Inmates in Gharchak Women’s Prison Denied Food and Heating After Being Assaulted by Guards
FEBRUARY
15, 2019
Prisoners Launched Protest
after Being Falsely Led to Believe They Would be Released
Twenty prisoners in Iran’s
Gharchak Prison for women, including five Sufi political prisoners, were placed
in solitary confinement or transferred to Evin Prison after prison guards
violently attacked them on February 8, 2019.
The prisoners were denied
food for the first two days after the transfer and continue to be denied access
to gas and electricity required for heating their cells, as well as fresh air
breaks, a source with knowledge about the event told the Center for Human
Rights in Iran (CHRI) on February 11.
A person going by the name
of Yaasan on Twitter whose sister is inside Gharchak Prison tweeted February
8: “My sister was crying over the phone and saying the guards broke the limbs
of a lot of prisoners and that the smell of tear gas was unbearable. Then she
got cut off. A couple of hours later her friend called me from prison and said
my sister was beaten and dragged away. We don’t have any news. My mother is in
front of the prison but no one is answering.”
A protest broke out in the
prison, located south of Tehran, on February 8 after the prisoners were falsely
led to believe that their release was imminent. Prison guards responded by
assaulting the inmates, five of whom are followers of the persecuted Sufi
Gonabadi faith.
“They fired tear gas and
used pepper spray in a closed space,” Alireza Roshan, the editor of the order’s
Telegram app channel Majzooban
Noor, told CHRI on February 9. “To save themselves [from the
tear gas], the prisoners set their blankets and clothes on fire.
“A special guard unit
brought fire engines and splashed water on the prisoners and all their
belongings,” he added. “Then they turned the gas and power off.”
He continued: “The
spreading smell of gas and smoke led to protests in other wards and the warden
ordered male guards to attack the female prisoners and severely beat them. I
heard some of the guards were dragging women on the floor by the hair. Many
prisoners had to go to the clinic for severe injuries.”
“Whatever crime a prisoner
may have committed, her life should be protected,” Roshan said. “But in
Gharchak Prison they contaminated their belongings with tear gas and then beat
them.”
The protest followed an
announcement by prison officials that 700 inmates at the facility would be
freed in a national pardon to mark the 40th anniversary of the revolution on
February 11.
“The prison officials said
everybody would be freed except convicted murderers and accomplices to murder,”
another source with knowledge of the cases told CHRI.
The source, who asked not
to be identified for security reasons, added: “The prisoners were so happy; it
was as if they were in the clouds. Many of them donated their belongings to
inmates who were not going to be freed. A lot of them packed their bags and
their families were happily waiting for them.”
“Then, yesterday,
[February 8], the Gharchak Prison authorities said they had made a mistake,”
said the source. “That made the prisoners boils over and protests because they
were already under a lot of psychological pressure.”
Roshan told CHRI that the
prisoners were also protesting because the authorities had been refusing to
provide medical care to a sick inmate.
Gharchak Prison currently
holds at least five female Sufis serving sentences ranging from one to two
years based on charges related to a protest by
hundreds of members of the faith in Tehran in February 2018.
The inmates are Shekoufeh
Yadollahi, Sima Entesari, Elham Ahmadi, Shima Entesari and Sepideh Moradi.
On February 4, Judiciary
Chief Sadegh Larijani announced 50,000
prisoners in Iran would be pardoned by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to
celebrate the anniversary of the country’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.
But the amnesty excluded
political prisoners convicted on the basis of “national security” charges.
“The reports from Gharchak
Prison are worrying,” tweeted reformist
Member of Parliament Mahmoud Sadeghi on the day of the disturbances. “I have
called the relevant authorities but no one is answering.”
People shared a photo on
social media claiming it showed smoke caused by the fire rising from one of the
prison wards in Gharchak on the morning of February 8.
A former political
prisoner told CHRI that it’s extremely distressing for a prisoner when they’re
falsely led to believed that their freedom is within reach: “I was in
prison during a period that coincided with the anniversary of the revolution,
the New Year and other important occasions when officials announce general
amnesties and free a lot of prisoners.”
He continued: “The
announcements would impact all the inmates, even those who didn’t have a chance
of being freed. They all felt freedom was a step away. A lot of times the
guards would try to inflate this mood and give the impression that freedom was
within reach.”
“Then the promised day
would arrive and everybody couldn’t wait but nothing would happen,” he added.
“Announcements were delayed and when they finally came, they didn’t include all
the prisoners as promised and only a few people got freed; a few people who
only had a short period of time left on their sentence.
“Oh, the disappointment in
the wards was unbearable,” he said. “Some pretended they didn’t care but they
would get depressed. They couldn’t eat. Tensions would rise. Everyone was angry
and would get upset over little things.”
“I remember the children
of one of the prisoners got really sick when their father was not freed as
expected,” added the former political prisoner. “And one of the wives was
hospitalized for a long time after the prosecutor did not free her husband as
he had promised.”
Reacting to the news from
Gharchak Prison, journalist and former political prisoner Jila
Baniyaghoob tweeted:
“A number of prisoners who were supposed to be freed for the 40th anniversary
of the revolution were severely beaten today and many of them have been
abandoned without medical attention. They didn’t feed the prisoners today….”
Journalist Mahtab
Gholizadeh commented:
“Do you have to unleash the guards and use tear gas in a closed space and
endanger the prisoners’ lives over a little protest in Gharchak Prison? The
prison authorities are displaying their new management skills in this modern
age. Can we export their expertise and import meat with it? Where does this
merciless bestial behavior come from?”
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