Mounting Evidence that Clears Eight Conservationists from Grave Charges, Judiciary Still Relies on Forced “Confessions”
FEBRUARY
7, 2019
Iran Must Guarantee Fair
Trial in Upcoming Court Session on February 12
Year-long Detainment
Continues while Judiciary Ignores Conclusions of Supreme National Security
Council, Intelligence Ministry and Department of Environment
February 7, 2018—In light
of the upcoming court session on February 12 in which eight conservationists
who has been detained for over a year will have to defend themselves against
grave national security charges, the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI)
calls upon the Iranian Judiciary to ensure all safeguards necessary for a free
trial will be provided.
With three major state
organizations in Iran calling into question the charges of espionage against
the eight conservationists, as well as credible evidence of forced confessions,
CHRI calls upon the authorities to adhere to international standards of
evidence and a fair trial, in which forced confessions are inadmissible.
“This case typifies the
fact that hundreds of citizens in Iran are trapped in a judicial system in
which there is no requirement of evidence and forced false ‘confessions’ are
used to compensate for this lack of evidence,” said Hadi Ghaemi, CHRI’s
executive director.
“The Judiciary is
disregarding conclusions of the state’s own agencies and instead bowing to
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps who concocted this case, giving lie to
their long-stated claim of judicial independence and the rule of law in Iran,”
Ghaemi added.
Supreme National Security
Council (SNSC) Rejects Espionage Charge
This past week Iran’s
Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), the country’s highest security body,
reportedly decided that the eight
conservationists who have been detained for over a year were
not involved in any espionage, according to a lawmaker. Yet so far, the
SNSC has not commented publicly on the matter, and the eight remain behind
bars.
“Based on information I
have received, the Supreme National Security Council’s (SNSC) expert
investigation of the accused conservationists concluded that their activities
did not constitute espionage,” tweeted Mahmoud
Sadeghi, a reformist member of Parliament from Tehran, on February 3, 2019.
In recent weeks Iran’s
Department of the Environment (DOE) has been collecting information about the
detained conservationists, including their academic background and professional
activities at the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, for the SNSC’s
attention, the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) has learned.
Based on that information,
the SNSC concluded the espionage charges against them were baseless. In May
2018, Iran’s Intelligence Ministry had also concluded that the conservationists
had not engaged in espionage, a view shared by Iran’s Department of Environment
as well.
Houman Jowkar, Taher
Ghadirian, Morad Tahbaz, Sepideh Kashani, Niloufar Bayani, Amir Hossein
Khaleghi, Sam Rajabi and Abdolreza Kouhpayeh are currently on trial on national
security charges. Four have been charged with “corruption on earth” (which can
carry the death penalty), three with “espionage” and one with “assembly and
collusion against national security.”
While the indictment was
being read during the trial, Niloufar Bayani stated her so-called “confessions”
were extracted under torture and she forcefully retracted these
statements.
CHRI calls on the Iranian
judiciary to dismiss any “confessions” or statements obtained under duress, and
to heed the conclusions of Iran’s own state agencies, which have concluded
there is no evidence of espionage.
CHRI calls on the Iranian
authorities to guarantee all safeguards necessary for a fair trial, which
should include an open trial and sufficient time for a full defense.
Fair Trial Concerns:
Insufficient Time for Defense and Closed Proceedings
On February 12, the next
session of the court will be held, in which the remainder of the indictment
will be delivered. Afterwards, the defendants’ lawyers are allowed to defend
their clients. However there are serious concerns that the defense will not be
given enough time to thoroughly review these charges and respond fully and
effectively to them. Judicial cases brought in Iran are notorious for allowing
defense insufficient time to respond effectively.
In addition, the closed
nature of the trial raises serious concerns. Trials are to be public under
Iranian law unless a specific request has been made by the parties or if a
public trial would jeopardize public security. Since details of the case have
already been heavily publicized on state TV and by news agencies close to
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards, any considerations that could have been
used to justify the court being closed to public scrutiny have already been
undermined. In addition, given credible questions regarding the nature of the
so-called “confessions” being used as “evidence,” having a public trial is
necessary to ensure the impartiality of the trial.
