Proposal Aims to Allow Authorities to Hold Detainees for at Least 20 Days without Counsel
MAY 10,
2019
On May 5, 2019, the
Iranian Parliament’s Judicial and Legal Affairs Committee approved a
problematic proposal that would allow detainees accused of national security
crimes to choose their own lawyer rather than one from a court-approved list.
But the proposal, which
would have to make it through two other stages before it could become law,
would allow the authorities to hold these detainees while denying them access
to counsel for at least 20 days during an initial “investigation” stage.
Since late 2017, detainees
held on national security-related charges—including journalists, activists,
and defense lawyers—have been told to choose their counsel
from a list approved by Iran’s chief justice.
This violation of
international standards of due process has been condemned by lawyers and rights groups based inside and outside the country.
Iran’s Constitution sets no limits or conditions on the
right to counsel.
Article 35 states, “Both
parties to a lawsuit have the right in all courts of law to select an
attorney,” and according to Article 48 of Iran’s Criminal Procedures Regulations, people have the
right to ask for and have a meeting with a lawyer as soon as they are detained.
However, the Note to Article 48 makes exceptions: “In cases of
crimes against internal or external security…during the investigation phase,
the parties to the dispute are to select their attorneys from a list approved
by the head of the judiciary.”
If approved, the new
proposal would allow these detainees to petition to be able to choose their own
lawyer after 20 days of being held without one—subject to certain conditions.
For example, if the
detaining authority decides that the detainee should be held without access to
counsel for longer than 20 days, the detainee would be allowed to file an
objection.
But it’s not clear exactly
how the detainee would be able to object without having a lawyer.
And if they did manage to
make an objection, the detainee would have to wait for an undeclared amount of
time while a court decides whether or not they should be allowed access to
counsel.
According to the
parliamentary committee’s spokesman, Hassan Norouzi, the
proposal states that those accused of acting against internal and external
security, financially supporting terrorism, conducing organized crime or
committing financial misconduct involving more than 10 billion rials ($237,206
USD) could be prohibited from accessing a lawyer during an initial
investigation stage for up to 20 days.
If the arresting authority
deems it necessary to hold the prisoner without counsel for more than 20 days,
the accused could challenge the decision in court, Norouzi added.
The proposal was presented
to Parliament after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei appointed conservative
cleric Ebrahim Raisi as Iran’s new chief justice in March
2019.
Since then, the Judicial
and Legal Affairs Committee has been trying to amend the controversial law
without actually restoring the right to counsel.
Continued Policy of Denying
Detainees Due Process
If the proposal becomes
law, it would cancel the Note to Article 48 and eliminate the lawyer’s lists
while prolonging the time for which a detainee could be legally held without
access to a lawyer.
Since gradually coming
into effect in 2017, the Note to Article 48 was criticized by Iran’s legal community for severely
restricting detainees’ due process rights as well as a lawyer’s right to retain
clients of their choosing.
The list became so
unpopular in the legal community that former Chief Justice Sadegh Larijani
tried to convince people that he was not responsible for
it.
“The Note to Article 48
was not our idea at all and we tried to avoid it for the longest time but
eventually we had no choice but to comply with the law in order to remove
obstacles in prosecuting certain security cases,” Larijani said at a June 2018
meeting with senior judiciary officials.
The Note to Article 48
was ratified by Parliament and the Guardian Council in
June 2015 but courts in various provinces only began issuing lists of lawyers
to detainees in late 2017.
In January 2018, 155
Iranian lawyers called on Larijani to end judiciary-enforced restrictions on legal counsel.
“To help attorneys
implement the law and protect the rights of every detainee, which should
certainly be your concern as well, and to resolve past and present problems
arising from the Note to Article 48 of the Criminal Procedure Regulations, it
is our expectation that you take the necessary steps to help lawyers accept
requests to represent the detainees,” said the letter.
In June 2018, the
opposition-run Zeitoon news website reported that the list of
allowable lawyers issued in Tehran included some with a history of serious
human rights violations.
Prominent defense
attorney Nasrin Sotoudeh was a vocal critic of the list before
she was sentenced to 33.8 years in prison (of which she must serve 12 years
subject to appeal) in April 2019.
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