Site icon Iran Human Rights Documentation Center

Violent Aftermath: The 2009 Election and Suppression of Dissent in Iran

This preliminary report documents and analyzes the regime’s brutal suppression of dissent after the June 12, 2009 presidential elections. Hours before the incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was declared the victor on election day, the regime began arresting opposition politicians, journalists and other activists. The arrests continued through the end of the year as did demonstrations that were met with violence by the regime’s security apparatus. This report documents in detail dozens of human rights abuses of Iranians and foreigners—including beatings, kidnappings, rapes and murders—and analyzes the perpetrators’ liability under Iranian and international law.

General Indictments by the Islamic Republic’s Prosecutor:

First Indictment
Second Indictment
Third Indictment
Fourth Indictment

Table of Contents

 

 

Introduction.

  1. The Election

1.1        The Presidential Election Process

1.2        The 2009 Election and Allegations of Fraud

1.2.1     Election Results are Announced

1.2.2     Fraud Allegations are Lodged

  1. Demonstrations

2.1        Saturday, June 13: Demonstrations are Sparked

2.2        Sunday, June 14: Students are Arrested and Killed in Dormitories

2.3        Monday, June 15: Millions Take to the Streets

2.4        Tuesday, June 16 through Friday, June 19: Mourning the Dead and Friday Prayers

2.5        Saturday, June 20: Demonstrations are Crushed

2.6        Summer into Winter 2009: Demonstrations on Remembrance Days

2.6.1     July 9: Anniversary of 1999 Attack on Dormitories

2.6.2     July 17: Rafsanjani’s Friday Prayer

2.6.3     July 30: Mourning the Dead

2.6.4     September 18: Quds Day

2.6.5     November 4 (13th of Aban): Anniversary of U.S. Embassy Takeover

2.6.6     December 7: National Student Day

2.6.7     December 20: Ayatollah Montazeri’s Death

2.6.8     December 27: Ashura

2.7        Violations of Iranian and International Law

2.7.1     Violations of Right to Assembly

2.7.2     Excessive Use of Force

2.7.3     Failure to Protect Right to Life and Murder

  1. Arrests and Detention of Demonstrators

3.1        Kahrizak Detention Center

3.2        Violations of Iranian and International Law

3.2.1     Arbitrary Arrests and Denial of Due Process Rights

3.2.2     Denial of Medical Care, Mistreatment, Torture, Forced Confessions and Death

3.2.3     Forced Disappearances

  1. Arrests of Civil Activists, Journalists, and Opposition

4.1        Non-Demonstrators are Arrested

4.2        Former Officials are Arrested

4.3        Dual Citizens, Foreign Nationals and Embassy Workers are Arrested

4.4        Violations of Iranian and International Law

  1. Mass Show Trials

5.1        The First Mass Show Trial

5.2        The Second Mass Show Trial

5.3        The Third Mass Show Trial

5.4        The Fourth Mass Show Trial

5.5        The Fifth Mass Show Trial

5.6        Detainees are Sentenced

5.7        Violations of Iranian and International Law

5.7.1     Right to Counsel

5.7.2     Convictions Based on Forced Confessions

Conclusion

Appendix 1.

Appendix 2.

 

Introduction

On June 13, 2009, the day after the tenth presidential election in the Islamic Republic of Iran, demonstrations erupted in cities across the country. Demonstrators protested what they viewed as wide-spread fraud—calls of “Where is my vote?” predominated. The Guardian Council had permitted only four men to campaign: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the incumbent; Mohsen Rezai, a former head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Sepah), considered a conservative; Mir-Hossein Mousavi, a former prime minister of Iran during the war with Iraq, considered a reformist; and Mehdi Karroubi, a former speaker of the Majlis, also a reformist.

 

Mousavi had declared himself the winner late on Election Day. The government immediately announced that Ahmadinejad had won by 62 percent of the vote. The regime also responded by cutting off electronic communication avenues within Iran and with the outside world. As the week progressed, cell phone and internet services were regularly shut down and slowed. On June 16, the authorities announced that foreign journalists were forbidden from reporting from the streets, and that their visas would not be renewed. Hundreds of domestic journalists and members of the press were arrested and intimidated.

 

Despite these efforts, demonstrations continued throughout the country on an almost daily basis through the month of June. On at least one occasion, the crowd numbered in the millions. In response, the government confirmed that Ahmadinejad had won and unleashed the Sepah (commanded by Mohammad-Ali Jafari) and the Basij (headed by Hossein Taeb) upon the crowds. As the crowds became larger and persisted in exercising their rights to peaceful assembly, the security forces became increasingly violent. Demonstrators were attacked, beaten and shot in the streets. Many demonstrators were killed in the street. Thousands were arbitrarily arrested—the Judiciary reported that 4,000 people were arrested in the initial weeks. Daily demonstrations finally slowed after a particularly harsh crackdown on June 20 during which at least thirty people were killed.

 

However, throughout the summer and continuing into the winter, demonstrators flooded the streets on remembrance days, and the security forces continued to brutally suppress all expressions of dissent. Objection to alleged fraudulent elections gradually developed into broader expressions of dissatisfaction with the government. Over the course of a few months, the protests became less focused on the election and more on the general repressive nature of the regime. On December 27, Ashura, reportedly hundreds of demonstrators were arrested.

 

The Iranian regime also arrested people who were not demonstrating but whom the government charged with fomenting a “velvet revolution.” The exact number of arrests remains unknown, but circumstantial evidence indicates that hundreds were arrested and detained merely for exercising their rights of association. The arrests captured broad segments of civil society, including leaders and members of political opposition and minority groups, members of the political establishment, lawyers, students, and academics. The arrests continued through the winter.

 

Many arrestees were threatened but released after a few days. However, many others faced torture, rape and sometimes death while in custody. Detainees were, and continue to be, subject to solitary confinement, lengthy interrogations, beatings, rape and other forms of torture. Many were not permitted contact with their families or lawyers, and many were coerced into providing public confessions. Some demonstrators were sent to the Kahrizak detention facility, where they were treated so brutally that the government ordered its closure and transferred detainees to Evin and other prisons. Three Kahrizak detainees died, due to lack of medical care, on the way to or shortly after arrival at Evin Prison. The families of many murdered demonstrators and detainees were denied permission to hold proper burial rites for their loved ones.

 

On August 1, a series of mass show trials began in Tehran. The first two were broadcast on Iranian television and showed hundreds of disheveled detainees dressed in pajama-like prison garb, looking dazed and confused. Although a list of defendants has never been made public, many were recognizable by the public including former vice-president Mohammad-Ali Abtahi and Dr. Mohsen Mirdamadi, the secretary general of the Islamic Iran Participation Front. The mass show trials bore little resemblance to criminal trials, under Iranian or international law. At each, the prosecution read a political document accusing the detainees and others outside of Iran, including foreign governments, of fomenting a “velvet revolution.” The readings were followed by confessions by select defendants.

 

Since August, detainees have also appeared on television confessing to crimes involving national security, belonging to terrorist organizations and conspiring with foreign powers. On October 5, the government began announcing sentences. The first four were death sentences handed down to men who had been arrested before the elections. As of December 31, at least a hundred sentences of lengthy prison terms, flogging, or banishment have been announced. However, the identities of many of those detained and tried remain unknown.

 

This preliminary report that documents and analyzes the Iranian government’s brutal suppression of dissent following the June 12 election. To meet publication deadlines, it ends its coverage on December 31, 2009. However, the Islamic Republic’s suppression efforts continue to escalate, and Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC) fully expects that in the coming weeks, months and years, further details will come to light.

 

This report begins with a brief description of the presidential election, which is followed by a catalogue of the regime’s brutal suppression of the demonstrations. The regime’s refusal to issue demonstration permits to opposition groups, its use of excessive force to suppress the demonstrations, and its murder of demonstrators violated the rights of the demonstrators to freedom of assembly, protection against the use of excessive force by law enforcement, and their right to life under Iranian and international law. The killing of demonstrators was simply murder.

 

The third section covers the arbitrary arrests of demonstrators and the brutal treatment they suffered while imprisoned in violation of Iranian and international law. Demonstrators were imprisoned without charge, and once imprisoned, were not afforded fundamental due process, including contact with their lawyers and families. Detainees were mistreated, denied medical care, beaten, raped, tortured, and killed. The regime’s failure to inform families of the whereabouts of their loved ones also constituted forced disappearances in violation of international law.

 

This is followed by a section describing the arrest and imprisonment of large swaths of Iran’s political and civil society. The arrests, interrogations and torture of the non-demonstrators violated Iranian and international law for the same reasons these acts violated the rights of the demonstrators. Political detainees were held for extended periods of time, often in solitary confinement, with minimal access to family or their chosen counsel. Those who were assigned legal counsel were allowed little contact with their chosen lawyers. If it is found that the torture, killings or forced disappearances were widespread, systematic, and with the knowledge of the perpetrators, each also constitutes a crime against humanity.

 

The last section of this report describes the five mass show trials and the sentencing of both demonstrators and activists. The parading of detainees in mass show trials, and subsequent sentencing of election-related arrestees violated Iranian and international law, both of which require observance of basic due process, including presumption of innocence, and the right to an attorney of one’s choice, and prohibit reliance on forced confessions in criminal proceedings.

 

The responsibility for this brutal wave of suppression begins at the top of the Iranian regime with the Supreme Leader and flows down through Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the heads of the law enforcement organizations, including the Sepah, the Basij and the police (NAJA), the heads of the Judiciary, and continues down through the ranks to the Basij on motorcycles running demonstrators down on the street, sadistic prison guards and other judicial employees. The perpetrators and their superiors are responsible under Iranian and international law.

 

Much of the material presented in this report is from thirty-two interviews conducted by IHRDC with activists, experts and victims of the government’s suppression. Most have chosen to remain anonymous for security reasons. Given the Iranian government’s concerted efforts to hide and distort the record, this report also analyzes and compares witness testimony with reports in the official Iranian press and the international press.

 

 

 

 

 

1.     The Election

On June 12, 2009, Iranians participated in record numbers in the tenth presidential elections held in the Islamic Republic of Iran. A spokesman for the Guardian Council reported that more than 85 percent of the 46.2 million eligible voters participated in the election.[1] Tensions, already high in the days leading up to the election, were heightened as the incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and a reformist candidate, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, both declared victory on election night. Following an announcement by the Election Commission of preliminary results that indicated a victory for the incumbent, the opposition candidates issued statements alleging fraud.

 

Since the 1979 revolution, the presidential election process in Iran has developed into a system that is tightly controlled by the Guardian Council.[2] This development has been accompanied by repeated allegations of fraud. However, the breadth of fraud allegations following the 2009 election was unprecedented and led to massive protests by voters. The government brutally suppressed the demonstrations, arrested thousands, killed many, and forced countless prisoners to confess to alleged crimes involving national security and fomenting a “velvet revolution.”

 

 

1.1      The Presidential Election Process

In 1989, the Iranian Constitution was amended to eliminate the post of prime minister and to provide that “[a]fter the office of Leadership, the President is the highest official in the country.” The president is responsible for implementing the Constitution and acting as the head of the executive branch.[3] He is in charge of the national budget, and chooses special representatives, deputies and ministers from outside of the parliament, including the Minister of the Interior.[4] In addition, the amended Constitution created the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) headed by the president, which among other things, is charged with the “coordination in the areas relating to politics, intelligence, social, cultural and economic fields in regard to general defense and security policies.”[5]

 

Under Article 115 of the Constitution, the president is elected from among religious and political personalities. The president must also possess administrative capacity, resourcefulness, virtue, and piety and must be committed to the fundamental principles of the Islamic Republic and its official religion (Twelver Shi’a Islam).[6]

 

The Guardian Council is charged under Article 99 of the Constitution with supervision of elections.[7] In 1991-92, the Council interpreted Article 99 to mean that it had supreme and all-inclusive authority over elections. Thus, the Council had the power to disqualify any candidate it considered unfit.[8] Though this interpretation was considered illegitimate by many scholars at the time, it was supported by the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.[9] In an address to the Council, he directed:

 

If someone speaks and writes in opposition to the views of the faqih, he is anti-Velayat-e Faqih. [Candidates] must be pure and pious. Although some people are good-natured, it is obvious that they act partisan, and this is not good. As a rule, therefore, it is better if you not select these people. If there is no proof or evidence against them, you can act based on your own knowledge.[10]

 

On July 26, 1995, the conservatively-dominated Majlis amended the election law and officially granted the Guardian Council these absolute powers.[11] The amendments established that the supervisory powers of the Council are “unequivocal throughout the duration of the election and with regard to all matters.”[12] As a result, the Guardian Council culls the list of candidates allowed to run for president and has final say over the certification of elections.[13]

 

The Guardian Council excludes candidates from running for office based on subjective criteria.[14] Disqualified candidates for both parliamentary and presidential elections have included respected clerics and traditional supporters of the Islamic system.[15] The Council is not required to explain its reasons and its decisions cannot be appealed.[16]

 

 

1.2      The 2009 Election and Allegations of Fraud

    Mohsen Rezai, a former commander of the Sepah, ran as a conservative candidate in the 2009 election with an open market economic platform. The official tally gave him 1.73% of the vote, and he joined the other challengers in disputing the election results. Less than two weeks later, he withdrew his complaints, but has remained active in trying to settle disputes and demands of the numerous factions vying for control of the Islamic Republic.

On May 20, 2009, in addition to the incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Guardian Council permitted three of the 475 candidates who registered with the Interior Ministry to campaign and run for president.  One, Mohsen Rezai, is considered a staunch conservative, while the other two, Mehdi Karroubi and Mir-Hossein Mousavi, ran as reformists.

 

Rezai was once head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Sepah-e Pasdaran-e Enqelab-e Eslami or Sepah). However, as an ally of Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Rezai presented a stark contrast to Ahmadinejad in several areas including economic policy. Rafsanjani was the fourth president of the Islamic Republic and is the powerful Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council.[17]

 

Mehdi Karroubi, the only cleric permitted to campaign, is a steadfast and vocal critic of the Guardian Council and the Judiciary. Now seventy-two years old, Karroubi is a founding member of the Assembly of Combatant Clerics and heads the Etemad Melli party. Founded in 1988, the Assembly of Combatant Clerics was approved by Ayatollah Khomeini. Famous clerics later joined, including Mohammad Khatami, Mousavi Khu’iniha and Mohammad-Ali Abtahi. In 2005, Karroubi left the Assembly to form the Etemad Melli Party and run for president.[18] He bitterly complained of election fraud after he failed to garner enough votes to make it into the second round of the elections.[19]

 

 Mehdi Karroubi, a former speaker of the Majlis, presidential adviser, and prominent reformist, came in last in the official election count with less than one percent of the vote. A vocal critic of the authorities’ response to the handling of the election and its aftermath, Karroubi has been repeatedly threatened with prosecution. The calls for his prosecution intensified after he published a letter to Ayatollah Rafsanjani, the head of the Expediency Council, alleging torture and sexual abuse of election detainees. 

Mousavi was Prime Minister of Iran from 1981 to 1989. He was later appointed to the Expediency Discernment Council and served as an adviser to both Presidents Rafsanjani and Khatami, but generally remained on the periphery of public life. Upon Mousavi’s announcement that he intended to run, former reformist President Mohammad Khatami ended his candidacy and supported Mousavi, whom he considered the stronger challenger to the incumbent, Ahmadinejad. During the official campaign period, from May 20 to June 10, Mousavi campaigned with his wife Zahra Rahnavard, promised to abolish the “moral police” in Iran,[20] and criticized restrictions on the freedom of expression. Much of the reformist movement and opposition coalesced around his candidacy and its campaign color, green.[21]

 

The 2009 Presidential campaign has been described by witnesses as vibrant and exuberant.[22] Days before the election, supporters of all the candidates participated in rallies and marches.[23] Some drove around slowly while chanting and displaying posters or signs supporting their candidate. The crowds were massive but peaceful. Two days before the election, supporters of both conservative and reformist candidates often chanted clever attacks and reprisals back and forth without much animosity. A witness described the jubilant last night of campaigning:

 

At one point we saw a car where the front seat occupants were Ahmadinejad supporters and the couple in the back supported Mousavi. Each would chant with the crowd they supported and seemed to be having a good time. Traffic was going so slow that we could walk alongside the car and talk to them. They explained that the couple in the back didn’t have a car and so they chipped in for the gas and came along to advocate for their candidate.[24]

 

Mir-Hossein Mousavi, a former prime minister of the Islamic Republic, was con-sidered the main challenger to Ahmadinejad in the 2009 pre-sidential election. Running as a reformist, his campaign color, green, came to represent the opposition movement and the current wave of dissent. Since the election, authorities have regularly threatened him with prosecution. Many of his ad-visers and his brother-in-law have been arrested, and on December 27, his nephew was shot to death by unidentified assailants. 

However, even before Election Day, the Mousavi and Karroubi campaign offices publically warned of election fraud. On June 9, the campaigns wrote letters to the Guardian Council and released statements warning of irregularities in the preparations for the election by both the Ministry of the Interior and the Guardian Council.[25] Among other charges, they reported large discrepancies between the number of voters and the number of ballots printed by the Ministry, and that twice the number of validation stamps had been manufactured and distributed. The reformist campaigns charged that these irregularities could easily be used in nefarious ways by election workers in small towns and villages who would be done early in the day and would therefore have a great deal of time on their hands.[26]

 

In addition, in the months before the election, human rights organizations reported waves of arrests and harassment of Iran’s student leaders, trade unionists and women’s rights activists. In an apparent effort to limit debate and silence critics of the authorities, newspapers were closed, and access to internet sites was restricted.[27]

 

The reformist candidates believed that a high turn-out would be an arbiter of their success. Mehdi Karroubi’s campaign manager, Qolam Hossein Karbaschi, argued that the incumbent’s chances of winning were significantly lower if more than 32 million members of the electorate participated. Mahdi Rahmanian, a campaign manager for Mousavi, expressed confidence that “a high turnout would make Mousavi a definite winner.”[28]

 

1.2.1     Election Results are Announced

Early reports on Election Day indicated that the turnout would be very high. Polling stations were kept open two hours past the scheduled deadline.[29] The Ministry of the Interior reported that over 39 million of the 46 million eligible voters in Iran voted, resulting in the highest participation rate (85 percent) in the history of the Islamic Republic.[30] The high rate of participation was immediately heralded by the Supreme Leader as proof “that Iran, thanks to the Islamic, revolutionary slogans and values even thirty years after the inception of religious democracy in the country, is more alive and enthusiastic than ever and ensures friends and enemies that it would continue its bright way.”[31]

 

Kamran Daneshjoo was Deputy Minister of the Interior and head of Iran’s Election Commission during the 2009 elections. He rejected all claims and accusations that the election was fraudulent. He held the position of Provincial Governor of Tehran during Ahmadinejad’s prior term. Following the election, Ahmadinejad appointed Daneshjoo to his cabinet as Minister of Science. During the approval process for his cabinet seat, the Iranian Majlis questioned the validity of his Ph.D. 

Late on Election Day, Mousavi held a news conference during which he alleged irregularities in the voting and counting of the votes.[32] He claimed, however, that he was the victor in the election with 54 percent of the official tally.[33] He also called on the Supreme Leader to intervene.[34] Following Mousavi’s press conference, Iran’s Election Commission Chief, Kamran Daneshjoo, announced in a surprisingly early press briefing that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had a strong lead in the polls.[35]

 

After midnight, jubilant supporters gathered outside Mousavi’s campaign headquarters in Tehran in anticipation of his victory speech. They were confronted by security forces that dispersed the supporters using tear gas.[36] However, there were no major confrontations. The security forces did not wear uniforms. Some witnesses were not sure whether they were police officers (NAJA) or members of the Basij. Others could not tell whether they were supporters of Ahmadinejad or merely enforcing a ban on street demonstrations during the election.[37]

 

Evidence suggests that a large number of Basij were mobilized weeks before June 12.[38] The Basij militia is a volunteer militia originally created to combat external enemies. According to its commanders, it currently has over thirteen million members.[39] Other estimates place the force at 400,000—about 90,000 active-duty Basij members who are full-time uniformed personnel and up to 300,000 reservists. Others believe that the Basij can mobilize up to one million men, including members of the University Basij, Student Basij, and the former tribal levies incorporated into the Basij (a.k.a. Tribal Basij).[40]

 

Basij members receive little or no law enforcement training. In 2007, its command structure was merged with that of the Sepah primarily to enable it to “deal with the threats from internal enemies.”[41] Major General Mohammad-Ali (Aziz) Jafari commands the Sepah. Hojjatoleslam Hossein Taeb was the head of the Basij until October 4, 2009, when he was appointed head of the Sepah’s intelligence unit. Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Naqdi replaced Taeb as head of the Basij militia.[42]

 

Under Iranian law, the Basij have broad discretion as to when they may take action. Militia members may engage in law enforcement whenever a crime is observed and they feel the police are not responding fast enough or properly, or when the police ask for their help.[43] Plainclothes Basij are often described by witnesses as men with beards or stubble who, though not wearing official uniforms, can still be recognized by their tight collared baggy shirts and loose pants. They are armed with batons, pepper spray, knives and guns.[44]

 

Early Saturday morning, the Election Commission Chief announced that Ahmadinejad was leading Mousavi by a two to one margin.[45] By Saturday afternoon, he announced that Ahmadinejad had won with 62.2 percent of the vote and that Mousavi had received just under 34 percent.[46]

 

The final official election results gave Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 63.62 percent of the vote, followed by Mir-Hossein Mousavi with 33.75 percent, Mohsen Rezai with 1.73 percent, and Mehdi Karroubi with .85 percent. Ahmadinejad’s announced margin of victory was the largest since reformist president Mohammad Khatami won reelection with over 60 percent of the vote in 2001.[47]

 

1.2.2     Fraud Allegations are Lodged

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the incumbent presidential candidate, was declared the winner of the election with over 62% of the vote. His reelection sparked spontaneous protests across Iran. At his victory rally on Sunday, June 14, he dismissed opposition members and protestors as sore losers similar to angry soccer fans. He derided them as “dust and dirt.” In the months following, he rarely commented on the dissent inside Iran but, when he did, he blamed foreign intervention and incitement.   

The three losing candidates alleged fraud. A representative of Mehdi Karroubi argued that the Interior Ministry distorted the early vote count by releasing the numbers of rural areas before the counting was complete in Iran’s cities.[48] In a June 14 letter to Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, the head of the Guardian Council, Mohsen Rezai claimed that experts and evidence suggested that he was the recipient of at least three and a half, and maybe as many as nine, million votes and requested that the council investigate the matter.[49] Rezai published his letter only after Ahmadinejad claimed in his victory speech that none of the candidates had made an official complaint to the Guardian Council.[50]

 

There were reports of irregularities. For example, one witness reported that two weeks before the elections, in a village in Azerbaijan province, representatives of Ahmadinejad distributed money to families equivalent to $50 per head. They promised the villagers that payments would continue if Ahmadinejad were reelected.[51] In spite of this, support for Mousavi seemed strong and most members of the community believed that he would garner the most votes. However, no one from the village was allowed to witness the closing and sealing of the ballot box.[52] In a community with only 1,200 eligible voters, the official tally showed 900 votes for Ahmadinejad and 700 votes for Mousavi. One witness explained:

 

Every village in the area has its own ballot box and there are ballot boxes for the military. … The closest large town is quite a ways away. No one would travel to vote in this … [area]. Even if they did, they would not travel to this particular village, which is quite ordinary. Also, in such a small community, 400 visitors would be very noticeable.[53]

 

Other observers noted discrepancies between registered populations and votes counted at both district and province levels.[54] A high number of districts showed more votes than registered voters. A statement by the Guardian Council acknowledged that there had been irregularities but disputed the high number of places where they occurred. It explained that these discrepancies could be accounted for by the fact that Iranian citizens are allowed to vote outside of their home districts.[55]

 

 

 

2.     Demonstrations

Street protests broke out immediately after the early Saturday announcement by Iran’s Election Commission Chief, Kamran Daneshjoo, that Ahmadinejad was winning by a large margin.[56] The rallies attracted men and women of all ages, and from a variety of socioeconomic segments of the population calling for nullification or a recount. The authorities responded by denying demonstration permits, and by sending in Basij and other security forces to break up the demonstrations. The large demonstrations continued regularly until June 20 when several demonstrators were killed. In the months following, demonstrations were generally limited to national remembrance days during which large numbers of people were expected to congregate in public spaces. Hundreds were arrested and several were killed at demonstrations on December 27, the day of Ashura, an important religious holiday in Iran. The demonstrations and killings continue as this report goes to press.

 

In Tehran, cell phone services were cut[57] and anti-riot security forces took to the streets during the hours following the election. They remained for weeks.[58] Throughout the summer and into the winter, the government unleashed additional security forces in an effort to quell public demonstrations against government policies. The forces included the regular police, anti-riot police under the command of the Sepah, the Basij, and plainclothes forces that could belong to any law enforcement branch including the intelligence ministry, but were mostly identified as Basij. Witnesses saw security forces engage in brutal acts of violence. For example, one witness said:

 

Law Enforcment Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran or Niruyih Inti-zamiyeh Jumhuriyih Is-lamiyih Iran (NAJA), headed by Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam, is one of the forces responsible for the suppression of the demonstrations that continue to take place in Iran. While plainclothes officers were feared by the public, witnesses often reported that uniformed police officers were less violent than plainclothes officers.

In 7th Tir Square on Karimkhan Bridge, I saw them rush past on a motorcycle and throw a (box) cutter at people. It injured a lady and a young boy. The boy’s nose and the side of his face were cut and the lady was injured on her upper arm.[59]

 

Another witness recounted:

While NAJA’s regular forces did not resort to much violence, the anti-riot police (which are a part of the NAJA but operate under the command of Tehran’s Sepah units) used severe force to prevent people from mobilizing. They used powerful tear gas, rubber bullets (which were often fired in the air) and attacks into crowds by [individuals on] motorcycles. They showed little mercy when confronting demonstrators and beating them. Of course, they had received training for these operations. Alongside these forces were plainclothes agents, who [were usually prone] to even more violence, especially against women. These plainclothes agents were mostly employed by the Basij, and they act without any regard for [the rule of law]. Sometimes ten of them would brutally attack one person.[60]

 

The Iranian government’s brutal suppression of demonstrators violated the demonstrators’ rights under Iranian and international law to peacefully assemble. Its killing of demonstrators violated their fundamental rights to life and constituted homicide. If the killings were widespread and systematic, they constituted crimes against humanity, rendering the perpetrators and their superiors criminally liable under international law.[61]

 

 

2.1       Saturday, June 13: Demonstrations are Sparked

An estimated ten thousand protesters thronged the streets of Tehran on Saturday. The protests in Tehran reportedly began in Vanak Square, but groups of demonstrators took different routes through the city. Demonstrators chanted “death to the dictator,” “death to the coup d’état,” called for a new election, and demanded that Ahmadinejad resign.[62]

 

Many demonstrators took to the streets to defend their votes. The precarious state of the economy, the high voter turnout, and suspicions of fraud made Ahmadinejad’s win—and especially his margin of victory—very suspect.

 

I was defending my vote. … I went and chose between these four people. I stood in line for three hours and I know many others who did the same. So, I was answering this affront against me. In no way whatsoever do I accept Mousavi as some kind of opposition leader. … I went and voted, and the next morning I woke up to find that my vote was not counted. Not my vote, nor anybody else’s. There was fraud, [and] I was protesting this fraud.[63]

 

Both Mousavi and Karroubi published statements demanding the nullification of the elections, and urged the population to remain calm. They did not attend the demonstrations on Saturday.[64] The Interior Minister, Sadeq Mahsouli, announced that the spontaneous demonstrations were illegal, thereby justifying the arrest and prosecution of protestors.[65]

 

By nightfall, protestors had set fire to trashcans, motorcycles and even buses while members of the Basij attacked the crowds with belts, batons, cables and rubber hoses.[66]

 

When people first came into the street they were angry. They were angry because they felt they had been lied to. They knew whom they had voted for, and they knew what had happened. They were made angrier still when officials denied the obvious. …They came into the streets to express their anger, by chanting slogans, burning things in the street, breaking things, just like everywhere else in the world.[67]

 

Clad in black body armor and riding motorcycles, the Basij randomly damaged private property and stole from demonstrators.[68] There are reports that they confiscated cell phones and photographic equipment, and at least one Basij stole sunglasses from demonstrators.

 

On [June 13], around five in the afternoon, a group of these [security] kids were being pounded [after they charged the crowd on motorcycles]. My husband went and brought one up [to our offices]. He was brutally beaten. His whole face was covered in blood. … We gave him some water and tea, changed his clothes and washed his face. We told him that if he went out with his own clothes the people would tear him to pieces. … In his pockets were several mobile phones he had stolen from people and several sunglasses [which we scolded him for].

 

… We asked him how much he was getting and what his situation was. He said: “We are supposed to get 50,000 Tomans [US$ 50] a day for these days. We were put on alert two months ago about the post-election days. They guessed it would become a tumultuous situation. We were ready. We are special forces, [but] we are not allowed to shoot people. However, they have said that if it continues, we will be given permission to shoot people. They told us to be prepared twenty-four hours before the election.”[69]

 

On Saturday night, people began shouting “God is great” from their rooftops at night, a strategy used in the 1979 revolution against the Shah.[70] The shouting continues.

 

 

2.2      Sunday, June 14: Students are Arrested and Killed in Dormitories

The demonstrations continued into Sunday in many of Iran’s larger cities.[71] In Tehran, Ahmadinejad held a victory rally in Valiasr Square, where thousands of his supporters came to celebrate his victory.[72] He disparaged those disputing the outcome of the election as “dust and dirt.”[73] Only a few blocks away, small groups of protestors continued their struggle against security forces. The tear gas used against them could be felt at Valiasr Square during Ahmadinejad’s speech. The beaten and bloodied protestors running away from the security forces nearby were also spotted just outside the barricades surrounding the square.[74]

 

The stepped-up security during the day on Sunday substantially reduced the number of protestors on the streets.[75] However, by nightfall, people converged on Vanak Square and again faced Basij forces that inflicted bloody wounds and whipped protestors with chains.[76] The security forces chased protestors into homes and followed student demonstrators into the university dormitories.

 

Many students were beaten and arrested outside of the main gate to the University of Tehran.[77] Those in the dorms believed the university campus provided a sanctuary because after the violent crackdown of the student riots in 1999, Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) had decreed that security forces were only allowed to enter campus after receiving permission from the University’s Board of Trustees and the Dean.[78]

 

On Sunday night, security forces broke open gates and doors on the campus. Witnesses describe vicious attacks by forces in riot gear who did not distinguish between students who had protested from those who had not:

 

Office for Strength-ening Unity or Daft-er-e Tahkim-e Vah-dat, is an Iranian stud-ent and alumni organ-ization (the latter is called Advar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat and uses the emblem to the left) active in advocating reform. Originally creat-ed in 1979 as a conservative Islamist organization, it counts Mahmoud Ahmadinejad among its former members, as well as exiled reformists including Ali Afshari. The organization’s members and leaders were arrested following the 2009 elections, and many were accused of participating in a “velvet revolution” during the mass show trials.

The police threw tear gas into the dorms, beat us, broke the windows and forced us to lie on the ground … I had not even been protesting, but one of them jumped on me, sat on my back and beat me. And then while pretending to search me for guns and knives, he abused me sexually. They were threatening to hang us and rape us.[79]

 

Early Monday morning, the authorities arrested over a hundred students under a cloud of tear gas while beating and shooting them with pellet guns.[80] The assailants were equipped with riot gear including shields and batons and witnesses identified them as members of the Basij.[81] Fatemeh Barati, Mobina Ehterami, Mohsen Imani, Kasra Sharafi, and Kambiz Sho’a’i were reportedly beaten to death with batons and electric shock prods.[82] Their names were confirmed by Tahkim-e Vahdat a politically active student and alumni organization.[83] Members of this organization were arrested before and after the election.[84] In addition, Iman Namazi and Mostafa Qaniyan were shot that night during the raid on the dormitories in Tehran.[85] Some bodies of students who had been killed were reportedly buried by Monday night without notification to their families.[86] Most of those students are thought to have died very early Monday morning.[87] When families inquired as to the whereabouts of their loved ones’ remains, the police and other institutions harassed and threatened them.[88] Twenty days later, five students were still in the hospital.[89]

 

Attacks on universities on Sunday were reported from around the country. There were reports of security forces and conservative militias including the Basij and Ansar-i Hizbollah[90] storming universities and dorms, and beating and arresting students in Tabriz, Babol, Mashhad[91] and Zahedan.[92] In Isfahan, attacks occurred the University of Technology.[93] Security forces stormed a library in Shiraz University, firing tear gas and beating students.[94] A hundred students were arrested and a staff member was assaulted.[95] Tahkim-e Vahdat reported the deaths of two students in Shiraz.[96] The attack in Shiraz was so vicious that the next day, Mohammad Hadi Sadeqi, the chancellor of the university, resigned in protest.[97] Killings at universities in Isfahan were also reported but remain unconfirmed.[98]

 

Gunshots were heard in several other parts of Tehran as well.[99] One witness recounted how security forces riding motorcycles fired on demonstrators with high-caliber weapons: “It wasn’t like the films where there is just a small hole—the shooting was blowing off hands, limbs. It was terrible, terrible.”[100]

 

The Ministry of Interior is in charge of elections, the national police force and for issuing permits for pub-lic rallies. At the time of the 2009 election, the ministry was headed by Sadeq Mahsouli. Mos-tafa Mohammad-Najjar replaced him in August 2009. The Ministry’s Election Commission was singled out for criticism by the opposition who voiced concern regarding the printing of an excessive amount of ballots before the election, the unusually fast an-nouncement of the results, and the fact that the commission was headed by a staunch supporter of Ahmadinejad.

On Monday, Iran’s conservative speaker of the Majlis, Ali Larijani, questioned the attacks, asking: “What does it mean that in the middle of the night students are attacked in their dormitory?”[101] Larijani blamed the Interior Minister, Sadeq Mahsouli, and demanded an investigation.[102] Tehran’s Governor-General, Morteza Tamaddon, later announced an investigation by the SNSC, but claimed that the assailants were not all members of the Basij. “We have found clues that some individual saboteurs attended rallies who will be introduced to the Iranian people later.”[103] A parliamentary commission investigating the post-election incidents made similar comments regarding “plain-clothed men who were not on a mission from the responsible authorities within the regime.”[104]

 

Little seems to have come of the investigation into the attacks on Tehran University, and lawmakers and administrators failed to address the widespread attacks on students in other towns in Iran. The similarity of the attacks and their proximity in time appears to indicate that they were planned and coordinated at a high level.

 

 

2.3      Monday, June 15: Millions Take to the Streets

On Sunday and the days that followed, Mousavi, Karroubi and others requested permits for demonstrations that were denied by the Interior Ministry.[105] Although the opposition candidates cancelled demonstrations, demonstrators often went forward without permits.[106]

 

Mousavi and Karroubi applied for a permit for a rally at Azadi Square on Monday, June 15, and asked people to stay calm. Their application was denied and the rally was officially canceled, but as the day progressed, significant numbers of demonstrators filled the streets of Tehran and other larger Iranian cities. In Tehran, protestors marched silently from Enqelab Square (Revolution Square) to Azadi Square (Freedom Square) where an estimated hundreds of thousands—maybe millions—of protestors[107] demanded nullification of the election and a recount.[108] One witness recounted:

 

All the people were protesting in silence and asking for their demands. They had one hand on their nose and another up, showing the peace sign. I walked up to Behboodi St. There were so many people there that I couldn’t go any further … several times I wanted to leave but decided not to and tried to go further. A few times I saw a small crowd chanting. But the [main] crowed was so well organized on its own that everybody would just say “Shush!” And the crowd would go quiet. I get emotional just talking about it right now.[109]

 

The Army of the Guard-ians of the Islamic Revo-lution or Sepah-e Pasdar-an-e Enqelab-e Eslami (Sepah), is a branch of the Iranian military established after the 1979 revolution. It is currently commanded by Gen-eral Mohammad-Ali Jafari. The Sepah’s objectives go much further than those of the Islamic Republic’s Armed Forces, which concerns itself with the ter-ritorial integrity of Iran. The Sepah has an intelligence branch, a navy, and an air force. One branch, known as the Quds Force, is tasked with exporting the Islamic revolution to other nations. The Basij, a paramilitary volunteer militia, serves as the Sepah’s instrument in combating internal threats including the greatly feared “velvet revolution.”   

Mousavi and Karroubi joined the demonstrators at Azadi Square.[110] Mousavi, in his first public appearance since the election, gave a speech demanding respect for the people’s votes.[111]

 

During most of the day, the response of the security forces to the large number of street protestors appeared to have been generally mild.[112] In spite of an official ban on demonstrations,[113] security forces were ordered to observe the events and not attack demonstrators. Mostly seen on the sidelines, they sat on stoops next to their riot gear, as the sea of protestors flowed past. The protests were given limited coverage by the national media in Iran.[114]

 

Speculation varied among protestors and commentators about the regime’s reasons for its non-confrontational policy. Some believed that by allowing unhampered protests, speeches, and some news coverage of the events, the regime sought to avoid the street clashes that were widespread on Saturday and Sunday.[115] Others noted the number of protestors and surmised that any attack by the security forces would have been too risky during the day.[116]

 

Protests were met with much greater resistance in other cities. In Ahvaz, a crowd of two thousand demonstrators was attacked by baton-wielding police officers.[117] In Shiraz, security forces fired into the air and Fars Province Police General Ali Moayeri authorized his officers to shoot at protestors and warned: “From now on, we will respond harshly.”[118]

 

Violence also broke out in Tehran as the sun began to set and the crowds thinned.[119] The Sepah and the Basij clashed with young demonstrators who would not disperse. One demonstrator remembered:

 

During the struggles, the youth threw stones at them and their motorcycles. The security forces’ fear of the young men was surprising to me. People shouted slogans from rooftops in support of the youth and the guards threw tear gas to the roofs. They tried to get inside one of the houses that gave refuge to the youth. … [The] presence of the plainclothes and the Basij in camouflage and ordinary clothes was very evident. They were the most violent and were mostly young; there were even kids between 14 and 16.[120]

 

Witnesses report that the Basij forces tried to provoke demonstrators, sometimes successfully, into taking violent action. Another witness said:

 

[After the demonstration, on our way home,] the Basij would come and insult people and start fights. They would come and instigate the guys. In Azadi Street close to Enghelab [Street], a group of them had come amongst the people and insulted the wife of a man who was there and started a fight. They were Basij, plainclothes, with batons at their belt.[121]

 

In one of the most publicized clashes, a security officer opened fire on a crowd of demonstrators outside the Basij compound near Azadi Square.[122] Iran state news agency, IRIB, reported that thugs had attacked a military post as people were leaving the illegal rally:

 

Towards the end of yesterday’s (Monday) illegal demonstrations from which many participants were peacefully returning, several thugs [or hooligans] attacked public/government buildings and private residences in a systematic and coordinated effort which created chaos and caused great damage to public property on Azadi Street. … The rioters, some of whom were armed, attacked a military depot with the intention of occupying the facility and disarming its guards. As a result of ensuing gunfire, seven compatriots were unfortunately killed and several others injured.[123]

 

Video footage shows young men throwing rocks and a fire set by protestors.[124] However, the chaos and fear experienced by the demonstrators is palpable in the several available videos of the incident. There is no evidence of systematic or coordinated action on the part of the demonstrators, and, although some demonstrators hold rocks, none are armed.[125] Whether this incident sparked the rest of the violence that night, or was simply one of the earliest and best documented, remains unclear. It is clear, however, that shooting into crowds was considered acceptable by the security forces from Monday night forward.

 

Video footage shows the Basij shooting into the crowds on Monday night.[126] Naser Amirnejad was one of the protestors shot at the Basij.[127] Close by, Mehdi Karami and Massoud Khosravi were also shot to death.[128] Davoud Sadri was shot outside the Meqdad Basij station near Azadi Square. The 25-year-old electrician was transferred to Rasoul Akram hospital, but died that day from injuries to his heart and spleen. His death was not confirmed for weeks during which time his family was given conflicting information by authorities about how he died, who was responsible, and where his body was located.[129]

 

The demonstrators were shocked and in disbelief as the security forces began shooting into the crowd. One witness recounted:

 

The circle was filled with people … [who] were drinking water or singing or dancing or shouting … And all of a sudden I heard someone shooting, … and we all got nervous … And we saw that some people are running against that noise and coming to push us back, and they would say “no, no don’t come there, go there, they’re killing people, they’re killing people.” [But] people were like, “no, no they would never kill people.”[130]

 

Kianoosh Asa, a masters student in Petroleum Chemistry at Iran University of Science and Technology is believed to have been shot on Monday. He disappeared that day and his whereabouts remained unknown until June 24 when his family found his body at the medical examiner’s morgue. His brother Kamran Asa pieced together some facts about Kianoosh’s death:

 

On 25th of Khordad [June 15] around Azadi Square, Kianoosh was shot and wounded in his side. According to eye witness accounts, he was only shot once and could easily move his hands, feet and neck and even turned his neck around. He was taken [by ambulance] … to a hospital. … We recognized his body on the 3rd of Tir [June 24]. [It] was taken to the Medical Examiner’s morgue four days after he was wounded, on the 29th of Khordad [June 19]. However, when we recognized his body at the [morgue], in addition to the bullet hole in his waist, he had a bullet hole in his neck. [I am] 90% positive that the cause of death was the bullet in his neck and not the one in his waist.[131]

 

Months later, on National Student Day (December 7), Kamran Asa and his companions were arrested as he tried to place a wreath and his brother’s picture on the university grounds where he had studied.[132]

 

At least eight people were killed in the demonstrations in Tehran on Monday.[133] Some were shot in streets close to Azadi Square. Others died from head injuries suffered from beatings by baton-wielding security forces.[134]

 

Sometimes they would even throw their batons towards women and girls. They would chase the protestors until they ran out of breath. Then, they would brutally beat them—whoever they may be: men and woman, old and young. This was to frighten everyone else so they wouldn’t come to the streets anymore.[135]

 

Confirmed deaths were also reported in Isfahan, Mashhad and Kermanshah.[136] Near Shiraz Gate in Isfahan, Hossein Akhtarzand suffered a terrible death at the hands of plainclothes security agents who chased him and other protestors into a building complex filled with doctors’ offices. Akhtarzand climbed to the third floor where he was beaten. Eyewitnesses report that he was thrown from the third floor rooftop. Reportedly, when representatives of the Intelligence Ministry delivered his body to his family, they claimed that he had slipped and fallen during the arrest.[137] Gruesome pictures of his shattered teeth and bruised body indicate that regardless of whether Akhtarzand slipped and fell down stairs or was thrown off the building, security forces bear the responsibility for his death.

