tajalli Hossein 1982 Tashayyod Mi Reza 1988 Tehran Tasslimi Abdolfazi 1981 Tavakol Mohesn 1984 Tavanian Mariam 1989 Tazehkandi Au Reza 01.1990 Teherani-Pour Hosein 1989 Karej (Gohardasht) Torabi Farah 08.1982 Evin prison Torkpour Gholam B. 1988 Vahabi Farah 1989 Evin prison Valizadeh Habit 08.1988 Rasht Vedadinya Habibo l lah 19.0?.1990 Tehran Vosoghian t4ehdi 06.1981 Yeganegi Mehdi 06.1981 Yelivand Mi Yosof Feizola 1983 Shirez Yousaf-Ta leshi Narollah 1981 Ramsar / ...
A/45/ 697 ng 1 i ah Page 80 Surnan e Name Data Place Zakori Mostafa 1981 Tebran Zandi Reaa 08.1981 Zeineli Jahangir , . . .
A/45/697 English Page 81 APPENDIX I I List of prisoners handed to the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs on 9 October 1990 The Special Representative requested to receive information on the fate or whereabouts of the following prisoners a 1. Jamahid Amlri-Bigvand 2. Bahman Agahy 3. Hooshang Amjadl Bigvand 4. Ardeahear Aahraf 5. Manochehr Azar 6. Masoud Deadehvar 7. Kyanoosh Hakeamy 8. Bahram Ikany 9. lieshrnatolah Magsoody 10. Gahraman Malekzadeh 11. Masoud Payeby 12. All Raze Nasirl 13. Noureddine Kianouri 14. Meriam Feirouz 15. Jamshid Torabi 16. Abmad Rashed-Marandi 17. Reza Arbabi 18. John Fettle 19. Mohamadreza Sedaghat 20. Addol All Bazargan 21. Ezzatollah Sehabi 22. Reza Sedr 23. Hussein Bani Assadi 24. Shams Shahshehani 25. Nour All Tabandeh 26. Yedolleh Chamse Ardallan 27. All Ardalen 28. Rochan Ardalan 29. Farhad Behbahanl 30. Abbas Ghaem Babahl 31. Khossro Mensourian 32. Hasnem Sabaghian 33.. Ezatollah Hamed Sahabi 34. Mohammad Tavassoll 35. Akbar Zarrinehbaf 36. Habib Davaran 37. NaIm Pour 38. AmIr Tavekol Ebrahlmi 39. Hossein Shah Hosselnl 40. Nezemedlne t4ovahed 41. Matunou t4alekl , . . .
A/45/697 Sng liih Page 82 42. Hormos Momayesi 43. Said Sedr 44. Hemid Sadr 45. Khosrow P rsa 46. Ahsnad Shayegen 47. Mahmoud Labibi 48. Shahin Parse 49. Azar Sadr 50. Davoud Mir Rahimi 51. Mrs. Ze nani b2. Mr. Jafarpour 53. Ahmad Rohdaki 54. Rhalil Ohiassi 55. Davoud Moyefar 56. Moh&inad Aininal Reaya 57. Nader Afshari 58. Dr. Assadi 59. iIenouchehr Motahari 60. Norous Neghizadeh 61. Ahmad Besten 62. Mohemad Dehgh n 63. HussaingholL Roshansamir 64. Sekhshullah Mias ghL 65. ayv&n Kha1aj b6d 66. 8ehn m Mies gh 67. Asisullah t4ahjoor 68. Habibu11 h Hak mi 69. Nader RouhenL 70. Badlull&h Sobh6ni 71. Dr. Mitre Ameli 72. Dr. latemeh Isadi 73. Ms. Fatemeh Hosaeinsadeh-Tussi Moghadam (known as Giti Aserang) 14. Ms. Malakeh Mohamadi 15. Ms. Zohreh Ghaeni 16. Ms. Nahid Dorudiahi 77. Ms. Feteineh (Zohreh) Sedigh Tonekaboni 18. Ms. Hure Fuladpour 79. Ms. Manijeh Riasi $0. Ms. Afsaneh Rhavar 81. Ms. Mahboubeh Roheadi 82. Ms. Mahin Ehosravi 83. Mr. Roger Cooper 84. Mr. Aliinad Resaire Fard 85. Ms. Monir Khosroshahi-Baradaran 86. Ms. Farideh Mahmood Mohanmiad Zamani 87 • Mr • Framers Mahmood Mohwnmad Zamani 88. Mr. Farsheed Mabmood Mohanined Zemani 89. Mr. Ainir Houshang Kemrani 90. Mr. Mensour Taheri
