Journalist Recounts “Inhumane” Living Conditions at Iran’s Great Tehran Penitentiaryمشاهده عینی نادر فتورهچی روزنامهنگار از حضور یک روزه در زندان فشافویه: زندانی ضد انسانی و ضد بشری، در ردیف جهنم
AUGUST 25, 2018
An Iranian journalist who was detained at
Iran’s Great Tehran Penitentiary (GTP) has written
about the jail’s “inhumane” conditions, stating in a Facebook post
that day to day life there is “beyond the limits of human tolerance.”
“The sign above the entrance to the prison in
Fashafouyeh says, ‘Great Tehran Penitentiary,’ but the fact is that
psychological and physical pressures on the prisoners are so intense that you
essentially don’t have the opportunity to ‘contemplate and repent,’” wrote
Nader Fatourehchi on August 21, 2018.
With an official capacity of 15,000 inmates,
the GTP, located in Tehran Province’s Fashafouyeh district, 20 miles southeast
of Tehran, is the largest detention facility in the country. It was built in
2015 primarily for holding suspects and inmates convicted of drug-related
offenses, but the judiciary has also used it to incarcerate dissidents and
anti-state protesters.
Since February 2018, more than 200 Sufi
Muslims belonging to the Gonabadi Order have been transported to the
penitentiary after being arrested at a street protest in Tehran that month. In
late August, human rights lawyer Arash Keykhosravi and former MP Ghasem Sholeh Sa’di were also taken there in handcuffs
and prisoners’ uniforms that are only used for
inmates convicted of violent crimes.
Both men were detained for attending a
peaceful protest rally.
Fatourehchi, a freelance film critic and
author, was arrested on August 19 and held at the GTP for one day after he was
sued by producer Mohammad Emami for criticizing the “suspicious” financial
backers of Emami’s popular historical drama series, “Shahrzad.”
In November 2017, Fatourehchi published
an article on the Amsterdam-based Radio
Zamaneh news website, titled, “Shahrzad: 10 Questions Journalists Are Not
Asking,” questioning where the film’s huge budget had come from. He also leads
the “No to Shahrzad” campaign on social media.
Fatourehchi, who was released on bail on
August 20, wrote about his experience the next day.
“Paying attention to the living conditions and
welfare of ordinary prisoners in Fashafouyeh is a very pressing and urgent
matter,” he wrote. “In Iran, nobody is more helpless and destitute than they
are.
Their conditions are the exact definition of
‘inhumane.’”
“What they are experiencing is beyond the
limits of human tolerance, even it were for just a day, and I have no doubt
that it is leaving an irreparable impact on their bodies and souls every day,”
he added.
According to Fatourehchi, about 40 new
prisoners are admitted into the facility each day. The new inmates are first
kept for four days in the quarantine unit, which he described as a “sewer”
without ventilation or washing facilities, and fed “cold macaroni or uncooked
yellow rice.”
Fatourehchi continued: “More than 80 percent
of the prisoners in quarantine are homeless drug addicts who are too weak to
stand on their feet. They should be hospitalized, not imprisoned. The stench
from body odor and infected wounds is unimaginable and what makes it worse is
the vomit left by drug addicts who don’t have the strength to go to the
toilet.”
Fatourehchi also noted that many of the
inmates, who come from poor backgrounds, are rarely able to see their relatives
who cannot afford to travel to the prison’s remote location. When their
relatives do show up, they have to wait outside for long periods and sit on
dirt.
In his Facebook post, Fatourehchi included a
photo of three cigarettes he had been given during his encounters with detained
Sufis in the jail.
“As I was leaving the prison, I bumped into
some Gonabadi dervishes, including the dear Kasra Nouri, Mr. Entesari and others whose
kindness, stature and affection were so deep that it felt like I was looking at
familiar faces filled with light that brightened the surrounding darkness.”
“I will never forget their loving smile,” he
added.
Nouri, who was a graduate student in human
rights at the University of Tehran before he was arrested, has been sentenced
to 12 years in prison, 74 lashes, two years of exile in Salas Babajani county
in Kermanshah Province, a two-year ban on traveling abroad, and a two-year
prohibition on political and social activities including social media.
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