(Beirut)
– Iranian authorities
should immediately release Golrokh Iraee, a human rights defender hospitalized
in Tehran, Human Rights Watch said today. Iraee was sentenced to six years in
prison in April 2015 on charges solely related to her peaceful activism, after an
unfair trial.
Iraee
was transferred to a hospital from prison on April 3, apparently suffering
medical complications from a hunger strike. The authorities allowed her family
to visit on April 9.
“Iranian
authorities are apparently so threatened by human rights defenders that they
imprison them for years,” said Sarah Leah
Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Instead of
making prison conditions worse, Iran should start listening to defenders’
demands for more rights and freedom for all citizens.”
On
January 24, authorities transferred Iraee and Atena Daemi, another human rights
defender, from Evin prison in Tehran to Qarchak prison in the city of Varamin,
which is reputed to have worse conditions than Evin. On February 3, Daemi and
Iraee embarked on a hunger strike to protest their transfer from Evin,
activists’ families reported. Daemi ended her hunger strike on February 26, but
Iraee continued hers until she was transferred to the hospital on April 3.
On April
3, Iraee’s family had traveled to Varamin in the hopes of visiting her in
prison. When they arrived, authorities told them that she had been transferred
to a hospital in Tehran but refused to provide the family any information about
her location or condition. On April 9, authorities finally allowed Iraee’s
father to visit her at a hospital in Tehran. A source who wished to remain
anonymous told Human Rights Watch on April 9 that the visit lasted about an
hour, and it was apparent that Iraee had lost a significant amount of weight.
On
September 6, 2014, authorities from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC) Intelligence Service arrested Iraee along with her husband, Arash
Sadeghi, also a human rights defender, and two other people, and sent them to
Evin prison. In April 2015, Judge Abdolghassem Salavati, from Branch 15 of
Tehran’s revolutionary court who has sentenced dozens of activists to unfair
prison sentences, sentenced Iraee to six years in prison on
charges of “insulting the sacred” and “propaganda against the state.”
Authorities used an unpublished story Iraee had written about stoning that was
confiscated at the time of her arrest as evidence to convict her.
Human
Rights Watch had previously documented the couple’s lack of
access to fair legal representation during their trial. Other
human rights defenders have experienced similar conditions at their trials.
Several other rights defenders serving long prison terms based solely on their
peaceful activism and criticism include Narges Mohammadi and Abdolfatah
Soltani, the former presidential candidates Mehdi Karroubi
and Mir Hossein Mousavi, and Zahra Rahnavard, an author and activist
who is Mousavi’s wife, have remained under house arrest in Tehran since
February 2011.
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