Tehran University Student Speaks Out Against “Virginity Tests,” Inhumane Interrogation Methods
MAY 11,
2019
Parisa Rafiei, a student at the University of Tehran,
was pressured to take a “virginity test” while in state custody and then blocked
from lodging a complaint against the inhumane practice, she revealed in
an open letter published on May 9, 2019.
“In a totally unlawful
action during my detention, my interrogator with the approval of the case
investigator sent me to the medical examiner’s office on Behesht St. for a
virginity test but I stood firm and despite threats and lots of pressure, they
did not succeed,” she wrote.
“I insisted on lodging a
complaint against this illegal request [of a virginity test] several times but
the authorities refused and kept it quiet,” she added.
In a global call to
eliminate violence against women and girls, the UN Human Rights Office, UN
Women, and the World Health Organization called in October 2018 for an end to virginity tests, described as a “medically
unnecessary, and often times painful, humiliating and traumatic practice.”
In their statement, the UN
agencies also explained that the practice has “no scientific or clinical basis”
and that “there is no examination that can prove a girl or woman has had sex.”
The 21-year-old
photography student was arrested in February 2018 and held in Evin Prison
in Tehran for 21 days for allegedly participating in street protests.
In August 2018, she
was sentenced by a preliminary court to seven years in
prison, 74 lashes, a two-year ban on traveling abroad and prohibited from
political and social activities for two years under the charges of “assembly
and collusion against national security,” “propaganda against the state” and
“disrupting public order.”
She is currently awaiting
the result of her sentence appeal.
Parisa Rafiei’s father,
Soltanali Rafiei, is a senior official of the reformist Islamic Union Party of
Iran, a close political ally of President Hassan Rouhani.
She wrote that the
authorities admitted to her that they backed off after she refused the test
because they didn’t want to be accused of sexual assault.
“Probably what they meant
is allegations of rape; allegations by me or other prisoners, even though the
detention center was full of security cameras,” she wrote.
“Of course, the tremendous
humiliation was not limited to the day I was sent to the medical examiner’s
office,” wrote Rafiei. “The case investigator wanted to impose more
psychological pressure by sending me so-called unofficial letters describing
the place I was going to be held, without saying where it was, along with verbal
threats of execution, beatings and even pulling out nails.”
“The reason I mention
these details is that we should not think that the interrogators use just one
tactic to extract the admission of guilt they are looking for,” she added.
Rafiei continued: “In
addition to commonly imposing solitary confinement for days and months during
the initial investigation stage, the authorities… transfer political suspects
to unidentified detention centers which not only hamper the efforts of family
and friends to find them, but also put the suspects under added psychological
pressure.”
“A political suspect
becomes more vulnerable to threats when she doesn’t know where she is being
held under tight security measures and when she’s blindfolded and incapable of
grasping the surrounding space,” she wrote.
Rafiei also noted that she
had initially planned to submit her letter to Parliament’s Article 90
Commission, which was set up to investigate complaints against the three
branches of Iran’s government, but decided to make the letter public instead
because lawmakers “have brazenly sided with the security establishment.”
“Members of Parliament,
especially the [pro-Rouhani] Hope Faction, were made aware of details of
psychological pressures… during my detention,” she wrote.
“But have they
investigated the unlawful secret detention centers run by the Revolutionary
Guard’s intelligence organization or prolonged solitary confinement or, more
importantly, the harassment of female prisoners with things like ‘virginity
tests’?”
According to state
officials, more than 150 university students were arrested in the
aftermath of nationwide protests in Iran in December 2017 and January 2018.
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