Kurdish Death Row Prisoner Transferred to Different Prison, Raising Fears He Could be Executedنگرانی خانواده و وکلای رامین حسینپناهی از انتقال شبانه او به زندان رجاییشهر کرج
AUGUST 16, 2018
A Kurdish man who has been
sentenced to death in Iran despite serious concerns about how his case was
handled has been transferred hundreds of miles to a prison near Tehran for
unknown reasons, raising fears he could soon be executed.
“His family is worried because
it is not clear if he has been transferred to receive treatment or if they want
to carry out his execution,” Osman Mozayyan, one of Ramin Hossein Panahi’s lawyers, told the Center
for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) on August 14, 2018.
“But what is clear is that… the
sentence against him was issued by a court in Sanandaj and legally that is
where he should be incarcerated. I and two other lawyers are pursuing the
matter,” he added.
Panahi, who was initially due
to be hospitalized for kidney problems in Sanandaj, the capital of Iran’s
Kurdistan Province, had phoned his family on August 13 to tell them he was
being taken to Rajaee Shahr Prison in Karaj but did not say why, according to
his brother Amjad Hossein Panahi.
“Surrounded by security forces
in several cars, they took Ramin out of Sanandaj prison at 11 on
Monday night,” Amjad Hossein Panahi told CHRI. “When relatives inquired at
the court, they were told that he had been transferred to receive treatment,
which is strange because the hospitals in Sanandaj are equipped to treat kidney
problems.”
“It’s unimaginable to dispatch
a prisoner on death row more than 500 kilometers (310 miles) away just for
kidney treatment,” he added.
Panahi and his family have
experienced other false alarms since he was sentenced to death in January 2018
by Branch 1 of the Revolutionary Court in Sanandaj for his alleged membership
in the outlawed Kurdish nationalist group, Komala. He has also been accused of
drawing a weapon against agents of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Panahi, 22, has insisted he did
not participate in any armed action nor did he reach for a weapon.
Iran’s Supreme Court upheld the sentence in April and
his execution was scheduled for May 3 but was postponed after international
outcry by the United Nations and rights organizations. Panahi’s request for a
case review was then rejected by Iran’s Supreme Court, leaving him in danger of
imminent execution.
The UN’s special rapporteur on
extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Agnes Callamard, has cited concerns that Panahi was denied
access to a lawyer, a fair trial, and that he was mistreated and tortured in
detention.
CHRI has called on the Iranian judiciary
to cease politically motivated executions, stop violating international
standards of due process, and guarantee the rights of detainees to counsel of
their choice as well as a fair trial in line with UN standards.
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