Families of Kurdish Prisoners Held Incommunicado Fear Imminent Executionوضعیت مبهم هوشمند علیپور و محمد استاد قادر و خطر صدور احکام سنگین قضایی
SEPTEMBER 28, 2018
Two Kurdish men, Houshmand
Alipour and Mohammad Ostad-Ghader, have been held incommunicado
inside Iran’s Intelligence Ministry detention center in Sanandaj, Kurdistan
Province, since they were arrested on August 3, 2018, the Center for Human
Rights in Iran (CHRI) has learned.
“Protests in Kurdistan
[Province] have been on the rise and the broadcast of forced confessions has
gotten us worried that they could be executed like Ramin Hossein Panahi was,” Houshmand’s
brother, Hejar Alipour told CHRI from exile in Canada on September 22.
“Houshmand has only made one
three-minute phone call to his family but nothing precise is known about what has
happened to his friend Mohammad, who apparently only has an old father and we
haven’t been able to locate any of his relatives,” Alipour said.
On August 8, the Islamic
Republic Broadcasting Organization (IRIB) aired what it claimed to be
clips of the two young men confessing to participating in armed attacks
against Iranian soldiers.
Forced “confessions” in politically motivated
cases are often extracted under the threat of or actual torture and then
broadcast by the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) to justify politically motivated prosecutions.
Since the clips were aired, the
prisoners’ families have feared the men could be executed without due process
given the recent executions of four Kurdish detainees on September 8 and 10 in
West Azerbaijan Province.
The two are members of a
militant Kurdish group known as the Parti Azadi Kurdistan (Kurdistan Freedom
Party) but were unarmed when they entered northwestern Iran through Iraqi
Kurdistan to campaign for their organization, according to Alipour.
Houshmand Alipour’s parents,
Mostafa Alipour and Ameneh Moloudian, issued a statement on August 15 denying
their son’s involvement in any military operation.
“Our son was only active in
informing the public about the situation of Iranian political prisoners and
human rights advocates, especially Kurds, and did not commit any crime,” the statement
said.
It continued: “Our repeated inquiries to the
relevant domestic authorities and our pleas to treat him fairly and avoid
torture and allow him access to a lawyer have so far had no results. So far no
one has given us answers about his condition or what he has done wrong.”
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