 

 

2.4      Tuesday, June 16 through Friday, June 19: Mourning the Dead and Friday Prayers

On Tuesday, June 16, the Ministry of Culture warned foreign news outlets not to participate in or cover rallies and demonstrations. Initially, the official reason was the safety of foreign journalists since the authorities claimed to have “received specific threats against reporters.”[138] Only a day later, the ban was extended to any news conference by Mousavi, and the Foreign Ministry declared:

 

In an inappropriate, rushed and impudent act, certain countries have supported the illegal gatherings and the disturbances of a number of opportunists and … have turned themselves into the mouthpiece for these hooligans, through which they aim at damaging the radiant face of the Islamic Republic.[139]

 

Foreign journalists were told that they would not be granted extensions on their visas and would have to leave Iran.[140]

 

The Guardian Council announced that the vote would be partially recounted. Mousavi urged restraint in light of threats by the country’s Police Chief, General Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam, who promised to “quell any unrest.”[141]

 

Yet, the demonstrations continued throughout the week. Despite Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam’s threats, witnesses report that uniformed police officers were less likely than Basij to use violence when dealing with demonstrators.

 

The interesting thing was that the National Police Force was with the people. They were not helping them, but they would not hurt them either. The problem was the plain-clothed individuals. … [And] the buses [that] were filled with military people, commandos and militia and all these Basij people. … People were [most] scared of those people who [wore black from] head-to-toe. They would call them fada’iyan-i rahbar [Leader’s devotees]. They’re just there to kill people. And even if they see you on your balcony saying ‘Allah’u akbar,’ they would get so mad, they would come to your house and break down [the door] and come up.[142]

 

Mousavi’s spokesperson asked that people refrain from attending a scheduled rally in Tehran on Tuesday because a pro-Ahmadinejad rally was to be held at the same site in front of the state television building.[143] Although protestors came out anyway, the two opposing crowds remained largely peaceful. Again, the majority of the opposition protestors marched in silence to their destinations in order to avoid being painted as thugs or hooligans.[144] As before, sporadic violence broke out later in the day, and demonstrators were injured and lost their lives.[145]

 

On Wednesday, June 17, thousands of demonstrators packed the streets of Tehran for a fifth straight day.[146] Mousavi and former president Khatami published a joint letter asking Iran’s courts to use their powers to deal with the street violence and release protesters who had been arrested:

 

The use of violence against ordinary people, raiding people’s residences just because they chant the sacred phrase of Allah’u akbar (Allah is great), beating up women and men, destroying buildings is not in line with the standards of the Islamic Republic. [147]

 

Though not a direct response to the letter, a warning by the chief prosecutor of Isfahan, Mohammad-Reza Habibi, did not bode well for the reformists’ call on the Judiciary to temper the conservatives’ zeal:

 

We warn the few elements controlled by foreigners who try to disrupt domestic security by inciting individuals to destroy and to commit arson that the Islamic penal code for such individuals waging war against God is execution.[148]

 

On Wednesday, Mousavi sent another letter to the SNSC criticizing the use of plainclothes agents and complaining of their use of batons, metal rods and firearms to “attack the lines of demonstrators before the security forces.”[149] He then released a statement asking the public to join him in a day of mourning for those who had been injured or killed in the protests:

 

In the course of the past days and as a consequence of illegal and violent encounters with (people protesting) against the outcome of the presidential election, a number of our countrymen were wounded or martyred. … I ask the people to express their solidarity with the families … by coming together in mosques or taking part in peaceful demonstrations. [150]

 

In response, the next day, demonstrators gathered in Imam Khomeini Square in Tehran in the late afternoon. Their numbers reached into the hundreds of thousands, and covered the whole square and the surrounding streets.[151] Dressed in green or black, bearing black candles or black ribbons, demonstrators heeded the call of mourning for the dead, but anticipated further clashes with the authorities.[152]

 

Anticipating both the impact of the upcoming Friday Prayer and an extraordinary session called by the Guardian Council on Saturday to consider allegations of vote-rigging, the Association of Combatant Clerics asked for a permit to hold a pro-Mousavi rally on Saturday.[153] Karroubi’s party, Etemad Melli, made a similar request that day even though the editor of its news outlet, Mohammad Qoochani, had been arrested by Intelligence Ministry agents.[154]

 

On Friday, Tehran’s Governor General, Morteza Tamaddon, made it clear that no permission for opposition rallies would be granted,[155] and the SNSC responded to Mousavi’s letter with threats:

 

It is your duty not to incite and invite the public to illegal gatherings; otherwise, you will be responsible for its consequences. … It is your responsibility to prevent the public from attending such rallies instead of making accusations against the law enforcement. … We believe this is an organized network which is most probably affiliated to foreign-related groups and deliberately disturbs the peace and security of the public. Of course, we have already ordered the law enforcement forces to deal with the issue.[156]

 

In a sign of disrespect, neither Mousavi nor Karroubi attended the Friday Prayer sermon by the Supreme Leader, and neither sent representatives to the Guardian Council’s session on Saturday.[157] Friday Prayer serves as a show of force against enemies and to unify Muslims. The Friday Prayer sermon (khutbih) is considered to be part of the prayer

and is delivered by the Friday Prayer Imam who must be a brave, intelligent, able and eloquent man. In Iran, attendance at the Friday Prayer presumes unity with the contents of the prayer, including the sermon.[158]

 

Khamenei’s Friday Prayer sermon, delivered to tens of thousands of conservative supporters, was a hard-line message that was well-received by the crowd but stunned much of the Iranian population.[159] He warned:

 

 Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is the successor of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and the current Supreme Leader of Iran. The powers of the Supreme Leader include formulating government policies and overseeing their implementation, commanding and mobilizing the armed forces, declaring war and peace, and resolving differ-ences between the three branches of government. In his June 19, 2009 Friday Prayer sermon, Khamenei warned demonstrators that further dissent would not be tolerated. This was a green light to security forces to use more violent means of suppressing the demonstrations. The next day, Saturday, June 20, was one of the most violent and deadly following the June election. 

If the political elite want to … break the law, they will be held responsible for the bloodshed and any form of unrest. … [the people are allowed to demonstrate], but it is different for terrorists who have infiltrated and hide behind these people. … If [the opposition] creates covers for them, who will be held responsible? I want both sides to put an end to this. … The responsibility of the consequences will be shouldered by those who are not putting an end to it. Thinking that you can put pressure on officials by turning out into the streets is wrong.[160]

 

 

2.5      Saturday, June 20: Demonstrations are Crushed

Receiving what amounted to a green light from the Supreme Leader on Friday,[161] the security forces unleashed ferocious assaults on the demonstrating public on Saturday, June 20. Deputy Commander of the Iranian Police, Brigadier General Ahmad-Reza Radan, issued a stern warning:

 

I should emphasize that all protests held in the past week were illegal and beginning today any gathering critical of the election would be illegal. … Police will deal with the protest firmly and with determination. Those who provoke street protests should know that they will be arrested and prosecuted.[162]

 

Again, thousands of protestors refused to remain home, and attended rallies in Tehran and around the country.[163] In Tehran, demonstrators tried to congregate in Enqelab Square and Azadi Square, but thousands of police, Basij, militia and plain-clothed officers blocked access to the squares and to the streets leading to the squares.[164]  A witness recounts:

 

The day after the prayer, I went to the demonstration. The demonstration was supposed to be at Enqelab Avenue, and we saw that all the streets were closed. We saw that every single street that ends in Enqelab [Square had] a bus right in front of it blocking the street. The buses were filled with military people, commandos, and militia and all these Basij people. … We were getting so frustrated.[165]

 

Some demonstrators managed to get into Enqelab Square, however. About three thousand protestors gathered inside the square chanting “Death to the Dictator” and “Death to dictatorship.”[166] Outside, the Basij purposefully limited the flow of people and were seen creating chaos:

 

I was around Enqelab Square. … The people were simply walking in protest without being too tumultuous. There were a lot of Basij and plainclothes officers who had barricaded many of the side streets and were directing the flow of the people. The demonstrators were walking in order … they weren’t chanting or anything … the Basij themselves came on motorcycles, shooting in the air, terrifying and riling up the demonstrators. Really, it was they themselves who wanted to create chaos. And when people tried to run away into smaller streets they were blocked from doing so. As they grew scared and frustrated, they would throw stones and counterattack the Basij.[167]

 

Secret police and plainclothes agents slashed people in the crowd with knives and razors.[168] Over twenty people were fatally shot in Tehran, including bystanders who were shot by security forces who opened fire on the demonstrators.[169] Video footage shows militia members firing from rooftops and windows into crowds of protestors chanting “Allah’u akbar” and “Do not fear. Do not fear. We are all together here.”[170]

 

Twenty-year-old Ashkan Sohrabi was shot in the chest. His mother and sister had attempted to keep him indoors, but he left home with assurances of his return. His sister was quoted as explained:

 

I tried my best to distract Ashkan with things other than the street, but the crowds on our streets (Azadi) continued to get bigger. People sought refuge in alleys and homes. We heard different chants and the sound of bullets and smell of tear gas were everywhere. I asked Ashkan not to go to the street. But he said his last words to me and left the house: “Don’t worry, I’ll come back.” … Two hours later they brought the news of his death to us. … They had shot our Ashkan three times in the chest.[171]

 

Kaveh Alipour was killed while walking home from acting class on Saturday. Standing at an intersection in downtown Tehran, the 19-year-old was shot in the head. He was reportedly alone, and his family and neighbors portrayed him as an apolitical person who had not taken part in the demonstrations. Though they have very little information about the circumstances of his death, they believe that he was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.[172]

 

Masoud Hashemzadeh left home to meet friends in his neighborhood. When he did not return home, his brother Milad became worried and went out to bring him back from his friend’s home. As Milad approached his destination, he heard gunshots.

 

I saw that some people had been shot. [There was a clinic] between the intersection where the shooting had occurred and the one I was on, where the wounded were being carried to. When I reached it, I recognized our Masoud from the watch, ring and clothes he was wearing … It had been maybe two minutes since his shooting, [when] a doctor bent over him and right there announced that Masoud had died.[173]

 

Masoud had been shot in the chest, and the bullet had punctured his heart and lung before exiting out of his back. He suffered extensive internal bleeding and general blood loss. His death was nearly instantaneous.[174] Milad took his brother’s body to their home town in the north of Iran. The authorities prevented him from holding a funeral until an investigation had been completed.[175] He was held overnight for questioning and missed his brother’s funeral which went ahead without him.[176]

 

Some of the most disturbing and dramatic video footage captured the death of Neda Agha-Soltan who was shot in the chest and died on the way to the hospital.[177] A former Islamic philosophy student, Agha-Soltan had never been particularly politically active, but like many others, she wanted to protest what she felt was the disregard of her vote.[178] Along with others gathered on the sidewalk, she watched the protestors on Karegar Street, when suddenly, security forces charged up the street on motorcycles wielding batons and throwing canisters of teargas at the demonstrators and onlookers.[179]

 

The crowd panicked and scattered. Agha-Soltan and her companions joined others who ran east on Khosravi Alley towards Salehi Street. After they stopped running, they stood in the street weighing their options. Dr. Arash Hejazi remembers:

 

We hear[ed] a gunshot. Neda was standing one meter away from me. I didn’t know her. She was just another person in the crowd. I hear[d] the sound, [and] I asked my friend who was standing beside me: “What was that? Was it a gunshot?” And he said: “No, they say, they are using plastic bullets.” … All of a sudden I turned back and I saw blood gushing out of Neda’s chest and she was in a shocked [state], looking at her chest.[180]

 

Others in the crowd noticed the wound at the same time. A few began making video recordings with their cell phones as she clutched her chest and fell to the ground.[181] While Hamid Panahi, her music teacher who was one of her companions, and Dr. Arash Hejazi tried to help by placing pressure on her wound, someone called for a car to take her to a hospital. The footage shows Agha-Soltan bleeding out of her mouth and nose as she quickly loses consciousness.[182] Dr. Hejazi described her state:

 

I bent over her and I saw the bullet wound then, which was right in the chest below the neck. … Her aorta and her lung were hit by the bullet. … I can verify that the bullet came from [the] front … and there were no exit point [in] her back. I have never seen such a thing. It seemed to have blasted [the] inside [of] her chest. That [much] blood, and later on the blood exiting from her mouth and her nose, [gave me the] impression at the time that it had hit her lung as well.[183]

 

She was put in a car that lost its way and became ensnarled in traffic, and then switched to another car and driven to Shariati Hospital where she was taken into surgery. She died well before she reached the emergency room.[184]

 

Neda Agha-Soltan died on June 20, after being shot in the chest during a demonstration.  She bled to death within minutes. Her death was captured on shaky video footage and posted online. Within hours, she became the most recognized victim of the regime’s violent suppression of dissent. Subsequently, her family, her fiancé, Caspian Makan, and witnesses to her murder including Dr. Arash Hejazi,  became targets of the regime as it tried to shift blame to the MEK, the U.S., the British government, the BBC, and Hejazi.

Dr. Hejazi was left behind in Khosravi alley where he watched as Abbas Kargarjavid, a Basij who had been riding a motorcycle just moments before, was mobbed and disarmed by the crowd who were shouting that they had caught the killer. They ripped his shirt off, confiscated his ID cards identifying him as a member of the Basij, and after some debate of what to do with him, let him go.[185]

 

A couple of minutes later, the people had arrested a person who kept yelling: “I did not intend to kill her.” It was precisely this sentence that made everyone suspect that he was guilty. … Debate broke out about what to do with him. Some suggested to deal with him right there, but a larger number insisted that “we are not like them. We can’t kill him.” On the other hand, they could not hand him over to the police … because they did not want to identify themselves to the authorities, nor did they feel that it would serve any purpose. For these reasons, they simply let him go … but they kept his [ID] cards.[186]

 

Agha-Soltan became a major symbol of the brutality of the regime for demonstrators and caused an international sensation. Video of her death was seen by millions on the Internet. As a result, her family suffered at the hands of the authorities as they attempted to deny the veracity of the facts surrounding Agha-Soltan’s death. In an interview with the BBC on June 22, her fiancé Caspian Makan, described the authorities’ manipulation of the grieving family:

 

We worked so hard to get the authorities to release her body. She was taken to a morgue outside Tehran. The officials from the morgue asked if they could use parts of her corpse for body transplants for medical patients. They didn’t specify what exactly they intended to do. Her family agreed because they wanted to bury her as soon as possible. We buried her in the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran. They asked us to bury her in this section where it seemed the authorities had set aside spaces for graves for those killed during the violent clashes in Tehran last week. On Monday afternoon, we had planned to hold a memorial service at the mosque. But the authorities there and the paramilitary group, the Basij, wouldn’t allow it because they were worried it would attract unwanted attention and they didn’t want anymore trouble. The authorities are aware that everybody in Iran and throughout the whole world knows about her story. So that’s why they didn’t want a memorial service.[187]

 

As with others who spoke up about the deaths of their loved ones or reported on killings they witnessed, both Makan and Dr. Hejazi became targets of the security apparatus. Dr. Hejazi realized the dangerous situation he was in and left immediately for Britain, but Makan stayed behind. Four days after Makan’s interview with the BBC, his house was surrounded and he was arrested. He was taken to Evin Prison, where he spent two weeks in solitary confinement and was repeatedly interrogated. His interrogations were similar to those of other arrestees. He was blindfolded and faced a wall as his interrogators accused him and Agha-Soltan of various motives and affiliations. He was beaten and psychologically manipulated. Finally, almost two months later, he was released on bail and escaped Iran.[188]

 

Dr. Hejazi, though in Britain, was still the target of attacks by the security apparatus and the state media who vigorously disputed his version of events. On July 1, state media outlets reported that Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam, had announced that the doctor was wanted by both Interpol and Iran’s Intelligence ministry. He accused Dr. Hejazi of helping the Western media launch “psychological warfare against Iran.”[189] After media sources contacted Interpol, Ahmadi-Moqaddam insisted he had been misquoted.[190]

 

The attacks continued, however. Dr. Hejazi’s publishing house in Iran was attacked through the use of censorship laws and financial constraints.[191] In early November, members of the Basij gathered in front of the British Embassy in Tehran to demand his extradition.[192] That same day, the Iranian Embassy in London denounced a graduate scholarship offered by Oxford in the name of Neda Agha-Soltan.[193] The published letter of protest suggested that Dr. Hejazi was somehow responsible for Agha-Soltan’s death.[194]

 

By the end of Saturday, June 20, the streets leading to Enqelab Square in Tehran were covered in blood and rocks thrown by the protestors.[195] State media initially glossed over the level of violence, reporting that police used batons and water canons to disperse protestors.[196] Later, it acknowledged that a number of people had been killed, but blamed “terrorist elements—who had infiltrated the rallies.”[197] These reports were given a boost of credibility by a reported suicide bomber attack on the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini,[198] but failed to address the video and testimonial evidence showing security forces shooting into crowds of chanting demonstrators.

 

 

2.6      Summer into Winter 2009: Demonstrations on Remembrance Days

Many protestors who witnessed the brutality on Saturday, June 20, believed that the demonstrations were over and would not be revived.[199] Indeed, for the next week, the streets remained mostly calm.[200] There was a suffocating security presence. One witness explained:

 

Hojjatoleslam Hossein Taeb, commanded the Basij militia until October 29, 2009, when he became head of the intelligence branch of the Sepah. As commander of the Basij, he insisted that the Basij were not authorized to carry weapons during the demon-strations, despite witness testimony and video footage showing otherwise. Taeb claimed that police had arrested armed imposters who had worn Basij uniforms. However, none of the public indictments read during the mass show trials included any such charges. 

After June 20, all of the Basij forces [and] the main branch of the Sepah’s ground forces … took over the streets. Shahid Shiroodi Stadium housed the anti-riot police, and the Basij camped out at Laleh Park. To this day, large numbers of security forces continue to take to the streets (especially during more sensitive times). It cannot be said with any certainty whether these forces have been deployed to Tehran from other cities, but [it is clear that] the sheer number of forces cannot be accommodated by Tehran’s bases.[201]

 

Throughout the rest of the summer and into the winter, demonstrations became more sporadic. They occurred mostly on religious days of mourning for the victims of the violence or on official national days of significance. On December 27, the day of Ashura, the violence escalated and many people were injured and killed.

 

2.6.1     July 9: Anniversary of 1999 Attack on Dormitories

Thursday, July 9, was the tenth anniversary of the 1999 attack on Tehran University’s dormitory by the Basij militia. Although warned by General Moqaddam that any gathering would be strongly confronted by the police, a few hundred people assembled and protested.[202]

 

Protestors once again resisted the authorities’ dispersal efforts by chanting and throwing rocks. Access to important sites were blocked, and protestors clashed with riot police who worked to prevent them from assembling, and dispersed those demonstrators who managed to congregate. One demonstrator who was arrested recounted:

 

No one was there who didn’t throw stones or chant. The girls brought us stones from the side streets and were acting like our support teams. The families who lived there were making drinks for the protestors and gave them water. … I was caught in a sudden and surprising attack. While we were battling the Special Forces, the plainclothes on bikes sped into Enghelab Street from S. Eskandari Street and blocked our exit from behind and arrested us. There was no chance for others to inform us of this beforehand.[203]

 

Authorities severely beat demonstrators with batons and used electric shock prods before arresting them. A subsequent military investigation revealed that over 145 of these and other demonstrators were taken to the Kahrizak detention facility the next day.[204] The beatings suffered on the streets and the treatment at Kahrizak led to the deaths of at least three of the demonstrators arrested on July 9.[205] Yet in one of his first statements regarding the victims of the July 9 demonstrations, Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam claimed on July 10 that NAJA no longer held anyone in custody in relation to the street protests.[206]

 

2.6.2     July 17: Rafsanjani’s Friday Prayer

A week later, on July 17, former president Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, a senior cleric and regular leader of Tehran’s Friday Prayer, gave his only post-election sermon. Following the election, his family members had come under scrutiny for participating in the demonstrations, and allegations about his own corruption were a major part of the Ahmadinejad’s campaign rhetoric.[207]

 

Rafsanjani’s sermon drew hundreds of thousands of attendees.[208] In his sermon, he criticized the handling of the elections by the government and the attacks on those he considered heroes of the revolution. He declared that the government’s legitimacy depends on the people’s consent, and noted that the population had lost trust in the system. Emphasizing unity, he urged the authorities to refrain from arresting and imprisoning citizens, and from censoring the media.[209] His sermon was not broadcast live on national television as is usually the case with Tehran’s Friday Prayers.[210]

 

Although both reformist candidates attended Rafsanjani’s sermon, Tehran University’s Prayer Hall, the setting of all Friday Prayers, was filled with supporters of the government. Outside, however, a multitude of demonstrators used the opportunity to continue their protests. Clashes erupted after the sermon and the security forces used tear gas and beatings to disperse the crowds as they gathered in several areas in Tehran. Once again, the authorities labeled all assemblies except those sponsored by the government illegal[211] and protestors were arrested for staging “illegal demonstrations” and starting “riots.”[212]

 

  Ayatollah Akbar Ha-shemi-Rafsanjani, a former president and current head of both the Expediency Council and the Assembly of Experts, has been one of the most powerful members of the regime since its inception. Before the 2009 election, he regularly gave The-ran’s Friday sermon, but since the election, he has given only one. During his sermon, Rafsanjani repeatedly advocated unity but also criticized the violence in the streets. He called for the release of arrested protestors, journalists and opposition members. After the 2009 election, Rafsanjani was the target of criticism by hard-liners. His daughter was briefly arrested for par-ticipating in a protest. During the mass show trials, a witness testified that Rafsanjani was a member of the “velvet coup” plot, and another witness accused his son of embezzlement.  

2.6.3     July 30: Mourning the Dead

Outbursts of protests and violence continued through July.[213] July 30 marked the last significant day of mourning for Neda Agha-Soltan and others who had died on Saturday, June 20.[214] Mousavi and Karroubi requested a permit to hold a memorial service at the Mossallah Mosque in Tehran. Their joint letter noted that no speeches would be made and that participants would be required to mourn in silence. The Interior Ministry denied their request.[215]

 

Thus, the thousands of mourners who attended were deemed guilty of illegal demonstrations and subject to attacks by security forces.[216] These forces cordoned off Agha-Soltan’s grave and limited access to the cemetery. While Karroubi managed to attend the ceremony, Mousavi was prevented from exiting his vehicle when he arrived to pay his respects.[217] Riot police used tear gas, beat demonstrators, broke windshields of passing cars and dispersed the crowds. Some people were injured after falling in freshly dug graves. Official sources put the overall number of those arrested at fifty.[218]

 

2.6.4     September 18: Quds Day

Fearing that demonstrators would co-opt national events and celebrations, the government cancelled several such events in the following weeks. For example, in early September, it announced that the religious ceremony of Ehya at the Imam Khomeini Shrine would be cancelled.[219] So too was the anniversary of the remembrance of Ayatollah Taleghani’s death,[220] and later the Eid-e Fetr prayer at the Mossalla Mosque and the anniversary of Ayatollah Ashrafi Isfahani’s martyrdom.[221]

 

There was a lull in large demonstrations for several weeks. However, on September 18, the government proceeded with public observance of International al-Quds Day. This annual event is a government-sponsored expression of solidarity with the Palestinian people and a protest against Israeli occupation of Jerusalem that was mandated by Ayatollah Khomeini.[222]

 

No permit was requested by any of the reformist candidates or parties. However, tens of thousands of opposition demonstrators used the government-sponsored demonstrations to express their continued displeasure with the government. Although they were reportedly a minority in comparison to the hundreds of thousands of demonstrators rallied by the government to attend the traditional protest, chants of “Death to the Dictator” were heard.[223]

 

Before the demonstrations, the opposition was warned by both the Supreme Leader and the Sepah that any division or deviation from the official purpose of the demonstrations would be met with force.[224] Security forces armed with tear gas and batons clashed with demonstrators in Tehran as well as in other cities including Shiraz and Rasht.[225] In Tehran, hard-liners attacked Mousavi’s vehicle and managed to shove and harass Khatami before supporters surrounded him.[226] Yet, the next day, the police announced that only demonstrators who were attempting to cause damage to public property were arrested and that police did not engage the opposition protestors.[227]

 

2.6.5     November 4 (13th of Aban): Anniversary of U.S. Embassy Takeover

Smaller demonstrations continued through the end of September as students returned to the universities. Again, authorities responded by arresting student leaders of Tahkim-e Vahdat.[228] However, the opposition set November 4, (the 13th of Aban in the Persian Calendar) as the next major planned demonstration. This date has traditionally been used by the Islamic Republic to mark the 1979 student takeover of the U.S. Embassy.

 

On October 16, nearly three weeks before the demonstration, the head of the Guardian Council, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, warned opposition protesters not to attempt to hijack another event. Jannati, a longtime supporter of Ahmadinejad, issued his warning during his nationally televised Friday Prayer.[229] He also encouraged security forces to show no mercy when dealing with arrested protestors.[230]

 

His warnings were echoed by the police, the Basij and the Judiciary. General Radan stressed that it was the duty of the police to “prevent any disturbance of order in society.”[231] In its announcement setting the location for the anti-American rally, the police emphasized that any other demonstration was illegal.[232] Mohammad Reza Naqdi, the head of the Basij, also emphasized the crucial role of his forces in protecting the revolution and the Velayat-e Faqih. Tehran’s newly-appointed prosecutor general, Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi, promised that “those who try to disrupt the anti-American rallies on Wednesday will be confronted.”[233]

 

On November 4, thousands of opposition protestors unsuccessfully attempted to assemble in Tehran and join the demonstrators bused in by the government to demonstrate in front of the former U.S. Embassy building.[234] One witness recounts:

 

It has been said that on this day around 300,000 security forces were covering the capital. Their goal was clear—to prevent demonstrators from gathering and keep people away from the pro-government demonstrations in front of the occupied U.S. embassy. They used every means necessary to ensure that this happened. But the crowds were very large. Clashes ensued; the crowds began to move … Things quickly got out of hand and the security forces began using more violence … They showed little mercy when confronting demonstrators and beating them … [even] attacking an office building on Takht-e Tavoos Street and severely beating demonstrators who had sought refuge there.[235]

 

The security forces did not allow opposition demonstrations anywhere in Tehran. One witness describes:

 

Control over 13th of Aban Square was undoubtedly at the hands of the Sepah, who gave direct orders to the anti-riot police … They had even deployed local police units in the streets during this time. The main forces were anti-riot units who acted at the behest of the Sepah. The Basij and the Sepah ground forces were also involved, as were intelligence agents (though to a smaller degree) who were working on behalf of the various intelligence ministries. The Law Enforcement Forces [NAJA] also used their trained forces in these operations.[236]

 

However, hundreds of protestors gathered in streets and alleys, and chanted anti-government slogans. They were dispersed by security forces shooting tear gas and wielding batons. Some demonstrators ran into buildings to escape the attacks, but security forces often stormed after them.[237] The security forces arrested many people. One witness recounts:

 

Under Karimkhan Bridge, the plainclothes and law enforcement forces attacked. We ran away. A hand pushed me from behind and threw me on the ground. Before I knew what was going on, they started beating me with a baton and kicking me. I think they beat me for a few minutes. They were mostly beating my back and shoulders. I raised my head and saw a few women wearing chadors trying to rescue me, but the plainclothes beat them and forcibly took me towards the Sepah forces. They punched me in the chest and dragged me into an alley, blindfolded and handcuffed me, and had me lay on my stomach there for about an hour. Then they put me on a motorcycle and took me to a city bus where other arrestees were.[238]

 

One witness, a retired academic and grandmother, had come to see the demonstrations for herself, but she decided to head home when security forces rode motorcycles onto the sidewalks kicking and beating people with batons, throwing tear gas and shooting into the air.

 

We were still standing on the sidewalk when they came on the sidewalk with their motorcycles. They were shouting “Go back to your houses.” A policeman shoved me and said “Go home.” I turned around and said “I am going!!” when he sprayed something in my face. I felt like my eyes were going blind and sat down. I don’t know what it was, but I think it was pepper spray. We made it to one of the side streets … A lady came out and told me I could go inside and wash my face. Someone said that I shouldn’t let water touch my eyes because it will get worse, and instead I should have someone blow smoke in my face. [My friend] lit a cigarette and blew it in my eyes. I felt better, so we decided to go back and get a cab home.[239]

 

A participant in the demonstrations noted the particular brutality of the Basij:

 

While NAJA’s regular forces did not resort to much violence, the anti-riot police (which are a part of the NAJA but operate under the command of Tehran’s Sepah units) used severe force to prevent people from mobilizing … Alongside these forces were plainclothes agents, who [were usually prone] to even more violence, especially against women. These plainclothes agents were mostly employed by the Basij, and they act without any regard for [the rule of law]. Sometimes ten of them would brutally attack one person. [They] used batons, sticks, clubs and tear gas for these operations and received monetary compensation through a network of mosques. [240]

 

A third witness remembers that the security forces were coordinated:

 

The plainclothes were shouting slogans and insults in front of the Art Gallery and the law enforcement were beating people with batons and shockers. However, when the plainclothes joined them, they were beating more violently with foul insults. They beat women more and disbursed them with kicks. This made the youth angrier and caused them to peel the stones off the ground and throw at them. The violence was worse on this day than other days.

 

They cussed at people in their faces. Most of the plainclothes had guns. The jade-clothed NAJA were less violent than the para-military. There were female police too. They beat people with batons and clubs. They threw a lot of tear gas. A lot. A few times people also threw the firecrackers they use at Chaharshanbeh Soori at the plainclothes. That scared them a lot because it sounds like gunshots. But they had no mercy on people. They beat up a dairy worker who was taking pictures with his cell phone and cuffed him with plastic cuffs and loaded him up in a van. They dragged girls and boys on the ground and kicked the boys and loaded them on a van. I didn’t see the female police hitting anyone and only cussed and disbursed people. Even schoolchildren (Basij students) hit people with their flagpoles, kids maybe 13 or 14 years old![241]

 

Reportedly, Karroubi was attacked by government forces after he exited his car because of a traffic tie-up. His entourage was stormed by plainclothes and NAJA officers, and one of his bodyguards was hit by a tear gas canister that split his head open and sent him to the hospital. Forces attacked and damaged Karroubi’s car as he drove to safety.[242] Mousavi was not even allowed to leave his offices at the Cultural Center. It was surrounded by plainclothes forces on motorcycles whom he reportedly confronted.[243]

 

Journalists were also targeted. Farhad Pouladi, a correspondent for Agence FrancePresse, and Nafiseh Zareh Kohan, a reporter for reformist newspapers, were arrested during the protests.[244] The Fars News Agency reported the arrest of one Japanese correspondent and two Canadian reporters who were accused of reporting on the demonstrations without licenses.[245]

 

Security forces arrested dozens of demonstrators and activists. The next day, families of these individuals gathered outside of Vozara detention center for news about the detained. They too were beaten and dispersed.[246] The following Saturday, Azizollah Rajabzadeh, the head of Tehran’s police, announced that 109 individuals had been arrested on November 4.[247]

 

2.6.6     December 7: National Student Day

December 7, National Student Day, presented opposition demonstrators with another opportunity to stage demonstrations. In the weeks preceding this day, the government intensified its efforts to arrest student leaders. Tahkim-e Vahdat issued statements protesting the arrests of most of its leadership and noted that civil society groups were not allowed to hold even the smallest meeting.[248] Authorities arrested or summoned several members of the central council of Tahkim-e Vahdat, including Milad Asadi, Bahareh Hedayat, Mehdi Arabshahi and Farid Hashemi, just a week before Student Day.[249] On December 5, in another preemptive strike, security forces dispersed and arrested ten members of the Mourning Mothers, a group formed after the death of Neda Agha-Soltan that held protest gatherings on Saturdays at Laleh Park in central Tehran.[250]

 

On Student Day, campuses in Tehran, Kerman, Mashhad, Isfahan, Hamadan and Sanandaj were the scenes of large demonstrations. The security forces, generally prohibited from entering campuses, sealed the universities in order to prevent demonstrations from spilling into the streets. Still, in several squares around Tehran and in the streets of Shiraz, protestors could not be contained and clashes with security forces were as violent as those immediately following the election.[251]

 

Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri was one of the founders of the Islamic Republic and a senior cleric in Shi’a Islam. However, after the ascension of Ali Khamenei to the Supreme Leadership, Montazeri be-came one of the regime’s most vocal critics. He declared the results of the 2009 election illegitimate, called for three days of mourning after the death of Neda Agha-Soltan and others on June 20, and went so far as to claim that the Islamic Republic was no longer Islamic or a republic. Following his death on December 19, massive funeral processions and protests were held in Qom, Isfahan, Najafabad and Tehran.

University students affiliated with the Basij confronted and arrested students on campuses. Reportedly, they threw two opposition members from a balcony in Hamedan.[252] In Tehran, they arrested student activist Majid Tavakoli after he spoke at Tehran Polytechnic.[253] Outside of Iran’s University of Science and Technology in Tehran, Kamran Assa, whose brother Kianoosh had been killed in the summer, was arrested trying to enter. He had been invited for a commemoration. His mother explained that “He had gotten a wreath and a picture of his brother and wanted to take them to the university, but before he could even enter the campus, he was arrested along with his companions.”[254] The Police reported the arrest of over 200 protestors, including 39 women, who were detained for resisting security forces and chanting slogans.[255]

 

State television showed images of unknown individuals tearing up a picture of Ayatollah Khomeini.[256] This prompted Mousavi and Karroubi, both of whom claim to represent the real ideals of the revolution and of Khomeini, to ask for permits to hold rallies for the first time in months.[257] These rallies were meant to protest the actions of those who tore the picture of the founder of the Islamic Republic. The requests were denied.[258]

 

2.6.7     December 20: Ayatollah Montazeri’s Death

On December 20, Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri died in his sleep at his home in the holy city of Qom. A grand ayatollah esteemed in Shi’a clerical circles,[259] Montazeri was one of the founders of the Islamic Republic and became its most vocal clerical critic.[260] Once Khomeini’s designated successor, in 1988, he objected to the mass executions of political prisoners that were taking place pursuant to a fatwa issued by Khomeini. He was considered the spiritual guide of the opposition movement in Iran. His death and funeral resulted in massive processions in Qom, and demonstrations in Tehran, Isfahan and Najafabad—his city of birth.[261]

 

Montazeri was laid to rest the day after this death, and thousands of people traveled to Qom for the funeral procession. Some were stopped en route and arrested.[262] Still, images show at least tens of thousands of mourners flooding the conservative city where most Shi’a clergy are educated.[263] Basij laid siege to Montazeri’s house, and committed other acts considered insulting by the mourners. The provocations resulted in opposition chants and clashes with the Basij, which were reportedly mediated by the police in Qom.[264]

 

On December 23, in Isfahan, the former Friday prayer Imam of the city, Ayatollah Seyyed Jalaleddin Taheri,[265] organized a ceremony at the Seyyed Mosque marking the third day of mourning for Montazeri. The ceremony began at nine, but after a few minutes during which attendants read the Quran, plainclothes forces closed the doors of the mosque. They deployed tear gas and pepper spray, and aggressively beat the assembled congregants. The lecturing cleric, several journalists and fifty others were beaten and arrested.[266] Ayatollah Taheri was prevented from attending the ceremony.[267] His supporters held at bay several plainclothes men who had surrounded his house but his son, Mohammad Taheri, was arrested five days later.[268]

 

2.6.8     December 27: Ashura

Ayatollah Montazeri’s seventh day of mourning, another traditionally important day in the forty-day mourning period, fell on December 27, which was also perhaps the most important religious day for Iranian Shi’as—Ashura. The tenth day in the Islamic month of Moharram, Ashura marks the death of Imam Hossein, who was killed in his struggle against the tyrannical Caliph Yazid.[269] Each year, Iranians commemorate the death of Hossein with street processions, self-flagellation, and passion plays known as Ta’ziyih in which Imam Hossein, dressed in green, is martyred.

 

The convergence of these symbolic events and the continued suppression of dissent may have resulted in what became the most significant and violent demonstrations since June. Although traditionally, combatants set aside hostilities during the Islamic month of Moharram and especially so on Ashura, the regime continued to violently confront demonstrators in the streets and used lethal force to deal with the massive crowds.[270]

 

The 45-year-old nephew of Mirhossein Mousavi was shot to death on December 27, during Ashura. He had re-ceived numerous death threats and was shot in what appears to have been a targeted assas-sination. The regime has blamed a host of suspects, including Mir-hossein Mousavi, who has been accused of planning the assassin-nation of his nephew.

On Tasu’a, the day before Ashura, about fifty members of the Basij and/or another vigilante group entered Jamaran Mosque in Tehran and interrupted a sermon by Mohammad Khatami about Ashura.[271] The violence continued on Ashura as hundreds of thousands flooded the streets in cities throughout Iran. Protests and clashes occurred in Mashhad, Tabriz Arak, Babol, Najafabad, Isfahan, Shiraz, Ardebil and Orumieh.[272] Video footage from Tehran and other cities show demonstrators clashing violently with security forces. They capture scenes showing demonstrators resisting arrest, being beaten by Basij and riot police, and being shot and run over by security forces.[273]

 

Hundreds were arrested around the nation. In Isfahan, during a clash at Hossein-Abad Street, over 400 demonstrators were arrested and transferred to Isfahan prison.[274] In Tehran, 1,100 people were reportedly arrested and transferred by bus to Evin prison and other detention centers.[275] In Najafabad, officials reportedly declared martial law.[276]

 

Ali Habibi-Mousavi, Mir-Hossein Mousavi’s nephew, was shot by a .45 caliber bullet that entered his chest and exited his body. [277] Reports indicate that his killing was targeted and that the 43-year-old father of two was not participating in the demonstrations. His body and those of four others who died on Ashura were taken by security forces for purposes of autopsy, and state media suggested a variety of different theories regarding the “mysterious” murder. Hossein Shariatmadari, editor in chief of the Kayhan publication, accused Mousvai of having assassinated his own nephew.[278]

 

Images of deaths and severe injuries were captured on cell phones and quickly spread over the Internet. For example, one video shows a police vehicle running over protestors.[279] However, the number of victims is difficult to establish. The Islamic Republic News Agency announced that 37 people were killed on Ashura.[280] Four deaths were reported in Tabriz,[281] and by the end of the day in Tehran, five deaths were confirmed by the opposition, including that of Mousavi’s nephew. Deputy Police Chief Radan claimed that the police and security forces did not use lethal force on Ashura.[282] However, state television initially claimed that ten members of anti-revolutionary terrorist groups were killed and that these groups also killed five others.[283] The police then claimed eight deaths in Tehran, and then changed that number to seven after determining that one victim was allegedly a drug addict with no link to the demonstrations. Tehran’s prosecutor, Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi, confirmed the seven deaths and claimed to have launched investigations.[284]

 

Bodies of those who died were returned to their families for burial under the condition that they not publicize the death or the cause of death.[285] Reportedly, family members of the victims were put under pressure to declare that the deaths of their loved ones were accidents.[286] Witnesses who saw law enforcement trucks run over protestors have reportedly been arrested. Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam, had claimed that the truck that ran over civilians was stolen from NAJA and that the thief who was the real culprit is being pursued.[287] However, the families of those arrested have been pressured not to speak of the reasons for the arrests.[288]

 

As was the case in earlier demonstrations, authorities insisted that foreigners and terrorists were to blame. Heydar Moslehi, the Minister of Intelligence, blamed foreigners for backing the chaos during Ashura and claimed that some of these foreigners were arrested.[289] Two European citizens were arrested—the Swedish Charge d’Affairs and a German tourist—both of whom were later released.[290] Qolam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, Chief Prosecutor of Iran, stated that three of those arrested on Ashura would be tried for muharibih and executed promptly.[291] More ominously, Mohammad Najjar, the Minister of Interior, declared that after Ashura, all rioters would be considered muharib and would be dealt with accordingly.[292]

 

 

2.7      Violations of Iranian and International Law

The regime’s refusal to issue permits to opposition demonstrators, its use of excessive force to suppress the demonstrations, and its murder of demonstrators violated the rights of the demonstrators to freedom of assembly, protection against the use of excessive force by law enforcement, and their rights to life under Iranian and international law. The killing of demonstrators was murder.

 

2.7.1     Violations of Right to Assembly

The preamble to the Iranian Constitution recognizes that the fundamental right to freely assemble enabled the people of Iran to overthrow the repressive regime of the Shah:

 

In the course of this popular movement, the employees of all government establishments took an active part in the effort to overthrow the tyrannical regime by calling a general strike and participating in street demonstrations. The widespread solidarity of men and women, of all segments of society and of all political and religious factions, played a clearly determining role in the struggle.[293]

 

The preamble entrusts the fate of the people to the people themselves and encourages Iranian citizens to broadly and actively participate in society. In this fashion, the Constitution aims to guarantee the rejection of “tyranny” and “economic monopoly.”[294]

 

Article 27 provides that “public gatherings and marches may be freely held, provided arms are not carried and that they are not detrimental to the fundamental principles of Islam.”[295] Gatherings may be held, and other rights may be exercised, if they are not detrimental to the public interest.[296] Article 9 provides that “[n]o individual, group, or authority, has the right to infringe in the slightest way upon the political, cultural, economic, and military independence or the territorial integrity of Iran under the pretext of exercising freedom.” It also provides:

 

Similarly, no authority has the right to abrogate legitimate freedoms, not even by enacting laws and regulations for that purpose, under the pretext of preserving the independence and territorial integrity of the country.[297]

 

Under the Procedural Code of the Article 10 Commission,[298] the Interior Ministry, made up of presidential appointees, is responsible for approving or denying applications for demonstrations and public gatherings. Article 30 of this law states:

 

Request for demonstrations and gatherings must be submitted in writing and in person by the recognized official representative of the group to the Interior Ministry, a week before the date of demonstration or gathering.

 

Note – It is not necessary to observe the time set by this article for demonstrations that take place due to unforeseen events. It is up to the Interior Ministry to decide this matter.[299]

 

Under the Procedural Code, the Interior Ministry has broad discretion to grant or deny a permit.[300] For example, the Ministry has the latitude to determine whether a gathering will be detrimental to Islamic fundamentals.[301] This is a concept so vague that the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) explicitly noted that such limitations could lead to the denial of the right to assemble and that the Islamic Republic should establish clear criteria to assess what a violation of such Islamic principles might entail.[302] There is no right to appeal.