tii'45/697 ng1 i ah Page 83 91. Ms. Maryazn Taleghani 92. Mr. Bahram Alai-Khastou 93. Mr. Seyedmehdi Nasry 94. Ms. Sakineh Sedaghat 95. Mr. Mi Sedaghat 96. Mr. Abbas Raini 97. Mr. Eaatollah Sahabi 98. Ms. Nerges Akbari-Namdar 99. Mr. Rahim Akberi-Nemdar 100. Ms. Jemileh Akbersad-Yousefi 101. Dr. Bozoo Bagha i 102. Mr. Esmail t4ovassaghian 103. Mr. Faramars Ah adian 104. Mr. Saeed Taati-Asil 105. t4s. Feeseh Sabet-Jahromi 106. Mr. Ebrahim Nebahat 107. Mr. Mohemmad-Taghi Rahimpour 108. Mr. Rajab Bayrem-Zadeh 109. Ms. Essat Habibkhani 110. Ms. Mahim Towfighi 111. Ms. Shahrsed Mahdavi 112. Ms. Farkhondeh Zanjanpour 113. Ms. Sousan Gorji-Sefat 114. Ms. Lilik Hakoopian 115. Ms. Fatema Shaf ii 116. Ma. Akhtar Tahrnesbi 117. Ms. Mehin Batrnani 118. Ms. Shokoofeh Ali-Gholi 119. Ms. Farkhondeh Tagharsi 120. Ms. Mahin Ohefferi 121. Ms. Sadigheh Ahoumoshk 122. 145. Sadigheh Hashemi 123. Ms. Nesrin Seltmi—Badr. 124. Ms. Shine Jehen-Zad 125. Ms. Maryam Noun 126. Ms. Mehri Salami 127. Ma. Maryam-Banou Sepehri Rehnema 128. Ms. Minou Naseri 129. Ms. Mine Vatanpour 130. Ms. Mahvesh Keshevarsi 131. Ms. Mansoureh Ghanbarpour 132. Ms. Sahareh Taghanian 133. Mr. Ghadam Khayyer-Nasiri 134. Ms. Shahin Samii 135. Ms. Shahia Talebi 136. Ms. Maryam Ghazi 137. Ms. Razieh Ghoreishi 138. Ms. Home Ipikchi 139. Ms. Taheri Semadi 140. Ms. Katazoun Baghaii / . . .
A/ 45 / 697 English Page 84 141. Me. Parlvaeh Torahisian 142. Ms. Mahdokht Hasheini 143. Me. Eemaieli Afrasiab 144. Mr. Mehdi Knosh Slook 145. Ms. Mehri Knosh Slook 146. Mr. Rhalid Alt Karimi 147. MB. Mona Abdi 148. Mm. Merges Chanbari 149. Mr. Mohaimned Macsan 150. Mr. Tofygh Setayeshi 151. Mr. Au Resa Sadeghi 152. Mr. Davod Acicy 153. Mr. Mohammed Tale Poor 154. Mr. Homeoun Najefi 155. Mr. Noreec Karami 156. Mr. Senjabe Aeghar 157. Mr. Atahey All Pesa 158. Mr. Sandabi Hamid 159. Mr. Moheen Farm 160. Mr. Parvin Farsin 161. Mr. Mohamnad Mehdi Bladi 162. Mr. Leb e Murtesa 163. Mr. tayqhy Jalal 164. Mr. Falanik Resa 165. Mr. Oholamy H.jatalah 166. Mr. Irantalap Shapor 167. Mr. Ammary Mahmed 168. Mr. Barariy Naeeer 169. Mr. Namor Safiden 170. Mr. Mohemad Salihi 171. Mr. Hasan Asady 172. Mr. Rohalah Ramacani 173. Mr. Jafar Trebperhisi 174. Mr. Adel Saudi 175. Mr. Iraj Kafashpour 176. Mr. Mehdokht t4ohamadi Yadeh 177. Mr. Mahmoud Akbari 178. Mr. Lotfali Mir Sorow 179. Mr. Panahandeh Mohammadi 180. Mr. Moheen Mohamadi Zadeh 181. Mr. Au Resa Babel 182. Mr. Mahmoud Faroukh Manesh 183. Mr. Resa Heueheki 184. Mr. M.*hsnood Bakshal 185. Mr. Grain Rondari 186. Mr. All Rosa Masondifar 187. Mr. Mohaimnadali Morshedi 188. Mr. Mahmood Tajgardan 189. Ms. Zahre Felahati 190. Mr. Mortesa Ghediyani / ...
