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Severe Beating and Transfer of Kurdish Prisoner Mostafa Salimi to Solitary Cell

(8 March 2012) — The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC) has received reports that on Monday, March 5, Mostafa Salimi—a Kurdish political prisoner sentenced to execution and currently held at Saqqez prison—got into a scuffle with prison authorities. The cause of the disturbance related to Salimi’s request for prison authorities to purchase certain items from the “Prison Café”—a store selling basic goods and provisions to prisoners that operates on credit (see prison regulations regarding operation of the store below)—and which Salimi helped manage. Although Salimi reportedly credited the authorities for the items, they did not procure the items requested, which prompted the scuffle. As a result, prison guards severely beat Salimi, bound his hands and feet, and threw him inside a solitary cell. In the days since the transfer Salimi has not been permitted any phone calls or visitation with his family.

Mostafa Salimi was arrested on April 6, 2003 in Nahavand for moharebeh (or “waging war against God”) and cooperation with the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), a Kurdish political party. According to sources close to Salimi, he has been physically and mentally tortured during his detention and incarceration and his court hearing only lasted 15 minutes.

The charges against Salimi include two separate incidents of armed combat during which two police officers were killed. He has also been charged with 18 years of unarmed activity for PDKI in Iran and five years of armed activity for the group in Iraqi Kurdistan and its border areas.    

He currently suffers from a serious infection of the kidneys, back and knee pains, and problems with his vision. Sources close to Salimi have told IHRDC that the prison authorities have not permitted Mr. Salimi to visit a doctor and instead he is merely provided painkillers for his ailments.

 

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Executive regulation of state prisons and security and corrective measures organization passed on Dec 11 2005

 

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