 

The fundamental right to freedom of assembly is also protected in international law. Article 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)[303] provides as follows:

 

The right of peaceful assembly shall be recognized. No restrictions may be placed on the exercise of this right other than those imposed in conformity with the law and which are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security or public safety, public order (ordre public), the protection of public health or morals or the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.[304]

 

The United Nations Human Rights Commission (HRC), a body responsible for interpreting the ICCPR, has recognized that States may require advance notice even though it may restrict the right to assemble. It reasons that States should be allowed some time in which to prepare for a demonstration.[305] However, the HRC has expressed concern that a notification requirement of just three days may be overly restrictive.[306] It has also made it clear that any permit procedure should include an appeals process.[307]

 

In the HRC’s concluding observations in a case involving Togo, it criticized a pattern of restrictions strikingly similar to those in Iran:

 

The Committee is concerned at reports that peaceful demonstrations organized by civil society are regularly prohibited and forcibly dispersed by the authorities, while marches in support of the President of the Republic are regularly organized by the authorities.[308]

 

The Iranian government violated Iranian and international law by allowing rallies in support of Ahmadinejad to take place while denying permits to opposition demonstrators. On November 4, the authorities also used a double standard when demonstrators were not allowed near the official demonstration sanctioned by the government in front of the old U.S. Embassy building, and did not allow opposition protests to take place anywhere in Tehran.

 

2.7.2     Excessive Use of Force

Regardless of whether the demonstrations were unlawful under Iranian law, their generally peaceful nature obliged the authorities to avoid excessive use of force. Iranian law provides that law enforcement may only use weapons in the case of illegal demonstrations if the use is “by order of the leader of the operation,” and

 

  1. other methods were used under the law and were unsuccessful, and
  2. before using weapons, the rioters and disturbers were given an ultimatum regarding use of weapon.[309]

 

Under international law, in dispersing “assemblies that are unlawful but non-violent, law enforcement officials shall avoid the use of force or, where that is not practicable, shall restrict such force to the minimum extent necessary.”[310] Law enforcement “may use force only when strictly necessary and to the extent required for the performance of their duty.”[311] Firearms “should not be used except when a suspected offender offers armed resistance or otherwise jeopardizes the lives of others.”[312]

 

Mohammad Reza Naqdi was appointed head of the Basij in October 2009. During Khatami’s presidency, Naqdi was head of the NAJA Intelligence Office and was alleged to have been personally involved in many operations, including the raids of the university dormitories in 1999, and the beatings of Abdollah Nuri and Ata’ollah Mohajerani. He has openly defended the participation of the Basij in politics and denounces the post-election demonstrations as ungrateful acts that disrespect the holy status of the Velayat-e Faqih.  

Videos, witnesses and independent news sources verify that the vast majority of the demonstrators were unarmed members of the general public who assembled peacefully, sometimes chanting and sometimes walking in silence through the streets.[313] Yet, there is abundant evidence that irregular forces used excessive force. They shot into crowds, and beat and stabbed unarmed demonstrators and bystanders, including women and children.[314] They also made liberal use of tear gas in crowded metropolitan areas.[315]

 

Witnesses report that though demonstrators sometimes resorted to violence—beating security forces, throwing rocks or making fires—they did so in direct response to assaults by irregular forces.[316] Some demonstrators struck back at security forces trying to violently disperse them.[317] Some threw rocks to keep the forces at bay, and made fires to help barricade themselves off from motorcycle-mounted Sepah or Basij, and because the smoke alleviated the effects of tear gas.[318]

 

Evidence shows that the primary objective of the security forces was to violently disperse and antagonize protestors, and not to maintain order.[319] Members of the Basij—an irregular force originally created to be mobilized in case of invasion—and vigilante groups such as Ansar-i Hizbollah, were deployed against demonstrators. They unlawfully instigated violence and, even after protests and while demonstrators were dispersing, stole and damaged personal property. Some reportedly rewarded themselves with the rape of detainees.[320]

 

The Iranian authorities violated Iranian and international law by using irregular forces to employ excessive force, including incitement to violence, and causing injury and death to peaceful demonstrators.

 

2.7.3     Failure to Protect Right to Life and Murder

The authorities’ use of excessive force led to violations of the right to life of the victims and constituted murder. All persons have a fundamental right to life under international and Iranian law.[321] Not surprisingly, murder is a crime under Iranian law.[322] Article 6 of the ICCPR provides that under international human rights law:

 

Every human being has the inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.[323]

 

The HRC has advised that this provision includes killings by security forces:

 

The Committee considers that States parties should take measures not only to prevent and punish deprivation of life by criminal acts, but also prevent arbitrary killing by their own security forces. The deprivation of life by the authorities of the State is a matter of the utmost gravity. [324]

 

The total number of those killed after the election remains unknown largely due to the fact that government authorities affirmatively prevent families and the public from learning of the whereabouts and fate of many victims. In September, the Iranian government stated that a total of 36 people, including security forces, had been killed.[325] Several organizations have attempted to collect and publish lists of those killed.[326] One list, created by a commission established by Mousavi and headed by Alireza Beheshti, son of one of the most prominent leaders of the 1979 revolution, put the number of election violence victims at seventy-two before the Ashura demonstrations. It was mailed to the Majlis’s Foreign Policy and National Security Commission, which rejected it because it lacked “essential data” such as the ID numbers of the victims.[327] For some observers, the reliability of this list was bolstered by the arrest of Beheshti days after completion of this list.[328]

 

The killings by the security forces following the June 12 elections were in violation of the victims’ rights to life and constitute murder in violation of Iranian and international human rights law. If it is found that the killings were widespread, systematic, and with the knowledge of the perpetrators, they also constitute a crime against humanity.[329]

 

 

 

3.     Arrests and Detention of Demonstrators

At this time, the numbers of demonstrators who were arrested during the post-election demonstrations remain unknown. In August, the Iranian government stated that 4,000 people throughout the country had been arrested but that 300 remained in custody.[330] Arrests began even before the end of Election Day, but information regarding those arrested continues to be scarce and distorted. Many demonstrators who were arrested or taken to a hospital lost contact with the outside world. Although families frantically searched for them, it often took days, if not weeks, to learn the fate of their loved ones.[331]

 

Many detainees suffered from lack of medical attention exacerbated by beatings, sexual molestation and rape from the time of their initial arrest and throughout their temporary detention, arraignment and release. An unknown number died. Hamid Maddah Shourche worked on Mousavi’s campaign in Mashhad. He was arrested on June 15 while participating in a sit-in protest at Mashhad’s Goharshad mosque. Only days after his release, Shourche died from a brain hemorrhage due to the injuries he suffered while in detention.[332]

 

Amir-Hossein Toufanpour, the father of a seven-year-old, was separated from his brother on June 15 at Azadi Square. His family instantly began a frantic search for him but never saw him alive again. Late that night, they received a phone call explaining that Toufanpour had been shot in the hand and was resting at Hazrat-i Rasul Hospital, but when they reached the hospital, he was no longer there. They searched every hospital in the city, but could not find a trace of him. Finally, four days later, on a visit to the medical examiner’s office, they found his picture in a catalog of the dead. He did, in fact, have a gunshot wound close to his hand. In addition, he was shot in his side and waist, had a bruised upper torso and neck, a broken arm and nose, and a deep gash in the back of his head that had been filled with cotton, presumably to stop the bleeding.[333] In order to receive his body without paying the requisite bullet fees—which the regime charges victims of shootings—family had to convince the authorities that Toufanpour was not a member of an opposition group and promise to refrain from holding a memorial service.[334]

 

Amir Javadifar and Seyyed Ali Akbar Kheradnejad participated in demonstrations on July 9. The latter was arrested at Valiasr Square by plainclothes officers at around 4:30 pm. He was beaten during his arrest, and throughout his time in custody.

 

They tied my hands behind me and put me in the van. They were attacking me from behind and were beating me. All kinds of insults and threats of rape were flying in the air. I was taken to police precinct 148, which is located on Felestin Street. There were three other people who were arrested with me and were sitting at the back of the van. When we arrived, we were body searched and were beaten again at the courtyard of the precinct. First they put us in a cage and insulted us in obscene language. Police officers in the precinct were not in charge. Plainclothes forces were beating us with batons through the bars and were laughing at us.[335]

 

Kheradnejad did not stay long at Precinct 148, but he recalls that during his time there, Javadifar was present as well:

 

[A] doctor showed up who wanted to take Amir and one other prisoner to the hospital but the plainclothes forces were not letting him. The doctor got into an argument with them and asked them to put that in writing. [T]he doctor said that he did not want to be responsible for their deaths.[336]

 

Javadifar was eventually moved from Precinct 148 to a small detention center named Kahrizak.[337] Kheradnejad was threatened with the same fate, but after receiving a charge sheet that included the crime of “acting against national security,” he was taken to Ward 240 in Evin Prison. There, the injured detainees were held without contact with the outside world until Sunday, when they were allowed to make short phone calls to their families. After that, they were held in dark cells, interrogated and fed false information about such things as the death of family members.[338]

 

Kheradnejad was released after his family posted bail. Outside Evin, desperate family members with photographs of their loved ones asked him for any information. Frightened by his experience, he avoided contact with any of the people with whom he had been arrested and soon left Iran for Britain.[339]

 

An alleged former Basij member seeking refuge in Britain, has reported that rape of detainees was a benefit conferred on Sepah and Basij members for their security work:

 

We asked what all the noise was about. They said, “Nothing, this is Fath Al Moin (aid to victory).” … We said: “What do you mean, what are you doing? Who’s in there?” Because they were Basij from the provinces, we didn’t know them. We asked: “What’s happening, why are they crying?” As we pursued the matter, the confrontation got worse and they said, “You have no right to enter.” My relative said: “What do you mean? I’m one of the leaders here. You can’t tell me I have no right.” And it really was so, but they didn’t allow us entry. We were all responsible and we clashed. After a few minutes, a vehicle came into the courtyard. Someone must have alerted the others that we were trying to prevent them from achieving what they set out to do, the Fath Al Moin. They had come for us to prevent the scene from deteriorating. They said our superior had summoned us.

 

[My relative] was very angry. When we got there, he said: “What is this? Sexual abuse is a serious crime. Who gave this order? Who authorized this?” Hajji[340] calmly replied with a smile: “This is Fath Al Moin. It’s a worthy deed. There’s nothing wrong with it. Why are you complaining?” When he said this, Hajji thought it would calm my relative down to know this. But the opposite happened—he became more upset. He raised his voice, saying: “What do you mean it’s not a crime?” “What do you mean it’s not a recognized crime? That it’s a good deed?” Hajji saw that he had lost control and said: “What’s the big deal? Nothing’s happened. What is the issue here?”[341]

 

Maryam Sabri, a twenty-one year old employee of a boating company, was one of their victims. She was arrested on July 30 during protests marking the fortieth day of mourning for those killed on June 20 and particularly Neda Agha-Soltan.

 

On a Thursday, Neda’s 40th, between 5 and 5:15 in Behesht-e Zahra [cemetery,] I was chanting slogans when the guys said we should run. When I turned, I saw that there were loads of Basij and Sepah behind us. There were around a hundred. I started running in the [cemetery’s] sections, and after I was hit a few times while running, I fell to the ground in one of the sections. [By] the time I got up there were plainclothes men all around me. They started beating me with batons and kicking me. Then they took me away. There were five of them and they were all men.[342]

 

After the June 12 election, Maryam Sabri participated in every demonstration in Teh-ran until she was arrested on July 30 while protesting near Neda Agha-Soltan’s grave site. She was detained for two weeks at an unknown location where she was repeatedly interrogated and raped.  She was released only after she agreed to inform on other protestors. She fled Iran and sought re-fugee status in Turkey.

Sabri was arrested, blindfolded, cuffed and taken with five or six others in a van to an unknown detention center. There, she was left in a dark, closet-like cell by herself where she had just enough room to sit with her legs stretched out. The sounds of beatings, screams, crying and cursing filled her cell and she herself was periodically interrogated and beaten by ski-mask-wearing guards.[343]

 

The first three times she was interrogated, she faced cursing and beatings, but she refused to cooperate fully with the interrogators. She was raped during the fourth session.

 

The fourth interrogation started like the other ones. He asked the same questions. Then he said, “Apparently you don’t want to talk, no?” When he saw that I said nothing, he said, “You don’t want to cooperate? No?” I said nothing. He said, “OK, fine. You wanted your vote? I am here to give your vote back. I will give you your vote now and you can see if it is any good.” I felt him grab my shoulders. He had never grabbed me this hard while he beat me. He got me up from the chair and took off my clothes by force. I was screaming and crying. I begged him. I swore to everything he believed in. He laughed and said, “I don’t have a God or prophet. Don’t bother yourself [with it].” I was crying and saying, “Please, for God’s sake, I will do whatever you want, whatever you say.” He said, “No, you didn’t cooperate in the beginning and now I want to give your vote back. Why are you upset? Why are you crying? No need for tears. You were being brash and wanted your vote, and I am going to be brash and give your vote back. Don’t cry.”[344]

 

She was raped again during the next session but by a different interrogator. The third time she was raped, she refused to scream or beg. The fourth time she was raped, her interrogator took off her blindfold so she could see his face.

 

He sat in front of me and started talking. He asked, “Do you want to be let go? Do you want to stay alive? Do you want to see the outside again?” I cried and said, “Yes. Whatever you say, I’ll do it. Whatever you want. Just let me go. Either kill me or let me go. Don’t hurt me like this anymore.” He laughed and said, “No, we won’t kill you yet.” He said, “We’ll let you go, but there is a condition, and that is that you have to go where we tell you and do as we tell you. Also, you can’t tell a soul about the events that happened here. If you do, we’ll kill you and won’t let you stay alive. We are following you constantly and won’t let you get out of our hands. If you do anything wrong, you wont stay alive. Like many others who died and no one found out, you will die too.”

 

After I was in that room for a while and he had asked me the questions and raped me [again]… he sat in front of me and started talking. He asked, “Do you want to go out? Do you want to stay alive? Do you want to see the outside again?” I cried and said, “Yes. Whatever you say, I’ll do it. Whatever you want, just let me go. Either kill me or let me go. Don’t hurt me like this anymore.”[345]

 

My condition of release was that I promised to collaborate with them. I said, “I will do as you ask, just give me some time to heal.” He laughed and said, “You are fine. Maybe you have some body pain and bone pain, or maybe dislocation. But none of these are important. You are still alive.” I said fine. I was supposed to collaborate with them, participate in demonstrations, and take pictures and movies. Get to know the guys and get their numbers, give them my number. This was their plan, but I didn’t go to demonstrations after that.[346]

 

On August 14, Sabri’s captors dropped her off by a park around dusk. She was instructed to infiltrate and inform on other demonstrators, and later received a number of threatening phone calls urging her to cooperate. She fled to Turkey and sought refuge with the United Nations in Ankara.[347]

 

Ebrahim Ali Mehtari, a 27-year-old computer science student and IT technician, also sought refuge in Turkey after his post-election arrest. Mehtari was arrested on August 19, near Enghelab Square in Tehran. He was blindfolded and handcuffed, and taken by an unmarked car to an unknown detention center.[348]

 

The detention center I was in stunk so badly and had such large piles of clothes that I could easily say a dead body was being kept there. There was blood, vomit, excrement, and urine of people. The blanket they gave me was a detailed description of what happened to like 70 people because from the amount of blood spilled on it, it had become as hard as lavashak.[349]

 

Mehtari recalls being detained for four or five days. In that time, he was under constant taped interrogation. He reports that he was safe so long as he could continue talking. If he had nothing to say or when he decided to resist the interrogators’ suggested answers, he was beaten and tortured.

 

I can easily say that the length of my stay in the cell was four hours and the length of my sleep at that detention center was zero hours. Almost the whole time I was there I was being interrogated … When they started the tortures they would halt the video. I called it the green light of death because when the green light on the camera came on and the red light that indicated recording would go off I was certainly getting some beatings and had cigarettes put out on my body … I was tortured while interrogated and while tortured, I was raped by the interrogators, and it happened very frequently. I passed out from pain. [350]

 

By the end of his ordeal, Mehtari had cigarette burns on his head, neck, both hands and shoulders and wrists. He was beaten, sodomized, and after suffering massive head injuries, left for dead in the streets of Tehran.[351]

 

My nose and ears were bleeding and my whole body was covered in blood. Their physician diagnosed me with a brain hemorrhage. A few decisions were made then of which I don’t have clear memories. The last one, however, was to transfer me to Evin.

 

The way it works at Evin is that when they accept a person they record what has previously happened to that person. [At Evin], the accusation of torture [is taken] seriously. They record if there is a wound on your body to say that it was there [before the detainee arrived]. Therefore, they try to write down everything about the person they accept and have him sign and report [it] … Now, if they accept a person from another custodian, [then that] custodian has to sign a paper explaining the physical condition of that person, it does not bode too well for that custodian [if there is evidence of torture].

 

I was taken to Evin at night with handcuffs, bound feet and a blindfold. We went some distance. There were three people in the car, two in the front and one next to me. We got to a place, and I got out. I was bleeding heavily and could not walk. [One of them] tried to make me sit down, but due to the injuries sustained to my buttocks and the back of my thighs, I could not sit. He kept insisting that I sit. I could not, and so he kicked me a few times. He emphasized that I should not make a noise or talk. Then he kicked me in the back one last time and I was confused … I thought I was in the Evin compound, but … I noticed that I was in one of the streets of Tehran in a place that could not be seen by everyone. They had abandoned me among a bunch of trees and bushes and stuff … The family who found me said that I was moaning and calling out to people.[352]

 

In December 2009, the Majlis Special Committee To Investigate the Situation of the Detainees of the Post-Election Events (Majlis Committee) charged with investigating Kahrizak and allegations of rape of demonstrators in prison issued a report denying any evidence of rape:

 

The Committee members had other investigations and the committee of the Secretariat of the Supreme National Security Council also investigated the matter in detail, and the results of all three committees of the Majlis, the judiciary, and the Supreme National Security Council conformed to one another completely, and it is announced that after the comprehensive investigations, we have not gotten to any case of sexual assault and strongly deny that.[353]

 

 

3.1      Kahrizak Detention Center

Many demonstrators who were arrested in the summer were taken to Kahrizak Detention Center. Located in southeastern Tehran, Kahrizak was designed to house “thugs and criminals.”[354] The facility was cited as sub-standard in 2007 by inspectors but the Center was only shut down after some detainees arrested during the July 9 demonstrations died.[355]

 

In one regularly-cited letter describing conditions in Kahrizak, an alleged survivor with the alias Reza Yavari describes both the brutality of the security personnel and the filthy conditions of the cells:

 

Plain clothed guards entered the room, shattered the light bulbs and began to beat everyone in complete darkness. They hit anyone they saw in front of them. We were beaten for a good half an hour. A few went into coma and may have even died from the intensity of the beatings. They then shone flash lights in our faces and said “If you let out any sound we will stick these batons …”

 

… In that room of ours at least four people were killed before morning. Sadegh said in a loud voice, “There is no such thing as a toilet and toothbrush here, you do your business right here, are we clear?” There was not a single uninjured person among us, they all either had blood clotted on their faces or their eyes had been bruised like mine. And many others had broken arms and legs. It was completely dark. Our eyes would become extremely irritated from the light every time they opened the door. [356]

 

Another reported account describes methods of intimidation, including torture and sexual abuse:

 

In the summer of 2009, Mohsen Ruholamini, the son of a prominent conservative, died on a bus while being trans-ferred from Kahrizak detention center to Evin Prison. He had been among approximately 200 demonstrators ar-rested on July 9 in Tehran during the tenth anniversary of the raid by Basij forces on the university dorms in 1999. Ruholamini, a masters student in computer science, was brutally beaten and ev-entually transferred to Kahrizak where he suf-fered more beatings, unsanitary conditions and lack of medical care. His father pres-sured the authorities to investigate Kahrizak.
[Many] were hung for long hours. A large number were only beaten, which was the easiest to deal with. Some were kept in the solitary cells. Some had their hands and feet burned with molten tar. Many of the detainees had their teeth broken in this period. Most of the people who went to Kahrizak don’t have healthy teeth. The young ones were taken to the gallows to be hung, the noose was placed around their neck, but they were brought back down again. The kids were mortified, and all the while the guards would beat them and call them all kind of despicable names. The stronger prisoners were even deprived from the little food provided. They stayed in the containers most of the time. Also, the guards had let loose a few mice inside the warehouse and … They raped those who were younger and quieter than others. We could hear their screams.[357]

 

Amir Javadifar suffered mortal wounds at Kahrizak. Medical reports reportedly show that he had several broken bones and missing toenails.[358] The Majlis Committee, appointed to investigate post-election abuse, concluded that he was beaten when arrested and that he “did not have the strength to withstand the physical and psychological damages” of his four-day stay at the Center. His condition became critical while on the bus to Evin Prison and he died “outside the bus.”[359] His family first received news of his death when they were told to pick up his body on July 26.[360]

 

Mohammad Kamrani also died from the injuries and lack of medical care he suffered in Kahrizak. His family has insisted that Kamrani was simply a pedestrian in the area of the demonstrations and not a participant. In any case, the eighteen-year-old was arrested and eventually taken to Kahrizak for some time before being transferred to Evin. His family was eventually told that he would be released from Evin on July 15. On that day, they arrived to take him home but were told that he had been transferred to Loqman Hospital. The Majlis investigative committee found that he did not receive the proper care and that his family was not informed of his critical condition until 30 hours after his transfer.[361] At the hospital, his family found him secured to the hospital bed, under the supervision of guards, and near death. They succeeded in transferring him to Mehr hospital to receive better care, but he died a few hours after his arrival on July 16.[362]

 

Mohsen Ruholamini was arrested during the July 9 protests and initially taken to Greater Tehran’s NAJA Office in Kargar Street, close to Enqelab Square. The day after his arrest, security forces put Ruholamini on a bus to Kahrizak. The Majlis Committee reported that he was later put on a bus to Evin:

 

The late Ruholamini was in a critical condition when going from Kahrizak to Evin, and although the other detainees informed the guards about this matter, they dismissed it. Transfer from Kahrizak to Evin was done with improper busses that were stuffed beyond capacity in the height of the heat between 10 am and 2 pm. Once at Evin, although he was in a critical condition, the late Ruholamini was kept in the quarantine section between 14:00 and 17:00, at which point the physician sent him to the hospital to receive medical care.[363]

 

His father, Abdulhossein Ruholamini, a well-known adviser to conservative presidential candidate Mohsen Rezai, spent two weeks looking for him but was unable to find any trace of him until Monday, July 20, when he confronted the Minister of Intelligence.[364] Two days later, he received a phone call from an official who expressed surprise at Ruholamini’s inability to find his son considering his status and rank. Only then did the caller give his condolences and provide Ruholamini with an address where he could find his son’s body. The phone conversation was so surreal that it left Ruholamini in doubt as to the veracity of the caller’s claims. Thinking that it was simply a scare tactic, he went to the Medical Examiner’s office as instructed and found his son’s body.

 

Ahmad-Reza Radan is Iran’s Deputy Chief of Police. Radan was accused by detainees of supervising as well as participating in beatings at Kahrizak detention center. He also person-ally threatened detainees with death. Radan has dismissed the issues sur-rounding Kahrizak as a “minor mistake” that was committed by NAJA. At the end of November, he met with the Majlis Special Committee To Investigate the Situation of the Detainees of the Post-Election Events. Following the demonstrations on December 27, Ashura, he warned that, going forward, NAJA will exercise no leniency towards demonstrators.

When I saw his body, I noticed that they had bashed his mouth in. My son was a truthful person. He never lied. I am certain that whatever he was asked, he answered honestly. His honesty was probably too much for them to bear, and they beat him senseless. [They] killed him under torture.

 

The authorities were kind and let me read his medical file, but the location of his death was blacked out. I learned that he was left untreated causing an infection [which in turn led to] a fever of over 40 degrees Celsius. [The file claimed that he had contracted] meningitis. On 3:30 p.m. of Wednesday, he was taken to Shohada Hospital in Tajrish as an unidentified patient. On Thursday morning, his dead body was handed over to the morgue. Then, after a week, they alerted us to the death of our son. [365]

 

Like other family members of victims, Ruholamini was forced to sign documents releasing the authorities from any blame for his son’s death and releasing his right to give his son a proper burial.[366] A witness reports that at the memorial service for Mohsen Ruholamini

 

the special forces attacked people with motorcycles to disburse them and beat them with batons. They would pull some of the protestors out of the crowd and carry them away with private licensed cars. They broke car windows who honked in protest. There were about 2,000 people there. If they found someone alone they would beat him with baton and kick him. They arrested a girl who was filming the guards from one of the floors in Sayeh tower with her cell phone. They forced her in the car and took her with them. They attacked people who protested.[367]

 

On July 27, the Supreme Leader ordered that Kahrizak be closed, and prisoners were transferred to other facilities. The authorities in Evin Prison, one of the most notorious prisons in the Middle East, found the condition of the prisoners shocking. They refused to take responsibility for the Kahrizak prisoners and transferred them to nearby hospitals, where at least three died.[368]

 

Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam was forced to admit that conditions had been “grave” at Kahrizak. However, he continued to insist that the issue was the overcrowding of the facility and that only two guards had beaten three prisoners—not those who died.[369] Instead, he insisted that “there is indisputable evidence that proves the deceased inmates died of a deadly virus infection.”[370]

 

Ayatollah Montazeri, directly addressing the Supreme Leader, insisted that simply closing the facility was an attempt to “fool” the people and that the blame could not simply be leveled at the building itself.[371] Ali Mottahari, a conservative Majlis member opined that, “If we are satisfied just to close one detention center, these people will continue to do what they have done elsewhere and nothing will change.”[372]

 

Investigations were launched by both the Majlis and the military. In addition, it was announced that ten staff members had been interrogated and eight had been arrested, including the head of Kahrizak.[373] Three judicial officers were also reportedly suspended due to their involvement with Kahrizak.[374] Still, even after other members of the government acknowledged the terrible conditions and violent interrogation of the detainees at Kahrizak,[375] General Radan, Deputy Police Chief, continued to portray the episode as a minor mistake.

 

At the outset, I would like to thank the police personnel for their role in the recent events. I say this because I feel that their work has been forgotten. Basij and law enforcement personnel act only on the belief that the principle of Velayat-e Faqih is unshakable. There have certainly been some minor mistakes in implementing our mission and these must be taken care of. Events at Kahrizak are among them and they must be addressed.[376]

 

As the investigations began to implicate Saeed Mortazavi, then-Prosecutor General of Tehran, he defended the compound. He claimed that there was no detainee abuse or lack of proper sanitation at Kahrizak.[377] Mortazavi did not deny the deaths of Mohsen Ruholamini, Amir Javadifar and Mohammad Kamrani, but claimed that they were the result of a flood of prisoners.

 

Many of the incidents that took place at Kahrizak were the result of prisoner overflow. … Even the three individuals who died at Kahrizak had been injured during the riots when they were brought to the detention center. … Two were taken to the hospital and the third died on the way to the hospital.[378]

 

Known as the “butcher of the press,” Mortazavi was Prosecutor General of Tehran from 2003 until August 29, 2009, when was he was appointed Iran’s Deputy Prosecutor General. Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi replaced him as Prosecutor General of Tehran.[379]

 

On August 31, 2009, a medical report was issued that rejected meningitis as the cause of Ruholamini’s death. Instead it cited physical stress, substandard detention conditions, and repeated blows to the head and body with a blunt object.[380] His doctor, Dr. Ramin Pourandarjani, told an investigating committee[381]

 

[Ruholamini] was brought to me after being physically and severely tortured. He was in a grave physical condition and I had limited medical supplies, but I did my best to save him. It was then that I was threatened by the authorities of Kahrizak that if I disclose the cause of death and injuries of the detainees, I will cease to live.[382]

 

Dr. Pourandarjani died on November 10 under mysterious circumstances following his testimony. Only 26 years old, he had been fulfilling his military service as a doctor at the detention facility. His death was initially reported as a heart attack by officials who claimed he died in his sleep.[383] A week later, Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam announced that Dr. Pourandarjani had committed suicide after he had been summoned to court and threatened with a five-year prison term.[384] Finally, Tehran’s new Prosecutor General Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi announced that Dr. Pourandarjani had died by ingesting a variety of heart and blood pressure medications in his salad.[385] The Prosecutor General left open the question as to whether the death was a suicide or murder. However, Pourandarjani’s father and others reported that he was communicative and in good spirits the night before his death. The matter continues to be investigated.[386]

 

The military court concluded its investigation on December 20 and published its findings:

 

Because three people from those arrested died (late Mohsen Ruholamini, Amir Javadifar and Mohammad Kamrani) and charges were made by their legal representatives, expansive research started on this case by interviewing those accused, witnesses and experts. Forensics was asked, based on the assessment of corpses, to declare its opinion on the definite cause of their death and also to get the opinion of the Forensics Experts Board. Forensics, in their opinion, rejected the idea that the above-mentioned people have died because of meningitis. Also, based on the beating marks on the corpses, they declared the reason for the deaths was physical abuse.[387]

 

The committee appointed by the Majlis to investigate Kahrizak released its report on January 10, 2010. It reported that, in an interview on July 28, Mortazavi claimed that, at the time, there were 390 detainees arrested at the demonstrations and 50 “non-field” detainees. He claimed that law enforcement had brought the arrestees to Kahrizak because there was no room at Evin Prison. However, the committee concluded that there was room at Evin and that Kahrizak was full before the arrestees arrived. It found that even if there was no room at Evin, housing the arrestees in the detention center was unacceptable. The committee also noted:

 

Saeed Mortazavi was the Prosecutor General of Tehran until late August 2009 when he became the Deputy Pro-secutor General of Iran. When the deaths of three young students held at Kah-rizak detention center became public, he claimed that they died from meningitis. This claim was denied by the prison authorities and the medical examiners. The Majlis Special Committee To Investigate the Situation of the Detainees of the Post-Election Events also found that the students died from their treatment and not meningitis. It concluded that Mortazavi ordered that the students arrested during the July 9 protests be transferred to Kahrizak even though there was no room at the detention center.

Kahrizak was an official detention center and all the judicial officials, from the highest level down, were aware of its existence and even visited it. Therefore, the warding off of responsibility done by some judicial officials in certain interviews is in no way acceptable and at present, more than any other body, the judiciary must be responsive to the weaknesses and shortcomings of this detention center.[388]

 

It found that the “existence of an issue such as meningitis was refuted” and that the three named detainees had died from “lack of space, weakness of health services, inappropriate nutrition, lack of air conditioner and … and as a result of beating and neglect of the officers and authorities of the detention center to their physical condition.”[389]

 

However, the committee placed the fundamental blame for Kahrizak on Mousavi and Karroubi:

 

If everyone had traveled their paths within the legal framework, and if the two presidential candidates did not attempt to break the law and incite the emotions of the people, we would not be observing such bitter events today that led to disrespect of the IRI regime and weakening of the precious opportunity of the presence of 40 million people at the ballot posts. They must, without a doubt, be accountable and the judicial system must not be dismissive of such criminal acts.[390]

 

 

3.2      Violations of Iranian and International Law

The Iranian authorities arbitrarily arrested and imprisoned demonstrators in violation of Iranian and international law. Demonstrators were imprisoned without charge and once imprisoned, were not afforded fundamental due process, including contact with their lawyers and families. Detainees were mistreated, denied medical care, beaten, raped, tortured, and killed. The regime’s failure to inform families of the whereabouts of their loved ones also constituted forced disappearances in violation of international law.

 

3.2.1     Arbitrary Arrests and Denial of Due Process Rights

Iran’s Constitution and laws[391] provide a significant range of due process protections to individuals who are arrested and detained, including the following:

 

 

Under Iran’s Criminal Code of Procedure (CCP), all preliminary investigations leading to temporary arrests and detentions of individuals suspected of committing national security crimes must be conducted pursuant to orders issued by trial judges and overseen by the Judiciary.[396] Such orders must conform to due process standards.[397] Pretrial arrest warrants are appealable and are only valid for a month unless extended by the issuing judge.[398] If the judge fails to issue a warrant, the suspect must be allowed to post bail.[399] Judicial officers and other governmental agents who illegally take people into custody or initiate criminal prosecutions are subject to punishment.[400]

 

International law also protects the due process rights of the accused. Article 9 of the ICCPR outlines Iran’s duty to provide due process before it limits, interferes with, or otherwise extinguishes an individual’s liberty. Article 9(2) requires government agents to promptly inform the accused of the reasons for his arrest at the time of arrest,[401] and Article 9(3) obligates the State to promptly bring the accused before a judge so that he shall be subject to trial within “a reasonable time.” Article 9(3) also provides that “it shall not be the general rule that persons awaiting trial shall be detained in custody.”[402]

 

Article 9(4) provides that anyone detained “shall be entitled to take proceedings before a court” in order to decide the “lawfulness of his detention and order his release if the detention is not lawful.”[403] Article 14(b) mandates that States provide “adequate time and facilities for the preparation of … defen[s]e and to communicate with counsel of [one’s] own choosing.”[404] In addition to these rights, the ICCPR guarantees the right to counsel (both at trial and at stages prior to trial) and doctor,[405] the right to humane treatment,[406] and the right to be presumed innocent.[407]

 

In the summer of 2009, the international community quickly realized that the vast majority of people arrested were deprived of contact with members of their family and were not being provided adequate access to legal counsel.[408] Just a week after the election, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillay, raised alarms about the lack of transparency:

 

The legal basis of the arrests that have been taking place, especially those of human rights defenders and political activists, is not clear … What are the grounds for the arrests? Have proper warrants been issued in accordance with Iranian law? Why have some of those who have been arrested been denied access to lawyers and members of their families? And why is the whereabouts of others unknown? These are all troubling questions, and I urge the Iranian authorities to ensure that due process is followed, since to do otherwise may fan the feelings of injustice.[409]

 

In violation of Iranian and international law, the authorities arbitrarily arrested and imprisoned demonstrators without charge. Most were not allowed contact with family or attorneys. Many were not allowed to post bail even after it was clear they were eligible. [410]

 

3.2.2     Denial of Medical Care, Mistreatment, Torture, Forced Confessions and Death

The Islamic Republic’s denial of medical care to injured detainees, and mistreatment, torture and killing of detainees, particularly for the purposes of coercing confessions, violated Iranian and international law. Iranian law is replete with provisions outlawing these activities. The authorities are forbidden from degrading a detainee in any fashion during arrest, detention, imprisonment or banishment.[411] The Citizen’s Rights Law provides that, “[d]uring arrest and interrogation or asking for information or research, harassing the individuals like blindfolding, tying other body parts, belittling or denigrating them must be avoided.”[412] Detainees have the right to adequate medical care provided by the government.[413] Detainees may not be held in solitary confinement for prolonged periods of time; solitary confinement is limited to a maximum of 20 days.[414]

 

Ill treatment is forbidden under Article 169 of the State Prison Organization (SPO) Law, and Article 9 of the Citizen Rights Law reiterates the prohibition against forced confessions.

 

Torture, particularly for the purpose of coercing confessions, is prohibited under Iranian law. Article 38 of the Constitution provides that “[a]ll forms of torture for the purpose of extracting confession[s] or acquiring information” are prohibited, as is “compulsion of individuals to testify, confess, or take an oath.”[415] Under Article 578 of the Islamic Penal Code, an official who inflicts corporal harm and torment on an individual in custody is subject to Qisas (retribution) or the payment of blood money and a prison term ranging from six months to three years.[416] In addition, the article shifts responsibility for the harm to superior officers who order it, unless a detainee dies, in which case, both the security officer causing the harm and his superior officer giving the order are subject to homicide proceedings.[417]

 

Torture is absolutely prohibited under international law. This absolute prohibition is codified in the Convention Against Torture,[418] but is also found in other international instruments, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the UN Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment, and the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment or Prisoners.[419] Article 7 of the ICCPR states that “no one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”[420] Article 10 provides that “all persons deprived of their liberty shall be treated with humanity and respect for the inherent dignity of the human persons.”[421]

 

Iran’s use of solitary confinement was highlighted as an issue of concern by the UN General Assembly[422] and by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention during its visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran in 2003.[423] It was a key obstacle to identifying the legal basis of the arrest and detention of an individual.[424]

 

Victims of beatings, tear gas, rubber bullets and air guns, many of the demonstrators detained following the elections were in dire need of medical attention. While there are reports of some detainees being examined by medical professionals, guards refused to allow them to adequately treat the sometimes mortally wounded demonstrators.[425] Although the number of deaths due to lack of medical care remains unknown, it directly contributed to the deaths of at least three demonstrators imprisoned in Kahrizak.[426]

Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam is Iran’s Chief of Police. He regularly warns demonstrators of “harsh consequences,” defends the actions of the security forces and blames the violence on “rioters, hooligans and terrorists.” He has publicly accused Dr. Arash Hejazi, a witness to Neda Agha-Soltan’s death, of working with Western media and engaging in psycho-logical warfare against Iran. Though he publically accepted some responsibility for the conditions at Kahrizak, he denied any problems beyond overcrowding and beatings. Later, when asked about footage showing police vehicles running over demon-strators, he claimed the vehicles had been stolen by rioters.

 

The torture of detainees, including solitary confinement, denial of medical care, beatings and rape appear to have been commonplace.[427] Detainees were beaten and tortured as part of an interrogation process intended to extract confessions and intelligence.[428] These sessions were conducted by unknown interrogators wearing masks, using pseudonyms and/or while the detainees were blindfolded. One witness recounted being faced with the choice of continued beatings and rape by unseen assailants or agreeing to serve as an informant.[429]

 

Many spent their entire detention in solitary confinement, broken up only by lengthy interrogation sessions. For example, one witness relates:

 

During the whole of my detention, my only encounter with another person other than my interrogator was when one night, in one of the adjacent cells, a Kurdish man started singing in Kurdish and was dealt with violently. The sound of the stomping feet that stormed the cell, the beating of the guy and him getting dragged away is still in my ear.[430]

 

Cells failed to meet basic requirements including adequate space, basic bedding and sanitation.[431] Witnesses recount floors and walls of solitary cells covered in vomit, urine, blood and excrement.[432] In group holding cells in Kahrizak, many injured demonstrators were forced to defecate and urinate on the floor.[433]

 

Each instance of denial of medical care, torture, mistreatment, solitary confinement and death violated the victim’s rights under Iranian and international human rights law. Should the torture or killing of detainees be found to be widespread and systematic, and with the knowledge of the perpetrators,[434] these acts also constitute crimes against humanity.[435]

The perpetrators and their superiors are liable under Iranian law, particularly for murder of detainees in Kharizak. Those responsible include, but are not limited to, the heads of the military and paramilitary forces, including Hojjatoleslam Hossein Taeb, the head of the Basij until October 4, 2009,[436] Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Naqdi, the head of the Basij since October 4, 2009, Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari who commands the IRGC, Police Chief Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam, his deputy, Brigadier General Ahmad-Reza Radan and Saeed Mortazavi for their roles in establishing and managing Kahrizak.

 

3.2.3     Forced Disappearances

The authorities’ failure to notify families of the whereabouts of their loved ones or their remains constitutes a violation of Iran’s obligation under international law to protect people from forced disappearances. The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (ICPAPED) codified the prohibition against forced disappearances in the United Nations Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances, and included additional provisions targeted at preventing forced disappearances and combating impunity for them.[437]

Sohrab Arabi disap-peared on June 15. For the next few weeks, his family searched for him in hospitals, Evin Prison and the revolutionary court.   Sometimes they were reassured, at other times they were in-sulted. Finally, his body was handed over to them on July 11.

The ICPAPED defines “enforced disappearance of persons” as a deprivation of a person’s freedom by a state or by persons acting with the authorization, support or acquiescence of a state, and the absence of information on the fate or whereabouts of such persons or refusal to acknowledge deprivation of freedom, thereby placing the person outside the protection of the law.[438] A “victim” can be the disappeared person as well as “any individual who has suffered harm as a direct result of an enforced disappearance.”[439] It requires that each victim be told the truth regarding the circumstances and fate of a disappeared person.[440] In the event of a disappeared person’s death, it requires the state to “respect and return their remains.”[441]

Iran violated, and continues to violate, its fundamental duty to prevent the forced disappearances of the demonstrators who were killed following the June 12 election. The Iranian authorities repeatedly withheld bodies from family members for days, sometimes weeks, prevented them from learning the cause of death and forbade funerals. Reports of deaths of demonstrators started surfacing as early as Saturday, June 13.[442] Maysam Ebadi, a seventeen-year-old who died Saturday in Tajrish Hospital, is believed to have been one of the first gunshot victims. Five days after his death, his brother had yet to receive his body.[443]

Sohrab Arabi, who also died from gunshot wounds, disappeared on Monday, June 15, but family members report that the arrival of his body was recorded at the coroner’s office on June 19. They did not manage to gain access to his body until July 11 and still do not know whether the nineteen-year-old died on the street, at a hospital or in detention.[444]

 

Arabi’s mother, Parvin Fahimi, became a prominent member of the Mourning Mothers—a group of mothers who call for the release of all detainees and the arrest and prosecution of those who killed protestors.[445] The group is repeatedly harassed at their gatherings, and reportedly, Fahimi’s residence was raided by security forces who tore down pictures of her dead son.[446]

 

On June 16, the Governor of Tehran Province, Morteza Tamaddon, confirmed the deaths of only seven people who had died around Azadi Square the day before.[447] By Wednesday, Tahkim-e Vahdat could only confirm seven killings in the attacks on the universities in Tehran and Shiraz.[448] At the end of the week, Amnesty International put the total minimum number of the dead at ten, while pointing out that four university students remained unaccounted for.[449] It was not until July 29 that Reporters Without Borders could confirm the Monday, June 15 death of Alireza Eftekhari. Eftekhari was a former reporter for the newspaper Abrar-e Eqtesadi and the first reporter killed in the post-election violence. He was bludgeoned to death.[450]

 

The regime’s failure to notify families about the whereabouts of their loved ones, its refusal to allow families to bury their loved ones, and its refusal to provide the remains to family members violate Iran’s obligation under international law to protect people from forced disappearances. If it is found that the forced disappearances were widespread, systematic, and with the knowledge of the perpetrators, they also constitute a crime against humanity.[451]

 

 

4.     Arrests of Civil Activists, Journalists, and Opposition

In addition to arresting demonstrators, the Iranian authorities arrested, and continue to arrest, non-demonstrators in their homes, offices and on the street. The scope of the arrests goes far beyond individuals associated with the reformist movement. It appears that the regime is targeting anyone who might be a potential leader in opposing government policies. The list includes leaders and members of political opposition and student groups, women’s rights activists, professors, lawyers, and journalists. It also includes former high-ranking officials of the Islamic Republic, icons of the 1979 revolution, and their family members. Several dual-nationals and foreign citizens have been arrested. Many remain in prison.