?J45/697 English Pegs 85 191. Mr. Gholeoe Reza Mirzani 192. Mr. Jawad Remany 193. Mr. Kernel Nadery 194. Mr. Kezem Karimabadi 195. Mr. Souhrab &thady 196. Mr. Farokh Djonaidie 197. Mr. Chasem Daryabaghi Mad 198. Mr. Mi Hessaraky 199. Mr. Devowl Rezaie 200. Mr. Shahab Nouzary 201. Mr. Mohamad ShL .jerdi . 202. Mr. Mohammed Taghi Rahimpour / . . .
A/4 5/697 English Page 86 APPENDIX III Official programme of the sc!cond yisit ot the Special Representative Tuesday. 9 October 199.Q 0015 - Arrival at Tehran Airport and reception by Mr. N. Mottaki, Deputy Foreign Minister for International Political Affairs and high officials of the Foreign Ministry 1030 - Meeting with Mr. H. Hottaki, Deputy Foreign Minister for International Political Affairs Wednesdays 10 October 199k 0930 - Meeting with Hojatolislem A. Fallahian, Kinister of Intelligence OEursday . 11 October 1990 0900 - Meeting with Hojatolislam Zargar, Special Prosecutor for Narcotic Drugs 1600 - Meeting with the Deputy Minister of the Interior and the Commission on Article 10 of the Constitution Saturday. U October 1990 0900 - Visit to Evin prison (hearing of prisoners) 1600 - Meeting with the Deputy Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance j nday . 14 October 199.0 0900 - Attendance at a session of the revolutionary court at Evin prison 1230 - Meeting with Ayatollah Moghtadaei, President of the Supreme Court 1600 - Meeting with Mr. Badatnchian, Political Deputy to the Head of the Judiciary Monday 15 October 1990 0830 - Meeting with Ayatollah Yazdi, Head of te Judiciary 1030 - Meeting wit)? Dr. Mehicour Judicial Deputy to the Heed of the Judiciary 1530 - Meeting with Dr. A. A. Velayati. Minister for Foreign Affairs 1700 - Final meeting with Mr. 14. t4ott ki . ,...
APPENDIX IV List of prisoners whom the Special Representative requested to sea during his second visit 1. List given to the authorities on 9 October 1990 Names A/45/697 English Page 87 Reasons given by the authorities for not being able to present the prisoner to the Special Representative Jamshid Amiri-Bigvand Bahoean Agahy Hooshang Ahmadi Blgvand Noureddine Kianouri Meriam Feirouz John Pattis Addol Mi Bazargan Hussein Bani Assadi Shams Shahshahani Hour All Tabandeh Mi Ardalan Farhad Behbahanl Mohammed Tavessoli Hossein Shah Hosseini Davoud Mir Rahimi Hussaingholi Roshanzamir Kayv n Khalaj b II' Habibull h Hak m Bad ull h Sobh nf Mitre knell Ms. Fatemeh Izadi Ms. Fatemeb Hosseinzadeh-Tussi Moghadam (known as Giti Azareng) Ms. Malakeh Mohammadi Ms. Zohreh Ghaeni Mr. Roger Cooper Ms. Sakineh Sedaghat On leave fror 18 July 1990 for 85 days On leave On leave from 11 Aug. 1990 for 70 days Visit not authorized by prosecutor Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Ms. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Ms. Visit Visit Visit not authorized not author ised not author ised by prosecutor by prosecutor by prosecutor Visit not authorized by prosecutor Visit not Detained Detained Released On leave 25 Sept. On leave authorized by prosecutor at Arak on smuggling charges in Keraj from prison of Shiver on 11 Aug. 1990 and was released on 1990 from 21 Aug. 1990 for 2 months / . . .
