Fourth Human Rights Lawyer Slapped With National Security Charges in Iranتبدیل قرار کفالت به بازداشت و سنگینتر شدن اتهام دو وکیل دادگستری
AUGUST
24, 2018
Arash Keykhosravi, a lawyer representing the
family of an Iranian Canadian man who recently died under suspicious
circumstances in state custody, has been slapped with national security
charges, making him the fourth defense attorney detained under this pretense in
Iran in less than a year.
Former moderate lawmaker Ghasem Sholeh Sa’di
is facing the same charges for attending a lawful political rally along with
Keykhosravi in August 2018. Their detention orders have also been extended for
a month without eligibility for bail.
“The prosecutor upped the charge from
‘disruption of public order’ to ‘assembly and collusion against national
security’ even though it’s unrelated to what they did, which was attend a
peaceful public gathering that didn’t harm national security the slightest
bit,” attorney Payam Derafshan told the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI)
on August 21, 2018.
Since February 2018, at least seven lawyers
who have taken on politically sensitive cases in Iran have also been arrested,
charged, and blocked from taking on new cases in a crackdown aimed at preventing
defense attorneys from representing people detained on politically motivated
charges.
As part of the crackdown, the judiciary
has restricted those detainees, who are held on “national
security” charges, to choosing their lawyers from a list of just 20 approved by the
judiciary.
Keykhosravi and Sa’di were arrested in front
of Iran’s Parliament building in Tehran at a rally on August 18 against the
signing of an accord between Caspian Sea
nations, including Iran that divides the body of water and its oil and gas
resources.
Keykhosravi has represented a number of
high-profile human rights cases throughout his career, including the suspicious
death of academic and environmentalist Kavous Seyed-Emami in Tehran’s Evin Prison
in February 2018.
Sa’di, a former two-term parliamentary
representative from the city of Shiraz, is also a retired Tehran University law
professor who has been a frequent critic of state policies.
Derafshan criticized the judicial authorities
for treating the two as convicts by cuffing their hands and feet and making
them wear prisoners’ uniforms as they were transferred from Evin Prison to
the Great Tehran Penitentiary, southeast of the
capital.
“The authorities have really acted in a mean
fashion toward two of the country’s most esteemed lawyers just to abuse and
humiliate them,” the attorney told CHRI.
“You can put cuffs on suspects’ hands and feet
but only for dangerous criminals or prisoners who might escape,” he added.
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