 

In addition to the scale and scope of these arrests, the immediacy with which security forces began targeting groups and individuals suggests that the arrests were premeditated and not merely a response to the post-election demonstrations. Prominent detainees later made public confessions, undoubtedly coerced, that echoed concerns regarding a “velvet revolution” that have been expressed by officers of the security apparatus over the last several years.

 

 

4.1      Non-Demonstrators are Arrested

The authorities began raiding opposition campaign offices and newspapers, and arresting campaign volunteers and leaders on Election Day.[452] Warrants were rarely presented at the time of arrest, but some detainees managed to see their warrants at some point during the process. At least some of the arrest warrants were issued before the election. One witness remembers that:

 

When I was arrested, they did not inform me of a charge, but I found out later that according to the arrest warrant of 20/3/1388 [10 June 2009] (yes, the arrest warrant for detention of all the politically active people was issued two days before the election) ordered by [Prosecutor] Mortazavi, I was arrested for altering the vote of the people.[453]

 

She was kept in solitary confinement for 50 days without access to her family or lawyer.[454] She was subject to daily and prolonged interrogation sessions during which interrogators regularly resorted to beatings.[455] The interrogations, as described by almost all victims, were conducted while she was blindfolded and facing a wall. The interrogators asked questions and instructed her to answer them in writing. Any denial was met with beatings, and threats of arrests of family members. These pressures and sheer exhaustion coerced this witness into writing answers that suited the narrative of her interrogators.[456]

 

Maryam Amoozegar, an artist and photo journalist who had worked for the Mousavi campaign, narrowly avoided arrest twice on Election Day. She attended an event organized by an actors’ organization, that then joined a more general event for artists supportive of the Mousavi campaign at the Qaytariyih Artist Center.

 

At the Qaytariyih Artist Center … which was a center for all kinds of artists, many people were celebrating the upcoming victory. They were checking websites, having conversations, and [we took] a lot of pictures and video footage. The lucky thing that happened to me that day was that we left the Center at two, because at around two fifteen, an unknown group, maybe thirty people, plainclothes and Basij, poured into that place and from top to bottom began breaking things in the center. [They] broke computers, beat people, and grabbed five or six of the ladies as hostages and left. One of them was Peggah-e Ahangarani.[457]

 

Amoozegar returned to her office for a few hours and then headed out again to deliver some images she had captured during the day. Again, she left only minutes before a raid.

 

Around six in the afternoon, the guys at Qalam News called me and asked me what kinds of pictures I had. … I went to Mirhadi Center, which usually has its doors open and everybody knows you. … I saw that the doors of the Center were closed … [I was told I could not go up.] … I called upstairs and was allowed to enter and go up to Qalam News. … [I was told] to turn in my pictures and leave quickly. … I went downstairs and my friend told me to hurry up so we could leave. I asked him what was wrong and he replied that they had raided the Artist’s Center and they would probably raid this place soon. … By the time we got back—it was a very short trip—they had already poured into the place and broken all the windows. The people were tied up for forty-eight hours while they erased everything on the computers … I saw two of the guys [a few months later]. They told me that for those forty-eight hours they were tied up and forced to lie on the ground while being regularly beaten. They asked me to make sure people knew about it. … They beat them and asked them what kind of information they had and what they knew.[458]

 

The main offices of the Mousavi campaign were raided on Election Day as well.[459] The campaign had expected a certain amount of interference with its activities, but was still surprised by the intensity of the trouble when it attempted to communicate with its field volunteers.

 

We had predicted the communication authority to disrupt the wireless service, especially SMS service on that day, so we had contacted them in advance about this and they had given us assurance of service on the Election Day. We also added more landlines in the headquarters. On the night before the Election Day, they shut down all wireless services, including SMS messaging. When, on the evening before the Election Day, we tried to use the landlines we had set up for the committee, we realized all 300 landlines were out of service.[460]

 

The campaign inquired with several government ministries and organizations regarding the reasons for why its headquarters was raided, but received no reply. A warrant was not presented during any of the raids.[461] During the subsequent show trials, Tehran’s Deputy Prosecutor, Mehdi Sepehri, alleged that the election office in northern Tehran was used for “various illegal activities, such as providing a base for the BBC’s Persian TV service.”[462]

 

Journalists and activists were dragged away Saturday night and very early Sunday morning. For example, at 3 a.m., Somayyeh Tohidloo was arrested at her parents’ home. The blogger, political activist and Mousavi supporter was arrested without a warrant or an explanation.[463] Two months later, Judge Hossein Haddad acknowledged that Tohidloo should already have been released, but he explained that Prosecutor Mortazavi had personally intervened to halt her release. Two days after this public acknowledgement, she was finally released on bail.[464]

 

Blogger and human rights activist Shiva Nazar Ahari was not home at 1 a.m. on Monday, June 14, when her residence was raided and belongings confiscated. The authorities arrested her the next day at her office.[465] In an open letter to her daughter written a month later, Ahari’s mother explained that the only comfort she felt was when she was with the other mothers who were searching for their children at the prisons and revolutionary courts.[466] Ahari was released on bail from Evin on September 23 after posting 200 million Tomans [US$200,000].[467]

 

Another person who was not home that night when authorities came to arrest him was Masoud Bastani. In his place, the security forces detained his wife and two of her guests.[468] The first was Behzad Bashoo, a cartoonist who was released on July 8, and the second was Khalil Mirashrafi, a TV producer and journalist.[469] Only hours later after these arrests, Bastani tried to turn himself in, so that his pregnant wife, Mahsa Amrabadi, would be released. The authorities declined his request and held on to his wife, a journalist for Etemad Melli, for over two months before she was released on August 23.[470]

 

That night, the security forces also arrested a large number of activists, including leaders in media and the student movement. Kayvan Samimi Behbahani, the editor of the monthly publication Naameh, and a member of the central committee of the Society for the Defense of Freedom of the Press, was arrested.[471] Security forces stormed Samimi’s house and arrested him in the middle of the night. They broke down the door and confiscated his computer and other personal property.[472]

 

In Evin Prison, security forces cut his hair and beard, locked him in a bathroom and reportedly beat him so severely that he had to be taken to Evin’s clinic.[473] He was forced to wait until September 9 before the authorities allowed him to see his lawyer, Nasrin Sotudeh. Although this meeting was under the supervision of his interrogator, Samimi complained of beatings and mistreatment to Sotudeh, who attempted to lodge a formal claim on his behalf.[474]

 

By October, Samimi was further isolated and restricted from making phone calls and receiving visitors. His lawyer succeeded in gaining access to his case file, and pointed out that after five months, his case file lacked an official arrest warrant. She explained that the case file made several charges against her client without any elaboration, evidence or explanation in support. These included “[c]ausing confusion among the masses,” and “gathering and conspiring with the goal of disrupting national security.”[475]

 

Also arrested was Ahmad Zeidabadi, a well-known journalist and the Secretary General of Advar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat, the alumni/student organization whose members are regular targets of arrest and detention. After the election, nearly all current and former members of this organization’s leadership were taken into custody.[476] Abbas Hakimzadeh, the political director of Tahkim-e Vahdat, was arrested in the winter of 2009 and released on July 8, 2009. Early in the morning on November 19, security forces raided his home, confiscated his computer and rearrested him.[477]

 

Zeidabadi was taken to an undisclosed location. While being transported, Zeidabadi protested the illegality of the manner of his arrest and vowed to begin a hunger strike. He spent the first seventeen days in a solitary cell without any interaction with authorities. After a visit by a physician who tried to convince him to break his hunger strike, he was again left alone—in total silence—for another eighteen days until he lost his mental facilities and began to scream incessantly. He was then moved to different cell, at which point the interrogations began.[478]

 

A month after his arrest, his wife, Mahdieh Mohammadi, wrote a letter to the then-head of the Judiciary, Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, expressing her dismay at the lack of information about her husband.

 

It has almost been a month since a group of strangers, who called themselves motorcycle envoys, kidnapped my husband, Mr. Ahmad Zeidabadi, in the middle of the night and in front of his young children’s eyes, without offering any form of warrant, and yet so far none of the responsible [government] organs have bothered to offer an answer about his condition.[479]

 

Zeidabadi was permitted to see his wife once, on July 29, for about ten minutes, and his whole family on August 17. On October 28, the Prosecutor of Tehran, Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi, insisted that Zeidabadi was in good health and that his case was still in the preliminary stages of investigation. In her response to the Prosecutor’s announcement, his wife demanded to know why she had not been able to see or speak with her husband for forty-four days and how his case could be in its preliminary stages after four months of detention.[480]

 

Zeidabadi’s lawyer, Dr. Mohammed Sharif, first found out that Zeidabadi was eligible for bail after he was allowed to review his client’s case file during an investigative session in October. Once he informed the court, the judge instructed him to notify the family so it could post bail. The Judiciary increased Zeidabadi’s bail to 350 million Tomans [US$350,000] and later to 500 million Tomans [US$500,000]. His family dutifully collected each of the enormous sums. Still, the prosecution delayed his release, and failed to inform the court each time bail had been posted.[481] Meanwhile, Zeidabadi was reportedly being tortured and pressured to openly apologize for his alleged crimes, including writing an article in which he criticized the Supreme Leader and omitted the word “Supreme.”[482]

 

In late November, Sharif realized that his client had been held illegally for almost two months. He reported that

 

An order of release for 250 million Tomans [US$250,000] bail was issued for Mr. Zeidabadi on October 4, and his family collected the bail and posted it. However, by order of the prosecutor, his release was prevented. Accordingly, all this time, his imprisonment has been illegal. [483]

 

Raids on newspaper offices continued into the fall. For example, in September, the offices of another news organization were raided:

 

[In early September,] the prosecution officers came to the newspaper office and detained everyone from editor in chief to technical managers and reporters and abdarchi [tea servant]. Around 27 people. The officers had a warrant from the prosecutor and confiscated and took CD’s (whatever was there) and computer towers. They took the guys in the car with them as well.[484]

 

 

4.2

A prominent member of the Participation Front, Saeed Hajjarian was arrested on June 15 and detained in Evin Prison. Hajjarian is partially paralyzed as a result of  an assassination at-tempt in 2000. He was forced to publicly de-nounce his reformist political views and to ask for forgiveness for his erroneous ideas. In September, after resign-ing from the Partici-pation Front, he was released on bail and is awaiting his official sentence. 

Former Officials are Arrested

Security forces also arrested politically influential and well-connected members of the political elite and icons of the 1979 revolution. Sometimes these arrests lasted for short periods, as in the case of Mohammad Reza Khatami, the brother of the former president of the Islamic Republic. He was reportedly arrested Sunday, June 14, and released by the next day, although authorities tried to deny that he was even arrested.[485] Others remain in prison.

 

Mohsen Mirdamadi, Secretary General of the largest pro-reform party in Iran, the Islamic Iran Participation Front (Participation Front) was arrested on June 13.[486] Mirdamadi was one of three student leaders who stormed the United States Embassy in 1979 and is considered a hero of the revolution by the Islamic regime.[487] Formerly a member of Majlis, the Guardian Council banned him from running for reelection in February 2008.[488] He was released 24 hours after his arrest; however, unlike Khatami, he was rearrested on June 20.[489] Following his second arrest, he was imprisoned in Evin and forbidden contact with his family for over a month. [490]

 

Mirdamadi was able to choose his own lawyer, Hossein Abadi, but the prosecutor did not issue him an individual indictment. Instead, the judiciary tried him—along with one hundred others—in a mass trial on August 1.[491] Six weeks later, on September 17, security forces also detained his son Mehdi Mirdamadi, and released him on October 4.[492] The fifty-four-year-old Mirdamadi was hospitalized for heart spasms on October 10 and remains in custody.[493]

 

Saeed Hajjarian, a former presidential adviser debilitated from an assassination attempt in 2000, was arrested on June 15. Hajjarian had served as a high-ranking member of the Intelligence Ministry, founded the Center for Strategic Studies within the office of the president and served on Tehran’s city council.[494] The 2000 assassination attempt—during which assailants shot him in the face—left him with severe brain and spinal cord injuries.[495] Even after nine years, Hajjarian still requires assistance walking and has difficulty speaking. He requires constant medical supervision, nursing assistance, and multiple medications.[496]

 

Hajjarian was imprisoned in Evin. He was allowed to see his wife, a physician, for about a minute on the day of his arrest.[497] Within a month, he had to be taken to a hospital because of his deteriorating health, but he was returned to prison. There, his wife was allowed to later visit him again. She described his condition to Human Rights Watch:

 

After the injury caused by the unsuccessful assassination attempt, his blood pressure was always below normal … Currently due to the stressful prison conditions, his blood pressure is up to a critical level. In addition, his situation has been exasperated by the poor diet in prison and this may cause him to have a heart attack … He was constantly crying when we saw him.[498]

 

In late July, she noted signs of jaundice and an irregular heart beat. She complained that the authorities failed to give him necessary medication and that she suspected he had been given hallucinogens for interrogation purposes. His daughter reported that these interrogation sessions sometimes took place under direct sunlight. The interrogators waited until Hajjarian’s temperature increased and then splashed him with ice water in order to cause shock and heart palpitations.[499]

 

By August, the authorities were attempting to present his situation as less dire than reported by family members. Kazem Jalali,[500] spokesperson for the Majlis Committee, announced that Hajjarian had been moved to a judiciary housing complex that Prosecutor Mortazavi claimed had the medical equipment necessary to care for him.[501] He appeared in court on August 8, and the following day, a special committee of the Judiciary recommended that Hajjarian be placed under house surveillance.[502]

 

The prosecution disregarded this recommendation until September 30 when it released Hajjarian after 109 days in prison.[503] Before his release, Hajjarian was forced to write a letter that was published by several semi-official news sources describing the first twenty days of his arrest:

 

I was imprisoned in solitary at Evin but my cell was big enough to walk in with a walker … prison food was adequate and I was even given fruit … I was transferred to a location that was close to a hydrotherapy pool and had a lively ambiance … every other day the pool was vacated for my sessions and I would undergo hydrotherapy along with a sympathetic instructor … prison doctor visited me every other day and took my blood pressure and temperature and checked my ears, nose, throat and lungs … the new location was such that I could walk long distances with the walker.[504]

 

His family responded by noting that during that time, Hajjarian was not seen by his family, lawyer or even representatives of the Majlis Committee.[505] Mortazavi has, in the past, used the threats of further detention and against family members to induce prisoners to write false accounts of the pleasant conditions in custody.[506]

 

Public and international outrage may have helped secure the release of Ebrahim Yazdi, the leader of the Freedom Movement of Iran. He was arrested on June 17. The seventy-eight-year-old veteran opposition leader had previously been imprisoned by both the Shah and the Islamic Republic. This time, he was arrested at Pars Hospital where he was being treated for stomach issues.[507] He was released two days later.

Mohammad Atrianfar, a famous journalist and editor of such news outlets as Shargh and Shahrvand Emrooz, was arrested June 16. He met with the Majlis Committee on August 12 and was in reportedly good health. Speaking to committee members, he insisted that he was well treated and that his interrogators were not violent or rude.[508]

 

Ebrahim Yazdi, the leader of the banned Freedom Movement, was arrested on June 17 at a hospital were he was a patient. The 78-year-old veteran op-position politician was released two days later. However, he was rear-rested on December 28, the day after the Ashura protests, at 3 a.m. He remains detained.

On the same day, similar comments were made by Mohammad-Ali Abtahi. Abtahi, the former head of Iranian Radio and later vice president of the Islamic Republic, was a close adviser to presidential candidate Mehdi Karroubi. He was arrested at 6 a.m. on June 16, by three plainclothes officials who very politely requested that Abtahi accompany them. They presented no identification, arrest warrant, reason for his arrest, or explanation as to where he was being taken. They claimed that his family would be contacted soon.[509]

 

His wife and three daughters were allowed to visit him for the first time on July 30, forty-three days after his arrest. At the time, he still had not met with a lawyer, and the judicial authorities suggested that he might be released before August 7. [510] On August 12, like Atrianfar, he spoke with the Majlis Committee in Evin and assured them that he was in good health and had not been mistreated. He was also allowed to post messages on his popular weblog from prison, where he reiterated that he was guilty and comfortable in prison.[511]

 

However, by then an interview, his confession and his testimony during trial had been broadcast on national television. Observers were shocked to see the usually plump and confident cleric appear defrocked, and like other prisoners, dressed in gray pajamas looking gaunt and haunted.[512] Previously at ease in front of cameras and with the press, he exhibited a tangible nervousness and disorientation that led many to accuse the authorities of having drugged him. His wife reportedly claimed that when she managed to see him “after 43 days, he had lost 18 kilos. She reported that he told her, ‘In the last few days, they have been giving me a pill that separates me from the noise and tumult of this world.’”[513]

 

After the response to these broadcasts by his family, the opposition, the Iranian public and the international community, Abtahi was not shown on television again, and his weblog was shut down.

 

 

4.3      Dual Citizens, Foreign Nationals and Embassy Workers are Arrested

The authorities also arrested citizens of Greece, Canada, France and the United States, and targeted Iranians working for the British Embassy in Tehran. These arrestees were generally charged with fomenting a “velvet revolution” sponsored by foreign governments.

 

Two days after foreign journalists were told their visas would not be extended on June 16, Iason Athanasiadis (known as Fowden), a freelance journalist, was arrested at Tehran airport while attempting to leave the country. Initially approached by only one plainclothes officer who asked him his name and told him that he would not be leaving that day, Fowden was quickly surrounded by a half dozen after he refused to comply.[514]

 

As he was dragged away while being punched and kicked, a vocal Fowden attracted the attention of a woman to whom he spelled his name and asked that she inform the Greek Embassy. Later, he considered this event to have been instrumental in his fairly quick release, since just days after his arrest, the Greek Foreign Ministry began working on his release.[515]

 

After being beaten with a club and pepper-sprayed at the police station for trying to make a phone call, Fowden was transferred to Evin. For more than two weeks, an unseen interrogator accused him of espionage in a soundproof room. The Greek government and non-governmental organizations lobbied intensely for his release. Yet the most frustrating time for Fowden was after their efforts seemed to have succeeded:

 

They took me to the airport; the Greek ambassador met me with a ticket. We started heading towards the gates, then we suddenly veered off to the escalator. … I promptly got re-arrested and spent this very strange night in a windowless room listening to bags thumping through the chutes and listening to departure announcements … it was the most scary time.[516]

 

It took another day before further pressure and pleading by the Greek Ambassador resulted in Fowden’s release.

 

The authorities arrested Maziar Bahari, a Canadian-Iranian journalist, two days later on June 21. A journalist for Newsweek magazine and documentary filmmaker, Bahari was picked up at his family home in Tehran. During his more than 118 days of imprisonment, he was repeatedly beaten, interrogated, and in the end, forced to confess to crimes he did not commit. The authorities accused him of reporting false news, participating in anti-government rallies, and possessing classified documents.[517] On June 30, like other political prisoners, Bahari admitted to the charges against him during a press conference. In this confession, Bahari suggested that he had been led astray by financial inducements and explained how the foreign media was actively promoting a color or “velvet revolution” in Iran.[518]

 

Although threatened with assassination if he related his experiences in detention, Bahari later described the circumstances of his arrest, detention, confessions and press conferences.

 

The thought of resisting had crossed my mind, too. But why? I was a journalist, not a freedom fighter. Political prisoners in Iran were forced to make false confessions all the time. I’d always known they had been coerced, and had sympathized with the victims. Surely others would feel similarly about me. But even now, months later, the experience gnaws at me. My father spent four years in prison under the Shah without asking for mercy. What would he think of his son apologizing to the Supreme Leader after eight days?[519]

 

The day before his first confessional news conference, Bahari was dragged—blindfolded—by his usual interrogator to meet a person who threatened him with a prolonged investigation during which he would be imprisoned and tortured before possibly being executed. He was then asked if he was instead interested in explaining that a “velvet revolution” was staged by foreigners and corrupt elites using western media and that this attempt was thwarted by the vigilant authorities of the Islamic Republic.[520]

 

He did as he was told, but tried to remain vague and ironically detached. Thus, his next interrogation session began with a beating. These beatings continued for the next three months, a period that covers August 1, the day the prosecution presented its first indictment to the court. That day, his interrogator took Bahari—without telling him where or why—to the court for his second public confession.[521] He was instructed to be more specific, name names, implicate reformists and link them to foreign media. Bahari failed to provide a satisfactory confession.

 

Clotilde Reiss, a 24-year-old academic and a French citizen, was arrested on July 1, 2009 for reporting on and sharing pictures of the protestors. She was forced to publicly con-fess to spying, and she remains in the French Embassy in Tehran.  She is unable to leave Iran until the judiciary resolves her case. 

When we finished, I knew what awaited me back in Evin. In the interrogation room [he] beat me without saying a word. He didn’t have to explain. [522]

 

During his imprisonment, Bahari called his mother, Molouk Bahari, from prison to reassure her. The eighty-three-year-old had lost two children since 2007 and was tired of calamity.[523] Throughout his detention, his wife pleaded for his release from London. Bahari was released on October 17 after posting 300 million Tomans [US$ 300,000] bail. A few days later, he was allowed to leave Iran and join his wife in the London hospital where she gave birth.[524]

 

On the same day Bahari was arrested, Manouchehr Mottaki, the foreign minister of Iran, presented a scenario that not only blamed foreign journalists, but targeted Britain as the source of the opposition movement:

 

The first path they took was boycotting the election and persuading the public not to participate in it … The second approach of the English was to send [agents disguised as] travelers who came with specific intelligence and security objectives. The numbers of these travelers increased so much that the small regular plane used between Tehran and London had to be replaced with a Boeing 747 … It is time [for the English] to forget the saying: ‘The sun doesn’t shine unless it shines for the Empire, and the sun never sets unless it sets for the British Empire.’[525]

 

Security forces arrested Hossein Rassam and eight of his co-workers at the British Embassy in Tehran. They were detained on June 27 and accused of playing an important role in the disturbances after the election.[526] Two days later, Hassan Qashqavi, spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry, announced that five of the nine had been released and that the rest were undergoing interrogations. Qolam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, the Minister of Intelligence, continued to insist that the British Embassy “under the cover of domestic agents, sent individuals among the rioters and disseminated information among both the rioters and the crowds at large.” [527] His evidence was that embassy employees were seen among the crowds in Tehran.[528]

 

Another two days whittled the number of “domestic agents” in custody down to two.[529] Only one person remained accused of the crimes listed by the foreign and intelligence ministries.[530] This reality did not stop Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati from claiming at a Friday Sermon that several of the Iranian employees of the British Embassy in Tehran would be prosecuted for their actions. Jannati asked:

 

According to [information found on] a website at the British Foreign Ministry, [the Ministry] had announced [for months] that there may be unrest following the Iranian elections, and we must warn our subjects to be careful. What are these predictions all about?[531]

 

By July 4, Hossein Rassam, a senior political analyst for the British Embassy and the only remaining employee in custody, was charged with “actions against national security.”[532] The British foreign ministry remained actively engaged, and the Iranian authorities allowed Rassam to post bail on Sunday, July 19.[533] His trial began two weeks later. In late October, the court convicted and sentenced him to four years of imprisonment.[534]

 

Rassam was prosecuted with a French Embassy employee and Clotilde Reiss.[535] Reiss was arrested July 1 at Imam Khomeini Airport, as she was leaving Iran. She was a visiting assistant professor at Isfahan University teaching French literature. The authorities alleged that the twenty-three year old had taken pictures of the demonstrations on her cell phone and e-mailed these pictures to a friend. Security forces contended that this constituted the collecting of information and aiding of the protests. [536] The French foreign minister’s reaction to the accusations bordered on confusion:

 

That is not espionage and cannot be so. The accusation is absurd. … She was a classic young student who was doing her job, who witnessed protests like millions of Iranians. … I do not think the Iranian authorities can think for a second that what is happening in their streets—the opposition to a government—can be settled by arresting innocent people. An innocent French person, what’s more.[537]

 

Reiss was tried in a closed trial on November 17, and under terms negotiated by France, remains confined at the French Embassy until she is sentenced.[538]

 

Hojjatoleslam Qolam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei was Iran’s Intelligence Minister until July 23, 2009, when he was dis-missed from his post by Ahmadinejad. A month la-ter, the new chief of the Judiciary appointed Ejei as the Prosecutor General of Iran. In that post, he has repeatedly warned of “tough action” against and a “crushing response” to illegal rallies. He was also a member of a judiciary panel that investigated claims by Karroubi of sexual assault on detainees. After little more than a day of investigation, the panel dismissed the allegations as baseless. 

Kian Tajbakhsh, an Iranian-American scholar, social scientist and urban planner, had been charged with espionage and imprisoned in Evin for more than four months in 2007. He was arrested again on July 9 at his home in Tehran.[539] Tajbakhsh was held incommunicado for nearly a month and first seen by his family when images of the August 1 mass trial were published by the Fars News Agency. His condition showed the level of pressure he was under. In his confessional press conference, Tajbakhsh maintained that the massive post-election protests were the result of planning by the United States and Britain. Oddly, he also implicated Haleh Esfandiari, another Iranian-American scholar whom the authorities had also arrested in 2007 but who returned to the United States after her release. Only weeks before Tajbakhsh’s statements, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had excoriated the Intelligence Ministry for ever arresting Esfandiari, maintaining that the real agents of overthrow were elsewhere.[540]

 

Despite his cooperation and forced confession, Tajbakhsh was sentenced to fifteen years on October 20 for crimes including actions against national security.[541] These actions included consultation work for the Soros Foundation and membership in the Gulf/2000 Project, a website and e-mail group that shares information and analysis on the Persian Gulf.[542]

 

His lawyer has noted that utter falsehoods were part of Tajbakhsh’s personal indictment. For example, it charged Tajbakhsh with participation in a demonstration, when, in fact, Tajbakhsh was arrested at his home. His lawyer was given permission to see Tajbakhsh’s case file only after his sentencing and was unable to find any evidence that correlated with the charges. Weeks after his sentencing, his lawyer was still prevented from visiting Tajbakhsh to prepare his appeal.[543]

 

 

4.4      Violations of Iranian and International Law

The arrests, interrogations and torture of the non-demonstrators violated Iranian and international law for the same reasons these acts violated the rights of demonstrators. Political detainees were held for extended periods of time, often in solitary confinement, with minimal access to family or their chosen counsel.[544] Those who were assigned legal counsel were allowed little contact with their chosen lawyers.[545]

 

The interrogation of political activists and journalists was designed to coerce confessions that were often televised by the national media.[546] As described above and in previous reports by the IHRDC,[547] the Islamic Republic employs sophisticated methods of torture and intimidation in order to coerce confessions from political prisoners. By arresting individuals in a manner similar to kidnappings, keeping them in the dark regarding the charges they face, limiting their contact with family and legal representation, and using psychological torture, beatings and solitary confinement, the authorities hope to extract confessions and public apologies.[548] Should the torture be found to be widespread and systematic, and with the knowledge of the perpetrators, these acts also constitute crimes against humanity.[549]

 

 

 

5.     Mass Show Trials

Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi replaced Saeed Mortazavi as General Prosecutor of Tehran in late August 2009. Dolatabadi immediately issued arrest warrants for political figures including Alireza Beheshti, Mousavi’s head advisor, and ordered that Karroubi’s office and the office of the Society for the Defense of Political Prisoners be sealed. In mid-October, he announced that a case has been opened in the Special Court for the Clerics to address accusations Karroubi made regarding rape in Kahrizak. In December, he claimed that the NAJA did not give the orders for shooting demonstrators during Ashura, and that they do not carry pellet guns. His claim was refuted the next day when the head of NAJA, Police Chief Ahmadi-Moqaddam, declared that his officers use pellets guns as anti-riot gear.

In late July, the former head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Seyyed Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, ordered a committee to meet with the reportedly 300 detainees and determine how they were being treated.[550] He declared that the detainees should be processed by August 3 and ordered then-Prosecutor General, Mortazavi, to set bail for those detainees who were not facing serious charges.[551]

 

The next day, the government announced that it had released close to half the detainees. While making this announcement, Saeed Jalili, the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran, claimed that those who remained in jail were accused of possessing “firebombs and weapons, including firearms, and who had caused serious damage to public property.”[552] Four days later, on August 1, the first mass show trial took place.[553] Three more show trials followed in August under the supervision of Mortazavi. Following the appointment of Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi as Prosecutor General in August, a fifth session was held on September 14.[554]

 

Although the sessions were called “trials,” they did not remotely resemble criminal trials as generally understood in domestic or international law. They consisted of the prosecutor reading a document called a general indictment, followed by confessions by selected defendants, often without the assistance of their chosen lawyers. An unknown number of defendants were later accorded individual trials, but many, if not all, were sentenced on the basis of their forced confession.

 

Similarly, the general indictments were not indictments as normally understood in criminal law. Rather, they were political platforms that broadly laid out the objectives of the government using suspect contentions and assumptions, and forced confessions to expose and describe plot to induce an alleged “velvet coup” in Iran. The Islamic Republic has been obsessed with velvet coup plots since at least the mid-1990s.[555] As described in the first indictment, a “velvet coup” is a Western-backed attempt to democratize (democracy for Western aims and interests) and secularize the Islamic Republic.[556] It is described as a psychological war that uses civil society, academia and media as a means of accomplishing its goals.[557] The term “velvet” refers to its non-military nature.[558] Maziar Bahari’s interrogator, after deciding Bahari was part of the plot, informed him that velvet revolutionaries were worse than violent revolutionaries: “You are worse than any saboteur or killer. Those criminals destroy an object or a person. You destroy minds and provoke people against the Leader.”[559]

 

The use of mass show trials to intimidate the population was foreshadowed. On June 23, well before any trial, the incoming deputy head of the Judiciary, Ibrahim Raisi, warned that, “Those arrested in recent events will be dealt with in a way that will teach them a lesson. … The rioters will be dealt with in an exemplary way and the judiciary will do that.”[560] A few days later, in his Friday Prayer sermon, Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, a hard-line member of the Assembly of Experts, instructed the head of the judiciary to use the maximum available punishment to deal with the arrested without mercy.

 

Anyone who takes up arms to fight with the people, they are worthy of execution. We ask that the judiciary confront the leaders of the protests, leaders of the violations, and those who are supported by the United States and Israel strongly, and without mercy to provide a lesson for all.[561]

 

 

5.1      The First Mass Show Trial

On August 1, Iranian state television broadcast the first mass show trial of a hundred defendants. The Revolutionary Court in Tehran was filled with detainees. Some wore prison garb, and others were handcuffed and wearing personal clothing.[562] As would be the case in the sessions that followed, the proceedings began with a reading from the Quran and a speech by Judge Salavati, followed by the reading of a general indictment by the prosecution.[563] Many of the defendants appeared dazed and confused. Some were unrecognizable.[564]

 

The first indictment purports to set out evidence that the “incidents and turmoil that took place following the elections were preplanned and took place according to the velvet revolution’s timeline of goals and events.”[565] It claims that 100 of the 198 steps proposed in Gene Sharp’s manual of instruction had been executed.[566] Gene Sharp is a former academic at Harvard University who is known for his study and promotion of non-violent action. Most of the evidence in the indictment is derived from alleged confessions of individuals in custody.

 

The indictment begins by contending that foreign Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO), are focused on creating a “velvet coup” in Iran.[567] It reports that the “velvet revolution projects” were successful in Georgia, Poland, Czech Republic, Croatia, Serbia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. The targeting of NGOs rests on the confession of an unnamed “spy who is now in custody, and who attempted to play a role in the tenth presidential elections.”[568] The alleged spy is easily identified as Hossein Derakhshan, a Canadian-Iranian blogger who has been in custody without charge since November 2008.[569]

 

Seyyed Mohammad Khatami, a former president and popular reformist, dropped out of the 2009 presidential election once Mir-Hossein Mousavi an-nounced his candidacy. Khatami campaigned for Mousavi and has remained a vocal critic of the regime’s handling of the post-election dissent. His administration and reformist party were major targets of the prosecution during the mass show trials. In his forced confession during the fourth session of show trials, Kian Tajbakhsh accused Khatami of meeting with the Soros Foundation and opening Iran to U.S. activities. The day before Ashura, Khatami fled Jamaran Mosque in the middle of his sermon after it was interrupted by Basij forces.

Derakhshan’s alleged confession is also used to describe the “arms” of the alleged “velvet coup.” [570]

 

The aforementioned spy says the following regarding the arms of the velvet coup in Iran: “The model that has been designed for Iran, like the other countries, has three arms: intellectual, media and executive. Each one of these arms has active subgroups. So for example, the intellectual arm has progressive, religious, progressive secular, capitalist, foreign policy, literature … subgroups, and each of these elements have internal and foreign institutions that play an active role.”[571]

 

The indictment uses Abtahi’s alleged confession to bolster the government’s theory that the reformists had planned all along to claim fraud in the elections:

 

[Abtahi] continues by saying: “After Mousavi announced his candidacy, an election committee member (Mr. Mohtashamipour discussed the fraud project. Both Mr. Mousavi and Mr. Mohtashamipour) discussed the fraud project. Both [of them] had strong opinions along these lines, and they established a Committee to Preserve the Votes. It is important to note that most of the reformists believed that no more than 2 or 3 million votes could possibly be fraudulent. In the next meeting, Mr. Mousavi Khu’iniha suggested that they must not let up on the issue of election fraud because they will need it when it is time to cheat.[572]

 

The indictment claims that the “executive arm” in Iran has six subgroups: the women’s subgroup, the ethnic-racial subgroup, the human rights subgroup, the labor subgroup, NGOs, and the student subgroup.[573] Several individuals are named as part of an “executive arm” of the revolution, including women’s rights activist and lawyer Shadi Sadr and Nobel Laureate Shirin Ebadi.[574] Sadr was arrested on July 17, 2009 and held for over a week, after which she left the country.[575] Ebadi, who has been previously imprisoned in Evin and—more recently—received increasingly dire threats to her life, also remains outside of Iran.[576] In November 2009, the authorities froze her and her husband’s accounts and confiscated her Nobel Peace Prize medal, citing tax evasion.[577]

The Islamic Iran Par-ticipation Front (Par-ticipation Front) or Jebhe-ye Mosharekat-e Iran-e Eslaami, is a re-formist political party in Iran that was established in 1998. It advocates for great-er freedom of speech, the rule of law, and other demo-cratic reforms. Its secretary general, Mohsen Mirdamadi, and other prominent members, including Saeed Hajjarian, were arrested soon after the 2009 election. In its fourth general indictment, the prosecution accused the Participation Front of being part of a “velvet coup,” and urged the court to outlaw the organization.

 

Also named are labor activist Mansour Osanlou who is currently serving a five-year prison term he received in 2007,[578] and student activist Ali Afshari who left Iran in 2003 after being imprisoned, beaten and tortured in secret detention facilities run by the judiciary during the reform period.[579] Afshari received asylum in the United States where he continues to openly advocate for human rights and non-violent reform in Iran. His activism was cited in the indictment as “the best proof of the link between this subgroup and the velvet coup project in Iran.”[580]

 

The “intellectual arm” is charged with preparing the “field for Westernization and American-ization.”[581] The indictment charges several groups and individuals with expressing doubt about the validity of the elections including, the Participation Front and members of the Association of Combatant Clerics.[582] Among the named intellectual leaders are Abbas Milani and Akbar Ganji, both of whom suffered arrest either under the Shah’s regime or the Islamic Republic. Both have since left Iran.[583]

 

The indictment points to three similarities with the “velvet revolutions” in other parts of the world: false claims of election fraud, “excessive use of illegal gatherings,” and “culture of networks and institutions.” As evidence that the fraud charges were a pre-planned part of the “velvet revolution,” the indictment relies on confessions by Mostafa Tajzadeh, a former official in the Khatami government, Behzad Nabavi, a member of the Mojahedin and former advisor to Khatami, and Mohsen Safa’i Farahani, head of the Participation Front.[584] It quotes from the confession of Maziar Bahari to support its charge that the Western media planned to declare that a coup had taken place if their candidate lost.[585] It also accuses reformists with fabricating a letter from the Interior Ministry and other documents in order to perpetuate its false claims of electoral fraud. It claims that “documents revealing intent to forge and create anxiety in the minds of the public” were found in Behzad Nabavi’s house.[586] Neither these documents, nor any other evidence of forgery have been made public.[587] The indictment later recounts Nabavi’s refusal to publically confess or apologize, and states that his refusal is a betrayal of the people and history of Iran.[588]

 

In support of the second similarity—“extensive use of illegal gatherings”—it relies on the confessions of Rostam Fard Tehrani, Kian Tajbakhsh, and Mohammad-Ali Abtahi.[589] For the third similarity, “culture of networks and institutions,” it relies on confessions by Abtahi and Tajbakhsh to conclude that NGOs and other unlawful groups are responsible for organizing and directing illegal gatherings before and after the elections.[590]

 

Mohammad-Ali Abtahi another one of the accused, confirmed Mr. Tajbakhsh’s statements and says: “During the reform government, two ministries, the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Culture and the National Youth Organization, took on the responsibility of licensing NGOs around the country.”

 

As such, during the past several years, tens of thousands of NGOs have been created and supported by the named Western organizations both financially and morally. Even Shell Corporation, which is an oil company, has gotten involved in developing, educating, organizing and providing money to NGOs.

 

In this regard, NGOs, along with the unlawful Group of 88 (which has been established by the aforementioned political parties—Participation Front, Mojahedin Organization, Executives of Construction Party), was responsible for organizing and directing the illegal gatherings before and after the elections. [591]

 

The central role of members from the Islamic Iran Participation Front, Mojahedin Organization, and the Executives of Construction party in planning, organizing and directing the disturbances and illegal gatherings surrounding recent events … brings us to the conclusion that the aforementioned groups, whether they are in power (such as during the reform period when they were in charge of two branches of government) or not, will continue with their mischief and attempt to change the nature of the Islamic Republic.[592]

 

The indictment quotes from a five year plan published by the Participation Front in 2008 to accuse the organization of treason.

 

Despite the fact that the authors of this document have tried to hide their true intentions through the use of reformist language such as “democracy” and “rule by the people,” (i.e. the establishment of a secular government), they have not been [fully successful]. Page 8, section 4 of the document reads: “So that the democratic segment of the leadership will be able to use the crisis that threatens the whole political system in favor of solidifying democracy and gaining more bargaining power.”

 

Can this sentence be deemed anything other than treason?[593]

 

The last two sections of the indictment charge individuals with particular crimes. The next to the last section charges several individuals with working for American agents, posting articles and interviews on the internet, “creating anxiety in the public mind,” “communication with foreign media and channels and dissemination of information and pictures designed to further incite the agitators.”[594]

 

Among the pictures and videos there are many scenes of distraught faces from inside the country, suggesting to viewers that the agitators are the people of Iran who have come to the streets in protest of the elections.[595]

 

Mohammad Rassouli participated in several protests after the elections and captured videos and uploaded them unto the Internet. These videos were then broadcast by international media organizations including the BBC.[596] He is quoted in the indictment as confessing that he participated so that he could send videos of the protests to foreign media such as the BBC.[597]

 

A photographer, Majid Saeedi, allegedly confessed to taking “illegal pictures of the unlawful protests” and sending them to foreign news media.[598] Another piece of evidence presented against Saeedi is his contract with Getty Images, a stock photo agency that agreed to pay him for his images.[599] Maziar Bahari’s forced confession is also cited:

 

Maziar Bahari, another of the suspects, says in his confessions: “In the ensuing unrest following the elections, I wrote two articles for Newsweek in which I defended the agitators and protestors and attacked the Islamic system. For my activities with Newsweek, I received $200 per day. In addition, after I sent a film showing attacks on Basij bases on Mohammad Ali Jenah Street, the U.K.’s channel 4 agreed to pay me 2100 pounds for the two minute film reel.[600]

 

The last section of the indictment charges individuals with violent actions, participating in riots, disseminating CDs and posters, and sending pictures to the foreign media—also based on their confessions.[601] Individuals are charged with attending protests and encouraging others to participate:

 

Mr. Iman Sohrabpour, “son of Kavus,” participated in illegal gatherings, sought to give away CDs of protest, and caused agitation among the people

 

Another suspect, Mr. Said Sepanlou, “son of Abolfazl,” who has a criminal record, participated in the protests and distributed CDs and flyers.

 

In addition, Mr. Hamid Reza Bakhtiari, “son of Ali,” participated in illegal gatherings and held the placards inciting others to participate in the protests too.[602]

 

Other examples include Emad Bahavar, identified in the indictment as a member of the Freedom Movement, who is accused of creating campaign commercials for the Mousavi and Karroubi campaigns. Another defendant, Mohammad Darmanaki Farahani, is accused of a litany of offenses including offending the leaders of the system, directing the chanting of slogans, and inciting public opinion.[603] Farahani was grouped with a number of defendants who demonstrated and attempted to document their experience.

 

Mr. Mahdi Moqimi, “son of Mohammad Hossein,” participated in the protests and attempted to film the disruption. … Mr. Shahour Saba, son of Mohsen,” participated in the protests and began to take pictures of the unrest. … Mr. Mohammad Soleimanpour, “son of Nosratollah,” participated and invited others to the protests. He then began to take pictures with certain goals in mind.[604]

 

Following the reading of the indictment, well-known figures including Abtahi and Mohammad Atrianfar,[605] confessed that no fraud had taken place during the election and that foreign governments were fomenting a “velvet coup” in Iran.[606]

 

 

5.2      The Second Mass Show Trial

Thirty defendants, including three women, were present at the second show trial on August 8.[607] The prosecution presented alleged members of terrorist organizations including the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK) and a little known royalist group called Anjoman-e Padeshahi (Royalist Society).[608] The prosecution read out the indictment which accuses foreign citizens, media and governments, as well as domestic groups with fomenting a “velvet coup.”[609]

 

The first section of the indictment alleges that foreign governments, particularly the United States and Britain, are attempting to overthrow the Islamic Republic using “soft overthrow, which was groomed and presented to the public as ‘public diplomacy.’”[610] Examples listed include:

 

  1. Providing aid and assistance to NGOs and publishing Persian-language materials about the values of democracy and supporting civil activities;
  2. Training journalists and reporters in order to establish news services with the aim of gathering and analyzing information;
  3. Training and mobilizing human rights activists in Iran in order to depict a grim picture of the regime;
  4. Creating websites and trainings about the election and providing complete information on the 1388 [2009] presidential candidates;
  5. Dispatching students, artists and people in trade outside the country in order to form a cadre of potential individuals for key positions in the future.[611]

 

The indictment charges British embassy employees with illegally attending meetings of supporters of the opposition candidates.[612] Employees allegedly confessed that they were asked to attend and report on the events as they unfolded.[613] It also charges Clotilde Reiss, the French instructor at Isfahan University, of the crime of documentation and gathering intelligence.[614]

 

The second indictment names media and information technology as tools used by foreign powers to promote a “soft overthrow” in Iran. For example, Facebook is number fourteen on the list of the alleged interventionist actions of the U.S.