A/45/697 Ingli sh Page 88 2. Additional list given to the authorities on 13 October 1990 Names Reasons given by the authorities for not being able to present the prisoner to the Special Representative Visit not authorized by prosecutor Visit not authorized by prosecutor Visit not authorized by prosecutor Visit not authorized by prosecutor Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Ms. Mr. Ezzatollah Sahabi Khossro Mansourian Hashem Sabaghian Hornios Momayesi Maryam Taleghani Amir Entezam / . . .
APPENDIX V Lint provided by the Government of eiecutiona carried out between the b.ainnin of the current Iranian year (31 March 1990) and the iscond yleir of the apeolal Representative Date of No. Name Father's name Crime Place .x,cUtion 1. Morad Davari Hashem Premeditated murder Mal i 27.03.1990 2. Eem.tollah A,I .ii Valiyol lah Idem Mali 37.03.1990 3. Abbe. Asisi No ato11ah Idem Arak 27.03.1990 4. Abbas Raieei Darav Spying for Iraq Zahedan 29.03.1990 S. Ahmad Ahmad Jangi—Zerehi .Jaksem—Dad Zahedan 29.03.1990 6. Gol—Nohammed Ohanbarsehi Rahmat Armed rebel Zahedan 03.04.1990 7. Davoud Ohanbar—Zehi 11am Idem Zahedan 03.04.1990 8. Abbee Mohammad-Noseini Foreign national Armed robbery and rap. Roudehen 9. llosein—All khademi Foreign national Idem Roudehen 10. Nader Ohanbari Foreign national i ! Roudehen — 11. Asia—All Noradi All Premeditated murder Bakhtaran 12.04.1990 and Kidnapping 12. Farsi Ghanbari-Neehad Jam Idem Bakhtaran 12.04.1990 13. Boraou Asgari Jam Murder and robbery Mianeh 13.04.1990 14. Bahman Heydari Jam M laneh 13.04.1990 15. Hosein—Jan P..ehouneh Jam Murder horram—Abad 2A.04.1990 16. han—A1.l Narouie Madad Activity against the Zahedan 36.04.1990 9.curity of the country, co—operation with armed rebels and drug traffickers, participation in armed conflict which resulted to martyrdom of military and non—military forces. 17. Asia Narouie Zeydar Zahedan 26.04.1990 18. Akhtar—Ameh Narouie Iamai.1 Id.m Zahed.-n 26.04.1990 19. Golahah Narouie Karim zahedan 26.04.1990 20. Hosein Sedaghat l urder Roraigan 30.04.1990 21. Enayat Saghaehi Eazatoddin Participation in transport Zahedan 30.04.1990 of 2 kg of heroin 22. HabibolIsh Arbab—Zehi peys—Nobammad Participation in transport Zahedan 30.04.1990 of 10 kg and 30 gr of heroin ,... t Copy Available A/43/697 English page 89
*145/697 Bngliah Page 90 Date of No. Name Father's name Crim. Place executIon 23. GhodOue (ihaljaii Alt—Moham m ed !mporting 3 kg and 200 gr Zahodan 30.04.1990 of heroin and 1 kg . hashish and selling 960 gr of h.roin 24. Naiim Ichajeh Feys—Mohammad Zahoden 30.04.1990 15. Abdol—Asil l.ili—Marvaa Bhirak National Rape Lavaaanat 05.03.1990 of Aghanistan 26. Khalil Mirsail Planting a bomb in AkhI— Asarahahr 06.05.1993 Jaman mosque and killing Hojatol—Eslam Fakhr—Banati 27. Kourosh Heeari Jamshid Kidnapping a child (girl) Eelamohahr 09.05.1990 and adultery 28. Ali—Resa nerd—Mad Ebrafil Murder Tehran 09.05.1990 29. Aeadollah Safi Oholam—Aval Drug trafficking, transport, Shlraz 22.05.1990 distribution and production of hundreds of kilograita of drugs 30. Abdolrahman Safi Abdol—Ejan Idem Shiras 22.03.1990 31. Fez—Mohammed Majidi Abdol—Najil Idem Shiraz 22.05.1990 32. Abdol—Khalegh Safi Kha lil Idem Shiraz 22.03.1990 33. Gholae—Mohammad Hour— Sarnoud Idem Shiras 22.05.1990 Mohammed 34. Gholam—Sanmi Moradi Khali l Idem Shiraz 22.03.1990 35. Au—Baa Mahbouri Mad Shiraa 22.05.1990 36. Jahan—Shah Zarreh—Poush Nashie Shiraz 22.05.1990 37. Tavakol Zarreh—Poush Nashie Idem Shirar 22.05.1990 38. Mahmoud Asiri Azis—Oholi Idea Shirar 22.03.1990 39. Abbee Esteli Hasan Idem ShIres 22.05.1990 40. Mostaf: Mansouri Mohammad—Ali Ides Shires 22.03.1990 41. Saedolleh Igmalel Pour— Fatholish Ic m Rhiraz 22.03.1990 Ate sh i 42. Jafar shaken Majid Murder Tehran 22.05.1990 4L Allah-Morsd Safari (ski—Monad Murd tr and armod robbery Mianeh 22.07.1990 44. Khedmat .