United Nations A/HRC/14/NGO/58
Distr.: General
General Assembly 27 May 2010
English only
Human Rights Council
Fourteenth session
Agenda item 4
Human rights situations that require the Council's attention
Written statement submitted by Amnesty International, a
non-governmental organization in special consultative status
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement which is circulated in
accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution 1996/3 1.
[ 18 May 2010]
* This written statement is issued, i.medited, in the language(s) received from the submitting non-
govemmental organization(s).
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A/HRC/14/NGO/58
Iran: Lift the shroud of secrecy; engage with international
human rights bodies
A year after the most serious human rights violations Iran has witnessed in 20 years, the
Iranian authorities continue to shroud the country's human rights situation in secrecy by
avoiding repeated requests made by UN human rights experts and NGO to visit Iran in
order to make independent assessments of the situation.
The aftermath of the June 2009 election withessed disturbing displays of excessive use of
force to disperse peaceful demonstrations. Mass “show trials” followed sweeping and
arbitrary arrests of thousands of protesters and individuals critical of the Iranian
government. Some were later sentenced to death; others received prolonged prison terms.
Between June 2009 and the end of the year, the authorities acknowledged over 40 deaths;
Amnesty International believes the true number of people killed unlawfully to be much
higher.
The government gave a grossly distorted account of the situation when addressing the 1.JN
Human Rights Council in February 2010, during the examination of the human rights
situation in Iran under the Universal Periodic Review.
It ignored global disquiet expressed concerning the unrest in 2009, including by the UN
General Assembly, symbolized by a video circulated worldwide of a young woman who
was shot dead during a largely peaceful protest in Tehran and concern over repressive
measures.
The government held itself above scrutiny as it rejected recommendations by many Human
Rights Council members to implement international human rights standards, describing
them as politically motivated, while at the same time ensuring that any voices of dissent in
Iran were smothered, ensuring no return to the demonstrations of mid-2009.
The Human Rights Council must not allow the government of Iran to pretend to cooperate
with the Council's procedures while in reality and in spite of a standing invitation to the
Special Procedures, Iran shows no sign of receiving any of the seven Special Procedures
that have requested to visit the country. It has not received a visit from a Special Procedure
since 2005.
Amnesty Tntemational calls on members of the Human Rights Council to take measures
aimed at ensuring that the Special Procedures of the Council are able to fulfil their
mandates and to gather first- hand information about human rights violations in Iran.
Recent developments in Iran again make the requested visits more urgent than ever.
Promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression
Independent scrutiny of the measures put in place by the Iranian government to curb the
rights to freedom of assembly and expression in print or via the electronic media is urgently
needed. In the aftermath of the 2009 election, new laws and stricter practices were
implemented that served to tighten freedom of expression, especially on the internet.
For example, In May 2010, the Head of the Judiciary talked of measures to prevent private
SMS messages from creating sedition in society, suggesting that all private
communications may be subject to scrutiny, without specifying criteria for investigation.
Students taking part in demonstrations or perceived as critical of the authorities may be
expelled from universities, and academics who have expressed views considered
unacceptable by the government face removal from their jobs, creating a climate in which
scholarship is under attack.
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A human rights lawyer who publicly criticized the execution of a juvenile offender in
foreign news media is serving a one year prison sentence.
Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
Amnesty International has documented the systematic use of incommunicado detention
which heightens the risk of torture or other ill-treatment. Detainees are subjected to torture
or other ill-treatment to extract “confessions”. Methods reported include beatings, rape,
death threats, and prolonged solitary confinement.
Publicly-aired “confessions” made by detainees deprived of access to a lawyer or their
family for weeks or months are far too common.
Most recently, Farzad Kamangar, a teacher and Kurdish rights activist was executed on 9
May 2010. His conviction followed repeated acts of torture. In a 2008 letter he described
how, when being interrogated in Tehran, he was asked of his origins. He wrote, “,.. [ A]s
soon as I said ‘Kurd', they flogged me all over my body with a hose- like whip.” He added
that his hands and feet were tied to a bed and his feet, thighs and back were whipped and
that he was electrocuted.
Extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions
The expertise of the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions
is urgently needed to assess the circumstances that resulted in at least 40 killings according
to official figures which took place in the course of demonstrations in the latter half of 2009
and to determine, independently, whether the security forces had any role in the killings, as
many Iranians believe.
Evidence arising from the dozens of unmarked graves in cemeteries across Iran and reports
that the authorities had shown photo albums containing images of scores of coipses in
makeshift morgues to the families of those who had gone missing both suggest that the true
number of killings exceed official estimates.
The legal proceedings that led to the executions in January and May 2010 of seven political
prisoners, including four Kurds, two of whom were connected to the election unrest
demand independent scrutiny.
Individuals continue to be sentenced to death for vaguely worded charge such as
‘5noharebeh” (enmity against God). The authorities seem to use to death penalty as a means
to threaten and intimidate demonstrators.
Freedom of religion and belief; minority issues
Religious and ethnic minorities face discrimination in law and in practice. In the aftermath
of the election, they have faced renewed repression as the Iranian authorities have sought
scapegoats for the unrest.
Baha'is, targeted in the past, have come in for renewed repression. Around 13 Baha'is were
arrested in January in connection with the Ashoura demonstrations, and two of them
continue to be held. A further eight were arrested on the anniversary of fran's revolution, on
10 February but have been released.
High numbers of Baha'is across the country continue to face persecution in connection with
their faith, such as nine reportedly sentenced to prison terms in Mashhad in early May.
Meanwhile Baha'i community leaders, detained since 2008, remain in detention pending
the conclusion of flawed proceedings before the Revolutionary Court.
The arrest of Ajlal Qavami, the spokesperson of Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan
on 13 May 2010, reminds the world that fran's ethnic minorities, some of whom did not
take an active role in the post-election protests in 2009, continue to face repression through
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arrests of their leaders, bans on their gatherings and — as in the case of the Azerbaijani
minority - refusal to allow the use of their language.
Enforced and involuntary disappearance
Arrests and detention by Iranian security forces are often arbitrary and are conducted in
circumstances which amount to enforced disappearances. Between June and end of 2009,
some 5000 people were arrested.
Families are typically not informed of the arrests or whereabouts of their relative in a timely
manner. In the latter part of 2009, some were not told for months of the fate of their
relatives. Amnesty International received complaints from family members forced to travel
between Evin Prison and the Tehran court offices and to pour over the lists of those
detained or scheduled for arraignment in order to find their loved ones.
The systemic failure to inform family members or legal representatives was at the core of
the situation in the Kahrizak detention facility in mid-2009 which led to several deaths in
custody. When the detention of individuals in not acknowledged and detainees do not have
access to the outside world, this can give raise to abuses. The Iranian authorities opened an
investigation into the Kahrizak deaths, but it remained opaque and did not provide families
with even the promise of truth, justice or reparation.
In the absence of effective safeguards for detainees, reports that the Kahrizak facility has
re-opened under the name Soroush 111, calls into question whether it ever closed.
Independent scrutiny of such practices of unacknowledged and incommunicado detention is
urgently needed.
Amnesty International urges the Human Rights Council to ensure that Iran 's commitment
to international human rights mechanisms includes specific arrangements for visits to Iran
in the near future and that state bodies extend full cooperation to visiting UN mechanisms.
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