 

  1. Strengthening the activities of the American company Facebook in order to facilitate access between Iranian users and those in other countries concerning Iran. Claiming that many people around the world use Facebook to exchange information about the fate of the Iranian election, this company launched its trial program in the Persian language so as to allow Persian speaking users to take advantage of it in their mother tongue.[615]

 

Western countries are also accused of maintaining and opening means of communications including offering software for viewing clips of the riots with low-speed access and providing anti-filter programs to circumvent restrictions in Iran.

 

The alleged role of the BBC is singled out. It is accused of preparing for 24-hour coverage on election day and interviewing “problematic individuals/dissidents within the country to transmit minute-by-minute reporting of the news and events.”[616] The indictment also accuses the Western media, particularly BBC Persian and Voice of America with encouraging and inciting disturbances.

 

The indictment purports to describe the unlawful activities of opposition groups, separatist and ethnocentric groups, and “anti-revolutionary terrorist groups” in the events following the elections. Targeted groups include the Freedom Movement, the Committee to Defend Free, Healthy and Fair Election (and its leader Kayvan Samimi), the MEK,[617] and royalist groups, particularly the Royalist Society. Three alleged members of this Society, living outside of Iran, are listed. The alleged “first line” who reside in Iran are listed as Mohammad Reza Ali Zamani, Ahmad Karimi, Hamed Rouhinejad, Arash Rahmanipour and Amir Reza Arefi. The indictment notes that the involvement of each individual in the “recent uproar is noted in their indictments which will be declared in due course.”[618]

 

 

5.3      The Third Mass Show Trial

During the third court session held on August 16, several defendants were presented with their individual indictments. Mostly accused of demonstration-related crimes including resisting security forces, spreading images of events and acts of vandalism,[619] none of these defendants were prominent reformist leaders or well-known activists.[620] Still, the third general indictment presented once again a larger conspiracy that was allegedly planned years before the election.[621]

 

The third indictment, dated August 15, is much shorter than the initial two. It is directed at what the prosecution identifies as “rioters and vandals” who participated in what it considered the post-election “riots.”[622] The individuals targeted by the indictment are described as mere pawns who were influenced by foreign satellite channels.[623]

 

By mid-August, when the third session was held, the show trials and use of confessions by the prosecution had been criticized by Iranians.[624] Thus, the prosecution took the opportunity to defend the “legal and logical principles” supporting its accusations. In a general manner, it again cited the confessions, the similarity between the “velvet revolutions” around the world and pre-election statements by candidates and reformists as undeniable evidence that they are agents of the “velvet revolution.”[625]

 

During the hearing, the reading of the indictment by Deputy Prosecutor Mehdi Sepehri was followed by a short video that showed alleged demonstrators destroying public property.[626] The general indictment and the video both point to the Lolagar Mosque on Azadi Street, which was set on fire.[627]

 

The video was followed by the reading of eleven individual indictments. This left an impression that the defendants were accused of setting fire to the mosque or that evidence would be presented regarding this act of vandalism. However, none of the defendants was accused of this crime. The defendants were permitted to make statements. One, Hossein Ezami, was surprised to find that his individual indictment assured the court that he had explicitly confessed to destroying public property. In his statement, he noted that he had not only refused to confess but had denied such acts during his interrogation.[628]

 

The prosecution failed to present reliable evidence supporting is allegations. Majid Moqimi was accused of destruction of public property, acting against national security and propaganda against the state. Yet, the only evidence presented against him was his admission that he attended a demonstration and took pictures of injured people that he had not published.[629] Mohammad Farahani, was accused of attending six illegal demonstrations, but three of the demonstrations cited by the prosecution were reformist events held before the election.[630]

 

 

5.4      The Fourth Mass Show Trial

The fourth mass show trial was held on August 25. Again, a general indictment was read that accused several individuals and organizations of planning a “velvet coup.”[631] Beyond laying out a case against American-Iranian academic Kian Tajbakhsh, it singled out the Participation Front and the Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization, two reformist parties, as detrimental and illegal.

 

The indictment quotes alleged confessions by members of the central committees of these parties, including denials of the veracity of statements issued by the parties that were then used by the prosecution to show why they should no longer be allowed to be active.

 

A party which, after spending considerable amount of time and consulting with its central council members, has a written strategy that is completely perverse, to the point that even its most loyal central council members have such [negative] judgment about it and deny these diversions with such honesty, is clearly no longer qualified to be active. Especially since the party has caused considerable damage to the country by putting to action this strategy.[632]

 

The evidence and arguments presented in this indictment are very similar to those in the first indictment. Many are simply repeated, without any substantial changes.[633] However, possibly in response to criticism of the trials, the prosecution emphasized that it did not wish to outlaw what it considered perverse thoughts:

 

We do not want to punish individuals or parties due to their perverse thoughts, and if we are mentioning these examples and asking for a legal action, it is because these unholy thoughts were acted upon and caused serious damage to the Iranian nation. In fact, these perverse beliefs are the root of many of the bitter incidents and riots of the last years.[634]

 

The Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization is accused of causing riots by publishing critical statements regarding the fairness of the election, and the prosecution is content to cite their statements as evidence of their crimes.

 

The statement dated June 14, 2009, that was published after the result of the 10th presidential election, is another evidence of the organization’s role in creating crisis and inciting turmoil in public minds in order to create doubt about the election’s fairness and destroy the legitimacy of the regime. Part of the statement states: “What happened in this election, in addition to the widespread and unprecedented fraud, was the ultimate abuse of all possible resources to produce and create votes.”[635]

 

Mohammad-Ali Jafari has been the commander of Sepah since 2007. In late summer 2009, he boasted that the role of the Basij in the post-election events was decisive, and claimed that at least 20 Basij members died during the demonstrations. He also argued that the detainees who confessed to having colla-borated with the enemy did so freely because, in prison, they were free of pressures from their affiliated parties and societies. 

During the trial session, the opinions and beliefs of the accused were juxtaposed with those of a Basij who was allegedly injured at a demonstration and who declared himself “ready to be sacrificed for the regime and the superior leadership.”[636] The reading of the indictment was followed by Saeed Shariati’s reading of the confession and defense of Saeed Hajjarian, the member of the central committee of the Islamic Participation Front, who was unable to read his own confession due to his disabled condition.[637] The prosecution also petitioned the court to dissolve and outlaw the Participation Front, a reformist political party.[638]

 

 

5.5      The Fifth Mass Show Trial

Some changes were noticeable at the fifth mass show trial on September 15. Only six defendants were tried and most of them—having been released on bail—wore personal clothes and were represented by counsel of their choice.[639] Journalists from news organizations that had heretofore been denied access to the proceedings were allowed to attend the fifth court session,[640] and Judge Salavati reminded all news outlets that under Article 188 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, reporters are not allowed to publish the names of the accused.[641]

 

Deputy prosecutor Ahmad Ali Akbari read yet another general indictment that focused on foreign soft power, including the use of the Internet.[642] This indictment, like those before, addressed and defended the actions by the Judiciary. By this date, allegations of mistreatment and rape of detainees had surfaced, and the prosecution took this opportunity to claim that these “false reports” were part of the “psychological warfare and destructive propaganda … by internal and external enemies.”[643]

 

The prosecution recycled many of the arguments from the second indictment against popular internet sites. It noted that “25 million Iranian users use the networking site Facebook and have been able to contact 200 million people in cyberspace.” It made clear that this was not a positive development since individuals and groups allegedly used these technologies to agitate and spread negative messages.[644]

 

Following reading of the indictment, confessions and individual indictments were presented that were in agreement with the general indictment.[645] While reading student leader Abdollah Momeni’s individual indictment, the deputy prosecutor noted that “The accused has confessed that the election was an excuse for disruptive actions and attacks on the pillars of the system.” Momeni—in custody for over four months—confessed to spreading propaganda against the Islamic Republic and distributing false statements aimed at acting against national security.[646] State media reported that he had refused legal counsel and quoted him as saying: “I admit that I have made huge mistakes, and my political activities and behavior caused mistrust and pessimism about the system among the youth, particularly among students.”[647]

 

 

5.6      Detainees are Sentenced

On August 28, Ahmadinejad recommended Islamic mercy for most of the demonstrators standing trial, citing his belief that they were deceived into taking part in the unrest. However, in his opinion, the leaders of the opposition should be dealt with more seriously.

 

Serious confrontation has to be against the leaders and key elements, against those who organized and provoked [protests] and carried out the enemies’ plans … They have to be dealt with seriously … Don’t give immunity and protection to the main elements, and punish the deceived and second-hand element.[648]

 

On October 5, the first sentence was announced. Mohammad Reza Ali Zamani was sentenced to death after confessing to plotting to carry out acts of terrorism and sabotage on behalf of the Royalist Society. He had been arrested in February 2009 before performing any of the alleged actions, and he had confessed during the first mass show trial.[649] His confession, together with that of Arash Rahmanipour, had also been televised.[650] This first sentence was quickly followed by two more death sentences.[651] Twenty-year-old Arash Rahmanpour confessed to the same crimes as Ali Zamani. Naser Abdolhosseini was convicted of being a member of the MEK.[652]

 

On October 30, the head of Tehran’s Justice Ministry, explained:

 

To compare these three’s sentences with other post-election arrestees’ sentences is being unfair to those who have a good relationship with the regime and had other intentions [than overthrow] … A youth may participate in the gatherings because of a specific viewpoint and his love for the regime, but he is not an anti-revolutionary and should not be placed in the same category as munafiqin [MEK] and anti-revolutionaries. Such [comparison] is not reasonable … The aforementioned three would have carried out their damaging work against the holy Islamic Republic regime even if the post-election incidents had not happened.[653]

 

On October 17, three political activists, Saeed Hajjarian, Shahab Tabatabai, and Hedayat Aghai were each sentenced to five years’ imprisonment.[654] The next day, Masoud Bastani, whose pregnant wife had by than been released, was sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment. On October 20, Iranian-American scholar, Kian Tajbakhsh, received a lengthy fifteen-year prison sentence. In Evin Prison, Tajbakhsh had been moved from solitary confinement to “the villa,” a more comfortable part of the prison complex.[655]

 

Former Vice President Abtahi, also housed in “the villa” and who appeared at the first mass show trial, was taken to court on November 4 for an individual trial session. There, he was charged with gathering and conspiring with the aim of disrupting the national security, propaganda activity against the Islamic Republic, insulting the president, disrupting the public order through participation in the illegal gathering of June 15, and keeping classified documents. On November 21, he was accompanied by five officers to his home where they searched the premises and then returned him to court.[656] He was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment and bail was set at 700 million Tomans [US$700,000]. Abtahi and his lawyer Saleh Nikbakht, plan to appeal the verdict.[657]

 

The spokesperson for the revolutionary court in Tehran issued a statement on November 17, allegedly to “prevent the spreading of false and baseless rumors.”

 

When the prosecution office received the case of each of the accused, issued an order of criminality and indictment and sent it to various branches of the court, the proceeding court convened to process the case with the presence of the accused and his defense attorney and the prosecutor, investigated the related crimes, and after hearing the defense by the accused and his attorney, issued a verdict. So far 89 of the accused have been tried and, based on their charges, five who were accused of being members of and having affiliations with terroristic, rebellious and anti-revolutionary groups have been sentenced to execution, and 81 others have been sentenced to imprisonment ranging from 6 months to 15 years.

 

Furthermore, the imprisonment order issued for three individuals who were sentenced has been suspended, and three other accused were exonerated from charges.[658]

 

The rate of announced sentences increased rapidly in November. While most defendants received only prison time, others were sentenced to lashings and banishment as well. Kambiz Norouzi, a member of the Journalist Union and media activist who was arrested in front of the Qoba Mosque on June 28, was convicted of propaganda against the regime because of his attendance at a June 15 demonstration, and sentenced to two years and 76 lashes.[659] Ahmad Zeidabadi, the secretary general of Tahkim-e Vahdat, was taken to court on November 23 and sentenced to six years in prison plus five years of exile in Gonabad, a city in a northwest province of Iran. He was also banned from participating in civil and social activities for the rest of his life.[660]

 

By December, Hamed Rouhinejad,[661] Reza Khademi,[662] and Ayoub Porkar, accused of membership in the MEK and Royalist Society, were sentenced to death by the 26 Branch of the Revolutionary Court. This brought the total number of death sentences to six.[663] Under Iranian law, these sentences may be appealed.[664]

 

 

5.7      Violations of Iranian and International Law

The mass show trials and subsequent sentencing of election-related arrestees violated Iranian and international law, both of which require observance of basic due process, including presumption of innocence, and the right to an attorney of one’s choice, and prohibit the use of forced confessions in criminal proceedings.

 

The mass show trials failed to meet even the most basic requirements of a fair trial. Up to 100 defendants were “on trial” at a time. The trials consisted of the reading of a political statement by the prosecution, followed by confessions by selected defendants. Defendants were forced to appear in court without the assistance of their counsel of choice.

 

5.7.1     Right to Counsel

Under Article 35 of the Iranian Constitution, citizens have a right to counsel “in all courts of law.”[665] This fundamental right is codified in Articles 128, 185 and 186 of the CCP, and Article 3 the Citizen Rights Law.[666] Although Article 128 of the CCP permits a judge to limit or prohibit a defendant’s access to a lawyer, it must be for national security reasons, and such a limitation can only last until the end of the investigation period.

 

Hojjatoleslam Seyyed Mohammad-Ali Abtahi, a former vice president and prominent reform-ist, was arrested June 16, 2009. In August, his forced confession was televised. Appearing be-draggled, sickly, and obviously under duress, he implicated himself and others in an attempted “velvet revo-lution.” In November, he was sentenced to six years of imprisonment and released on bail pending his appeal.

Article 14(b) of the ICCPR requires that defendants be provided “adequate time and facilities for the preparation of … defen[s]e and to communicate with counsel of [one’s] own choosing.” Individuals have the right to counsel both at trial and at stages prior to trial.[667] In an August 13 press release regarding the mass show trials in Iran, several U.N. Human Rights Rapporteurs noted that defendants in criminal proceedings should have adequate legal counsel. The Human Rights Committee has observed that “in cases involving capital punishment, it is axiomatic that the accused must be effectively assisted by a lawyer at all stages of the proceedings.”[668]

 

Defendants were denied their right to counsel in violation of Iranian and international law. Beginning with the first mass show trial, defense lawyers expressed legitimate concerns about the due process rights of their clients. Most defendants were initially not represented by the lawyers of their choice. Saleh Nikbakht, the chosen defense attorney for Abtahi and several other defendants, reported that he was denied entrance to the first trial session—during which one of his clients confessed.[669] Dr. Ali Najaf Tavana, another attorney, complained both of the lack of access to clients as well as the impropriety of prosecuting such a large number of defendants with varying backgrounds who faced diverse charges.[670] A full week after the prosecution laid out its broad case and public confessions were made by many of the defendants, the lawyers for over a dozen of the defendants complained that they still had not been allowed to contact their clients or even access their case files.[671]

 

During his trial, Naser Abdolhosseini, who confessed to crimes that led to a death sentence, was left almost defenseless. His brother has reported:

 

During the trial, the court appointed lawyer did not defend my brother. He [had] only contacted my brother twice and has done nothing for his case … The statement of defense the lawyer read during the hearing was useless. The indictment against my brother did not correspond to the facts. My brother was not in Tehran during the protests and, therefore, could not have taken part in the protests or chanted slogans.[672]

 

5.7.2     Convictions Based on Forced Confessions

Many, if not all, of the convictions were based on confessions obtained from detainees held in custody in coercive conditions. This use of forced confessions is not innovative. Famously, Stalinist Russia broadcast over radio edited trials of dissidents. The Pahlavi regime used similar tactics before the 1979 Iranian revolution. After the revolution, confessions of many former officials, military personnel, co-revolutionary leftists and members of other dissident groups were presented to the nation, sometimes as a prelude to execution.[673]

 

Grand Ayatollah Yousuf Sanei is one of the most senior clerics in Shi’a Islam and a former member of the Guardian Council. Following the death of Ayatollah Mon-tazeri, many regard Sanei to be the most senior cleric in support of the reform move-ment. He publically condemned the arrest, imprisonment and torture of activists and demon-strators. His offices in Qom were reportedly attacked by hundreds of Basij, who injured staff, broke windows, and put up posters of the Supreme Leader. Re-cently, Ayatollah Yazdi, a supporter of Ahmadinejad, attempted to strip Sanei of his status as a source of emulation—a move criticized by many prominent Shi’a clerics.   

The use of forced confessions remains standard practice in the Iranian judicial system. Confessions are often broadcast in an effort to bolster the judiciary’s case or reputation.[674] In at least one instance, in 2004, Prosecutor Mortazavi held four journalists hostage until they agreed to publish apologies that testified to the good treatment they were afforded while in detention.[675]

 

However, Article 38 of the Iranian Constitution states that “any testimony, confession, or oath obtained under duress is devoid of value and credence.” In addition, Article 129 of the Criminal Code of Procedure provides that an investigating judge shall not resort to compulsion and duress when interrogating a defendant.[676] On August 3, 2009, only three days after the first trial session, reform-minded Grand Ayatollah Yousuf Saanei reiterated that “confessions taken while in captivity and under critical conditions, are religiously, legally and logically invalid and worthless.”[677] Grand Ayatollah, Hossein-Ali Montazeri, went further:

 

The confessions that have been extracted in prison have absolutely no religious or legal value and cannot be the basis for the death or prison punishments that have been issued … Those who are responsible for such confessions and their accomplices are religiously and legally guilty and criminal.[678]

 

Though both Ayatollahs are considered dissident or reform-minded clerics, they are maraji’-i taqlid, and their religiously legal judgments carry the authority of the highest rank attainable by Shi’a clerics.[679] In addition, both are experts on the Constitution of the Islamic Republic, as Ayatollah Saanei is a former member of the Guardian Council and the recently deceased Ayatollah Montazeri was instrumental in the authorship of the Constitution.[680]

Maziar Bahari, a Canadian-Iranian jour-nalist and filmmaker, was arrested June 21 and spent more than 118 days in detention. Under constant inter-rogation, he was forced to confess and testify about his alleged par-ticipation in a “velvet coup” during the first mass show trial. Due to inter-national pressure, he was released and allowed to leave Iran. Once released, Bahari, provided detailed ac-counts of the tactics and pressures used to coerce him into confessing.

 

 

As the mass show trials were proceeding, Manfred Nowak, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, pointedly declared that confessions obtained as a result of harsh interrogations or under torture are invalid in any real judicial system.[681] El Hadji Malick Sow, the Vice-Chairperson of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, emphasized that, “these confessions for alleged crimes such as threats against national security and treason must not, under any circumstances, be admitted as evidence by the Revolutionary Court.”

 

There is every reason to believe that the confessions used by the Judiciary to convict detainees were forced. For example, following his release, Maziar Bahari, the Canadian-Iranian journalist, stated that his confession had been obtained after brutal interrogations and torture, and that he told his interrogators what they wanted to hear.[682] He is quoted in the first indictment:

 

Maziar Bahari, a reporter for the Newsweek weekly magazine in New York, has this to say regarding this matter: “The foreign media were covering the issue of election fraud even before the elections. In an interview with Mr. Khatami, I also asked this question from him. After the interview I realized that a movement following the classic model for a color revolution was taking place.”[683]

 

Naser Abdolhosseini confessed to contacts and cooperation with the MEK on Iranian television.[684] The 22-year-old car parts salesman had been arrested on June 26, after returning from a sales trip. However, his brother claims that Abdolhosseini, a high school dropout, was not politically active. He has reported:

 

My brother was told that if he made televised confessions, his sentence would be reduced … and he would be released before the end of his term. They deceived him into making televised confessions, but contrary to what he was promised, they sentenced him to death. They took advantage of Naser and played with his life.[685]

 

After witnessing the initial trials and confessions, Mohsen Armin, a well-known pro-reform politician took preemptive action to assure that if he is arrested, any future confession would be appropriately dismissed.

 

There is no dark stain in my life to be ashamed of: I have never received any money from foreign forces; I have no relations with foreigners and I will not have; so far I have not received money from foreigners; I do not support a velvet revolution to overthrow the system, but I do call for the implementation of the Constitution to promote the cause of my country and consolidate the pillars of the system.[686]

 

 

 

Conclusion

As this report goes to press, the cycle of arrests, detention, forced confessions, trials and sentencing continues in Iran. Following the demonstrations on Ashura, hundreds of demonstrators and activists were arrested in the streets or at their homes. Many had been recently released but were rearrested by the regime in another attempt to violently crush the opposition movement. IHRDC will continue to document these violations of Iranian and international law.

 

IHRDC wishes to thank the witnesses, many of whom have suffered unspeakable treatment in the hands of the Iranian regime, for their willingness to recount their experiences. The Center also wishes to thank students of the Human Rights Clinic of the University of Toronto Law School for their invaluable research assistance.

 

 

Appendix 1

 

Organizational Chart of Law Enforcement Power Structure of the Islamic Republic of Iran

 

 

 

 

 

Organizational Chart of Law Enforcement Power Structure of the Islamic Republic of Iran:

Before the June 12, 2009 Presidential Election

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Organizational Chart of Law Enforcement Power Structure of the Islamic Republic of Iran:

After the June 12, 2009 Presidential Election

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appendix 2

 

Translation of  Matn-i Kamil-i Kayfarkhast-i Duvumin Guruh az Mutahamin-i Prujiyih Kuditayih Makhmali [Complete Text of the Indictment of the Second Group of the Accused in the Velvet Revolution Case], Fars News Agency, Aug. 8, 2009.

 

 

[1] Council: Iran Election Turnout at 85%, Press TV, June 13, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=97990.

[2] The Guardian Council is a twelve-member council that is granted extensive powers under the Constitution of Iran. The Council determines whether laws and regulations meet Islamic criteria and are constitutional. Six of its members are appointed directly by the Supreme Leader. Six others are appointed by the Majlis from among jurists nominated by the head of the Judiciary who himself is appointed by the Supreme Leader. See Qanun-i Assasiyih Jumhuriyih Islamiyih Iran [Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran] 1358 [adopted 1979, amended 1989] arts. 4 and 91-99 [hereinafter Iranian Const.].

[3] Id. art. 113.

[4] Id. arts. 124, 126, 127, and 133.

[5] Id. art. 176.

[6] Id. art. 115.

[7] Article 99 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran states: “The Guardian Council has the responsibility of supervising the elections of the Assembly of Experts for Leadership, the President of the Republic, the Islamic Consultative Assembly, and the direct recourse to popular opinion and referenda.”

[8] Mehdi Moslem, Factional Politics In Post-Khomeini Iran 181 (2002).

[9] Reza Afshari, Human Rights in Iran: The Abuse of Cultural Relativism 206 (2001).

[10] Moslem, supra note 8, at 181 (citing Khamenei).

[11] Mehrangiz Kar, Constitutional Obstacles to the Realizations of Human Rights and Democracy in Iran, 73 (unpublished manuscript, on file with Scholars at Risk and Iran Human Rights Documentation Center) [hereinafter Constitutional Obstacles]; Iranian Const., supra note 2, art. 99; Afshari, supra note 9, at 239.

[12] Moslem, supra note 8, at 234; Qanun-i Intikhabat-i Riyasat-i Jumhuri [Presidential Election Law] 1364 (1985), art. 8.

[13] Constitutional Obstacles, supra note 11, at 73.

[14] See also Afshari, supra note 9, at 237.

[15] Id. at 237.

[16] Id. at 239.

[17] Rafsanjani was president of the Islamic Republic of Iran between 1989 and 1997, prior to which he was the speaker of the Majlis. His presidency was marked by encounters with opposition groups inside and outside of the country including extra judicial killings of many opposition leaders in Europe and throughout Middle East. Along with some of his ministers, Rafsanjani has been implicated in the 1994 bombing of the Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires. See generally Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, No Safe Haven: Iran’s Global Assassination Campaign, (May 2008), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm. See also Zindiginamih, Aba’d-i Ilmi va Siyasi [Biography, Science and Political Aspects], Website of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, available at http://www.hashemirafsanjani.ir/?type=static&lang=1&id =7.

[18] See Darbarihyih Jami’yih Rawhaniyat-i Mubariz [About Society of Combating Clerics], Rohaniat Mobarez, available at http://www.rohaniatmobarez.com/Portal/Home/ShowPage.aspx?Object=Paper&LayoutID=7c9956bd-93dd-4453-b4fa-4cac96c389c7&ID=48bb9d3a-fddb-48c6-b8fd-554013fdbfaa; Rawhaniyat-i Mubriz va Hidayat-i Fikr-i-Siyasiyih Millat-i Iran dar Inqilab-i Islami [Society of Combatant Clerics and the Political – Ideological Guidance of Iranian Nation during the Revolution], Rasekhoon, available at http://www.rasekhoon.net/Article/Print-30699.aspx; A’za [Members], Majma Rouhanioon Mubariz, available at http://rouhanioon.com/; Tarikhchihyih Ta’sis-i Hizb [History of Founding of the Party], Etemad Melli, available at http://www.etemadmelli.org/?xid=0005020002002100000.

[19] Fear and allegations of fraud in elections are not new in the Islamic Republic. In 1997, following the presidency of Hashemi Rafsanjani, presidential elections became more contestable, and suspicions of election rigging entered the public dialog. These rumors led in turn to low voter participation and were publically addressed by then-president Rafsanjani: “The administrators of the election procedure must act in a way so that the minds of people will be at ease. … The results [of the election] are the people’s will, even though there may be people who might want to change the votes to get their candidates elected. This action would undermine the faith of the people in the system.” The Supreme Leader announced that he would not allow illegal tampering with the vote. Moslem, supra note 8, at 250. Allegations of fraud were again raised after the 2005 presidential elections when Mahdi Karroubi led in the initial results but failed to qualify for the runoff which took place between Rafsanjani and Ahmadinejad. In a letter to the Supreme Leader, Karroubi claimed that the Guardian Council, in collusion with the Sepah, worked to create the election results that they desired. Mohammad Sahimi, The Sheikh of Reform, Tehran Bureau, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/10/the-sheikh-of-the-reforms-mehdi-karroubi.html.

[20] The “moral police” in Iran patrol streets and enforce religious modesty such as the proper wearing of the hijab.

[21] The color green was initially suggested to Mousavi by one of his advisors and later endorsed by Khatami to become the color of his campaign. See Ramz Gusha-i az Rang-i Sabz-i Mousavi [Cracking the Code of Mousavi’s Green Color], Ravayat, Dec. 21, 2009, available at http://ravayat.ir/shownews.asp?c=0&id=7130.

[22] IHRDC interview with S.R. (Aug. 29, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[23] Shu’ar-i Mardum Pas az Munazirih dar Khiyabanha, Rayih Ma Nukhust Vazir-i Imam [People Chant in the Streets After the Debate: Our vote is Imam’s Prime Minister], Entekhab News, June 4, 2009, available at http://www.tikonline.org/portal/ index.php?news=5637 (last visited on Oct. 13, 2009).

[24] IHRDC interview with S.R. (Aug. 29, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[25] Hushdar-i Kumitihyih Siyanat az Ara Nisbat bih Takhalufat-i Intikhabat-i [Warning of the Committee for Protection of the Votes regarding Irregularities in the Election], BBC Persian, June 9, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/ 2009/06/090609_bd_election_fraud_letter.shtml.

[26] Id.

[27] Amnesty International, Iran: Worsening Repression of Dissent as Election Approaches, AI Index MDE 13/012/2009, February 2009, available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE13/012/2009/en/6355979b-f779-11dd-8fd7-f57af21896e1/mde1 30122009en.html.

[28] Ali Akbar Dareini, Iran Reformists Hope for High Election Turnout, The Associated Press, May 22, 2009, available at http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=7656826.

[29] Thomas Erdbrink, Iran’s Vote Ends in Confusion, Confrontation, Washington Post, June 13, 2009, available at http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2009/06/12/MNSR186K08.DTL [hereinafter Confusion and Confrontation].

[30] Natayij-i Naha’i’yih Dahumin Dawrihyih Intikhabat-i Riyasat-i Jumhuri [Final Results of the Tenth Presidential Election], Islamic Republic of Iran’s Ministry of Interior Portal, June 14, 2009, available at http://moi.ir/Portal/Home/ShowPage.aspx? Object=News&CategoryID=832a711b-95fe-4505-8aa3-38f5e17309c9&LayoutID=dd8faff4-f71b-4c65-9aef-a1b6d0160be3&ID =5e30ab89-e376-434b-813f-8c22255158e1; 32 million votes cast in elections, Press TV, June 12, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=97958.

[31] Seyyed Ali Khamenei, President Elect Is President of All Iranians, The Office of the Supreme Leader Seyyed Ali Khamenei, June 13, 2009 available at http://www.leader.ir/langs/EN/index.php?p=contentShow&id=5566; Iran Election: What Iranian Newspapers Say, The Atlantic, June 15. 2009, available at http://politics.theatlantic.com/2009/06/iran_election _what_iranian_newspapers_say.php.

[32] Latest Results: Landslide Win for Ahmadinejad, Press TV, June 13, 2009 available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=97967.

[33] Id.

[34] Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Protests Flare in Tehran as Opposition Disputes Vote, New York Times, June 14, 2009 available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/14/world/middleeast/14iran.html?_r=1 [hereinafter Protests Flare].

[35] Ahmadinejad Leads Mousavi in Preliminary Results, Press TV, June 12, 2009 available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=97953.

[36] Confusion and Confrontation, supra note 36; Sit-i Sitad-i Mousavi az Barkhurd-i Police ba Havadaran Khabar Dad [Mousavi’s Campaign Website Reported on the Clash of the Police and the Supporters], BBC Persian, June 13, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090612_bd_ir88_mousavi_supporters.shtml. A spokesperson claimed that Mousavi was told by military personnel that his victory could not stand. Video File: European Parliament against Ahmadinejad, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7fiBxU8wEU.

[37] Confusion and Confrontation, supra note 36. On election days, the authorities allow no gatherings or campaigning under article 66 of the Presidential Election Law.

[38] IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar. (November 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC); Iran: Basij Member Describes Election Abuse, Channel 4 News, Dec. 16, 2009, available at http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/world/middle_ east/iran+Basij+member+describes+election+abuse/3466142 [hereinafter Basij Interview].

[39] According to a former commander of the Basij, Brigadier General Mohammad Hejazi, the strength of the force in 2004 was 10.3 million. By 2007, its strength stood at 12.6 million. On November 25, 2008, Taeb told the semi-official Fars news agency that the force numbered 13.6 million, which is about 20 percent of the total population of Iran. Of this number, about 5 million are women and 4.7 million are schoolchildren. Iran’s Basij Force–the Mainstay of Domestic Security, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Dec. 8, 2008, available at http://www.rferl.org/content/Irans_Basij_Force_Mainstay_Of_Domestic_ Security/1357081.html.

[40] Middle-school-aged members of the Student Basij are called Seekers (Puyandegan), and high-school members are called the Vanguard (Pishgaman). Niruyeh Moghavemat Basij, Mobilization Resistance Force, GlobalSecurity.org, undated, available at http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/iran/Basij.htm.

[41] Sarlashgar Jafari: Mas’uliyat-i Asliyih Sepah dar Hal-i Hazir Mughabilih ba Tahdidat-i Dakhili Ast [Commander Jafari: Presently Sepah’s Primary Duty is to Combat Internal Threats], Fars News Agency, Sept. 29, 2007, available at http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8607070416.

[42] Sarlashgar Jafari Farmandihyih Kull-i Sepah-e Pasdaran Shud [Commander Jafari Was Appointed the General Commander of Sepah], Mehr News Agency, Sept. 1, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com/fa/NewsDetail.aspx?NewsID=544358; Irtiqa’-i Muavinat-i Ittila’t-i Sepah bih Sazman-i Ittila’t [Sepah’s Intelligence Organization is Promoted to Be the Intelligence Organization], Alef, Oct. 6, 2009, available at http://alef.ir/1388/content/view/54822/; Sardar Naqdi Ra’is-i Sazman-i Basij-i Mustazafan Shud [Brigadier General Naqdi Was Appointed Head of the Basij of the Dispossessed], Fars News Agency, Oct. 4, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8807121636.

[43] Article 1 of the Law for Judicial Protection of the Basij states: “The resistance force of the Basij of [Sepah], like the Judicial officers, is given permission to take necessary legal actions when encountering evident crimes and in cases of absence of the judicial officer, or their lack of timely action, or their announcement of help, in order to prevent the disappearance of the signs of crime and flight of the accused and to prepare and send a report to the judicial authorities.”

[44] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[45] 32 Million Votes Cast in Elections, Press TV, June 12, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=97958.

[46] Protests Flare, supra note 34.

[47] The percentage of the electorate participating had consistently fallen through 1997, 2001 and 2005. Some constituencies advocated boycotting the elections in an effort to reduce the legitimacy of the regime. It is also believed that the drop was the result of general apathy in the electorate, which did not believe their votes would have any effect. In the 1997 elections, nearly 80 percent of the electorate participated. In 2001 and 2005, the percentages were 66 and 63 percent respectively. In 2005, the first ever runoff elections were held. Participation in that election fell further to 59 percent. See Iran Hardliner Sweeps to Victory, BBC, June 25, 2005, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4621249.stm.

[48] Confusion and Confrontation, supra note 36.

[49] Pas Az Israr-i Ra’is Jumhur dar Inkar-i Shikayat-i Mohsen Rezai, Namihyih In Candida bih Jannati dar Ikhtiyar-i Hamvatanan Qarar Girift [After the President Insisted to Deny that Mohsen Rezai Sent a Letter to Jannati, the Letter Was Made Accessible to the Public], Internet Website of Dr. Mohsen Rezai, June 14, 2009, available at http://www.rezaee.ir/fa/pages/?cid=8518. (Photo of original letter on file with IHRDC).

[50] Id.

[51] IHRDC interview with B.N.N., (Aug. 11, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[52] Id.

[53] Id.

[54] Preliminary Analysis of the Voting Figures in Iran’s 2009 Presidential Election, Chatam House, June 21, 2009, available at http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/files/14234_iranelection0609.pdf.

[55] Guardian Council: Over 100% Voted in 50 Cities, Press TV, June 21, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=98711&sectionid=351020101.

[56] Protests Flare, supra note 34; Khordad-i Khunin: Guzarish-i Tafsiliyih Naqz-i Huquq-i Bashar dar Iran Pas az Intikhabat [Bloody Khordad [May-June]: Detailed Report of the Violations of Human rights in Iran after the Election], July 5, 2009, Human Rights Activists News Agency, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/1416.aspx, that mentions widespread protests starting on June 13 and spreading throughout the country.

[57] Qat’-i Khutut-i Tilifun-i Hamrah dar Tehran [Cell Phone Lines Cut Off in Tehran], Aftab, June 13, 2009, available at http://aftabnews.ir/vdcfced1.w6dx0agiiw.html.

[58] IHRDC interview with J.B. (Nov. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[59] IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[60] IHRDC interview with J.B. (Nov. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[61] Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, art. 7, Jul. 17, 1998, 2187 U.N.T.S. 90 [hereinafter Rome Statute] available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/aadel.htm.

[62] Tazahurat-i Chand Hizar Nafari dar Tehran Idamih Darad [Demonstration of Several Thousands in Tehran Continues], Gooya News, June 13, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/06/089091.php.

[63] IHRDC interview with J.Q. (July 21, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[64] Protests Flare, supra note 34.

[65] Vazir-i Kishvar dar Sitad-i Intikhabat: Barayih Tajamu’at Mujaviz Sadir Nakardim [Interior Minister at the Election Office: We Have Not Issued Permits for the Gatherings], ISNA, June 13, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1355761.

[66] Fazayih Amniyatiyih Hakim bar Shahr-i NaAram-i Tehran [Military Atmosphere Governs the Restless City of Tehran], Advar News, June 13, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.biz/politic/9132.aspx.

[67] IHRDC interview with P.Q. (July 21, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[68] IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar (Nov. 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[69] Id.

[70] Ruzshumar-i Peiknet az Kuditayih 22 Khordad – 3 [Chronology of Peiknet of the June 12 Coup – 3], Peiknet, Nov. 18, 2009, available at http://www.peiknet.com/1388/05aban/27/page/31Ruzshomar.htm. In the midst of the Islamic Revolution, during the Moharram of 1978 and specially the days of Tasu’a and Ashura [December 10 and 11], people chanted ‘Allah’u akbar’ (God is great) from rooftops as a way of expressing their opposition to the Pahlavi regime. David Menashri, Iran, A Decade of War and Revolution 60 (1990).

[71] See Video File: Demonstrations in Tehran, Isfahan, Tabriz, Rasht, Shiraz, Qazvin, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkfYX-o_3vg&feature=related.

[72] Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Unrest Deepens as Critics Are Detained, New York Times, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/15/world/middleeast/15iran.html?_r=1&pag.

[73] Ahmadinejad defends ‘dust and pebbles’ remark, Press TV, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail/98502.htm?sectionid=351020101. Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Defiance Grows as Iran’s Leader Sets Vote Review, New York Times, June 16, 2009, available at, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/world/middleeast/16iran.html?_r=1

[74] Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Unrest Deepens as Critics Are Detained, New York Times, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/15/world/middleeast/15iran.html?_r=1&pag.

[75] Nahid Siamdoust, Tehran’s Rallying Cry: ‘We Are the People of Iran’, Time, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1904764,00.html [hereinafter Siamdust Article].

[76] Id.

[77] Saeed Kamali Dehqan, Death in the Dorms: Iranian Students Recall Horror of Police Invasion, Guardian, July 12, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/12/iran-tehran-university-students-police [hereinafter Death in the Dorms].

[78] Yurish-i Police bih Danishgah [Storming of the University by the Police], Rooz Online, Jan. 30, 2008, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/archive/news/news/article/2008/january/29//-66e5af12d3.html.

[79] Id.

[80] Hamlihyih Khushunatbar-i Niruhayih Amniyati bih Kuyih Danishgah-i Tehran va Danishgah-i Isfahan [Violent Attack of the Security Forces to the Tehran University Dormitories and Isfahan University], BBC Persian, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090614_si_bd_ir88_kooyedaneshgah.shtml.

[81] Death in the Dorms, supra note 77.

[82] Id.

[83] Id.; Ittlia’iyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat Piramun-i bih Khak va Khun Kishidih Shudan-i Kuyih Danishgah-i Tehran [Announcement of Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat Regarding the Vicious attacks on the Dormitories of Tehran University], Advar News, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.biz/university/9154.aspx.

[84] See Abbas Hakimzadeh, Uzv-i Shurayih Markaziyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat Azad Shud [Abbas Hakimzadeh, Member of the Central Cadre of Tahkim-e Vahdat was Released], Saham News, July 11, 2009, available at http://www.etemademelli.ir/published/0/00/51/5151 (last visited Sept. 14, 2009); explains Hakimzadeh was in prison for 135 days. Akharin Vaziyat-i Azayih Shawrayih Markaziyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat [Latest News from the Members of the Central Cadre of the Office for Strengthening Unity], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, Jan. 8, 2010, available at http://chrr.us/spip.php?article7796.

[85] Norooz Asamiyih Shahidan-i Ihraz-i Huviyat Shudih ta bih Imruz ra Muntashir Mikunad, Asami va Mushakhasat-i 72 Shahid-i Sabz [Norooz Published the Names of the Martyrs whose Identity Has Been So far Established, Name and Identity of 72 Green Martyrs], Norooz, Sept. 4, 2009, available at http://norooznews.org/news/13739.php [hereinafter, Norooz List].

[86] Death in the Dorms, supra note 77.

[87] Norooz List, supra note 85. Hamlihyih Khushunatbar-i Niruhayih Amniyati bih Kuyih Danishgah-i Tehran va Danishgah-i Isfahan [Violent Attack of the Security Forces to the Tehran University Dormitories and Isfahan University], BBC Persian, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090614_si_bd_ir88_kooyedaneshgah.shtml.

[88] Dawlat-i Kudita Jinazihyih Shuhadayih Kuy ra Dafn Kard [Government of the Coup Buried the Bodies of the Martyrs of University Dorms], Bamdad Khabar, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.bamdadkhabar.org/ 2009/06/post_1909/.

[89] Rahbar Wants Follow-up to Dorm Attack Probe, Press TV, July 4, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=99771&sectionid=351070101.

[90] Ansar-i Hizbollah, meaning the followers of Hizbollah (party of God), is “a semi-official, paramilitary organization in Iran that carries out attacks on those it perceives to be violating the precepts of Islam, including women wearing makeup, reformist protestors, and unmarried couples.” See Ansar-i Hizbullah, Followers of the Party of God, Global Security, available at http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/iran/ansar.htm.

[91] See Hamlihyih Niruhayih Amniyati bih Danishgahhayih Shiraz, Isfahan va Tabriz [Attack of Security Forces to Shiraz, Isfahan and Tabriz Universities], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.chrr.us/print. php?articleid=4315; Hamlihyih Niruyih Intizami bih Kuyih Danishgah [The Law Enforcement Forces Attack University Dormitories], Akhbar-e Rooz, June 14, 2009, available at http://www.akhbar-rooz.com/ article.jsp?essayId=21505.

[92] Amnesty, Arrest and Killings Rise as Election Protest Grip Iran, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/arrests-and-killings-rise-election-protests-grip-iran-20090617.

[93] Gustarish-i NaArami dar Danishgahhayih Iran [Unrest Spreads in Iran’s Universities], BBC Persian, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090615_ba-ir88-uni-unrest.shtml; Hamlihyih Niruhayih Amniyati bih Danishgahhayih Shiraz, Isfahan va Tabriz [Attack of Security Forces to Shiraz, Isfahan and Tabriz Universities], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.chrr.us/print.php?articleid=4315.

[94] Robert Tait, Unrest in Iran Spreads to the Provinces as Students Clash with Security Forces, Guardian, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jun/16/iran-shiraz-university-chancellor-resignation [Unrest Spreads].