-A1i Anghouti Agha—Jan Idem Mianeh 22.07.1990 45. Jebreil Joudi Mahmoud Idem Mianeh 22.07.1990 46. Jahan in Gh nI i*deh Ebnahim Premeditated murder OEhran 29.07.1990 /...
A/45/697 English Page 91 Date ot No. Name Father's name C'ime Place execution 47. ‘ .. ,Ald Abnoum Ebrel Kidnappvd and raped A girls Qom fl. 08.19 9 0 who were between 6 and a years old 48. Baeed Roahanali Yado l lah Idom Qom 11.08.1990 49. Beytollah Mohammadi Rama san—A IL Xidnappinq and rape Najaf—Abad 13.08.1990 SO. Eamaiel Abmadi Ebrahim Idom Najaf—Abed 13.08.1990 Si. Masoud Sourani Hosein Najef—Abad 13.08.1990 52. Raheen Habibollahi yadollah Idem Najaf—Abad 13.08.1990 53. Oholam—Hoa.ln Joel Mohammed Najaf—Abad 1.3.08.1990 54. Mortesa Shaflyan Ragab—Ali Yluin Najaf—Abad 13.08.1990 55. Gholam—Abbas Rhouravi I3oeein—A1l Idom Najaf—Abad 13.08.1990 56. Hoqat Habibi Murder of Majid Nasiri Tehran 14.08.1990 57. Nader Zandi Amir-Morad Murder ot Hasan Ahmadi-Pour Iehran 17.09.1990 58. Hosein Gh vini Murder of Mihan Masoudi Arak 17.08.1990 59. Mehdi Khe3eqhi Gho lam-I1oaein Importing, buying, neiling, Mashad 05.09.1990 distributing more than 30 kilograms heroin md . 3 kiloqrams opium. Some of them were inomb re of a druq—trafficking ‘ and which Imported drugs from Afghanistan with armed convoys. 60. Mouwla Dajerat Heydar Idom Mashed 0 .09.1 990 1. Abdollah Narouii Jaman Idem ,Iashad 05.39.1990 62. Nour-Mmad Narouii Gol—Mohanunad Idem Mashiv.j 05.09.1990 63. Alt—lieu Abedi Mohammed Idem Ma SP.id 0! .O9.l99O 64. Mowla pouya Pacviz ‘dem Ma had 05.09.1990 65. Mohammed Raahtanya Sahibdad Idem M . shsd 05.09.1990 66. Ali-khan Touedeh Ramazan Idem Mashed 05.09.1990 67. Maehallah Sarhadi Fouled d em Meshed 03.09.1990 68. Mactee Rajabzadeh Mostafe Idea Mashed 05.09.1990 69. Goi—Mohamx.d Audi Shir—Mohammadi Idea Mashed 05.09.1990 70. Nour—Mohamma.3 Ramazan Idem Mashed 03.09.1990 Hesan—pour 71. Golmm Rosa Fathirounji Alt Idea Mashed n .09.1q9o 72. Mohammed Alt Baratt Hareti-Alt Idea Mashed 05.09.1990 ,... py AvaHable
&/4 5/ 497 Inglish P.91 •a Oct. of No. Na PaIIsr'. name Crime Plac. •xsE ution 73. Noha*mad Nowrous Ishi Afial Machad 05.09.1990 74. Ramsean Racist 7atianq tr Muhad 05.09.1990 75. !brahi. arimi Mactm Machad 05.09.1990 74. Macic Macart Nicro l imh Manbad 05.09,1990 77. Uholia—Mia Shial-Talab Gholam Machad 05.09.1990 78. Rica rant Ohar.khon Machad 05.09.1990 79. Oholam—Rica Pant Nohamead Mashed 05.09.1990 50. Ibg ht* Nour—Nohamad Machad 05.09.1990 Ii. Ahmadi.nah Ata—Mohaminad Idem Machad 05.09.1990 83. Mohsme.d Io.sein Gho lman Machad 05.09.1990 83, Gol—Mohamead Noun—Mohamad Machad 0! .0 9. 1990 84. Nabibollsh Nourri Machad 05.09.1990 85. Joalh Gol—dousti Najooddin Machad 05.09.1990 86. Mabiboitab P.yso l l.h Meohad 03.09.1990 87. Alt—Valid Ztaoddin Machad 05.09.1990 88. 