Iran is Using False “Confessions” to Manufacture Cases Against Detained Conservationists
JANUARY
24, 2019
One Dead, Eight Others At
Grave Risk for Harm
Detainees, Jailed for 12
Months, Denied Counsel, Could Face Death Penalty
January 24, 2019 – Some of
the conservationists who have been imprisoned incommunicado in Iran for the
past year have been forced to confess under the threat of death, the Center for
Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) has learned.
New details about the
prolonged detentions of Houman Jowkar, Taher Ghadirian, Morad Tahbaz, Sepideh
Kashani, Niloufar Bayani, Amir Hossein Khaleghi, Sam Rajabi and Abdolreza
Kouhpayeh strongly indicate that Iran’s judicial officials have been working
closely with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC’s) Intelligence
Organization to build cases against them based on false confessions obtained
under extreme duress.
A source with detailed
knowledge of the cases told CHRI that some of the conservationists “were
subjected to months of solitary confinement and psychological
torture, threatened with death, threatened with being injected with
hallucinogenic drugs, threatened with arrest and the death of family members.”
“Some of the detainees
were also physically beaten up… all to force them to give false confessions
against themselves,” added the source who requested anonymity for fear of
reprisals by Iranian security forces.
“Forced confessions won’t
conceal the fact that these detainees’ due process rights have been trampled on
while hardline judicial and security forces have been trying to manufacture
cases against them,” said CHRI’s Executive Director Hadi Ghaemi.
One Dead, Eight Others Isolated, Under
“Immense Pressure”
Agents of the IRGC’s
Intelligence Organization arrested nine conservationists working for the
Tehran-based Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation (PWHF), which had been
licensed to operate in Iran by the government, between January 24 and 25, 2018.
While detained in Evin
Prison for interrogations, the PHWF’s Managing Director Kavous Seyed-Emami, an
Iranian Canadian conservationist and academic, died two weeks later under suspicious circumstanceson February 9.
Officials claimed he
committed suicide but a preliminary autopsy report that omitted his cause
of death showed “bruises on different parts of the body and evidence of an injection
on his skin,” said a lawyer representing the Seyed-Emami family. No final
autopsy report has been made public 12 months after his death.
Just four days after
Seyed-Emami’s death while his case was still making international headlines,
Tehran Prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi accused him on February 13 of engaging in
espionage.
He and his family were
also smeared in a film made collaboratively by Iran’s
IRGC and Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting that was aired on Iran’s
state-run TV.While his family was in the early stages of grieving, they were
threatened with harm by security agents if they spoke to the media about the
case.
Seyed-Emami’s wife, Maryam
Mombeini, was repeatedly interrogated so aggressively that she was hospitalized for a nervous breakdown and banned from leaving the country despite calls by the Canadian government for her to be
allowed to travel.
“Instead of holding anyone
accountable for Seyed-Emami’s death, Iran has subjected his colleagues to 12
months of abuse while violating their right to counsel,” Ghaemi said.
The source who confirmed
to CHRI that some of the PWHF staffers have been “subjected to immense
pressures to give false confessions against themselves and others” did not
indicate exactly how many were forced to make statements incriminating
themselves.
On October 24, 2018,
Dowlatabadi said indictments against all eight detainees had
been completed and would soon be submitted for trial. He added that charges
against four of the accused, whom he did not name, had changed to “corruption
on earth,” which could carry the death penalty.
It is unknown whether any
of the conservationists have since been tried.
On November 8,
Gholamhossein Esmaili, the chief prosecutor of Tehran Province, pointed to the
“camera traps” the conservationists had used to track wildlife in Iran
including the endangered Asiatic Cheetah as evidence that they were spying.
In fact, the
cameras—standard professional equipment commonly used in the field—are an
“essential tool in providing a critical basis for both science and conservation
strategies to save species from extinction,” said dozens of conservation
practitioners and scholars including renowned primatologist Jane Goodall in
a November 2018 open letter.
“Some of us are ready to
provide evidence and witness testimony upon request,” added the signatories in
the letter addressed to several Iranian officials including Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei, head UN envoy Gholamali Khoshroo and Judiciary Chief Sadegh Larijani.
Right to Counsel Violated
The conservationists’
cases have been shrouded in secrecy other than occasional accusations or
comments by judicial officials run in state media outlets.
The informed source that
spoke with CHRI confirmed that the detainees have been subjected to prolonged
periods of solitary confinement and only sporadically granted severely limited
access to counsel or phone calls with family members.
“They have had no legal
representation for the entire duration of their arrest until the indictments
were issued in late July [2018],” the source told CHRI, adding that after “one
year of effort,” their families were finally allowed to choose lawyers for them
in January 2019.
“They have no clue about
what is happening outside, and express their immense stress of isolation… and
continue to voice their innocence,” added the source.
As in the case of
Seyed-Emami who died in state custody, Iranian state-run TV has repeatedly run
sensationalist news reports and comments by hardline judicial officials all
aimed at smearing the detainees, who have been denied the right to respond or
speak freely to defend themselves.
Iran’s Own Intelligence Ministry Says No
Evidence of Spying
In May 2018, the head of
Iran’s Department of Environment, Vice President Isa Kalantari, refutedaccusations that the conservationists were
spies, pointing to the conclusions of President Hassan Rouhani’s own
Intelligence Ministry and “fact-finding committee.”
“It has been determined
that these individuals were detained without doing anything,” Kalantari said. “The
Intelligence Ministry has concluded that there is no evidence that these
individuals were spies.”
“The government’s
fact-finding committee concluded that the detained activists should be released
because there’s no evidence to prove the accusations leveled against these
individuals,” he added.
International Calls For Their Release
The UN has called the
charges against the conservationists “hard to fathom.”
“Nowhere in the world,
including Iran, should conservation be equated to spying or regarded as a
crime,” said UN human rights experts in February 2018.
“Detention of human rights defenders for their work is arbitrary in nature.”
CHRI calls on the Iranian
judiciary to dismiss any “confessions” or a statement obtained under duress and
adds its voice to the growing chorus of calls from inside and outside Iran for
the conservationists to be granted a fair trial and released immediately.
“Iran has held these women
and men in near isolation for a year while it has been cooking up cases against
them,” said Ghaemi.
“Yet emerging details tell
a very different story of a group of conservationists being smeared and
pressured to make false statements against themselves while being denied access
to counsel,” he added.
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