[95] Id.

[96] Ittlia’iyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat Piramun-i bih Khak va Khun Kishidih Shudan-i Kuyih Danishgah-i Tehran [Announcement of Daftar Tahkim-e Vahdat Regarding the Vicious attacks on the Dormitories of Tehran University], Advar News, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.biz/university/9154.aspx.

[97] Robert Tait, Unrest in Iran Spreads to the Provinces as Students Clash with Security Forces, Guardian, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jun/16/iran-shiraz-university-chancellor-resignation. A witness to the events in Shiraz claimed on Mousavi’s website that this resignation was a ruse to calm the vitriol at Shiraz University after the attacks, and that the Chancellor had himself invited the security forces. Nivishtih Hayih Shahid-i Ayniyih Zarb va Shatm 25 Khordad-i Danishgah-i Shiraz [Writings of the Eye Witness of the Beatings of 25th of Khordad at Shiraz University], Mowj-e Sabz-e Azadi, Aug. 24, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/21534 (last visited Nov. 4, 2009).

[98] In contrast, the Chancellor of Tehran University, Farhad Rahbar, blamed vandals and thugs, vaguely denied the nature of the attacks, and hinted at having given permission to security forces to enter the University. ISNA, Rahbari: No Student was Harmed, June 16, 2009, available at http://isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1357051&Lang=P. Rahbar later denied having given any security forces permission, though his statements were so contradictory that he confused even Iranian lawmaker Mohsen Kouhkan. Rahbari Wants Follow-up to Dorm Attack Probe, Press TV, July 4, 2009 available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=99771&sectionid=351070101.

[99] Martin Fletcher, Hardliners Open Fire on Defiant Protestors as Tension Grips Tehran, Times Online, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6505842.ece.

[100] Id.

[101] Parisa Hafezi, Iran Speaker Condemns Attack on University Students, Reuters, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE55F2ZC20090616.

[102] Iran Probes Attack on Tehran University Dorm, Press TV, September 8, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=105614&sectionid=351020101.

[103] Id.

[104] Namayandigan-i Mardum dar Khaniyih Millat Havadis-i Ruzhayih Akhir ra Barrisi Kardand: Parvandihyih NaAramihayih Akhir dar Majlis [People’s Representatives in the Majlis Investigated the Recent Events: Report of the Recent Unrest in the Majlis], Ebtekar Newspaper, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.ebtekarnews.com/Ebtekar/News. aspx?NID=50689.

[105] In Iran, Mousavi Seeks Permission for Rallies, Press TV, June 14, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail. aspx?id=98106&sectionid=351020101.

[106] Mousavi Denied Permit for Post-Vote Victims Mourning, Press TV, July 28, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail. aspx?id=101842&sectionid=351020101.

[107] Mousavi: Umidvar bih Shawrayih Nigahban Nistam [Mousavi: I have No Hope in the Guardian Council], BBC Persian, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090615_ba-ir88-mousavi-gathering.shtml; Tazahurat-i Milliuniyih Mardum dar Khiyaban-i Inqilab va Azadi [Demonstrations of Millions of People in Enghelab and Azadi Streets], Advar News, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.us/politic/9146.aspx.

[108] Siamdust Article, supra note 75.

[109] IHRDC interview with H.S. (Dec. 4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[110] Rahpayma’iyih Hamiyan-i Mousavi Barguzar Shud [Mousavi’s Supporters Had their Demonstration], Fars News Agency, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8803250654.

[111] Sukhanan-i Mir-Hossein dar Rahpayma’iyih 25 Khordad [Speech of Mir-Hossein at June 15 Demonstration], Khabgard, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.khabgard.com/?id=-1534175924.

[112] Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Defiance Grows as Iran’s Leader Sets Vote Review, New York Times, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/world/middleeast/16iran.html?_r=1.

[113] Rahpayma’iyih Hamiyan-i Mousavi Barguzar Shud [Mousavi’s Supporters Had their Demonstration], Fars News Agency, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8803250654.

[114] Siamdust Article, supra note 75. Protestors Rally for Mousavi in Election Dispute, Associate Press, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31365097/ [hereinafter Rally for Mousavi].

[115] Rally for Mousavi, supra note 114.

[116] Guzarishha-i az Tazahurat-i Dushanbih 25 Khordad [Reports from the Demonstration of Monday, 25th of Khordad [June 15]], Peyk-e Iran, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.peykeiran.com/Content.aspx?ID=2345.

[117] Rally for Mousavi, supra note 114.

[118] Idamiyih I’tirazat dar Tehran va Shahrhayih Digar [Protests Continue in Tehran and Other Cities], Deutsche Welle, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4330212,00.html. Protestors Rally for Mousavi in Election Dispute, Associate Press, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31365097/.

[119] In June 2009, the use of force seemed to increase in the evenings. At one of the later demonstrations, a witness reported being warned about staying out too late, though the warning was unhelpful: “The [police] forces were saying that they won’t hit people until 8 pm, but when we left the mosque at seven, the guards had started beating people.” IHRDC interview with M.M.T. (Dec. 24, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[120] IHRDC interview with M.M.T. (Dec. 24, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[121] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[122] There are several videos of this incident available online. See, e.g., Video File: Militia Shooting Protestors with Live Bullets, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFs0a6-0J5o; Video File: Shooter at Basij Base in Azadi Street, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aviXWF1c0q0&feature=related.

[123] Iqtishash-i Sazmandihi Shudih va 7 Kushtih [Organized Riots and 7 Dead People], IRIB News, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.iribnews.ir/Default.aspx?Page=MainContent&news_num=193088.

[124] Video File: Militia Shooting Protestors with Live Bullets, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFs0a6-0J5o; Video File: The only video of the Shooter at Basij Base in Azadi street, June 15, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aviXWF1c0q0&feature=related.

[125] Id.

[126] Video File: Basij Attacking People at Azadi Square after the Election, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeJLbn9Vs_Q.

[127] List-i Janbakhtigan-i Shinasa-i Shudih bih 78 Nafar Risid [List of the Identified Dead Reached 78 People], HRA News, July 28, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/2610.aspx.

[128] Id.

[129] Nader Karami, Basij Shooter Killed Davoud Sadri, Rooz Online, August 1, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/august/01//Basiji-shooter-killed-davoud-sadri.html.

[130] IHRDC interview with witness M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[131] Madaram Hichvaqt Marg-i Kianoosh ra Bavar Nimikunad [My Mother Will Never Believe Kianoosh’s Death], Radio Farda, Aug. 19, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/articleprintview/1802961.html.

[132] My One Son Is Buried and the Other One Is in Prison, Rooz Online, Dec. 10, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/december/10//my-one-son-is-buried-and-the-other-is-in-prison.html.

[133] Norooz List, supra note 85.

[134] Id.

[135] IHRDC interview with F.A. (Dec. 22, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[136] Norooz List, supra note 85.

[137] Hossein Akhtarzand, Another Victim of the Post-Election Violence, Iran Human Rights Voice, Aug. 21, 2009, available at http://www.ihrv.org/inf/?p=2642.

[138] Nazila Fathi, Protestors Defy Iranian Efforts to Cloak Unrest, New York Times, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/18/world/middleeast/18iran.html.

[139] Bayaniyihyih Vizarat-i Umur-i Kharijih dar Vakunish bih Risanihhayih Qarbi [Statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in response to the reaction of the Foreign Media], Kayhan, 03/28/1388 [June 18, 2009], available at http://kayhannews.ir/880328/3.HTM#other300.

[140] Iran Bars Foreign Media from Reporting on Streets, Associated Press, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/feedarticle/8560894.

[141] Iran Opposition Keeps up Pressure, BBC News, June 16, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8103577.stm.

[142] IHRDC interview with Witness M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[143] Thousands of Mousavi Supporters Head for TV Building, Reuters, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE55F54020090616.

[144] Iran Opposition Keeps Up Pressure, BBC, June 16, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8103577.stm.

[145] Norooz List, supra note 85.

[146] Farnaz Fassihi, Iran Arrests Reformers as Huge Protests Continue, Wall Street Journal, June 18, 2009, available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124523854750623001.html.

[147] Iranian Protesters Mostly Unfazed by Government Warnings, CNN, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/06/17/iran.elections.rallies/index.html.

[148] Sharon Otterman and Alan Cowell, Protestors Defy Iranian Efforts to Cloak Unrest, New York Times, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/18/world/middleeast/18iran.html.

[149] Namihyih Sargushadihyih Muhandis Mir-Hossein Mousavi bih Shawrayih Amniyat-i Kishvar darbarihyih Iqdamat-i Qayr-i Qanuniyih Libas Shakhsi-ha [Open Letter of Mir-Hossein Mousavi to the National Security Council regarding the Illegal Actions of the Plainclothes], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, June 17, 2009, available at http://chrr.us/print.php?articleid=4329; Parisa Hafezi and Hashem Kalantari, Iran Set for a Day of Mourning after Protest Deaths, Reuters, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE55F54520090617.

[150] Bayaniyihyih Jadid-i Mir-Hossein Mousavi: Panjshanbih ba Namad-i Sugvari, Tajam’u va Tazahurat Kunid [New Statement of Mir-Hossein Mousavi: Demonstrate and Gather on Thursday with Symbols of Mourning], Ham Mihan, June 17, 2009, available at http://hammihannews.com/news/4779. Nazila Fathi and Michael Slackman, As Confrontation Deepens, Iran’s Path Is Unclear, New York Times, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/19/world/middleeast/ 19iran.html.

[151] Nazila Fathi and Michael Slackman, As Confrontation Deepens, Iran’s Path Is Unclear, New York Times, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/19/world/middleeast/19iran.html.

[152] Id.

[153] Ian Black and Saeed Kamali Dehqan, Iran Elections: Guardian Council to Examine Vote-Rigging Claims, Guardian, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jun/18/iran-protest-mourning; Iran Clerics Schedule Pro-Mousavi Rally, Press TV, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail/98410.htm?sectionid=351020101.

[154] Iran Opposition Rallies again in Tehran, Agence France-Presse, June 18, 2009, available at http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Iran_opposition_rallies_again_in_Te_06182009.html. See also, Tajamu-i Azim-i Mukhalifan dar Tehran, Laqv-i Tazahurat-i Jum’i [Colossal Gathering of Opposition in Tehran, Cancelling Friday Demonstration], BBC Persian, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090618_si_ir88_friday_ noprotest.shtml. Repression Stepped Up Yet Again as Iran Becomes the World’s Biggest Prison for Journalists, Reporters Without Borders, June 21, 2009, available at http://www.rsf.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=33474.

[155] Iran Council Warns Mousavi Against Rallies, Press TV, June 20, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail/98558.htm?sectionid=351020101.

[156] Id.

[157] Hushdar-i Ayatollah Khamenei dar Murid-i Idamiyih Tazahurat-i Khiyabani [Warning of Ayatollah Khamenei Regarding Continuing Street Protests], BBC Persian, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090619_he_ir88_khamenei.shtml; and IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Nazila Fathi, Iran’s Top Leader Dashes Hopes for a Compromise, New York Time, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/20/world/middleeast/20iran.html; 2 Kandidayih Mu’tariz Namayandih Mu’arifi Nakardand, Shawrayih Nigahban Ra’san Bazshumari Kar [The Two Protesting Candidates Didn’t Introduce their Representatives: Guardian Council Recounted on Its Own], Fars News Agency, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8804100052.

[158] See Quran 62:9-10; Ahamiyyat-i Namaz-i Jum’i [Importance of Friday Prayer], Hawzah, available at http://www.hawzah.net/Hawzah/Articles/Articles.aspx?LanguageID=1&id=60488&SubjectID=59952; Jaygah va Vijigihayih Namaz-i Jum’i [Importance and Status of Friday Prayer], Resalat, July 27, 2006, available at http://www.magiran.com/npview.asp?ID=1153718.

[159] Interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Nazila Fathi, Iran’s Top Leader Dashes Hopes for a Compromise, New York Time, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/20/world/middleeast/20iran.html.

[160] Bayanat-i Muhimm-i Rahbar-i Mu’azam-i Inqilab dar Khutbihhayih Namaz Jum’i Piramun-i Intikhabat [Important Message of the Esteemed Leader of the Revolution in the Friday Sermon regarding the Election], Jumhouri Eslami, 03/30/1388 [June 20, 2009], available at http://www.jomhourieslami.com/1388/13880330/.

[161] Reading into the meaning of the sermon, Amnesty International warned that the Supreme Leader had “given the go ahead for the police to launch violent crackdowns on people who continue to protest the country’s election results.” Amnesty International, Iran’s Supreme Leader Condones Violent Police Crackdown on Protestors, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/iran-supreme-leader-condones-violent-police-crackdown-on-protesters-20090619.

[162] Protestors Stage Illegal Rally in Tehran, Press TV, June 20, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=98606&sectionid=351020101.

[163] Armed Vandals ‘Killed Civilians’ in Tehran, Press TV, June 22, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=98746&sectionid=351020101 [hereinafter Armed Vandals]. See Dah Kushtih va Yiksad Zakhmi dar Dargirihayih Diruz-i Tehran [Ten Dead and One Hundred Injured in Tehran’s Clashes Yesterday], BBC Persian, 21 June 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090621_ka_ir88_tehran_clashes.shtml.

[164] Iran Police Clash with Protestors, BBC, June 20, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8110582.stm.

[165] IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[166] Iran Police Clash with Protestors, BBC, June 20, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8110582.stm.

[167] IHRDC interview with P.R.Q. (July 21, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[168] Iran Police Clash with Protestors, BBC, June 20, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8110582.stm.

[169] Norooz List, supra note 85.

[170] Video File: Shooting of the Basij at the Civilians, June, 25, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srzMo4Zatcg&feature=PlayList&p=BBE591B85F04F82A&index=43.

[171] Parastu Sepehri, My Brother Was Only 18, Rooz Online, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/interview/interview/article/2009/july/01//my-brother-was-only-18.html.

[172] Farnaz Fassihi, Son’s Death Has Iranian Family Asking Why, Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2009, available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124571865270639351.html.

[173] BBC interview with Milad Hashemzadeh at Ittila’t-i Tazih dar Murid-i Khushtih Shudan-i Masoud-i Hashemzadeh [New Information Regarding the Death of Masoud Hashemzadeh], BBC Persian, July 21, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090721_nm_iran_hashemzadeh.shtml.

[174] Id.

[175] Id.

[176] Id.

[177] Borzou Daragahi, Family, Friends Mourn ‘Neda,’ Iranian Woman who Died on Video, Los Angeles Times, June 23, 2009, available at http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-iran-neda23-2009jun23,0,366975,full.story.

[178] Id.

[179] See BBC interview with Arash Hejazi at Iran Doctor Tells of Neda’s Death, BBC, June 25, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8119713.stm.

[180] Id.

[181] See video of Neda Agha-Soltan’s death at IHRDC’s Election 2009 Violence page, available at https://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/videos2.htm

[182] Id.

[183] See BBC interview with Arash Hejazi at Iran Doctor Tells of Neda’s Death, BBC, June 25, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8119713.stm.

[184] Borzou Daragahi, Family, Friends Mourn ‘Neda,’ Iranian Woman who Died on Video, Los Angeles Times, June 23, 2009, available at http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-iran-neda23-2009jun23,0,366975,full.story.

[185] See Video File: Voice of America Interview with Arash Hejazi, July 27, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYJJKVPtLOk.

[186] Id.

[187] Death Video Woman ‘Targeted by Militia’, BBC, June 22, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8113552.stm.

[188] Caspian Makan: ‘I Cannot Believe it Yet. I Still Think I Will See Neda Again,’ Guardian, Nov. 15, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/15/iran-neda-caspian-makan-interview.

[189] Interpol Hunting for Witness of Neda’s Death, Press TV, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=99571&sectionid=351020101; Basij Calls for Hejazi’s Extradition, Press TV, Nov. 11, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=110991&sectionid=351020101.

[190] Iran Police Chief Says Interpol Remarks Distorted, Press TV, July 6, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=99938&sectionid=351020101.

[191] Iranian Doctor Arash Hejazi who Tried to Rescue Neda Soltan Tells of Wounds that Never Heal, Times Online, Nov. 13, 2009, available at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6913273.ece.

[192] Basij Calls for Hejazi’s Extradition, Press TV, Nov. 11, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=110991&sectionid=351020101.

[193] Iran Condemns Oxford University’s politically Motivated Scholarship, IRNA, Nov. 10, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/En/View/FullStory/?NewsId=783122&IdLanguage=3; Letter of the Embassy of Islamic Republic of Iran to Prof. Paul Madden, Provost of the Queens College at Oxford University, Time Online, available at http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/pdfs/letter1.jpg.

[194] See Letter of the Embassy of Islamic Republic of Iran to Prof. Paul Madden, Provost of the Queens College at Oxford University, Time Online, available at http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/pdfs/letter1.jpg.

[195] IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[196] Protestors Stage Illegal Rally in Tehran, Press TV, June 20, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=98606&sectionid=351020101.

[197] Armed Vandals, supra note 163. Press TV also reported that protestors set fire to a mosque and other buildings.

[198] Juziyat-i BumbGuzari dar Haram-i Imam [Details of Bombing in Imam’s Shrine], Fars News Agency, June 20, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8803301162.

[199] IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[200] Armed Vandals, supra note 163.

[201] IHRDC interview with J.B. (Dec. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[202] Guzarish-i Dargirihayih Ruz-i 18 Tir dar Tehran [Report of the 18th of Tir [July 9th] Clashes in Tehran], BBC Persian, July 9, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090709_ba-ir88-protests-tehran-uni.shtml; Iran Police Disperse Pro-Reformists – Witness, Reuters, July 9, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSL9616401.

[203] Dar Kahrizak Ab ra Milisidim [We Licked Water in Kahrizak], Rooz Online, May 28, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/news/newsitem/article/2009/july/29//-7d123bfc2d.html.

[204] Qatl-i Amd-i Had’iaqal Sih Nafar dar Kahrizak Muhraz Shud [The Intentional Murder of at Least Three people was Evident in Kahrizak], Rouydad, Dec. 19, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/801.php.

[205] They were Mohsen Ruholamini, Amir Javadifar and Mohammad Kamrani. See infra Section 3.1

[206] Farmandihyih NAJA: Hich Bazdashti dar Ikhtiyar-i Ma Nist [NAJA Commander: There Are No Remaining Detainees in Our Custody], Saham News, July 10, 2009, available at http://www.etemademelli.ir/published/0/00/50/5093/ (last visited on Sept. 14, 2009).

[207] Rafsanjani’s Daughter Arrested in Iran, India Times, June 21, 2009, available at http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/middle-east/Rafsanjanis-daughter-arrested-in-Iran/articleshow/4683868.cms; Ahmadinejad Wants Certain Power-Holders in Court, Press TV, Aug. 17, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=103803&.

[208] More Protestors Detained: Tehran Police Chief, Press TV, July 18, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=101036&sectionid=351020101.

[209] Film va Matn-i Kamil-i Namaz-i Jum’iyih Tir Mah bih Imamat-i Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani [Complete Text and Video of the Friday Prayer of the month of Tir by Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani], Website of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, Jan. 18, 2009, available at http://www.hashemirafsanjani.ir/?type=dynamic&lang=1&id=1570.

[210] Pasukh-i Sida va Sima bih Muntaqidan darbariyih Sansur-i Khutbih Hayih Hashemi [Response of IRIB to the Critiques Regarding Censoring Hashemi’s Sermon], Aftab, July 21, 2009, available at http://www.aftab.ir/news/2009/jul/21/c5c1248161189_art_culture_media_tv.php.

[211] In Tehran, Protests Follow Friday Prayer, Press TV, July 17, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=100935&sectionid=351020101.

[212] More Protestors Detained: Tehran Police Chief, Press TV, July 18, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=101036&sectionid=351020101.

[213] Iran Police Detain Many Tehran Protesters: Witness, Reuters, July 21, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE56K3YH20090721; Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Ahmadinejad Seen as Increasingly Vulnerable Since Re-election, New York Time, July 26, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/27/world/middleeast/27iran.html.

[214] In Shi’a Islam, the significant days of mourning are the day of, and the third, seventh and fortieth days after the death of an individual.

[215] In Iran, Police Clash with Mourners of Post-Vote Victims, Press TV, July 30, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=102035.

[216] Mujaviz-i barayih Barpa’iyih Tajamu’ ya Barguzariyih Marasim Sadir Nashudih Ast [No Permit Has Been Issued for a Gathering or Ceremony to Take Place], July 28, 2009, IRINN, available at http://www.irinn.ir/Default.aspx?TabId=15&nid=147233; Violence Breaks Out on Streets of Tehran, Washington Post, July 31, 2009, available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073000291.html.

[217] On Mourning Day, Iranian Police Arrests 50 Protestors, Press TV, July 31, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=102105&sectionid=351020101.

[218] Id.

[219] Fisharhayih Siyasi Mujib-i Laqv-i Marasim-i Shabhayih Ehya dar Marqad-i Imam Khomeini Shud [Political Pressure Led to Cancellation of Ehya Night Ceremonies at Imam Khomeini’s Shrine], Parleman News, Sept. 4, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=3223. Ehya is a restoration or remembrance rite of the receiving of the Koran celebrated in the month of Ramadan.

[220] Hamiyan-i Kudita az Barguzariyih Marasim-i Yadbud-i Ayatollah Taleghani ham Jilugiri Kardand [Supporters of the Coup Prevented the Remembrance of Anniversary of Ayatollah Taleghani to Take Place], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Sept. 7, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/27173. Taleghani was a leader of the opposition against the Shah and a founding member of the Freedom Movement.

[221] Marasim-i Salgard-i Shahid Ashrafi Isfahani Laqv Shud [Commemoration Ceremony of Martyr Ashrafi Isfahani’s Anniversary of Death was Cancelled], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Oct. 14, 2009, available at http://mowjcamp.com/article/id/47681; Namaz-i Eid-i Fitr Ham dar Mosallah Laqv Shud [Eid al-Fitr Prayer in Mosallah Was Cancelled], Salaam News, Sept. 5, 2009, available at http://salaamnews.ir/ShowNews.php?8378. Ayatollah Isfahani was a prominent aid to Ayatollah Khomeini who was assassinated in 1982 by the MEK.

[222] In 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini invited Muslims around the world to rally on the last Friday of the month of Ramadan in solidarity with the Palestinians (Quds is the Arabic name for Jerusalem.) See The universal Day of Quds, Islamic Digest, available at http://www.islamicdigest.net/v7core/editorial-the-universal-day-of-quds-14282007/.

[223] Nasser Karimi, Thousands March in Iran Opposition Protests, ABC News, Sept. 18, 2009, available at http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=8608799.

[224] Ikhlalgaran dar Rahpaymaiyih Ruz-i Quds ba Barkhurd-i Farzandan-i Qayur-i Millat Muvajih Khahand Shud [Disrupters on Quds Day Will Encounter the Brave Sons of this Nation], Fars News Agency, Sept. 17, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8806260664; Iranians rally on ‘al-Quds Day’, Aljazeera, Sept. 18, 2009, available at http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/09/200991875246806121.html.

[225] Nasser Karimi, Thousands March in Iran Opposition Protests, ABC News, Sept. 18, 2009, available at http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=8608799.

[226] Clashes Erupt at Iran’s Mass Rally, BBC, Sept. 18, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8262273.stm.

[227] After Quds Day, Iran Police Say ‘Several’ Arrested, Press TV, Sept. 19, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=106618&sectionid=351020101.

[228] Iran Students Hold Anti-Government Protest: Website, Reuters, Sept. 28, 2009, available at http://in.reuters.com/articlePrint?articleId=INTRE58R4DS20090928; Nazila Fathi, Authorities in Iran Arrest 18 Students, New York Time, Oct. 3, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/03/world/asia/03iran.html.

[229] Ayatollah Jannati dar Khutbihhayih Namaz-i Jum’iyih Tehran [Ayatollah Jannati in the Friday Sermon of Tehran], 25/07/1388 [Oct. 17, 2009], Jomhouri Eslami, available at http://www.jomhourieslami.com/1388/13880725/index.html; Iran Cleric Warns Against Planned Opposition Rally, Seattle Times, Oct. 16, 2009, available at http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld /2010078320_apmliran.html; Ahmadinejad bih Kudam Himayatha Chashm Dukhtih [The Supports Ahmadinejad Is Hoping For], Rooz Online, June 11, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/news/newsitem/article/2009/june/11//-e177fa1f4d.html.

[230] Iran Cleric Warns Against Planned Opposition Rally, Seattle Times, Oct. 16, 2009, available at http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2010078320_apmliran.html.

[231] Barkhurd ba Hargunih Tajamu’-i Qayr-i Qanuni dar Ruz-i 13 Aban [Encountering Any Kind of Illegal Gathering on 13th of Aban [Nov. 4th]], Mehr News Agency, Nov. 1, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com/fa/NewsDetail. aspx?pr=s&query=%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%86&NewsID=975019; Iran Warns of Crackdown on Any Opposition Protest, Agence France-Presse, Nov 1, 2009, available at http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iZtE16AUy-AOidK-YtcGCh5ESalw.

[232] Police Set Location for Tehran Anti-US Rally, Press TV, Nov. 3, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id= 110313&sectionid=351020101.

[233] Release Jailed Iranian Women, Mousavi’s Wife Urges, Reuters, Nov. 3, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/ idUSTRE5A20PN20091103.

[234] Opposed Rallies on US Embassy Takeover Anniversary, Press TV, Nov. 4, 2009, available at  http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id= 110449&sectionid=351020101.

[235] IHRDC interview with J.B. (Dec. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[236] Id.

[237] Id.

[238] IHRDC interview with A.U.S. (Dec. 23, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[239] IHRDC interview with N.A. (Nov. 13, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[240] IHRDC interview with J.B. (Dec. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[241] IHRDC interview with M.I. (ِDec. 25, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[242] Juz’iyati az Mumani’at-i Guard-i Yigan-i Vijih Az Tadavum-i Huzur-i Karroubi dar Miyan-i Mardum [Report of the Special Forces Preventing Karroubi from Remaining Amongst the People], Rah-e Sabz, Nov. 4, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/3560/.

[243] Libas Shakhsiha Mani’i Khuruj-i Mir-Hossein az Farhangistan Shudand [Plainclothes Prevented Mir-Hossein Exiting the Art Center], Parleman News, Nov. 4, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/?n=5123.

[244] Arrests of Journalists Since Disputed June Election Now Top 100, Reporters Without Borders, Nov. 5, 2009, available at http://www.rsf.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=34918.

[245] Sih Khabarnigar-i Risanihayih Khariji Bazdasht Shudand [Three Reporters from Foreign Media Were Arrested], Fars News Agency, Nov. 6, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8808150392; Dadsitan-i Tehran, Sih Taba’iyih Kharijiyih Bazdasht Shudih dar Ruz-i 13 Aban Azad Shudand [Prosecutor of Tehran: the Three Foreigners who were arrested on 13th of Aban [Nov. 4th] Were Released], IRNA, Nov. 6, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=775365.

[246] Tehran Police Clashes with Families of Detainees, Radio Zamaneh, Nov. 5, 2009, available at http://www.zamaaneh.com/enzam/2009/11/tehran-police-clashes-wit.html.

[247] Iran Says Over 100 People Detained at Anti-U.S. Rally, UNHCR, Nov. 07, 2009, available at http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,IRN,,4af82edb8,0.html.

[248] Azar Mah, Yad Avar-i Mubarizat-i Junbish-i Danishju’iyih Iran [Month of Azar: Reminiscing the Resistance of the Iranian Student Movement] Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Nov. 23, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/66615 (last visited Nov. 30, 2009).

[249] Iran: Top Student Leader Arrested, Payvand, Dec. 3, 2009, available at http://www.payvand.com/news/09/dec/1025.html.

[250] Bazdasht-i Bish az Dah Nafar az Madaran-i Azadar [Detaining Over Ten Mourning Mothers], Change for Equality, Dec. 5, 2009, available at http://www.signforchange.info/spip.php?article5110.

[251] Khushunat-i Tamam Ayar dar Muqabil-i Itirazat-i Musalimat Amiz 16 Azar [Full Force Violence as a Response to Peaceful Demonstrations of 16 Azar [Dec. 7th]], Human Rights Activists News Agency, Dec. 7, 2009, available at http://hra-news.org/news/10162.aspx; Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Iranian Students Clash With Police, New York Time, Dec. 8, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/08/world/middleeast/08iran.html.

[252] Dargiri dar Daneshgah-i Bu Ali-yih Hamedan [Clash at Hamedan Bu Ali University], Fara Ru, Dec. 7, 2009, available at http://fararu.com/vdcepz8x.jh8poi9bbj.html; See also Video File: A student at Hamedan University Is Thrown Down from the Second Floor by Basiji Militia, Dec. 7, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kl1wct1eh_M.

[253] Majid Tavakoli, Uzv-i Anjuman-i Islamiyih Polytechnic Bazdasht Shud [Majid Tavakoli, Member of the Islamic Association of Tehran’s Polytechnic Was Arrested], AUT News, Dec. 7, 2009, available at http://www.autnews.es/node/4809 (last visited on Dec. 7, 2009).

[254] Kaveh Ghasemi Kermanshahi, My One Son is Buried and the Other is in Prison, Rooz Online, Dec. 10, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/december/10//my-one-son-is-buried-and-the-other-is-in-prison.html.

[255] Rajabzadeh: Dar Jaryan-i Ashubhayih 16 Azar 204 Nafar Bazdasht Shudand [In the 16th of Azar [Dec. 7th] Unrest, 204 People Were Detained], IRNA, Dec. 8, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=831304.

[256] Intiqad az Pakhsh-i Film-i Tilivisiuniyih Ihanat bih Aks-i Ayatollah Khomeini [Criticizing the TV Broadcasting of the Video of Disrespecting Imam Khomeini’s Photo], BBC Persian, Dec. 11, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/12/091211_he_ir88_khomeini_pix.shtml.

[257] Tasmim-i Mushtarak-i Mehdi Karroubi va Mir-Hossein Mousavi: Darkhast-i Mujaviz-i Rahpayma-i [Joint Decision of Mehdi Karroubi and Mir-Hossein Mousavi: Request for a Demonstration Permit], Kalameh, Dec. 14, 2009, available at http://www.kaleme.org/1388/09/23/klm-5615.

[258] Sabzha Hamchinan dar Intizar-i Mujaviz-i Rahpayma’i [Greens Still Await a Demonstration Permit], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 17, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/5581/.

[259] Ayatollah Ali Sistani, in his condolences to Montazeri’s son and followers, referred to him as an “esteemed religious jurist.” Bayaniyih Mu’azam’u’lah bih Munasibat-i Irtihal-i Hazrat-i Ayatollah Montazeri (Qudis-a Sirra) [Message of the Esteemed Ayatollah on the Occasion of the Passing of Ayatollah Montazeri (May his Grave be Sanctified)] the Official Website of Grand Ayatollah Sistani, Dec. 20, 2009, available at http://www.sistani.org/local.php?modules=extra&eid =2&sid=143; On the day of his death, Grand Ayatollahs Golpayegani, Ardebili and Saanei as well as several mid-ranking ayatollahs paid their respects at Montazeri’s house. Tasliyat-i Maraji va Ulama bih Bayt-i Marhum Ayatollah Montazeri [Condolences of the Maraji and the Scholars to the House of the Late Ayatollah Montazeri], Mehr News Agency, Dec. 20, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com/fa/NewsDetail.aspx?NewsID=1003848; Even the Supreme Leader noted in his sometimes dismissive condolence letter that Montazeri was a “well-versed jurist and a prominent master.” Leader Offers Condolences over Ayatollah Montazeri’s Death, Press TV, Dec. 20, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id= 114219&sectionid=351020101.

[260] See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Deadly Fatwa: Iran’s 1988 Prison Massacre, 60-61 (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[261] Clashes Reported at Funeral of Iranian Dissident Cleric, BBC, Dec. 21, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8423794.stm; For videos from several sites and cities see Latest Iran News, Demonstration in Memory of Montazeri, Enduring America, Dec. 20, 2009, available at http://enduringamerica.com/2009/12/20/latest-iran-video-demonstrations-in-memory-of-montazeri-20-december/.

[262] Bazdasht-i Jam’i az Fa’lan-i Siyasi dar Rah-i Azimat bih Qom [Arrest of a Group of Political Activist En Rout to Qom], Rouydad, Dec. 21, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/829.php.

[263] Clashes Reported at Funeral of Iranian Dissident Cleric, BBC, Dec. 21, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8423794.stm.

[264] Ta’ruz bih Bayt-i Ayatollah Montazeri [Aggression Toward the House of Ayatollah Montazeri], Ham Mihan, Dec. 21 2009, available at http://www.hammihannews.com/news/8097.

[265] Ayatollah Taheri, a former close aid to Ayatollah Khomeini, resigned his post in 2002 in protest against the regime’s policies. The Public Letter and Resignation of Ayatollah Taheri of Isfahan City, Daneshjoo, Aug. 10, 2002, available at http://www.daneshjoo.org/article/publish/printer_20.shtml.

[266] Hamlihyih Libas Shakhsiha bih Muqalidan va Alaqimandan-i Ayatollah Montazeri dar Isfahan [Attack of the Plainclothes to the Emulators and Those Interested in Ayatollah Montazeri in Isfahan], Parleman News, Dec. 23, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=6554; Hamlihyih Gustardihyih Niruhayih Amniyati bih Marasim-i Khatm-i Ayatollah Montazeri dar Isfahan [Widespread Attack of the Security Forces to the Mourning Ceremony of Ayatollah Montazeri in Isfahan], Norooz News, Dec. 23, 2009, available at http://norooznews.info/news/15792.php.

[267] Hamlihyih Libas Shakhsiha bih Muqalidan va Alaqimandan-i Ayatollah Montazeri dar Isfahan [Attack of the Plainclothes to the Emulators and Those Interested in Ayatollah Montazeri in Isfahan], Parleman News, Dec. 23, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=6554.

[268] Muhasirihyih Bayt-i Ayatollah Taheri Tavasut-i Niruhayih Amniyati [Security Forces Surround the House of Ayatollah Taheri in Isfahan], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 23, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/6082/; Farzand-i Ayatollah Taheri Bazdasht Shud [Son of Ayatollah Taheri Was Arrested], Human Rights Activists News Agency, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://www.hranews.info/news/PNews.aspx?request=11195. Mohammad Taheri is married to Ayatollah Khomeini’s granddaughter.

[269] Every Day Is Ashura and Every Land Is Kerbala, Ashura.com, available at http://www.ashura.com/.

[270] Protestors: ‘Killing Muslims on Ashura is like Crucifying Christians on Christmas’, ABC World News, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://abcnews.go.com/WN/iranian-government-arrests-hundreds-tensions-mount/story?id=9436148.

[271] Video File: Tasu’a 1388, Attack of the Basij in the Middle of Khatami’s Speech in Jamaran, Dec. 26, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aaz5b5TNOEc.

[272] Dargiri dar Tabriz, Ihtimal-i Kushtih Shudan-i Had’iaqal 4 Nafar [Arrests in Tabriz, Possibility of 4 Deaths], Rouydad, Dec. 27, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/952.php; Dargiriyih Shadid-i Shibhih Nizamiyan ba Azadaran dar Babol [Heavy Clash of the Para-Military with the Mourners in Babol], Rouydad, Dec. 27, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/948.php; Hamliyih Vahshiyanihyih Niruhayih Intizami bih Azadaran-i Hosseini dar Arak [Violent Attack on the Hosseini Mourners by the Law Enforcement], Rouydad, Dec. 27, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/956.php; Video File: Iran, Isfahan, Najafabad, Ashura Protest, 27 Dec. 2009, available at Video File: Isfahan, Najafabad Ashura Protest, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITySVDg54BM.

[273] See Mushakhasat-i Qatil-i Khaharzadihyih Mir-Hossein Mousavi va Shuhadayih Ruz-i Ashura [Specification of the Murder of Nephew of Mir-Hossein Mousavi and the Martyrs of Ashura], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 30, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/6703. See also videos of the Ashura Protests at IHRDC’s Election 2009 Violence page, available at https://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/videos2.htm.

[274] Bazdasht-i Bish az 400 Nafar dar Isfahan [Arrest of Over 400 People in Isfahan], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/6558/.

[275] Bish az Hizar Nafar dar Tehran Bazdasht Shudand [Over A Thousand People Were Detained in Tehran], Human Rights Activists News Agency, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/PNews.aspx?request=11183.

[276] I’lam-i Hukumat-i Nizami dar Najafabad [Martial Law Declared in Najafabad], Gooya News, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/12/098216.php; Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Police Are Said to Have Killed 10 in Iran Protests, New York Time, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/28/world/ middleeast/28iran.html.

[277] Borzou Daragahi and Ramin Mostaghim, Mousavi’s Nephew Had Received Threats, Friends Say, Los Angeles Times, Jan. 1, 2010, available at http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-fg-iran-nephew1-2010jan01,0,2943497.story?page=1.

[278] Id.

[279] Video File: Police Car Running over People, Dec. 29, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v= t6vXWXdIs0U&skipcontrinter=1.

[280] Bulitin-i Vijihyih IRNA: Si va Haft Kushtih dar Ruz-i Ashura dar Sarasar-i Kishvar [IRNA’s Special Bulletin: Thirty Seven Killed on Ashura Around the Country], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 29, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/6669/.

[281] Dargiri dar Tabriz, Ihtimal-i Kushtih Shudan-i Had’iaqal 4 Nafar [Arrests in Tabriz, Possibility of 4 Deaths], Rouydad, Dec. 27, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/952.php.

[282] 7 Killed on Ashura Day: Tehran Prosecutor, Press TV, Dec. 29, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id= 114882&sectionid=351020101.

[283] Press TV: Hasht Kushtih dar Dargirihayih Ruz-i Ashura [Press TV: Eight Killed in the Ashura Clashes], Mardomak, Dec. 28, 2009, available at http://www.mardomak.me/news/press_tv_says_eight_killed_in_ashoora_clashes/. The government announced that 15 died and that five were killed by terrorists, and ten belonged to anti-revolutionary and terror groups. Hardliners Seize Mousavi Corpse as Iran Regime Hits Back, Times Online, Dec. 29, 2009, available at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6969523.ece.

[284] 7 killed on Ashura Day: Tehran Prosecutor, Press TV, Dec. 29 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id =114882&sectionid=351020101.

[285] Huviyat-i Yiki Digar az Shahidan-i Ashurayih Tehran Mushakhas Shud [Identity of Another Martyr of Tehran’s Ashura Was Discovered], Rah-e Sabz, Dec. 31, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/6810; Tashi’i Paykar-i Khaharzadihyih Mousavi Barguzar Shud [Funeral Procession for Mousavi’s Nephew Took Place], Kalameh, Dec. 30, 2009, available at http://www.kaleme.org/1388/10/09/klm-6999.

[286] Fishar-i Dastgah-i Amniyati bar Mujriyih Sida va Sima [Pressure of the Security Apparatus on the MC of IRIB], Rah-e Sabz, Jan. 2, 2010, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/mahin.

[287] Farmandihyih Niruyih Intizami: Khudru-i kih Ruz-i Ashura Mardum ra Zir Kard Duzdidih Shudih Bud! [Commander of the Law Enforcement: The Vehicle that Ran Over People on Ashura was Stolen!], Gooya News, Dec. 30, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/12/098375.php.

[288] Bazdasht-i Shahidan-i Ayniyih Jinayat-i Khudruyih Niruyih Intizami dar Ashurayih Tehran [Arrest of the Eye Witnesses to the Criminal Acts Done by NAJA’s Trucks on Ashura in Tehran], Rah-e Sabz, Jan. 8, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/khodro.

[289] Vazir-i Ittila’t Bazdasht-i Atba’-i Khariji dar Ruz-i Ashura ra Ta’id Kard [Minister of Intelligence Confirmed the Arrest of Foreigners on Ashura], Rah-e Sabz, Jan. 4, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/iran9.

[290] Kardar-i Sifarat-i Su’id Bad az Ihraz-i Huviyat Azad Shud [Charge d’Affaires of the Swedish Embassy Was Released after Identity Was Verified], Fars News Agency, Jan, 10, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn= 8810201288.

[291] Ejei az Idam-i 3 Nafar az Dastgir Shudigan-i Ashura Khabar Dad [Ejei Spoke of the Execution of Three of Ashura Arrestees], Rah-e Sabz, Jan. 1, 2010, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/ezheie.

[292] Vazir-i Kishvar: Ba’d az Ruz-i Ashura Iqtishashgaran Hukm-i Muharib ra Darand [Minister of Interior: After the Day of Ashura, the Rioters Are Deemed Muharib], IRNA, Jan. 5, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=878674.

[293] Iranian Const., supra note 2, preamble.

[294] Id.

[295] Id. art. 27.

[296] Id. art. 40.

[297] Id. art. 9.

[298] Article 10 of the Code of Activity of parties, Political and Trade Societies, and Islamic Societies or Those Belonging to other Recognized Religious Minorities, sets out the membership and responsibility for a commission that monitors the activities of groups. This Article 10 Commission has a code that sets out the process by which it regulates the groups for which it is responsible. The committee was formed in the Ministry of Intelligence with representatives from the General Prosecutor of Iran, the Supreme Judicial Council, the Ministry of the Interior, and two members of the Majlis.

[299] A’innamiyih Ijra’iyih Commission-i Asl-i Dah-i Qanun-i Fa’aliyat-i Ahzab [Procedural Code of the Commission of the Article 10 of the Law of Party Activities], (1360) [1981], art. 30. (Iran), available at http://iscanews.ir/fa/PrintableNewsItem.aspx?NewsItemID=312601 (last visited December 30, 2009) [hereinafter Article 10 Commission Procedural Code].

[300] Id. arts. 28-36. The Article 10 Commission Procedural Code does not include an appeals procedure.

[301] Id. art. 31.

[302] CRC, Concluding observations of the Committee on the Rights of the Child: Islamic Republic of Iran, ¶ 33, U.N. Doc. CRC/C/15/Add.123 (June 28, 2000), available at, https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/aadel.htm.

[303] Iran signed the ICCPR on April 4, 1968 and ratified the agreement on June 24, 1975 without reservations.

