Iran: Crackdown on Student ActivistsLong Prison Sentences, Rights Violated
University students cross a street during a snow storm in Tehran November 8, 2010.
© 2010 Reuters/Caren Firouz |
July 21, 2018
(Beirut) – Iranian authorities
have increased their crackdown on student protesters with prison terms and
restrictions on their peaceful activities, Human Rights Watch said today.
After authorities repressed the protests that broke out in December 2017
and January 2018, Intelligence Ministry authorities have arrested at least 150
students and courts have sentenced 17 to prison terms, according to a member of parliament. In
January, another parliament member had tweeted that when he followed up on the
arrests of students with the authorities, he was told that most arrests were “preventive.”
As of mid-July 2018, reliable
sources reported that revolutionary courts had sentenced at least eight student
protesters from universities in Tehran and Tabriz to prison sentences of up to
eight years and banned some of them from membership in political parties or
participating in media, including social media, for two years.
“Instead of enabling a safe
environment for peaceful activism, Iranian authorities have gone back to their
favorite response: cracking down on peaceful dissent,” said Sarah Leah Whitson,
Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “While encouraging students to
participate in public discourse, the authorities in practice prosecute them for
peaceful assembly.”
On March 7, the Telegram
channel of the Association of Unions for University Students reported
that Branch 26 of Tehran’s revolutionary court had sentenced Leila Hassandzadeh
and Sina Rabiee, student activists from University of Tehran who were arrested
on January 1, to six years and one year in prison respectively and a two-year travel ban on charges of
“conspiracy and collusion to act against national security” and “propaganda
against the state.”
The association also reported
that on March 5 a trial court had sentenced Mohsen Haghshenas, a
student of scenic design at the University of Tehran, to two years in prison on
charges of “conspiracy and collusion to act against national security” and “disruption
of public order by participating in illegal assemblies.”
On June 12, the Human Rights
Activists News Agency (HRANA), an independent human rights group, reported that Branch 15 of Tehran’s revolutionary
court had sentenced Sina Darvish Omran, a student of German
language, and Ali Mozaffari, an anthropology student, both at the University of
Tehran, to eight years in prison and two-year travel bans. The court also
banned them from membership in political parties and participation in media,
including social media, for two years.
On July 10, Roya Saghiri, a
student at University of Tabriz, posted on her Instagram account that a
court of appeal had upheld her 23-month prison sentence “for propaganda against
the state and insulting its pillars.” Several days earlier, a court had
sentenced two University of Tabriz students, Ali Kamrani and Ali Ghadiri, to
six months in prison.
In an earlier case, Fereshteh
Tousi, 30, was sentenced by a Tehran court to 18 months in prison on July 3 on
charges of “propaganda against the state” for organizing a ceremony
commemorating the national student day at the Allameh Tababa’i University in
December 2016.
Mahmoud Sadeghi, a parliament
member from Tehran, tweeted on June 28 that courts
reportedly based their verdicts and sentences against student activists on
reports and interrogations by Intelligence Ministry officials.
Mansour Gholami, the science
minister, told Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) on July 18 that a committee
in the ministry is negotiating with authorities for leniency in the sentencing
of these students.
Since March, 125 university professors and dozens of student associations have called on
President Rouhani to intervene to protect the students’ rights.
“President Hassan Rouhani, who
ran under the promise of citizens’ rights, should direct the ministries under
his supervision to halt these abuses against university students,” Whitson
said. “These are the young people who are so often extolled as essential
to the country’s future economic success.
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