Elderly Baha’i Man Arrested for Third Time for Peacefully Practicing His Religionتوهین به اعتقادات مذهبی و بازداشت دوباره یک بهایی از سوی ماموران اداره اطلاعات ساری
DECEMBER
26, 2018
“…The agents repeatedly cursed and insulted
him and called him a ‘Baha’i dog’”
Formerly imprisoned Baha’i
faith member Ali Ahmadi has been arrested for a third time in Iran on the
charge of “propaganda against the state,” this time for having a holy book
inside his home, a source with knowledge about his case informed the Center for
Human Rights in Iran (CHRI).
The latest arrest took
place on November 18, 2018, in the city of Sari by the Caspian Sea where the
60-year-old works as a rice trader. He was taken into custody by agents of the
Intelligence Ministry and is currently being held in solitary confinement at
the Kachouie Detention Center in Sari.
“At 7:30 in the morning,
eight agents from the Intelligence Ministry went to his house and quickly
flashed a piece of paper that apparently gave them permission to search the
house and arrest Mr. Ahmadi,” the source said on December 23 after requesting
anonymity for security purposes.
“While searching the
house, the agents repeatedly cursed and insulted him and called him a ‘Baha’i
dog’ and warned him not to make contact with them with his ‘filthy’ body,”
added the source. “They even pointed at a portrait of the Baha’i prophet,
Abdu’l-Baha, on a wall and ordered him to bring that ‘filthy man’ down. Then
they took away his personal belongings including some holy books.”
“The next day he was brought
to a court in Ghaemshahr [Mazandaran Province] along with the eight agents and
charged with ‘propaganda against the state.’ When his wife asked why, they said
because he had a [Baha’i] holy book inside the house. When she said that was
not a crime, they told her they knew better what is or isn’t a crime.”
The Baha’i community is
one of the most severely persecuted religious minorities in Iran and the
country’s Constitution does not recognize the faith as an
official religion.
Although Article 23 states
that “no one may be molested or taken to task simply for holding a certain
belief,” followers of the faith are denied many basic rights and subjected
to arbitrary arrests often on false charges of trying to propagate their
religion.
Since his arrest, Ahmadi
has spoken to his family on the phone three times and had a brief visit with
his wife, the source told CHRI.
“One day they contacted
Mrs. Ahmadi and said she could visit her husband for an hour,” said the
source.” She was also twice warned that the visit would be canceled if she
asked about the details of his case.”
The source continued:
“When Mrs. Ahmadi went there, they first took her belongings and then took her
to a car parked near the Intelligence Ministry’s detention center in Sari. Mr.
Ahmadi was sitting in the back while two agents sat in the front while the
couple spoke with each other for a few minutes.”
The source also told CHRI
that agents had confiscated Ahmadi’s eyeglasses, which he requires due to
severely weakened eyesight from several operations.
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