[304] International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, art. 21, March 23, 1976, 999 U.N.T.S. 171 [hereinafter ICCPR]. See also Universal Declaration on Human Rights, GA Res 217(III), UNGAOR, 3d Sess., UN Doc A/810 (1948), Article 20:(1) [hearinafter UDHR] (“Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association”); Organization of American States, Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, Bogotá, Colombia, 1948, Article XXI (“Every person has the right to assemble peaceably with others in a formal public meeting or an informal gathering, in connection with matters of common interest of any nature”); European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, Article 11(1) (“Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others, including the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests”); Organization of American States, American Convention on Human Rights, Article 15 (“Right of Assembly: The right of peaceful assembly, without arms, is recognized. No restrictions may be placed on the exercise of this right other than those imposed in conformity with the law and necessary in a democratic society in the interest of national security, public safety or public order, or to protect public health or morals or the rights or freedom of others”).

[305] Kivenmaa v. Finland, Communication No. 412/1990, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/50/D/412/1990, ¶ 9.2 (March 21, 1994) available at, http://www.bayefsky.com/pdf/119_finlandvws412.pdf (Holding that a requirement to notify the police of an intended demonstration in a public place six hours before its commencement may be compatible with the permitted limitations laid down in article 21 of the Covenant).

[306] Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: Kenya,   U.N. Doc. CCPR/CO/83/KEN, ¶ 23 (April 29, 2005) available at, http://www.universalhumanrightsindex.org/documents/825/725/document/en/pdf/text.pdf.

[307] See, Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: The Kyrgyz Republic,   U.N. Doc. CCPR/CO/69/KGZ, ¶ 22 (July 24, 2000) available at, http://www.universalhumanrightsindex.org/documents/825/431/document/en/pdf/text.pdf. See also, Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: Kenya,   U.N. Doc. CCPR/CO/83/KEN, ¶ 23 (April 29, 2005) available at, http://www.universalhumanrightsindex.org/documents/825/725/document/en/pdf/text.pdf.

[308] Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: Togo,   U.N. Doc. CCPR/CO/76/TGO, ¶ 18 (November 28, 2002) available at, http://www.universalhumanrightsindex.org/documents/825/583/document/en/pdf/text.pdf.

[309] Qanun-i Bikargiriyih Silah Tavasut-i Ma’murin-i Niruyih Musalah dar Mavarid-i Zaruri [Law for using arms by the armed forces in necessary situations] (1373) [1995], art. 4. (Iran).

[310] Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials art. 13., Eighth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, Havana, Cuba, Aug.27 – Sep. 7, 1990, Report prepared by the Secretariat, (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.91.IV.2), chap. I, sect. B.2, Annex, available at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/firearms.htm.

[311] Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials, G.A. Res. 34/169, Annex, U.N. Doc. A/Res/34/169/Annex, art. 3 (December 17, 1979) available at, http://www.un.org/documents/instruments/docs_en.asp?year=1970.

[312] Id.

[313] IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). There are literally hundreds of videos of the demonstrations that can be accessed online that show these peaceful processions. Here is one example: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVBZQCsqdjo.

[314] IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).  IHRDC interview with M. (Aug. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Furthermore, a number of individuals were stabbed to death during the post-election unrest.

[315] IHRDC interview with J.M. (December 4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). IHRDC interview with H.S. (December 4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[316] IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar (November 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[317] Id.

[318] Interview with J.B. (Dec. 18, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Interview with N.A. (Nov. 13, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Iran Disputes Press Coverage of Day of Protests, Time, November 5, 2009, available at http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1934907,00.html. “Some demonstrators—by now seasoned veterans in confronting the police—counseled that applying cigarette smoke to the eyes eases burning sensations, as opposed to dousing the eyes with water. This led to odd moments where teenage boys were seen blowing smoke into the eyes of elderly women and vice versa.” Id.

[319] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[320] Basij Interview, supra note 38.

[321] Iranian Const., supra note 2, art. 22. UDHR, supra note 304, art. 3. ICCPR, supra note 304, art. 6.

[322] Qanun-i Mujazat-i Islami [Islamic Penal Code] 1379 [2000], art. 205 (Iran) [hereinafter Iran Penal Code], available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/iraniancodes.htm.

[323] ICCPR, supra note 304, art. 6.

[324] U.N. Human Rights Comm., General Comment No. 6, Article 6: The Right to Life, U.N. Doc. HRI/GEN/Rev.1 at 6, ¶ 1, (July 29, 1994), available at, http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=HRI/GEN/1/Rev.1.

[325] Intikhabat va Havadis-i Bad az An bih Ravayat-i Farmandihyih Sipah-i Mohammad Rasul’ullah-i Tehran [Election and Its Aftermath as Told by the Commander of Mohammad Rasul’ullah Sepah Brigade of Tehran], Parleman News, Sept. 9, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=3400. Amar-i Tazih va Mutafavit-i Yik Maqam-i Nizammiyih Iran az Qurbaniyan-i Khushunatha [New and Different Statistics of the Victims of Violence by an Iranian Law Enforcement Official], BBC Persian, Sept. 11, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/09/090910_si_violence_victims.shtml.

[326] See, Norooz List, supra note 85. Martyred and Murdered, Tehran Bureau, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/ wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/08/martyred-and-murdered.html.

[327] In Iran, list of 72 alleged post-vote victims rejected, Press TV, September 06, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=105430&sectionid=351020101. Many consider Beheshti’s list to be the same as one published by Norooz News published on Friday, September 4, 2009. See, Norooz List, supra note 85.

[328] IHRDC interview with Roozbeh Mirebrahimi (Oct. 25, 2009).

[329]  The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court requires that to constitute a crime against humanity, the killings be (1) a widespread or systematic attack, (2) directed against a civilian population, (3) with knowledge on the part of the perpetrator of the nature of the attack. Rome Statute, supra note 61, art. 7;  See also, Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Deadly Fatwa: Iran’s 1988 Prison Massacre, 60-61 (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[330] Iran Admits 4,000 June Detentions, BBC, Aug. 11, 2009, available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8195586.stm.

[331] Bayaniyih-i Mushtarak bar Alayhih Mowj-i Jadid-i Sarkub va Ikhtinaq [Joint Statement against the New Wave of Crushing and Suffocation], Asr-e Nou, July, 14, 2009, available at http://asre-nou.net/php/view.php?objnr=4617.

[332] Hamid Maddah Shourche az Aza’i Sitad-i Mousavi dar Mashhad Kushtih Shud [Hamid Maddah Shourche, a Member of Mousavi’s Campaign in Mashhad Was Killed], Gooya News, July 6, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/07/090434.php; Ali Sheikholeslami, Iran Warns Western Meddling Will Have Negative Impact, Bloomberg, July 6, 2009, available at, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid= aPGkuF4XOzJ8.

[333] Ifshayih Huviyat-i Yiki Digar az Janbakhtigan-i Junbish-i Sabz: Amir Hossein Toufanpour [Exposing the Identity of Another Member of the Green Movement Who Lost his Life: Amir Hossein Toufanpour], Human Rights Activists News Agency, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/PNews.aspx?request=2679; Martyred and Murdered, Tehran Bureau, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/08/martyred-and-murdered.html.

[334] Ifshayih Huviyat-i Yiki Digar az Janbakhtigan-i Junbish-i Sabz: Amir Hossein Toufanpour [Exposing the Identity of Another Member of the Green Movement Who Lost his Life: Amir Hossein Toufanpour], Human Rights Activists News Agency, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/PNews.aspx?request=2679.

[335] See Interview of HRAI with Seyyed Ali Akbar Kheradnejad in Eyewitness Account of the Conditions in Evin and How Amir Javadifar Died, Human Rights Activists in Iran, Sept. 9, 2009, available at http://hra-iran.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid =66:304&id=1716:54657&Itemid=293 [hereinafter Kheradnejad Interview].

[336] Id.

[337] See infra Section 3.1.

[338] Kheradnejad Interview, supra note 335.

[339] Id.

[340] Hajji is a term used for individuals who have been on the Hajj (pilgrimage) to Mecca and colloquially, a respected person or supervisor.

[341] Basij Interview, supra note 38.

[342] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[343] Id.

[344] Id.

[345] Id.

[346] Id.

[347] Id.

[348] IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009)(on file with IHRDC).

[349] Id. Lavashak is a fruit snack often made of plum pulp. It is sold in sheets and its texture is similar to rough leather.

[350] Id.

[351] Id.

[352] Id.

[353]  Matn-i Kamil-i Guzarish-i Kumitihyih Vijihyih Majlis, Naqsh-i Qazi Mortazavi dar Havadis-i Kahrizak Rasman Ta’id Shud [Complete Text of the Special Report of the Majlis, Role of Judge Mortazavi in the Kahrizak Evens Was Officially Declared], Emruz, Jan. 10, 2009, available at http://www.emruznews.com/ShowItem.aspx?ID=27307&p=1 [hereinafter Special Majlis Report].

[354] Police Chief Announced: “Kahrizak” Detention Facility Will Be Renovated,” Rooz Online, Aug. 6, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/august/06//kahrizak-detention-facility-will-be-renovated.html.

[355] More on Kahrizak, Pedestrian, Aug. 6, 2009, available at http://www.sidewalklyrics.com/?p=1127.

[356] Reza Yavari, The Bowels of Kahrizak, Inside Iran’s Most Infamous Prison, CounterPunch, Aug. 11, 2009, available at http://www.counterpunch.org/yavari08112009.html; see also Names of 140 Detainees at Kahrizak, Narratives of Prisoners from Iran’s Guantanamo, Rooz Online, Aug. 2, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/ 2009/august/02//narratives-of-prisoners-from-irans-guantanamo.html.

[357] Yiki az Nijatyaftigan dar Musahibih ba Rooz, dar Kahrizak Ab ra Milisidim [One of the Survivors in an Interview with Rooz, In Kahrizak we Licked Water], Rooz Online, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/ news/newsitem/article/2009/july/29//-7d123bfc2d.html.

[358] Martin Fletcher and special correspondent, Ahmadinejad’s Basij Run a Regime of Rape, Murder to Suppress Critics, The Australian, Sept. 19, 2009, available at, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/ahmadinejads-Basiji-run-a-regime-of-rape-murder-to-suppress-critics/story-e6frg6so-1225776888607.

[359] See Special Majlis Report, supra note 353.

[360] Robert F. Worth and Nazila Fathi, Ahmadinejad Seen as Increasingly Vulnerable Since Re-Election, New York Time, July 26, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/27/world/middleeast/27iran.html.

[361] See Special Majlis Report, supra note 353.

[362] Muhammad Kamrani, Yiki Digar az Kushtih Shudigan-i Dargirihayih Tehran [Mohammad Kamrani, Another Killed During Tehran’s Clashes], BBC Persian, July 20, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090720_bd_ir88_ kamrani_18tir.shtml.

[363] See Special Majlis Report, supra note 353.

[364] Mohsen Ruholamini bih Illat-i Bimari va Minanjit Namurdih Ast [Mohsen Ruholamini Did Not Die of Illness and Meningitis], BBC Persian, July 31, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/business/2009/08/090831_ir88_roholamini.shtmlShahid-i Mazlum, Yaddashti az Sardar Doctor Hossein Ala’i [The Meek Martyr, A Note Written by Dr. Hossein Ala’i], Rooznevestha (by Serajeddin Mirdamadi), July 24, 2009, available at http://www.roozneveshtha.com/2009/07/post_252.shtml; Niruhayih Sih Ganiyih Sepah bih Ravayat-i Farmandihyih Zaman-i Jang-i Niruyih Darya’iyih Sepah [Sepah Three-Branched Forces as Told by the Commander of the Sepah Naval Forces During the War], Tabnak, Sept. 16, 2008, available at http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/pages/?cid=18468.

[365] Shahid-i Mazlum, Yaddashti az Sardar Doctor Hossein Ala’i [The Meek Martyr, A Note Written by Dr. Hossein Ala’i], Rooznevestha (by Serajeddin Mirdamadi), July 24, 2009, available at http://www.roozneveshtha.com/2009/07/post_252.shtml.

[366] Id.

[367] IHRDC interview with M.I. (December 25, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[368] Bazdashtgah Kahrizak Ta’til Shudih Ast [Kahrizak Detention Center Is Closed], BBC Persian, July 28, 2009, available at  http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090728_he_ir88_karizak.shtml; Zindaniyan-i Kahrizak bih Zindanhayih Karaj, Evin va Qizil Hisar Muntaqil Shudand [Kahrizak Prisoner were Transferred to Karaj, Evin and Qezel Hesar Prisons], ISNA, Aug. 20, 2009, available at http://isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1388879; Talash-i Mortazavi barayih Dur Shudan az Jaygah-i Mutaham-i Asli [Mortazavi’s Efforts to Distance Himself from Being the Prime Suspect], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Oct. 5, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.ws/article/id/43341; Selected Headlines, Tehran Bureau, Oct. 6, 2009, available at  http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/10/selected-headlines-38.html.

[369] Ahmadi Moqaddam: dar Ittifaqat-i Bazdashtgah-i Kahrizak Man ham Muqassiram [Ahmadi Moqaddam: I am also at Fault in the Kahrizak Detention Center’s Events], Aftab, Aug. 9, 2009, available at http://www.aftabnews.ir/vdcdoj0n.yt0fx6a22y.html; More on Kahrizak, Pedestrian, Aug. 6, 2009, available at http://www.sidewalklyrics.com/?p=1127.

[370] Kahrizak Prison Chief Dismissed, Arrested, Press TV, Aug. 10, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx? id=103006&sectionid=351020101 [hereinafter Prison Chief Dismissed]; More on Kahrizak, Pedestrian, Aug. 6, 2009, available at http://www.sidewalklyrics.com/ ?p=1127.

[371] Ayatollah Montazeri: Ba Ta’tiliyih Yik Bazdashtgah Mardum ra Iqfal Nakunid [Ayatollah Montazeri: Don’t Delude People with the Closure of One Detention Center], Rah-e Sabz, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/103/.

[372] Ali Mottahari Ba Isharih bih Nakafi Budan-i Ta’tiliyih Kahrizak: Muqasirin dar Margha ra Mujazat Kunid [Ali Mottahari Pointed Out that Closure of Kahrizak Is not Enough: Punish those Responsible for the Deaths], Sarmayeh Newspaper, July 30, 2009, available at http://www.sarmayeh.net/ShowNews.php?52526; Reports of Prison Abuse and Deaths Anger Iranians, New York Time, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html?ref=t.

[373] Prison Chief Dismissed, supra note 370; Shirin Karimi, Police Deputy: Kahrizak Prison was a Minor Mistake, Rooz Online, Oct. 7, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/october /07//kahrizak-prison-was-a-minor-mistake.html.

[374] Juz’iyat-i Hukm-i Ta’liq-i Sih Maqam-i Qaza’i [Details of Suspension Sentence of Three Judicial Officials], Parleman News, Nov. 8, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/?n=5224.

[375] Prison Chief Dismissed, supra note 370.

[376] Kahrizak Yik Ishtibah-i Kuchak Bud [Kahrizak Was A Small Error], Rooz Online, Oct. 5, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/news/newsitem/article/2009/october/05//-c1721ec71b.html.

[377] Talash-i Mortazavi barayih Dur Shudan az Jaygah-i Mutaham-i Asli [Mortazavi’s Efforts to Distance Himself from Being the Prime Suspect], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Oct. 5, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.ws/article/id/43341; Selected Headlines, Tehran Bureau, Oct. 6, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/10/selected-headlines-38.html.

[378] Selected Headlines, Tehran Bureau, Oct. 6, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/ 2009/10/selected-headlines-38.html.

[379] See Saeed Mortazavi Mu’avin-i Dadsitan-i Kull-i Kishvar Shud [Saeed Mortazavi was appointed Deputy Prosecutor General of Iran], BBC Persian, Aug. 30, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/08/090830_mortazavi _appointment.shtml.

[380] Illat-i Marg-i Ruholamini Bimari va Minanjit Nabud, Juz’iyat-i Nazariyihyih Pizishki Qanuni [Ruholamini’s Cause of Death Was not Sickness or Meningitis, Details of the Medical Examiner’s File], Mehr News Agency, Aug. 31, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com/fa/newsdetail.aspx?NewsID=939256; Selected Headlines, Tehran Bureau, Oct. 6, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/10/selected-headlines-38.html.

[381] Ilat-i Marg: Shahadat dar Dadgah Alayhih Mujriman-i Asliyih Kahrizak [Cause of Death: Testifying in Court Against The real Culprits of Kahrizak], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Nov. 17, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/65382 (last visited on Nov. 17, 2009).

[382] Ilat-i Marg: Shahadat dar Dadgah Alayhih Mujriman-i Asliyih Kahrizak [Cause of Death: Testifying in Court Against The real Culprits of Kahrizak], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Nov. 17, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/65382 (last visited on Nov. 17, 2009); Suspicions Over ‘Heart Attack’ Death of Iranian Doctor Who Knew Too Much, The Times Online, Nov. 18, 2009, available at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6920788.ece.

[383] Id.

[384] Iran Detention Centre Doctor Commits Suicide: IRNA, Reuters, Nov. 18, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/ article/idUSTRE5AH28X20091118.

[385] Kahrizak Doctor Died of Poisoning: Prosecutor, Press TV, Dec. 1, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail. aspx?id=112582&sectionid=351020101.

[386] Kahrizak Doctor Poisoned, New Revelations of Horrific Detention Facility, Rooz Online, Dec. 3, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/english/news/newsitem/article/2009/december/03//new-revelations-of-horrific-detention-facility.html.

[387] Qatl-i Amd-i Hadd-i Aqal Sih Nafar dar Zindan-i Kahrizak Muhraz Shud [Intentional Murder of at Least Three People in Kahrizak Was Confirmed], Rouydad, Dec. 19, 2009, available at http://www.rouydadnews.com/pages/801.php.

[388] See Special Majlis Report, supra note 353.

[389] Id.

[390] Id.

[391] Iran has several codes that protect the rights of arrested citizens. On May 5, 2004, a directive issued by the former head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Shahroudi, was formally approved by the Majlis and confirmed by the Guardian Council, This Citizen Rights Law enumerated a host of safeguards already codified in Iran’s Constitution, the Criminal Code of Procedure (CCP), the State Prisons Organization (SPO) Law. See Iranian Const., supra note 2; Qanun-i A’yin-i Dadrisiyih Dadgahhayih Umumi va Inqilab dar Umur-i Kayfari [Criminal Procedure Code for Public and Revolutionary Courts] (1379) [2001], art. 104 (Iran), available at http://hoghoogh.online.fr/article.php3?id_article=67 [hereinafter Criminal Code of Procedure]. A’yin Namihyyih Ijra’iyih Sazman-i Zindanha va Iqdamat-i Ta’mini va Tarbiyatiyih Kishvar [Executive Procedure for the State Prisons and Security and Corrective Measures Organization] 1384 [adopted 1985, amended 2005], art. 1 (Iran), available at http://www.prisons.ir/fa/PrisonsOrganNewFormualPart1.php [hereinafter SPO Law]. Qanun-i Ihtiram bih Azadihayih Mashru’ va Hifz-i Huquq-i Shahrvandi [Law Respecting Legitimate Freedoms and Protecting Citizen Rights] (1383) [2004], available at http://dadkhahi.blogsky.com/?PostId=218 [hereinafter Citizen Rights Law].

[392] Article 32 of the Constitution emphasizes that “[n]o one may be arrested except by the order and in accordance with the procedure laid down by law.” Iranian Const., supra note 2.

[393] Article 32 of the Constitution provides that “[i]n case of arrest, charges with the reasons for accusation must, without delay, be communicated and explained to the accused in writing, and a provisional dossier must be forwarded to the competent judicial authorities within a maximum of twenty-four hours so that the preliminaries to the trial can be completed as swiftly as possible.” The article also specifies that violators of the above provisions are “liable to punishment in accordance with the law.” Id. In addition, Articles 24, 129, and 192 of Iran’s Criminal Code of Procedure oblige the authorities to inform the accused of the charges and the reasons for such charges. Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391.

[394] Article 37 of the Constitution provides that defendants must be presumed innocent until their guilt has been established by a competent court. Iranian Const., supra note 2.

[395] Citizen Rights Law, supra note 391, art. 5; SPO Law, supra note 391, arts. 180-97, 198-212 and 213-229.

[396] Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391, arts. 38, 42.

[397] The requirement to state the nature and cause of the allegation goes beyond mere statement of the charge. See id. arts. 37-39 (requiring the Judiciary to act based on evidence, conform to the rule of law, and be impartial during the investigation phase); see also id. art. 32 (allowing temporary arrests and detentions of suspects only when circumstantial evidence indicates that a crime has been committed and certain conditions are satisfied).

[398] Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391, art. 33.

[399] Id. art. 37.

[400] Article 575 of the Iran Penal Code provides that “judicial officials or other officers who, contrary to the law, take a person into custody, initiate criminal prosecutions or convict and sentence a person, are liable to a punishment of permanent dismissal from their judicial post and five years ban of serving in governmental positions.” Iran Penal Code, supra note 322.

[401] ICCPR, supra note 304, art. 9(2). Article 9(2) provides that “[a]nyone who is arrested shall be informed, at the time of arrest, of the reasons for his arrest and shall be promptly informed of any charges against him.” The requirement to state the nature and cause of the allegation goes beyond mere statement of the charge; instead, it requires that the prosecutor provide not only the exact legal description of the offense but also the facts that gave rise to the charge.

[402] Id. art. 9(3). Article 9(3) provides that “anyone arrested or detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release.”

[403] Id. art. 9(4). Victims of unlawful arrests are entitled to compensation. See id. art. 9(5).

[404] Id. art. 14(b).

[405] In addition to the right to counsel at trial, there is a right to counsel in the stages prior to trial, stemming from Article 14(3)(b). The HRC has stated unequivocally that “all persons who are arrested must immediately have access to counsel, be examined by a doctor without delay and be able to submit promptly an application to a judge to rule on the legality of the detention.”  Concluding Observations on Georgia, U.N. Doc. A/52/40 ¶ 254 (1997).  Presence of counsel is required to ensure that rights of accused persons are protected, that detainees are not ill-treated and that any confession obtained using impermissible methods is excluded.

[406] Article 10(1) of the ICCPR requires States to treat detainees “with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person.” ICCPR, supra note 304.

[407] Id. art. 14(2); U.N. Human Rights Comm., General Comment No. 13, Article 14: Administration of Justice, U.N. Doc. HRI/GEN/Rev.1 at 14, ¶ 7, (July 29, 1994), available at, http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=HRI/GEN/1/Rev.1, (setting the standard of proof at “guilty beyond a reasonable doubt”).

[408] The Secretary-General, Report of the Secretary-General on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, ¶ 22, submitted in accordance with General Assembly resolution 63/191, U.N. Doc. A/64/357 (Sep. 23, 2009) available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/aadel.htm [hereinafter SG report]; Maziar Bahari, 118 Days, 12 Hours, 54 Minutes, Newsweek, November 21, 2009, available at http://www.newsweek.com /id/223862 [hereinafter 118 Days].

[409] Press Release, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, UN Human Rights Chief Concerned About Manner of Arrest, and Possible Use of Excessive Force in Iran (June 19, 2009), available at http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/ 0/B4FA7547DF8F001DC12575DA0031AFC6?opendocument.

[410] Chira Zeidabadi Azad Nashud [Why Wasn’t Zeidabadi Released], Advar News, Dec. 9, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.biz/organization/10050.aspx.

[411] Iranian Const., supra note 2, art. 39.

[412] Citizen Rights Law, supra note 391, art. 6.

[413] See SPO Law, supra note 391, arts. 110-19.

[414] Id. art. 175(4).

[415] Iranian Const., supra note 2, art. 38. Iran Penal Code, supra note 322, art. 578.

[416] Id.

[417] Id.

[418] Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, GA res. 39/46, annex, 39 UN GAOR Supp. (No. 51) at 197, UN Doc. A/39/51 (1984); 1465 UNTS 85, available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/ English/aadel.htm [hereinafter Convention Against Torture].

[419] See, e.g., UDHR, supra note 304; Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment, UN General Assembly, Principles 6, 33, resolution / adopted by the General Assembly, 9 December 1988. A/RES/43/173, available at http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3b00f219c.html; United Nations, Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, art. 44(3), 30 August 1955; approved by the Economic and Social Council, resolutions 663 C (XXIV) of 31 July 1957 and 2076 (LXII) of 13 May 1977 [hereinafter Standard Minimum Rules].

[420] ICCPR, supra note 304, art. 7.

[421] Id. art. 10.

[422] G.A. Res. 62/168, ¶ 2 (h), U.N. Doc. A/RES/62/168 (March 20, 2008) available at http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC /GEN/N07/473/85/PDF/N0747385.pdf?OpenElement.

[423] “Solitary confinement covers the generalized use of ‘incommunicado’ imprisonment. The Working Group, for the first time since its establishment, has been confronted with a strategy of widespread use of solitary confinement for its own sake and not for traditional disciplinary purposes, as the Group noted during its truncated visit to sector 209 of Evin prison. This is not a matter of a few punishment cells, as exist in all prisons, but what is a ‘prison within a prison,’ fitted out for the systematic, large-scale use of absolute solitary confinement, frequently for very long periods.” U.N. Econ. & Soc. Council [ECOSOC], Sub-Comm. on Human Rights, Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Addendum: Visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran, ¶ 54, U.N. E/CN.4/2004/3/Add.2 (June 27, 2003), available at  https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/aadel.htm.

[424] SG report, supra note 408, ¶ 53.

[425] Kheradnejad Interview, supra note 335.

[426] See Special Majlis Report, supra note 353.

[427] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). See also, Esfandiar Poorgiv, Arrested, Beaten and Raped: an Iran Protestor’s Tale, The Guardian, July 1, 2009; and Letter from Mehdi Karroubi to Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, Head of the Expediency Council (July 31, 2009) available at: http://enduringamerica.com/2009/08/10/iran-the-karroubi-letter-to-rafsanjani-on-abuse-of-detainees.

[428] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[429] IHRDC interview with Maryam Sabri (December 3, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[430] IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[431] See, e.g., SPO Law, supra note 391, art. 71 (requiring basic minimum shelter, including a bed, mattress, pillow, and blankets), art. 93 (requiring three courses of food a day), 95 (providing minimum standards regarding the type of food fed to prisoners and detainees), art. 96 (discussing the provision of necessary kitchen tools for prisoners and detainees), art. 104 (requiring regular cleaning and disinfecting of prisons and detention centers), art. 106 (requiring access to light and fresh air), art. 108 (addressing the availability of adequate hot water, restroom and shower facilities).

[432] IHRDC interview with Ebrahim Ali Mehtari (Dec. 3-4, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[433] Reza Yavari, Inside Iran’s Most Infamous Prison, CounterPunch, August 11, 2009, available at http://www.counterpunch.org/yavari08112009.html.

[434] Even if these individuals did not directly order or assist the commission of these crimes, they may still be charged with a criminal offence under the doctrine of superior responsibility if they failed to effectively supervise and prevent or punish violations by persons under their authority. For example, the ICTY found a prison camp commander guilty for acts committed by his subordinates of murder, torture, causing great suffering or serious injury, and inhumane acts. He was commander of the prison camp for approximately six months, yet he failed to prevent the abuses, even though he “was fully aware of the fact that the guards at the Celebici prison-camp were engaged in violations of international humanitarian law.” Prosecutor v. Delalic, et. al., “Celebici,” Case No. ICTY-96-21-T, Judgment, ¶ 770 (Nov. 16, 1998).

[435] See Rome Statute, supra note 61.

[436] Taeb was appointed the head of the Sepah’s intelligence unit.

[437] See International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances, G.A. Res. 61/177, U.N. Doc. A/RES/61/177 (Dec. 20, 2006), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/aadel.htm [hereinafter ICPAPED]; see also ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Report of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, ¶¶ 40-42, U.N. Doc E/CN.4/2005/65, at 14 (Dec. 23, 2004) available at http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/refworld/rwmain?page= search&docid=42d66e400&skip=0&query=%22E/CN.4/2005/65%20%22. While only thirteen countries (of which Iran is not one) of the required twenty have ratified the Convention, it has only been open for signature since February 2, 2007. United Nations Treaty Collections, ICPAPED, Status available at http://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src= TREATY&mtdsg_no=IV-16&chapter=4&lang=en.

[438] ICPAPED, supra note 437, art. 2.

[439] Id. art. 24(1).

[440] Id. art. 24(2).

[441] Id. art. 24(3). Article 24 addresses concerns pointed out by an expert to the working group on enforced disappearances. The expert pointed out that there was a need to “precisely define the concept and the legal consequences of the right of family members of disappeared persons to the truth.” ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Civil and Political Rights, Including Questions of: Disappearances and Summary Executions, ¶ 80, U.N Doc. E/CN.4/2002/71, at 34 (Jan. 8, 2002) (prepared by Manfred Nowak) available at http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/refworld/rwmain?page=search&docid=3d6ce3c50& amp;skip=0&query=E/CN.4/2002/71.

[442] Protests Flare, supra note 34.

[443] Parvez Sharma, Memo from the Streets of Tehran, The Daily Beast, June 18, 2009, available at http://www.thedailybeast. com/blogs-and-stories/2009-06-18/memo-from-the-streets-of-tehran/.

[444] Sohrab Arabi: 19-Year-Old Student Killed, Iranian.com, July 11, 2009, available at http://www.iranian.com/main/2009/jul/ sohrab-arabi.

[445] Ann Harrison, Mourning Mothers Weep for Victims of Excessive Force in Iran, Amnesty International, July 20, 2009 available at http://livewire.amnesty.org/2009/07/20/mourning-mothers-weep-for-victims-of-excessive-force-in-iran/.

[446] Security Forces Attack Sohrab Arabi Residence and Tear Sohrab’s Pictures, Gooya News, December 24, 2009, available at http://persian2english.wordpress.com/2009/12/24/security-forces-attack-sohrab-arabi-residence-family-and-tore-down-sohrabs-pictures/.

[447] ‘Hasht Nafar’ dar Tehran Kushtih shudihand [“Eight people” have been killed in Tehran], BBC Persian, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090616_he_ir88_killing_rally.shtml.

[448] Daftar-i Tahkim-i Vahdat: Haft Daneshju Kushtih Shudihand [The Office for Strengthening Unity: Seven Student Have Been Killed], BBC Persian, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090616_si_ir88_tahkim_ students.shtml.

[449] Iran’s Supreme Leader Condones Violent Police Crackdown on Protestors, Amnesty International, June 19, 2009, available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/iran-supreme-leader-condones-violent-police-crackdown-on-protesters-20090619.

[450] Alireza Eftekhari Ruznamihnigar-i Sabiq-i Abrar dar 20 Khordad Kushtih Shudih Ast [Alireza Eftekhari, Former Reporter of Abrar Was Killed on 25 Khordad], Reporters Without Borders, July 30, 2009, available at http://www.rsf-persan.org/article16780.html.

[451] In 1998, enforced or forced disappearance of persons was recognized as a crime against humanity in the Rome Statute. Rome Statute, supra note 61, art. 7(1)(i). The Rome Statute’s definition of “enforced disappearance of persons” is similar to that in the newer ICPAPED. It also requires deprivation of a person’s freedom by a state or by persons acting with the authorization, support or acquiescence of a state, and the absence of information on the fate or whereabouts of such persons or refusal to acknowledge deprivation of freedom, thereby placing the person outside the protection of the law. Compare Rome Statute, supra note 61, art. 7(2)(i), with ICPAPED, supra note 437, art. 2. The Rome Statute requires that the perpetrator intends to remove the person from the “protection of the law for a prolonged period of time.”

[452] IHRDC interview with A.E. (Dec. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC); IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar (November 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[453] IHRDC interview with K.H.S. (Dec. 19, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[454] Id.

[455] Id.

[456] Id. IHRDC interview with K.J.B. (Dec. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[457] IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar (November 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC). Bazdasht-i Pegah Ahangarani, Bazigar-i Cinema [Arrest of Movie Actor Pegah Ahangarani] Gooya News, July 27, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/07/091343.php.

[458] IHRDC interview with Maryam Amoozegar (November 10, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[459] In Iran Court, Dissolution of Reform Fronts Is Sought, Press TV, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=104441&sectionid=351020101.

[460] See Etemad Newspaper interview with Alireza Beheshti in Pas az Intikhabat dar Guftugu ba Alireza Beheshti, ‘Qafilgir Shudim’ [After the Election, in an Interview With Alireza Beheshti ‘We Were Surprised’], Etemad, 31/05/1388 (Aug. 23, 2009), available at http://www.etemaad.ir/Released/88-05-31/166.htm.

[461]Id.

[462] In Iran Court, Dissolution of Reform Fronts Is Sought, Press TV, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=104441&sectionid=351020101.

[463] Somayeh Tohidloo va Mahsa Amrabadi Azad Shudand [Somayeh Tohidloo and Mahsa Amrabadi Were Released], Radio Farda, Aug. 24, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/f10_Tohidlou_Amrabadi_Released/1806462.html [hereinafter Tohidloo and Amrabadi Released].

[464] Id.

[465] Shiva Nazar Ahari Bazdasht Shud [Shiva Nazar Ahari Was Detained], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, June 24, 2009, available at http://chrr.us/spip.php?article4306.

[466] Namihyih Madar-i Shiva Nazar Ahari: Tanha Dilkhushiyih Man dar in Muddat in Bud Kih Tanha Nabudam [Letter of Shiva Nazar Ahari’s Mother: My Only Solace During This Time Is That I See I Am Not Alone], Change for Equality, July 21, 2009, available at http://www.sign4change.info/spip.php?article4339.

[467] Shiva Nazar Ahari Azad Shud [Shiva Nazar Ahari Was Released], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, Sept. 23, 2009, available at http://chrr.us/spip.php?article5876.

[468] Masoud Bastani bih Shish Sal Habs-i Ta’ziri Mahkum Shud [Masoud Bastani Sentenced to Six Years Discretionary Imprisonment], Kerman Nama, Oct. 19, 2009, available at http://www.kermannama.org/module-pagesetter-viewpub-tid-1-pid-2257.html; Tohidloo and Amrabadi Released, supra note 463; and Behzad Bashoo va Khalil Mirashrafi Bazdasht Shudand [Behzad Bashoo and Khalil Mirashrafi Were Arrested], Ham Miham, June 17, 2009, available at http://www.hammihannews.com/news/4782.

[469] Bashoo Azad Shud [Bashoo Was Released], No Andish, July 11, 2009, available at http://noandish.com/com.php?id=29375.

[470] Tohidloo and Amrabadi Released, supra note 463.

[471] Kayvan Samimi, Du Mah Bazdasht Bidun-i Marja’-i Pasukhgu [Kayvan Samimi, Two Months of Detention without a Responsible Authority], Radio Farda, Sept. 16, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/f2_postelection_detainees _Keivan_Samimi_lawyer_Evin/1823897.html.

[472] Kayvan Samimi Hamchinan Taht-i Fisharhayih Fiziki va Ravani Qarar Darad [Kayvan Samimi Continues to be Under Physical and Psychological Pressure], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, August 20, 2009, available at http://chrr.us/spip.php?article5150.

[473] Khabarha-i az Evin, Azar va Azyat-i Kayvan Samimi dar Band-i 209 [News From Evin, Harassing Kayvan Samimi in Ward 209], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Sept. 13, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/29086 (last visited Nov. 12, 2009). Khabarha-i az Evin, Kayvan Samimi bad az Zarb va Shatm-i Shadid bih Bihdariyih Evin Muntaqil Shudih Ast [News From Evin, Kayvan Samimi Was Beaten So Severely He Was Taken to Evin Clinic], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Aug. 30, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/23969.

[474] Kayvan Samimi, Du Mah Bazdasht Bidun-i Marja’-i Pasukhgu [Kayvan Samimi, Two Months of Detention without a Responsible Authority], Radio Farda, Sept. 16, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/f2_postelection _detainees_Keivan_Samimi_lawyer_Evin/1823897.html.

[475] Istimrar-i Bazdasht-i Kayvan Samimi Qayr-i Qanuni Ast [Continuing to Keep Kayvan Samimi in Detention is Illegal], Human Rights Activists News Agency, Oct. 28, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/7974.aspx.

[476] Members of student groups under the umbrella of Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat were continuously arrested and released. However, Members of the central Cadre have been imprisoned for months with little information about them available to their families. Many members of the alumni association, Advar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat, including Abdollah Momeni and Ahmad Zeidabadi have also been imprisoned for months, some since the election. See Bazdasht-1 210 Tan Danishjuyih Sabz-i Danishgah-i Azad-i Mashhad [Arrest of 210 Green Students of Mashhad Azad University], Rah-e Sabz, Jan. 1, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/print/6876; Ittila’iyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat, Bazdasht-i 17 Tan az Fa’alan-i Danishju’i [Announcement of Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat, Arrest of 17 Student Activists], Gooya News, Oct. 2, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/10/094456.php; 15 Tan az Danishjuyan-i Bazdasht Shudih Azad Shudand [Fifteen of the Arrested Students Were Released], Iranian UK, Oct. 3, 2009, available at http://www.iranianuk.com/article.php?id=42301; Akharin Vaz’iyat-i Aza’i Shawrayih Markaziyih Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat dar Zindan [Latest News Regarding the Imprisoned Members of the Central Cadre of Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat], Advar News, Jan. 7, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.us/university/10242.aspx; Bayaniyihyih Advar Tahkim Vahdat dar Itiraz bih Bazdasht-i Aza’i Khud [Statement of Advar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat in Protest to Detention of Its Members], Deutsche Welle, Nov. 21, 2009, available at http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4914365,00.html.

[477] Student Activists Under Pressure in Iran, Radio Zamaaneh, Nov. 19, 2009, available at http://www.zamaaneh.com/enzam/ 2009/11/iran-student-activists-un.html.

[478] Zeidabadi Duchar-i Junun Shudih Bud [Zeidabadi Had Gone Insane], Rooz Online, Aug. 19, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/interview/interview-item/article/2009/august/19//-8c4e67e213.html, (and a reprint by Advar News at Ifshagariyih Hamsar-i Ahmad Zeidabadi: Ahmad bih Hadd-i Junun Risidih va Qasd-i Khudkushi dar Zindan ra Dashtih Ast [Wife of Zeidabadi Revealed: Ahmad Has Gone Insane and Intended to Commit Suicide in Prison], Advar News, Aug. 19, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.us/organization/9389.aspx.

[479] Namihyih Sargushadihyih Hamsar-i Zeidabadi Khatab bih Shahroudi [Open letter of Zeidabadi’s wife to Shahroudi], Gooya News, July 12, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/07/090690.php.

[480] Vakunish-i Hamsar-i Zeidabadi bih Izharat-i Dadsitan: Ta Ahmad Ra Mulaghat Nakunam Nemitavanam bih in Harfha Itimad Kunam [Reaction of Zeidabadi’s Wife to the Comments of the Prosecutor: I Can’t Trust What I Hear Until I Visit Ahmad], Mizan Press, Oct. 28, 2009, available at http://74.125.95.132/search?q=cache:cxBX16Kp7EoJ:www.mizanpress.org/index.php %3Foption%3Dcom_content%26view%3Darticle%26id%3D6220:2009-10-27-22-10-30%26catid%3D6:2009-04-01-10-24-33%26Itemid%3D66+%D8%AF%D8%B3%D8%AA%DA%AF%DB%8C%D8%B1+; see also Guzarish-i Akharin Vaz’iyat-i Bazdasht Shudigan-i Havadis-i Bad az Intikhabat [Latest News of the Conditions of the Post Election Arrestee], BBC Persian, Oct. 27, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/10/091027_m_arrested_reports.shtml.

[481] Chira Zeidabadi Azad Nashud? [Why Wasn’t Zeidabadi Released?], Advar News, Dec. 9, 2009, available at http://www.advarnews.biz/organization/10050.aspx.

[482] Mahkumiyat-i Zeidabadi bih Shish Sal Habs va Tab’id dar Gonabad [Zeidabadi Sentenced to Six Years’ Imprisonment and Exile in Gonabad], Radio Farda, Nov. 23, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/F11_Iran_Postelection _Zeydabadi/1885960.html.

[483] Ahmad Zeidabadi bih 5 Sal Zindan dar Tab’id Mahkum Shud [Ahmad Zeidabadi Was Sentenced to 5 Years’ Imprisonment in Exile], Human Right Activists News Agency, Nov. 23, 2009, available at http://www.hra-news.org/news/9452.aspx.

[484] IHRDC interview with A.Y. (Dec. 19, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[485] Dastgiriyih Gustardihyih Fa’alan-i Siyasi dar Tehran [Widespread Arrest of Political Activists in Tehran], BBC Persian, June 14, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090613_op_ir88_mosharekat_mojahedin_arrests.shtml; Sardar Radan: Dastgiriyih Mohammad Reza Khatami Sihhat Nadarad [Commander Radan: Arrest of Mohammad Reza Khatami Is Not True], ISNA, June 14, 2009, available at http://isna.ir/Isna/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1356087.

[486] Islamic Iran Participation Front is a reformist political party that was founded in 1998 after the election of President Khatami and was headed by the President’s brother, Mohammad-Reza Khatami. Bazdasht-i Dabir-i Kul va Ti’dadi az Aza’i Mosharekat [Detemtion of the Secretary General and Some of the Members of Participation Front], Aftab, June 13, 2009, available at http://aftabnews.ir/vdcbfzb9.rhbgfpiuur.html.

[487] Mohsen Mirdamadi: Defa’ az Taskhir-i Lanihyih Jasusi [Mohsen Mirdamadi: Defending the Storming of the Den of Spies], Aftab, Nov. 5, 2009, available at http://www.aftab.ir/news/2009/nov/05/c1c1257414831_politics_iran_ mohsen_mirdamadi.php.

[488] Asamiyih Namayandigan-i Radd-i Salahiyat Shudihyih Majlis-i Shishum [Representatives of the Sixth Majlis Who Were Not Deemed Competent], Mardomak, Feb. 18, 2008, available at http://www.mardomak.biz/news/vetted_six_majlis/.

[489] Mohsen Mirdamadi Bar-i Digar Bazdasht Shud [Mohsen Mirdamadi Was Arrested Again], Radio Farda, June 21, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/F8_MIRDAMADI_ARREST/1759160.html.

[490] Interview of Etemad with Zahra Mojaradi, Mirdamadi’s wife, ‘Ittihamat ra Qabul Nakardand’ [‘He Did Not Accept the Charges’], Etemad Newspaper, 21/7/1388 (October 13, 2009) available at http://www.etemaad.ir/Released/88-07-21/272.htm. She states, “He was initially arrested on the 23rd of Khordad [13th June] but released after 24 hours. Then, he was arrested again on the 30th of Khordad [June 20th] … we only heard that he was held in the Sepah Intelligence ward in Evin … His first contact with us was 40 days after his arrest and our first visit with him was around 60 days after his arrest.”

