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Directive To Protect Iranian Prisoners Could Be Too Little Too Late

Iran International Newsroom
Jan 13, 2022, 09:21 GMT+0Updated: 17:39 GMT+1
Screen shot of a video released by hackers last year showing beating of prisoner in Tehran's Evin prison.
Screen shot of a video released by hackers last year showing beating of prisoner in Tehran's Evin prison.

In a move seen more as a public relations effort, the chief of Iran's judiciary has called on judges and prison wardens to respect the inmates' human dignity.

Gholam-Hossein Ejei made the call after Iranians as well as the international community saw pictures of Iranian poet and filmmaker Baktash Abtin with his feet chained to his hospital bed as he was dying of Covid-19. Abtin passed away on January 8 because prison wardens operating under Ejei’s command had delayed his medical treatment for at least 10 days.

Many other Iranian political prisoners have also ended up chained to hospital beds, but they were luckier than Abtin. Nonetheless, some of them developed problems such as kidney failure. Alireza Rajaei, a well-known intellectual and journalist lost part of his face because of neglect in prison.

Ejei particularly warned his colleagues not to use shackles on non-violent prisoners as if it was a new practice and he did not know about that before. Ejei has been holding top positions at the Iranian Judiciary throughout the past four decades, including Prosecutor of Tehran, and Prosecutor General at ordinary and revolutionary courts. Meanwhile, he is known for his hardliner positions regarding how to treat prisoners.

On Tuesday, the Iranian Prisons Organizations, which is a part of the Iranian Judiciary issued a long directive about how to handle matters relating to prisoners. Iranian media outlets such as moderate Aftab News have characterized the directive as a positive change.

Ejei visiting a prison last year after incriminating prison abuse videos emerged.
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Ejei visiting a prison last year after incriminating prison abuse videos emerged.

A video broadcast by the Iran International TV last year showed prison wardens beating prisoners and dragging them on the floor in Evin prison's corridors. The Judiciary at the time removed the chief prison warden at Evin, but what happened to Abtin revealed that more changes were needed.

The new directive which includes 8 paragraphs, first defines the rights of inmates upon their arrival and then calls for respecting inmates' human dignity. It also calls for a medical and psychological assessment of the inmates upon their arrival. It also defines prisoners' rights in solitary confinement, which is a notorious method of torture against political prisoners in Iran.

In the new directive, solitary confinement is limited to 10 days for the first time and 15 days for the second time and applies only to violent inmates or those who break the law. Many Iranian political prisoners including former deputy interior minister Mostafa Tajzadeh have spent several months in solitary confinement.

The directive bans checking in inmates with acute illness and calls for free round-the-clock access to telephone within the first 48 hours of imprisonment so that the inmates could notify their lawyer and family of their situation.

Chief wardens are told to frequently visit new prisoners to make sure that they are familiar with their rights, and to put hygienic items, proper outfit, blankets and bank cards at the inmates' disposal. The cards allow inmates to shop their essential requirements at the prison shop.

The chief wardens also should facilitate contact with individuals who would bail out the prisoner or help them access the right kind of medical care they might need. Meanwhile they should record cases of assault and battery of the inmates by prison guards.

The directive particularly bans torture and discrimination based on sex, nature of accusations, and the inmates' financial status.

If the directive means that wardens were not committed to these principles until now, this could be the most incriminating document against the treatment of prisoners in Iran so far. It was the lack of such rules that led to many deaths in custody in Iranian prisons such as that of environmentalist Kavous Seyed Emami in 2018 and Iranian Canadian journalist Zahra Kazemi in 2003.

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British Council Says Iranian Employee Residing In UK Released By Iran

Jan 12, 2022, 12:52 GMT+0

British Council employee Aras Amiri has arrived in the United Kingdom after being released from an Iranian prison, the British Council said on Wednesday.

Amiri, an Iranian national who resides in Britain, was arrested in March 2018 during a visit to Tehran and sentenced to 10 years in prison the following year by the Iranian judiciary on charges of spying.

Due to tensions with Western powers, Iranian authorities banned cooperation with the British Council in 2019 and warned that such activity would result in prosecution.

"We are very pleased to confirm that British Council employee and Iranian citizen Aras Amiri has been acquitted by the Supreme Court in Iran of all charges previously made against her, following a successful appeal lodged by her lawyer," the British Council said in a statement.

Several British-Iranian nationals have been jailed in Iran on similar charges, including Thomson Reuters Foundation worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe who was sentenced to an additional year in prison in April 2021, shortly before finishing her five-year sentence.

Tehran is engaged in negotiations with major powers in Vienna to revive a 2015 nuclear agreement which the United States abandoned in 2018, subsequently reinstating tough sanctions on Iran's economy.

