Ten Detained Political Activists and Environmentalists Denied Counsel in Iran’s Kurdistan Province
FEBRUARY
14, 2019
Ten political activists and
environmentalists arrested in Iran’s Kurdistan Province between December 31,
2018, and January 6, 2019, are being held at the Intelligence Ministry’s
detention center in the city of Sanandaj while being denied access to legal
counsel and contact with family members.
Eight of the detainees are
members of the Kurdish branch of the Iran National Unity Party (INUP) and two
others had allegedly engaged in peaceful environmental activism, a party source
with knowledge about their cases told the Center for Human Rights in Iran
(CHRI) February 5.
As of February 5, they had only
been allowed to make one phone call to their families, said the source who
asked not to be identified for security reasons.
“It started on January 31 with
the arrest of three people and by January 6 a total of ten people had been
taken into custody in Sanandaj and Kamyaran,” said the source.
Added the source: “We heard
nothing for a week until they made a short call to their families to say they
had been arrested and were okay. Since then, they have not met with their
lawyers or family members and it’s not clear what they have been accused of.
The authorities are not responding to family inquiries.”
News about the arrests was
first published by the Kurdistan Human Rights
Network website. Those taken into
custody include Farhad Mohammadi, the secretary of the INUP’s Kurdish
branch in Sanandaj; Zanyar Zamiran, the party’s former deputy secretary in
Sanandaj; Hadi Kamangar, the party’s senior official in Kamyaran; Fazel Gheytasi,
a party member in Kamyaran; Reza Asadi, a party member in Kamyaran; Amanj
Ghorbani, the chairman of the party’s regional environmental committee and an
official in the Department of the Environment in Kamyaran; Issa Feyzi, a member
of the party’s environmental committee in Kamyaran; and Rashed Montazeri, a
former party member in Kamyaran.
In addition, Hossein Kamangar
and Bakhtiar Kamangar, two political activists mainly concerned with
environmental issues, were arrested during the same period in Kamyaran and taken
to the Intelligence Ministry’s detention center in Sanandaj, according to
CHRI’s source.
The INUP’s Kurdish branch
was launched in 2015 with a license from the Interior Ministry. Its
mission statement states: “The country of Iran… is in the process of
transforming from a traditional society to a modern one. As part of our
national duty as the children of this land, we have decided to create a civil
institution called the Iran National Unity Party in order to protect our
precious heritage and bring about a happy, dynamic and prosperous society
capable of meeting the material and spiritual needs of our compatriots.”
CHRI’s source said the party
had organized public education classes on issues such as civil society, the
environment, social upheavals and natural disasters.
Party members were among first
responders after an earthquake hit the region in November 2018, the source
added.
Hossein Khosheghbal, the deputy
governor of Kurdistan in charge of security, alleged that under the cover of
environmental activities the detainees had engaged in criminal activities,
specifically playing a role in the murder of an ambulance driver in July 2018.
“Following our investigations
and security leads from intelligence agencies, a number of contacts and agents
for anti-revolutionary groups who were working under the guise of environmental
activities have been identified and arrested for being responsible for the
martyrdom of a Red Crescent ambulance driver and will be treated in accordance
with the law,” Khosheghbal said in an interview with the state-run Islamic Republic News
Agency (IRNA) on January 8.
“Officials and members of the
INUP’s Kurdish branch have been arrested without a true understanding of the
party’s activities and without considering society’s guaranteed rights,” it
said. “The INUP strongly condemns the arrests and the way the state views the
party as a security threat.”
On January 25, a group of 59
attorneys in Iran issued a statement calling for the immediate release of the detainees,
especially Farhad Mohammadi, a prominent lawyer in the province.
“It is unlawful to summon and
arrest a person without sufficient cause,” the statement said. “We call upon
bar association members and legal advisers not to remain silent and carry out
their duty to defend detained lawyers.
“Secondly, we urge the judicial
authorities who issued the arrest warrants to suspend their decision by taking
into consideration all aspects of a fair legal process … and take steps to free
detained lawyers.”
Security forces in Iran
including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Intelligence Ministry
launched several crackdowns on lawyers, environmental activists and dissidents
in 2018.
At least eight lawyers who have worked on human
rights issues in Iran, including prominent attorney Nasrin Sotoudeh, were jailed that year as well
as nine members of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation.
Many of them are facing
years of imprisonment for their peaceful activities.
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