No Evidence, Forced
“Confessions” Extracted Under Torture
“What do they want from
the conservationists?” tweeted Sam
Rajabi’s sister, Katayoun on February 2. “We have received news that Niloufar
Bayani raised objections in court and said, ‘If you were threatened with a
syringe shot, you would confess, too!’ Why are we silent? Let’s help them.”
In May 2018, DOE head,
Vice President Isa Kalantari, referring to
the fact that the Intelligence Ministry had found no evidence the detained
conservationists had engaged in espionage, stated: “The government’s
fact-finding committee has concluded that the detained activists should be
released because there’s no evidence to prove the accusations leveled against
these individuals.”
Their continued detainment
has prompted an international outcry. The UN has called the charges against the
conservationists “hard to fathom” and in February 2018 stated, “Nowhere in the
world, including Iran, should conservation be equated to spying or regarded as
a crime.”
The trial of the eight
environmental conservationists, which began on January 30, 2019, is being held
at Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court in Tehran, presided by the notoriously
hardline Judge Abolqasem Salavati.
During the proceedings one
of the defendants repeatedly asserted her so-called “confessions,” which had
become the basis for the trial, were made under
physical and mental torture and that she retracted all of them.
The accused have been
repeatedly denied due process. Mohammad Hossein Aghasi, the attorney for one of
the defendants, for example, stated that
he was not allowed to attend his client’s trial.
Hessam Khaleghi, the
brother of Amir Hossein Khaleghi, tweeted:
“[These conservationists] have spent their lives saving this country’s natural
environment. So please don’t keep repeating baseless accusations against them.”
Parliamentarians Question
Rouhani on the Conservationists’ Cases
On February 4, Iran’s
labor news agency, ILNA, reported that
a group of parliamentarians had asked President Rouhani to look into the case
and ensure the accused are not being denied their legal rights.
According to ILNA’s
Political Correspondent, as Rouhani was about to leave the chamber he was
surrounded by a group of lawmakers and they began a conversation. “The
lawmakers pointed out the importance of this case in the eyes of the public and
the international human rights community and asked the President to ensure
these individuals can choose their own lawyers in accordance with the law… and
to schedule a time for family visitation.”
Meanwhile Parliament
Speaker Ali Larijani has accepted a
request to meet the families of the conservationists but no date has yet been
set, according to MP Mohammad Reza Tabesh.
Fars News, a mouthpiece
for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) whose intelligence agents
arrested the eight conservationists in late January 2018, published a
long report on
the start of the trial and described the defendants as individuals accused of
“spying on Iran’s military installations.”
Iranians React with
Outrage on Social Media
Niloufar Bayani’s leaked
objections to the indictment, and the use of torture to extract her
“confessions,” have been widely discussed by Iranians on social
media—especially after the torture
allegations revealed by labor activist Esmail Bakhshi and
journalist Sepideh Qoliyan during their detentions in January 2019.
Journalist Shabnam
Nezami tweeted on
February 4: “The Intelligence Ministry, the Department of Environment and the
President have said that the conservationists were not spies. Falsely accused,
the late Kavous Seyed-Emami [one of the original nine conservationists
arrested, who died in detention under highly suspicious circumstances] left
this world in a mysterious death. We have to listen to Niloufar Bayani’s cries
of innocence and help the eight prisoners before it’s too late.”
The political activist
Pooyan Fakhraei commented:
“Niloufar Bayani’s statements are shocking…An all-out effort is needed to stop
this nightmare.”
Tara Sepehrifar, researcher at Human Rights
Watch, commented:
“In 2017 Niloufar Bayani left her job working for the UN’s environmental
program and returned to Iran to work on conservation. After a year in temporary
detention, they say she stood in front of Judge Salavati and told him about how
she was forced to make confessions under torture. Is anyone hearing her?”
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