Report by Reuters

Iran Harassed, Intimidated Families Of Downed Airliner Victims

Jan 11, 2022, 17:28 GMT+0

Iranian security harassed families of victims who died when the military shot down an airliner, as they gathered to mark the second anniversary of the tragedy.

The association representing the families issued a statement on Tuesday, saying that authorities cut off the internet when they gathered at the crash site, to prevent sharing of images from the ceremony on social media.

It said that three people were arrested after they were chased by security forces in a situation that seemed like an abduction. They were kept in detention for several hours and were released after security forces erased the memory cards of their cameras.

A low-flying helicopter was also dispatched to the area to further unsettle the participants, the statement added.

It deplored such acts of “harassment and intimidation”, calling on the Islamic Republic to end the persecution of victims’ families who have nothing else to lose.

Ukrainian International Airways flight PS752 was shot down by two air-defense missiles fired by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) in the morning of January 8, 2020, as it took off from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport, killing all 176 people onboard.

Last week, Canada, Britain, Sweden and Ukraine said they had abandoned efforts to talk to Tehran about reparations for an airliner downed by Iran and would try to settle the matter according to international law.

Iranian Rights Activist Alinejad Nominated For Nobel Peace Prize

Jan 11, 2022, 09:02 GMT+0

Iranian journalist and activist Masih Alinejad has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her advocacy for women's rights in Iran.

Alinejad was nominated by Erlend Wiborg, a Progress Party member of the Norwegian parliament.

Wiborg described Alinejad’s nominationin line with Alfred Nobel's will, noting that a very basic factor for peace is respect for people and their freedom. “Respect for people and their freedom of choice will contribute to more peace in the world”, he said.

He highlighted Alinejad’s “fearless way of fight”, which has made her live in exile, and her “activism” that made her a target for a kidnapping plot by Iran’s intelligence agents.

In a tweet announcing her nomination, the New York-based activist said, “It’s important that the fight of Iranian women against gender apartheid is recognized”, adding that “For a peaceful world, it is vital that our struggles with terrorist states is strengthened globally.”

Iran's Intelligence Ministry's plot to abduct the Iranian American journalist drew global outrage from international journalists’ unions and writers associations when it was revealed by US authorities in July 2021.

Among other things, Alinejad has started several online movements against Iran’s compulsory hijab, the latest of which was the trending hashtag #LetUsTalkthat garnered support from hundreds of Iranian social media users.

Political Prisoners In Iran Blame Authorities For Death Of Jailed Poet

Jan 10, 2022, 20:17 GMT+0

Several Iranian political prisoners have written an open letter holding the Islamic Republic responsible for the death of poet and filmmaker Baktash Abtin.

Political prisoners in Gohardasht Prison said that Abtin’s death is the continuation of the politically motivated serial assassinations – also known as Chain murders of Iran, a series of 1988–98 murders and disappearances of Iranian dissident intellectuals.

They said the Islamic Republic has found new ways to silence the voices of those who are critical of its system, describing Abtin is an example.

Criticizing “inaction” by international human rights organizations, the detainees stated that facing no consequences for its crimes against humanity has emboldened the repression and killing machine of the Islamic Republic.

Earlier in the day, some scuffles were reported following a ceremony to commemorate Abtin in the women’s ward of the Evin Prison, when officials tried to transfer rights activist and photojournalist Alieh Matlabzadeh to the notorious Qarchak Prison.

Abtin died of Covid-19 complications following days of medically induced coma on Saturday after he was denied timely treatment by officials at Tehran’s Evin Prison.

The Iranian Writers' Association said in a statement that his funeral service was held a day ahead of schedule under a heavy presence by security forces because authorities feared a large crowd and protest during the event.

Washington Urges Tehran To Release Imprisoned US, UK Citizens

Jan 10, 2022, 18:20 GMT+0

US Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley has called on the Islamic Republic to release US and UK citizens who are imprisoned in Iran.

Malley said in a tweet on Monday that the Iranian government has held environmentalist Morad Tahbaz for four years, stressing that he is a father and a cancer victim.

Iran has arrested many dual nationals and foreignners throughout the years, charging them with vague espionage and political offenses.

In a similar call for the fourth anniversary of Tahbaz’s “unfair detention in Iran”, UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said that “Iran must release him and all unfairly detained British nationals to allow them to return to their families. This appalling ordeal must be brought to an end.”

Malley also urged the release of Iranian American businessman Siamak Namazi, who is imprisoned in Iran since October 2015 on charges of collaboration with a foreign government, and his 84-year-old father, Bagher Namazi, a retired senior UNICEF official, also arrested and jailed in 2017 after he went to Iran to visit his son. Both are serving ten-year sentences.

Malley also called on the authorities to free Emad Sharghi, a 56-year-old Iranian American businessman who was arrested in December 2020 and sentenced to 10 years in prison on charges of espionage and collecting military intelligence.