9.yyed Raouf Seyy.d Abdollah j Machad 03.09.1990 89. Moha ad-KanLs Abram Mabmoud Idem Manhad 05.09.1990 90. Mohammed , Abdol—Ohafour Machad 05.09.1990 91. Rabsh—Bsn A llahvendi Idom Machad 05.09.1990 93. IsmaisI Joudou Machad 05.09.1990 93. RiIouI—Afghan Rain Zdom Manhad 05.09.1990 94. Rhada—Nauar Zgenbordou Machad 05.09.1990 95. Abdoll.h Karvan Idem Machad 05.09.1990 96. Abdoll.h Iloulan 16cm Machad 0 .09.1990 97. Sarvar Pey u—Mohaminad Machad 03.09.1990 98. Oholam Sarvarongy (nick ‘med as Bha-Gho lam) Zanifol lsh Tajik 16cm Machad 03.09.1990 Hahibolish M.dadl i ahmat Idem Machad 05.09.1990 Nohame.d—Bbrahi. Douran 16 cm Machad 05.09.1990 JCh.nad—Naur Jomsh—Morad Idern Machad 05.09.1990 ,...
Sng li sh Pig• 93 Oats of No. Nams Pathsr's na ertms Plac. . i.uutLon 103. Njib Nsghsoud Mashed 05.09.1990 104. Ohyamoddin Najaoddin Mashad 05.09.1990 105. khodaysr Ds1—Nohaad Mashad 03,09.1990 106. H.dayato l lah Nssro l lsh Buying, sslling and Boushshr 05.09.1990 A lihcu .ohdi—g asii (National of distributing drug. Afghanistan) . 107. Abdolghodous Mohammad Doush.hr 05.09.1990 Ishagh—lehi 106. F.r.ydoun Vataii Nohaad 1.4k! Zahsdan 18.09.1990 109. Ali—Nauar Noh.sd— Balsh—Nohaad Zahsdan 18.09.1990 8amdani 110. Iaman-Khan Nouti— shi Mohasmad-Nour Zahsdan 19.09.1990 111. Nassr—NohaaJ Nohamaad—Akbar Trans rting end distributing fah.d&n 19.09.1990 Darahoui l drug. 113. Abdolkhalsgh Nousa—!shl Ali—Shir Zahsdan 1A.09.1990 113. Issat 8a.vd—Nya Gho laa—Hos.in ?ransporting 31 kilograms drugs and partiaipattnq in distributing 7 kilogram. of it. I... opy Available
k/45/697 English Peg. 94 APPENDIX VI Government rejlies conc.rnin.g aa a of execution listed injravioua reports of the Special Representative The names of 2,109 persons allegedly executed cannot be recognised. 137 persons allegedly executed are studying in Iranian universities. 276 names are duplicated in the reports of the Special Representative. 368 names are incomplete and were not found in the Islamic Republic of Iran. 51 persons allegedly executed are working in different organizations of the Islamic Republic. 135 persons have died due to natural causes. 53 persons are terrorists and murderers who were executed in 1981 and 1982. They were sentenced to d.ath by the courts. Unfortunately, most of these individuals were influenced by the deceptive slogans of the rivals of the Islamic Republic of Iran and coniaitted acts of terrorism and destructive activities, including the murder of innocent people. 76 persons allege 1ly executed achieved mai tyrdom while confronting the Revolution's enemies. 110 persons were imprisoned because of their opposition towards the Islamic Republic of Iran and were released from prison later on 57 persons have never been arrested, although thd t4o ahedin Organization alleged that they were executed in l981-. 1982 and the Special. Representative listed them as executed in 1988—1989. 27 parsons died in street clashes and clashes with border troops. 86 persons are studying abroad 62 persons allegedly executed are held as prisoners of war in Iraq. 44 persons are missing in action during the imposed war end unfortunately there is no information about them for lack of cooperation by the Iraqi authorities. 19 persons allegedly executed live and work in Iran. 7 persons had to undergo military service, but in order to escape from this holy duty have sought shelter in foreign countries. 2 persona have been imprisoned for various reasons. 1 person was killed In an armed clash with military forces at the border. / . . .