[491] Interview of Etemad with Zahra Mojaradi, Mirdamadi’s wife, ‘Ittihamat ra Qabul Nakardand’ [‘He Did Not Accept The Charges’], Etemad Newspaper, 21/7/1388 (October 13, 2009) available at http://www.etemaad.ir/Released/88-07-21/272.htm. See also Matn-i Kamil-i Kayfarkhast-i Muda’ialumum Alayhih Mutahamin-i Prujihyih Shikastkhurdihyih Kuditayih Makhmali [Complete Text of the Indictment of the Prosecutor General Against the Accused of the Failed Velvet Coup], Fars News Agency, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8805100944 [See www.iranhrdc.org for a paginated translation] [hereinafter First Indictment].

[492] Pisar-i Mohsen Mirdamadi Bazdasht Shud [Son of Mohsen Mirdamadi Was Arrested], BBC Persian, Sept. 17, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/09/090916_si_mirdamadi_arrest.shtml.

[493] Interview of Etemad with Zahra Mojaradi, Mirdamadi’s wife, ‘Ittihamat ra Qabul Nakardand’ [‘He Did Not Accept the Charges’], Etemad Newspaper, 21/7/1388 (October 13, 2009) available at http://www.etemaad.ir/Released/88-07-21/272.htm. Pustirha-i Barayih 13 Aban [Placards for 13 Aban Demonstration], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Oct. 20, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/49827.

[494] Mohammad Sahimi, Reformist Strategist: Saeed Hajjarian, Frontline, July 8, 2009, available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/07/reformist-strategist-saeed-hajjarian.html.

[495] Iran: Release Disabled Reformist, Human Rights Watch, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.hrw.org/en/news/ 2009/07/01/iran-release-disabled-reformist.

[496] Id.

[497] Zindigiyih Mahsa Amrabadi, Khabanigar-i Bardar, va Saeed Hajjarian dar Khatar-i Jiddi Ast [Life of Mahsa Amrabadi, Pregnant Journalist, and Saeed Hajjarian Is Serious in Danger], Gooya News, July 7, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/07/090458.php.

[498] Iran: Release Disabled Reformist, Human Rights Watch, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/07/01/iran-release-disabled-reformist.

[499] Zindigiyih Mahsa Amrabadi, Khabanigar-i Bardar, va Saeed Hajjarian dar Khatar-i Jiddi Ast [Life of Mahsa Amrabadi, Pregnant Journalist, and Saeed Hajjarian Is Serious in Danger], Gooya News, July 7, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/07/090458.php.

[500] For an interview with Kazem Jalali, see video file: Repertoire of the Commission for National Security, Kazem Jalali Interview, August 31, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yFL4o2Azkk.

[501] Intiqal-i Hajjarian az Zindan bih Khanihyih Sazmani [Relocating Hajjarian to a Judiciary Housing], BBC Persian, July 30, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/ persian/iran/2009/07/090730_ra_hajjarian_housearrest.shtml.

[502] Dorri Najafabadi: Tawsiyihyih Ma Azadiyih Hajjarian Ast [Dorri Najafabadi: Our Recommendation Is Hajjarian’s Release], BBC Persian, Aug. 8, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/08/090808_ka_dori_hajarian.shtml.

[503] See Saeed Hajjarian Pas az 109 Ruz Bazdasht Azad Shud [Saeed Hajjarian Was Released After 109 Days of Detention], Radio Farda, Sept. 30, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/F8_HAJARIAN_FREED_postelection_ Ahmadinejad_Moosavi/1840150.html; see also Guzarish-i Ruzhayih Zindan bih Ra’is Jumhur-i Islahat [Reporting Prison Days to the President of Reform], Etemaad, 15/07/1388 (Oct. 7, 2009) available at http://www.etemaad.ir/Released/88-07-15/150.htm.

[504] Id’ahayih Karroubi dar Mawrid-i Vaz’iyat-i Bazdashtgahha Sidayih Hajjarian ra Ham Daravard [Karroubi’s Claim Regarding the Situation of the Detention Centers Made Even Hajjarian Talk], Fars News Agency, Sept. 3, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8806120733.

[505] Zaynab Hajjarian: Agar Namih Sihhat Darad Chira az Pidaram Bi Khabarim? [Zaynab Hajjarina: If the Letter Is True then Why Have We No News of My Father?] BBC Persian, Sept. 4, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/09/090903_wmj-hajjarian-letter.shtml.

[506] See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Crtl+Alt+Delete: Iran’s Response to the Internet (2009) and Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Forced Confessions: Targeting Iran’s Cyber-Journalists (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[507] Jenny Booth, Martin Fletcher and Ella Flaye, Iran Regime Arrests Ailing Reformer Ebrahim Yazdi in Hospital Bed, Times Online, June 18, 2009, available at, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6527580.ece.

[508] Itirafat-i Jalib-i Atrianfar dar Dadgah [Interesting Confessions of Atrianfar in Court], Tabnak, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/pages/?cid=57808. See also, Guzarish-i Kamil-i Izharat-i Abtahi va Atrianfar dar Kunfirans-i Matbuati va Jalasiyih Dadgah [Complete Report of Abtahi and Atrianfar’s Comments in Court], ISNA, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1379312; Izharat-i Atrianfar va Chahar Nafar az Bazdasht Shudigan-i Havadis-i Bad az Intikhabat dar Dadgah [Confessions of Atrianfar and Four other Detainees of Post-Election Unrest in court], ISNA, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1379336; Ibraz-i Rizayat-i Abtahi, Tajzadeh va Atrianfar az Vaz’iyat-i Khud [Abtahi, Tajzadeh and Atrianfar Expressed their Content Regarding their Conditions], ISNA, Aug. 14, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1385706; Tawzihat-i Tajari Darbarihyih Didar-i ba Abtahi, Tajzadeh va Atrianfar [Tajari’s Explanations Regarding Visiting Abtahi, Tajzadeh and Atrianfar], ISNA, Aug. 13, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1385519; Borujerdi dar Jam’i Khabarnigaran: Musahibiyih Matbuatiyih Atrianfar va Abtahi Vijigiyih Musbat-i Dadgah Bud [Borujerdi to the Reporters: Press Conference of Atrianfar and Abtahi Was the Positive Aspects of the Court], ISNA, Aug. 2, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1379659; Borujerdi Pas az Didar ba Abtahi, Tajzadeh va Atrianfar: Anha az Barkhurd-i Bazjuha Izhar-i Rizayat Mikardand [Borujerdi after Meeting with Atrianfar, Tajzadeh and Abtahi: They Expressed Content Regarding the Interrogators Behavior], ISNA, Aug. 13, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1385524.

[509] Abtahi, Hajjarian va Aminzadeh Bazdasht Shudand [Abtahi, Hajjarian and Aminzadeh Were Arrested], BBC Persian, June 16, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090616_he_ir88_abtahi-arrest.shtml.

[510] Akharin Vaz’iyat-i Abtahi, Tajzadeh va Zeidabadi dar Guftugu ba Hamsran-i Anan [Latest Condition of Abtahi, Tajzadeh and Zeidabadi According to their Wives], ISNA, July 31, 2009, available at http://www.isna.ir/ISNA/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-1378604.

[511] Weblog Nivisi az Darun-i Zindan [Weblogging from Prison], Webneveshteha, Aug. 26, 2009, available at http://www.webneveshteha.com/WEBLOG/?id=2146310142.

[512] Video-i Kunfirans-i Khabari va Difa’ Mohammad Ali Abtahi va Atrianfar dar Dadgah [Video of Press Conference and Defense of Mohammad Ali Abtahi and Atrianfar in Court], Khandaniha, Aug. 2, 2009, available at  http://www.khandaniha.eu/items.php?id=810; Musahibihyih Muzhik-i 20:30 ba Abtahi va Atrianfar [20:30’s Comical Interview with Abtahi and Atrianfar], Gooya News, Aug. 2, 2009, available at http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2009/ 08/091621.php.

[513] Tabesh: Nimitavanim Nigaraniyih Khud ra az In Nahvih Muhakimih I’lam Nakunim [Tabesh: We Have to Express Our Concern Regarding this Type of Trial], Parleman News, Aug. 20, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=2337.

[514] Ivan Watson, Reporter Held for 21 Days in Iranian Jails, CNN, July 9, 2009, available at http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/07/09/iran.detained.journalist/.

[515] Id.

[516] Id.

[517] 118 Days, supra note 408.

[518] Maziar Bahari: Tajamu’at-i Qayr-i Qanuni Sutun-i Inqilabhayih Rangin Ast [Maziar Bahari: Illegal Gatherings Are the Pillars of Colored Revolutions], Islamic Republic Documentation Center, June 30 2009, available at http://www.irdc.ir/fa/content/7350/default.aspx; Dawr-i Taziyih Itirafat Dar Jumhuriyih Islami [New Wave of Confessions in IRI], BBC Persian, June 30, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090630_alia_confessions.shtml.

[519] 118 Days, supra note 517.

[520] Id.

[521] Id.

[522] Id.

[523] Christopher Dickey, A Mother’s Lament, Newsweek, July 4, 2009, available at http://www.newsweek.com/id/205288.

[524] Ali Akbar Dareini, Maziar Bahari Released: Iran Frees Newsweek Reporter On Bail, Huffington Post, Oct. 17, 2009, available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/17/maziar-bahari-released-ir_n_324859.html.

[525] Mottaki Ifsha Kard: Naqsh-i Ingilis dar Iqtishashat-i Akhir [Mottaki Exposes, the Role of Britain in the Recent Unrest], Jam-e Jam Online, June 21, 2009, available at http://www.jamejamonline.ir/newstext.aspx?newsnum=100910031269.

[526] Dastgiriyih Karkunan-i Iraniyih Sifarat-i Britannia dar Tehran [Arrest of the Iranian Employees of the British Embassy], BBC Persian, June 28, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090628_sz_ir88_iran_britain_arrests.shtml; this is a longer version of the more familiar: “The sun never sets on the British Empire.”

[527] Panj Karmand-i Iraniyih Sifarat-i Britannia Azad Shudand [Five Iranian Employees of the British Embassy Were Released], BBC Persian, June 29, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090629_he_ir88_british_embassy.shtml.

[528] Id.

[529] Although several Iranian news sources reported the release of three of the employees, all three were not officially released until July 6 when the British government confirmed the release of everyone but Hossein Rassam. See Iran Yik Karmand-i Digar-i Sifarat-i Britannia ra Azad Kard [Iran Released Another Employee of the British Embassy], BBC Persian, July 6, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090706_aa_british_iran_arrest.shtml.

[530] ‘Azadiyih Sih Karmand-i Digar-i Sifarat-i Britannia [‘Release of Another Three Employees of the British Embassy’], BBC Persian, July 1, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090701_wmj-ir88-after-election.shtml.

[531] Ayatollah Jannati: Karmandan-i Bazdashtiyih Sifarat-i Britannia dar Tehran Muhakimi Mishavand [Ayatollah Jannati: The Detained Employees of the British Embassy Will be Tried in Tehran], BBC Persian, July 3, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090703_rs_ir88_jannati_uk.shtml.

[532] Britannia darbariyih Ittihamhayih Iran Tahqiq Mikunad [Britain Will Investigate the Accusations of Iran], BBC Persian, July 5, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090704_wmj-ir88-after-election-uk-iran.shtml.

[533] Karmand-i Sifarat-i Britannia Azad Mishavad [Employee of British Embassy Will be Released], BBC Persian, July 16, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090716_ba-ir88-rassam-release.shtml; Karmand-i Sifarat-i Britannia dar Tehran Azad Shud [Employee of the British Embassy in Tehran Was Released], BBC Persian, July 19, 2009, available at  http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/07/090719_pm_ir88_rassam_released.shtml.

[534] Itiraz-i Ittihadiyyih Urupa bih Mahkumiyat-i Tahlilgar-i Sifarat-i Britannia dar Tehran [Protest of the EU to the Sentencing of the Tehran British Embassy’s Commentator], BBC Persian, Oct. 23, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/10/091029_op_rassam_eu_reax.shtml

[535] Hushdar-i Ittihadiyyih Urupa bih Iran Darmurid-i Muhakimiyih Karmandan-i Sifarat Khanihha va Shahrvandan-i Urupa-i [Warning of the EU to Iran regarding Sentencing of the Embassy Employees and the European Citizens], BBC Persian, Aug. 9, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/08/090808_wkf-eu-iran-trial.shtml.

[536] Nicolas Sarkozy Khastar-i Azadiyih Clotilde Reiss Shud [Nicolas Sarkozy Requested the Release of Clotilde Reiss], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Aug. 9, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.org/article/id/11588.

[537] Charles Bremmer, France Demands Release of Student Clotilde Reiss by Tehran, Times, July 7, 2009, available at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6656429.ece.

[538] French Teacher Back in Iran Court, al-Jazeera, Nov. 17, 2009, available at  http://english.aljazeera.net/news/ middleeast/2009/11/2009111716267279653.html.

[539] Kian Tajbakhsh Bazdasht Shud [Kian Tajbakhsh Was Detained], Radio Zamaneh, July 10, 2009, available at http://zamaaneh.com/news/2009/07/post_9669.html.

[540] Doctor Kian Tajbakhsh Zir-i Fisharhayih Jismi va Ravani [Dr. Kian Tajbakhsh Under Physical and Psychological Torture], Deutsche Welle, Aug. 8, 2009, available at http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4547758,00.html.

[541] Tajbakhsh was also convicted of espionage. Vakil-i Kian Tajbakhsh: Dar Parvandih Hich Mustanad-i Jasusi Vujud Nadarad [Kian Tajbakhsh’s Attorney: There are No Documents of Espionage in the Case File], International Campaing for Human Rights in Iran, Dec. 11, 2009, available at http://persian.iranhumanrights.org/1388/09/tajbakhsh-charges/.

[542] Khabarha-i az Evin: Haq-i Tajdid-i Nazar Khahi az Kian Tajbakhsh Salb Shud [News from Evin, Kian Tajbakhsh Ripped Off of the right to Appeal], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Oct. 29, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/53572; The group is run by Columbia Professor Gary Sick. Sick clarified his relationship and contact with Tajbakhsh after the sentence was announced: “I have been in meetings with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on four different occasions over the past three years. I have spent at least nine hours with him, much more than I ever spent with Kian. In my last meeting with Mr. Ahmadinejad, I told him that if he were simply a lowly academic, instead of the president of Iran, he would be subject to arrest upon his return to Iran for meeting with the roomful of U.S. academics and think tank representatives that he had assembled at his hotel. He scoffed at the idea. Now one of my colleagues, a lowly Iranian-American professor who was about to take up a position at my university, is being condemned to 15 years in prison because, among other things, he had contact with me.” Gary Sick, Inside Iran’s Intimidation Campaign, The Daily Beast, Oct. 25, 2009, available at http://www.cfr.org/publication/20525/daily_beast.html.

[543] No Evidence of Espionage in Tajbakhsh’s File, Lawyer Says, International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Dec. 14, 2009, available at http://www.iranhumanrights.org/2009/12/tajbakhsh-evidence/.

[544] IHRDC interview with Witness K.H.S. (Dec. 17, 2009) (on file with IHRDC).

[545] The Brothers of a Man Sentenced to Death in Election Trials Say He Was Deceived by Interrogators, Madyar Iran, October 13, 2009, available at http://www.madyariran.net/?p=2620.

[546] See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Forced Confessions: Targeting Iran’s Cyber-Journalists (2009), and Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Deadly Fatwa: Iran’s 1988 Prison Massacre (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[547] See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Crtl+Alt+Delete: Iran’s Response to the Internet (2009), and Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Covert Terror: Iran’s Parallel Intelligence Apparatus (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[548] Id.

[549] See Rome Statute, supra note 61.

[550] Judiciary Chief Calls for Rulings on Detainees by August 3, Mehr News Agency, July 27, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com/en/NewsDetail.aspx?NewsID=919450.

[551] Id.

[552] Robert F. Worth, Reports of Prison Abuse and Deaths Anger Iranians, New York Time, July 29, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html?_r=1&ref=t.

[553] First Indictment, supra note 491.

[554] Prosecutor Mortazavi was removed from his position by the newly appointed Head of the Judiciary Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani. He was later appointed as Deputy Prosecutor General of Iran.

[555] see Inqilab-i Makhmali ra dar Nutfih Khafih Mikunim [We Will Suffocate the Velvet Revolution in its Embryonic Stage], alarabiya, June 10, 2009, available at http://www.alarabiya.net/views/2009/06/10/75552.html, which quotes Yad’ullah Javani, Head of the Sepah’s political office as stating that the velvet revolution project “started for the first time in 1376 [1997] in Iran and ever since, there has been efforts to carry out scenarios using such examples [of Georgia] that have so far been unsuccessful.”

[556] First Indictment, supra note 491, at 10.

[557] See generally, First Indictment, supra note 491.

[558] Id.

[559] 118 Days, supra note 408.

[560] Thomas Erdbrink and William Branigin, Iran Vows To Make Example of Arrestees, Washington Post, June 24, 2009, available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/23/AR2009062300155.html.

[561] Hojjatolislam Seyyed Ahmad Khatami dar Khutbihhayih Namaz-i Jum’i Tehran: Hamih Bayad bih Qanun Tamkin Kunand [Hojjatolislam Seyyed Ahmad Khatami in the Friday Prayer Sermons of Tehran: Everyone Must Obey the Law], Jomhouri Eslami, 6/4/1388 (June 27, 2009) available at http://www.jomhourieslami.com/1388/13880406/.

[562] Hashiyihha-i az Dadgah-i Mutahamin-i Parvandihyih Iqtishashat-i Pas az Intikhabat-i Riyasat-i Jumhuri [About the Court of Those Accused in the Case of the Post Presidential Election Unrest], IRNA, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/ FullStory/?NewsId=613700.

[563] Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Siyasiyih Dastgirihayih Bad az Intikhabat Barguzar Shud, Ittiham: Inqilab-i Makhmali [The Trial of the Politically Accused in the post Election Arrestees Convened, Charge: Velvet Revolution], Ebtekar, 5/11/1388 (Aug. 2, 2009) available at http://www.ebtekarnews.com/EBTEKAR/News.aspx?NID=53083; Ittiham: Kuditayih Makhmali [Charge: Velvet Coup], Fararu, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.fararu.com/vdccpoqi.2bq4o8laa2.html.

[564] For images and videos of the trials please visit IHRDC Current Events, Election 2009, available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/videos3.htm.

[565] First Indictment, supra note 491.

[566] Id. Gene Sharp’s manual detailing 198 forms of nonviolent action can be found here: http://aeinstein.org/organizations/org/198_methods-1.pdf

[567] Id. at 3-5.

[568] Id. at 4.

[569] Hossein Derakhshan has been under arrest since November 1, 2008. See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Crtl+Alt+Delete: Iran’s Response to the Internet (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm and Quvviyih Qaza’iyih Iran Bazdasht-i Hossein Derakhshan ra Ta’id Kard [Hossein Derakhshan’s Arrest Confirmed by the Judiciary], BBC Persian, Dec. 30, 2008, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2008/12/081230_ag_jb_ derakhshan.shtml. Recently his family decided to be more vocal about his arrest and his father wrote a letter to the news head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani. See Namihyih Pidar-i Hossein Derakhshan bih Ra’is-i Quvihyih Qaza’iyih [Letter of Hossein Derakhshan’s Father to Head of the Judiciary], Iran-e Emrooz, Oct. 21 2009, available at http://www.news.iran-emrooz.net/index.php?/news1/19702.

[570] The prosecution and state media use various terms to describe this non-violent threat: soft over throw, velvet coup, velvet revolution, psychological warfare, etc.

[571] First Indictment, supra note 491, at 7.

[572] Id. at 12.

[573] Id. at 7-8.

[574] Id. at 8.

[575] Shadi Sadr Azad Shud [Shadi Sadr Was Released], BBC Persian, July 28, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/ persian/iran/2009/07/090726_m_shadi_sadr_released.shtmll. Shadi Sadr, Barandihyih Lalihyih Hoquq-i Bashar-i Holland [Shadi Sadr Was Awarded the Dutch Tulip of Human Rights], Radio Zamaneh, Nov. 10, 2009, available at http://zamaaneh.com/special/2009/11/print_post_949.html.

[576] Shirin Ebadi: Dastgiriyih Khaharam Barayih Mutivaqif Kardan-i Man Ast [Shirin Ebadi: My Sister’s Arrest Is Meant to Stop Me], Rooz Online, Dec. 30, 2009, available at http://www.roozonline.com/persian/news/newsitem/article/2009/ december/30//-1a1bd83186.html.

[577] Ebadi az Tawqif-i Jayizihyih Nobel-i Khud Miguyad [Ebadi Speaks of her Nobel Prize’s Confiscation], RadioFarda, Nov. 27, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/F8_Ebadi_interview_nobel_prize_confiscated_byIran/1889453.html

[578] Mansour Osanlou bih 5 Sal Habs-i Ta’ziri Mahkum Shud [Mansour Osanlou Was Sentenced to 5 Years’ Discretionary Imprisonment], Norooz News, May 29, 2007, available at http://norooznews.info/news/349.php; First Indictment, supra note 491, at 8.

[579] Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Covert Terror: Iran’s Parallel Intelligence Apparatus (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm; First Indictment, supra note 491, at 8.

[580] First Indictment, supra note 491, at 8.

[581] Id. at 9.

[582] Id. at 10.

[583] Id.

[584] Id. at 12.

[585] Id. at 13-14.

[586] Id. at 11.

[587] This evidence may have been presented in closed trial sessions, but IHRDC has not been able to find any published evidence.

[588] First Indictment, supra note 491, at 13.

[589] Id. at 14-15.

[590] Id. at 15-16.

[591] Id. at 16.

[592] Id. at 19.

[593] Id. at 17.

[594] Id. at 22-25.

[595] Id. at  25.

[596] Id.

[597] Id.

[598] Id.

[599] Id.

[600] Id. at  26.

[601] Id. at  29.

[602] Id.

[603] Id. at 31.

[604] Id.

[605] Hashiyihha-i az Dadgah-i Mutahamin-i Parvandihyih Iqtishashat-i Pas az Intikhabat-i Riyasat-i Jumhuri [About the Court of Those Accused in the Case of the Post Presidential Election Unrest], IRNA, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/ FullStory/?NewsId=613700, Ittiham: Kuditayih Makhmali [Charge: Velvet Coup], Fara Ru, Aug. 1, 2009, available at http://www.fararu.com/vdccpoqi.2bq4o8laa2.html, Iran Starts Trial of Election Protestors, Press TV, August 1, 2009, available at http://www.presstv.com/classic/detail.aspx?id=102172&sectionid=351020101.

[606] Video File: IHRDC Current Events, Election 2009, available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/videos3.htm.

[607] Hashiyih Nigariyih Khabarnigar-i IRNA az Duvumin Jalasihyih Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Iqtishashat-i Akhir [IRNA Reporter’s Side Not from the Second Court of the Accused from the Recent Unrest], IRNA, Aug. 8, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=624703; for video of the second trial please see Video File: Show Trial of this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qx8vDh0_ROk.

[608] Id.

[609] Matn-i Kamil-i Kayfarkhast-i Duvumin Guruh az Mutahamin-i Prujiyih Kuditayih Makhmali [Complete Text of the Indictment of the Second Group of the Accused in the Velvet Revolution Case], Fars News Agency, Aug. 8, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8805170594. For a paginated translation please see Appendix 2 [hereinafter Second Indictment].

[610] Id. at 2.

[611] Id. at 4-5.

[612] Id. at 16-17.

[613] Id. at 12-13.

[614] Id. at 12. She had taken pictures with her cell phone and emailed them to her friends, and she sent descriptions of the demonstrations to a French academic institution.

[615] Id. at 12.

[616] Id. at 18.

[617] The Freedom Movement is a banned but tolerated opposition party. The Committee to Defend Free, Healthy and Fair Election is an NGO established by members of Defenders of Human Rights Center, which is headed by Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi. The Mojahedin-e Khalq or MEK is an armed opposition group. See infra note 684.

[618] Second Indictment, supra note 609, at 26.

[619] Sivumin Jalasihyih Dadgah-i Risidigi bih Ittihamat-i Mutahaman-i Parvandihyih Kuditayih Makhmali, Matn-i Kamil-i Kayfarkhast-i Guruhi az Mutahamin-i Iqtishashat-i Akhir [Third Court Session for the Accused in the Case File of Velvet Coup, Complete Text of the Indictment for a Group of the Accused in the Recent Unrest], Fars News Agency, Aug. 16, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8805250449 [See www.iranhrdc.org for a paginated translation] [hereinafter Third Indictment].

[620] Hashiyihhayih Dadgah-i Sivvum-i Mutahaman bih Iqtishash [Side Notes of the Third Trial Session for those Accused of Riots], Raja News, Aug. 16, 2009, available at http://www.rajanews.com/detail.asp?id=34390.

[621] Third Indictment, supra note 619.

[622] Id.

[623] Id.

[624] See for example an interview broadcast on Press TV with a member of the Majlis doubting the efficiency of the trials and the confessions on which they are based; Video File: PressTV: MP Critical of ‘Show Trial’ Refuses to Rule Out Torture Used on Defendants, Aug. 2, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2YIVt0mlIA; and see also a video by comedian Ebrahin Nabavi satirizing the confession of Abtahi: Video File: Ali Abtahi Confession (Ebrahim Nabavi), Aug. 2, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKPlnqDONY0&feature=related.

[625] Third Indictment, supra note 619.

[626] Hashiyihhayih Dadgah-i Sivvum-i Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Akhir [Side Notes of the Third Trial Session for the Accused of the Recent Events], Tabnak, Aug. 16, 2009, available at http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/pages/?cid=59893.

[627] Third Indictment, supra note 619; Hashiyihhayih Dadgah-i Sivvum-i Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Akhir [Side Notes of the Third Trial Session for the Accused of the Recent Events], Tabnak, Aug. 16, 2009, available at http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/pages/?cid=59893; Kayfarkhast-i Imruz Niz Pur az Ishtibah, Tanaquz va Idi’ahayih Ajib Bud, Gafhayih Sivumin Dadgah-i Namayishi [Today’s Indictment Was Riddled with Mistakes, Contradictions, and Strange Claims, Gaffes of the Third Show Trial], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Aug. 16, 2009, available at http://www.mowjcamp.com/article/id/18922.

[628] Id.

[629] Id.

[630] Id.

[631] Matn-i Kayfarkhast-i Dadgah-i Chaharum [Text of the Indictment of the Fourth Trial], Asr Iran, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.asriran.com/fa/pages/?cid=82146.

[632] Chaharumin Jalasihyih Dadgah-i Risidigi bih Ittihamat-i Muttahaman-i Parvandihyih Kuditayih Makhmali – Matn-i Kamil-i Kayfarkhast-i Umumiyih Guruhi az Mutahaman-i Parvandihyih Kuditayih Makhmali [Fourth Court Session to Investigate the Charges of the Accused of the Velvet Revolution – Complete Text of the Indictment for a Group of Accused in the Velvet Coup Case File], Fars News Agency, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.net/newstext.php?nn=8806030283 [See www.iranhrdc.org for a paginated translation] [hereinafter Fourth Indictment] at 7.

[633] On page 10, the prosecution again notes that the Participation Front has, as part of its platform, the desire to use any national crisis to bring about more democratic policies. Again, the prosecution asks whether this could be anything but a betrayal of the nation. Id. at 10.

[634] Id. at 15.

[635] Id. at 21.

[636] Mashruh-i Kamil, Dar Chaharumin Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Kuditayih Makhmali Matrah Shud: Naqsh-i Mehdi Hashemi va Jasbi dar Iqtishashat [Complete Text, Discussed in the Forth Trial Session of the Accused of the Velvet Coup: Role of Mehdi Hashemi and Jasbi in the Unrest], Yazd Farda, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.yazdfarda.com/news/18777.html.

[637] Hashiyihha-i az Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Akhir bih Ravayat-i ILNA [Side Notes of the Fifth Trial Session for the Accused of the Recent Events as Told by ILNA], Kaleme, Aug. 25, 2009, available at http://www.kaleme.org/1388/06/03/klm-43.

[638] Fourth Indictment, supra note 632.

[639] Mashruh-i Panjumin Jalasiyih Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Iqtishashat-i Akhir [Details of the Fifth Trial Session for the Accused of the Recent Unrest], IRNA, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=681249 [hereinafter Fifth Trial Session]; Hashiyihhayih Jalib-i Panjumin Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Akhir-i Tehran [Interesting Side Notes of the Fifth Trial Session of those Accused in Tehran’s Recent Events], Khedmat, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://khedmat.ir/vdcbugb5prhb0.iur.html.

[640] Hashiyihhayih Jalib-i Panjumin Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Akhir-i Tehran [Interesting Side Notes of the Fifth Trial Session of those Accused in Tehran’s Recent Events], Khedmat, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://khedmat.ir/vdcbugb5prhb0 .iur.html; These organizations included Jomhouri Eslami, Iran, Jame-Jam, and Ettela’at.

[641] Fifth Trial Session, supra note 639.

[642] Id.

[643] Reza Derakhshi, Iran Holds Fifth Trial over Election Unrest, Reuters, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE58D0VU20090914?feedType=RSS&feedName=Iran&virtualBrandChannel=10209.

[644] Kayfarkhast-i Mutahaman-i Interneti – 1, Tazakur-i Qanuniyih Ra’is-i Dadgah bih Risanihha / Darkhast-i Ra’fat-i Islami Barayih Mutahaman [Indictment for the Internet Accuse – 1, Legal Warning of the Head of the Court to the Press / Request of Islamic Kindness for the Accused], Mehr News Agency, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://www.mehrnews.com /fa/NewsDetail.aspx?pr=s&query=کیفر%20خواست%20پنجم&NewsID=946913.

[645] Journalists Forced to Confess in Show Trials; Detainees Tortured, International Freedom of Expression Exchange, Sept. 23, 2009, available at http://www.ifex.org/iran/2009/09/23/trials_torture/.

[646] Hujum-i Niruyih Intizami bih Marasim-i Iftar dar Muqabil-i Zindan-i Evin [Law Enforcement Forces Attack the Iftar Ceremony in Front of Evin Prison], Rah-e Sabz, Sept. 2, 2009, available at http://www.rahesabz.net/story/1082/; Reza Derakhshi, Iran Holds Fifth Trial Over Election Unrest, Reuters, Sept. 14, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/ idUSTRE58D0VU20090914?feedType=RSS&feedName =Iran&virtualBrandChannel=10209.

[647] Fifth Trial Session, supra note 639.

[648] Ahmadinejad Calls for Prosecution of Opposition Leaders, Guardian, Aug. 28, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk /world/2009/aug/28/mahmoud-ahmadinejad-urges-opposition-prosecutions.

[649] Anahita Bijani, A Report on Political Prisoners in Iran, Gozaar, Dec. 3, 2009, available at  http://www.gozaar.org/template1.php?id=1385&language=english; Hukm-i Idam-i Yiki az Mu’tarizin bih Natijiyih Intikhabat dar Iran Sadir Shud [Execution Order Was Issued for One of the Protestors to Election Results in Iran], Deutsche Welle, Oct. 8, 2009, available at http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4773758,00.html.

[650] Video File: Operative of Iranian Monarchist Group Confess to Terrorist Activities, Aug. 17, 2009, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3uPOOgitWyg.

[651] Executions are not unusual in Iran. In numbers of executions, Iran ranks second only to China. Reported executions spiked alarmingly after the June elections. In the first six months of 2009, Iran executed 196 persons. In the fifty days following the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the government reported that at least another 115 executions took place, but that those executed were convicted of crimes such as drug smuggling or other serious crimes. Amnesty International, Iran: Alarming Spike in Executions Since Disputed Presidential Elections, Aug. 7, 2009, available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-alarming-spike-executions-disputed-presidential-election-20090807. However, this claim is impossible to verify as the names have never been released.

[652] Membership in the MEK is usually considered an act of waging war against God (or being Muharib), which is eligible for the death sentence.

[653] Sudur-i Hukm-i Idam barayih Sih Nafar az Mutahaman-i Havadis-i Pas az Intikhabat [Death Sentence Issued for Three of the Post Election Accused], Fars News Agency, Oct. 30, 2009, available at http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn= 8808060622.

[654] Hukm-i Avaliyih barayih Hajjarian: Panj Sal Habs-i Ta’liqi [Hajjarian’s Preliminary Sentence: Five Years’ Suspended Imprisonment], BBC Persian, Oct. 17, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/10/091017_op_ir88 _hajarian_sentenced.shtml; Sources close to Hajjarian’s family told BBC that the family was verbally informed of the sentence and that it has not been officially announced. A day later, Alireza Ava’i, Head of the Tehran Office of Ministry of Justice said that no sentence has been issued for Hajjarian as of then. See Ava’i: Takunun darbarihyih Hajjarian Ra’i Sadir Nashudih Ast [Ava’i: No Sentence Has So Far Been Issued for Hajjarian], IRNA, Oct. 18, 2009, available at http://www2.irna.ir/05/news/view/line-9/8807258522090411.htm. Hajjarian’s sentence was suspended in light of his disabilities.

[655] Nazila Fathi, Iranian-American Stunned by Sentence, New York Time, October 21, 2009, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/world/middleeast/22tehran.html?_r=1.

[656] Abtahi bih Shish Sal Zindan Mahkum Shud [Abtahi Was Sentenced to Six Years’ Imprisonment], Ayande News, Nov. 21, 2009, available at http://www.ayandenews.com/news/15483/.

[657] Jenny Percival, Former Vice-President of Iran Sentenced Over Election Protests, Guardian, Nov. 22, 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/22/mohammad-ali-abtahi-iran-protests-jailed.

[658] Ittila’iyih Dadgustari Kull-i Tehran darbariyih Parvandihyih Havadis-i Pas az Intikhabat [Announcement of the Ministry of Justice of Tehran Province Regarding the Case Files of the Post Election Events], ILNA, Nov. 17, 2009, available at http://www.ilna.ir/printable.aspx?ID=90437.

[659] Kambiz Norouzi bih Habs va Shallaq-i Ta’ziri Mahkum Shud [Kambiz Norouzi Was Sentenced to Imprisonment and Discretionary Lashes], Parleman News, Nov. 18, 2009, available at http://www.parlemannews.ir/index.aspx?n=5523; another example of a defendant being sentenced to lashes is Soheil Navid Yekta, a young demonstrator who was sentenced to seven years and 74 lashes. Mahkumiyat-i Navid Yekta bih 7 Sal Zindan va 74 Zarbih Shallaq [Navid Yekta Sentenced to 7 Years’ Imprisonment and 74 Lashes], Mowj-i Sabz-i Azadi, Nov. 11, 2009, available at http://mowjcamp.com/article/id/63474.

[660] Mahkumiyat-i Zeidabadi bih Shish Sal Habs va Tab’id dar Gonabad [Zeidabadi Sentenced to Six Years’ Imprisonment and Exile in Gonabad], Radio Farda, Nov. 23, 2009, available at http://www.radiofarda.com/content/F11_Iran_Postelection _Zeydabadi/1885960.html.

[661] I, Hamed Rouhinejad, Son of Mohammad Reza, Sentenced to Death, Want to Tell You My Story, Human Rights Activists in Iran, Oct. 15, 2009, available at http://hra-iran.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1904:45546&catid= 66:304&Itemid=293.

[662] Sudur-i Panjumin Hukm-i Idam barayih Mutahaman-i Itirazat-i Pas az Intikhabat / Guzarishi az Parvandihyih Reza Khademi [Fifth Execution Order was Issued for the Accused in the Post-Election Protests/A Report about Reza Khademi Case File], Committee of Human Rights Reporters, Nov. 15, 2009, available at http://chrr.us/spip.php?article6774.

[663] Political Activist Sentenced to Death, Human Rights Activists in Iran, Dec. 2, 2009, available at http://hra-iran.net/index. php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2233:political-activist-sentenced-to-death&catid=66:304&Itemid=293; Rouhinejad was sentenced October 15, Khademi, November 16 and Porkar, November 28.

[664] Article 232 of the Procedural Code of the Public and Revolutionary Courts in Criminal Cases says: “The decisions of public and Revolutionary Courts in Criminal Cases are final, other than in situations below, where they can be appealed:

  1. a) crimes for which the legal punishment is execution or stoning.” See Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391, art. 232.

[665] Iranian Const., supra note 2, art. 35.

[666] Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391, arts. 128, 185-186; Citizen Rights Law, supra note 391, art. 3. “Judges and prosecutors are required to respect the right of the accused (or respondents) to defend themselves and provide them with opportunities to employ lawyers and experts.” Id.

[667] ICCPR, supra note 304 art. 14(b).

[668] U.N. Human Rights Comm., General Comment No. 32, Article 14: Right to equality before courts and tribunals and to a fair trial, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/GC/32 ¶ 38, (August 23, 2007), available at http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/ GEN/G07/437/71/PDF/G0743771.pdf?OpenElement.

[669] Muhakimiyih Bazdasht Shudigan-i Havadis-i Iran Aqaz Shud [Trial of those Arrested in Iran’s Clashes Began], BBC Persian, August 1, 2009, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/08/090801_ba-rioters-trial.shtml.

[670] Arzyabi va Tahlil-i Huquqiyih Dadgah-i Mutahaman-i Rukhdadhayih Akhir [Evaluation and Analysis of the Trial of those Arrested in the Recent Events], Tabnak, August 2, 2009, available at http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/pages/?cid=58011.

[671] Barguzariyih Dadgah Bidun-i Ittila’i Vukalayih Mudafi’i Mutahaman [Trial Convened without Notifying the Defense Attorneys], Radio Zamaneh, August 8, 2009, available at http://zamaaneh.com/special/2009/08/post_845.html.

[672] The Brothers of a Man Sentenced to Death in Election Trials Say he Was Deceived by Interrogators, Madyar Iran, October 13, 2009, available at http://www.madyariran.net/?p=2620.

[673] See, Ervand Abrahamian, Tortured Confessions (1999).

[674] Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Crtl+Alt+Delete: Iran’s Response to the Internet (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[675] See Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Forced Confessions: Targeting Iran’s Cyber-Journalists (2009), available at https://iranhrdc.org/violent-aftermath-the-2009-election-and-suppression-of-dissent-in-iran/httpdocs/English/reports.htm.

[676] See Criminal Code of Procedure, supra note 391, art. 129.

[677] Bayaniyihyih Marja’i Aliqadr Hazrat-i Ayatollah al-Uzma Saanei dar Pay-i Barguzariyih Dadgahhayih Pas az Intikhabat-i Dahumin Dawrihyih Riyasat Jumhuri [Statement of the Esteemed Marja, Grand Ayatollah Saanei Regarding the Post Election Trials], Website of Ayatollah Saanei, August 5, 2009, available at http://saanei.org/?view=01,01,01,67,0; Fredrik Dahl, Mousavi’s Wife Says Brother Jailed in Iran Crackdown, Reuters, July 23, 2009, available at http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Iran/idUSTRE56M1TH20090723?s.

[678] Payam-i Ayatollah al-uzma Montazeri dar Itiraz bih Barguzariyih Dadgahhayih Farmayishi [Message of the Grand Ayatollah Montazeri in Protest to the Show Trials], Website of Ayatollah Montazeri, August 4, 2009, available at http://www. amontazeri.com/farsi/link.asp?Topic_ID=217.

[679] Maraji’-i taqlid (sin. marja’-i taqlid) are religious sources of emulation whom Shi’a Muslims follow. According to Center for Answering Religious Question: “Everyone who has come of the age of performing secondary religious duties (praying, fasting, charitable contribution, Islamic taxes, …) either themselves have reached the status of valid opinion and practicing jurisprudence or must emulate.” A person can be emulated who is a “man, of age, wise, twelver Shi’a, born into wedlock, alive, just,” and “most learned.” See, Sharayit-i Intikhab-i Marja-i Taqlid Chist? [What Are the Criterions to Select a Marja’-i Taqlid?], Center for Answering Religious Question, 19 December 2006, available at http://www.porsojoo.com/en/node/55143; and Bihtarin Marja-i Taqlid Kist va Chih Khususiyati Bayad Dashtih Bashad [Who is the Best Marja’i Taqlid and What Must be his Characteristics?], Center for Answering Religious Questions, 19 December 2006, available at http://www.porsojoo.com/en/node/56325.

[680] Yousuf Saanei was appointed to the first Guardian Council as one of the six Islamic jurists by Ayatollah Khomeini on February 20, 1980, where he served for three years. On January 9, 1983, Khomeini appointed him Prosecutor General of Iran, a post he left in the summer of 1985. Inayat-i Hazrat-i Ayatollah Khomeini va Mas’uliyathayih Ijra’i [Biography: Kindness of Ayatollah Khomeini and Executive Positions], Website of Ayatollah Saanei, available at http://saanei.org/?view=01,01,14,7,0 (last visited Dec. 30, 2009). Ayatollah Montazeri reviewed the Constitution after it was written and was one of the forces behind the concept of the ‘guardianship of the jurist’ in the Constitution. See generally, Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri, Khatirat-i Ayatollah Montazeri, Majmu’iyyih Payvastha va Dastnivisha [Memoir of Ayatollah Montazeri, the Collection of Appendices and Handwritten Notes] (2001); see also, “Questions Regarding the Constitution” on Ayatollah Montazeri’s website available at http://www.amontazeri.com.

[681] Press Release, UN Experts, Iran: detainees subjected to torture and ill-treatment to extract confessions, warn UN Experts (August 13, 2009), available at http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/0/32F1022E3AE7B473C1257611004DFC95? opendocument.

[682] 118 Days, supra note 408.

[683] First Indictment, supra note 491, at 11-12.

[684] The MEK began to be in conflict with the ruling clerics within months of the 1979 revolution. In the early years of the Islamic Republic, the MEK launched several devastating assassinations and terrorist operations, killing many high-ranking members of the Islamic Regime. During the Iran-Iraq war, the MEK joined forces with Saddam Hussein and attacked Iran in a few offensives. For more information, please see Ervand Abrahamian, The Iranian Mojahedin (1989).

[685] The Brothers of a Man Sentenced to Death in Election Trials Say He Was Deceived by Interrogators, Madyar Iran, October 13, 2009, available at http://www.madyariran.net/?p=2620.

[686] Pishdasti dar Itiraf [Pre-empting Confessions], Aug. 9, 2009, Etemad, available at http://www.etemaad.ir/released/88-05-18/150.htm.

Download Attachments:

Exit mobile version