APPENDIX VII Measures taken by the Amnesty Division oL.IIe. Judiciary from 23 September 1989 to 7 October 1990 Number and date of the Clemency Number of sentenced personc to death who appeal to the Leader Amnesty measures Total benefited from amnesty 1299/68 - 12 Oct. 1989 45 3 48 - 4/480/68 - 6 Dec. 1989 56 35 91 8 4/610/68 - 27 Dec. 989 139 71 210 840/68 - 31 Jan. 1990 113 65 178 1080/68 - 6 Marv,h 1990 111 32 143 1200/68 - 17 March 1990 53 66 119 50/69 - 29 March 1990 58 21 79 — 480/69 - 24 April 1990 112 148 260 8 900/69 - 16 May 1990 229 89 318 3 1370/69 - 14 June 1990 286 332 618 1720/69 - 30 June 1990 92 55 147 1752/69 - 2 July 1990 24 20 44 - 2000/69 - 21 July 1990 929 650 1 579 1 2002/69 - 21 July 1990 178 213 391 1 3080/69 - 4 Sept. 1990 26 69 95 3 3382/69 - 26 Sept. 1990 84 172 256 5 3384/69 - 2 Sept. 1990 50 15 65 Total 2 585 2 056 1 641 29 / . . . A/4 5/697 English Page 95 Copy Available
A/45/697 English Page 96 kPPSNDI VIII Circular letter No. 1/7553/9 da ad 4 Au sLj99O by the Head of Judiciary to all judigial uuits and authorities On the basis of the report rec ive6, some of the courts create impediments for the acceptance of attorney. It is, therefore, notified as followss In accordance with principle 35 of the Constitution of the Islemic Republic of Iran, that provides for the right of the parties to a lawsuit to select an attorney in all civil and penal courts, and that stipulates that in case of the inability of the person concerned to select an attorney, the court should arrange for the appointment of an attorney, and with due regard to the decisions No. 15 dated 19 September 1984 and No. 501 dated 9 AprIl 1987 of the General Board of the Supreme Court on the unity of procedures, and in compliance with articles 59 and 69 bi oC the law of the civil procedure, and article 11 amended of the law on the establishment of Special Civil Courts, and article 15 of the non-litigious jurisdiction act and it note, and article 309 of the law of the Penal procedure and the note of article 112 of the same law, and article 9 of the law on the establinhment of penal courts, and article 34 of the law on legal practice and all other relevant applicable laws, all legal authorities should accept the legal attorneys of the parties to the lawsuit or the accused as prescribed in the law. Such attorneys should be allowed to defend their clients. Besides, where request Is made for a public defender or a counsel, necessary arrangements should be made in accordance with above-mentioned legal provisions. In short, all necessary arrangements should be made to make it possible for eligible attorneys to defend their clients. The violation of the aforementioned regulations shall make the violator liable to disciplinary prosecution and, as the case may be, shall lead to the reversal of the verdict by the Supreme court. (Signed) Mohammed Yazdi Head of the Judiciary