Want to support victims of torture? Put the squeeze on Iran
July 6, 2019
June 26 marked
the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture,
commemorated on the anniversary of the implementation of the United Nations Convention against Torture. For many
imprisoned Iranians, it was yet another day of torture by the country’s
repressive regime, which has never signed the Convention. If free democracies
want to walk the walk in opposing torture, they should increase economic and
political pressure on Tehran to stop this barbaric practice.
The Iranian
authorities employ a grotesque menagerie of physical and
psychological torture methods. They inflict bodily harm through
beating; burning; cutting; electrocution; placement into stress positions;
sleep deprivation; denial of medical care; and rape, including “virginity” and “sodomy” tests. And they
torment victims’ minds through prolonged solitary confinement, mock executions, threats of rape, and claims that family members are being tortured nearby.
Torture, which
pervades the judicial process from beginning to end, serves many purposes for
the Iranian regime.
It deters Iranians from protesting for their rights in
the first place. As one student who feared attending demonstrations remarked, “Before, you might be afraid that they would take
you to jail for the day. Now, you are afraid that they will beat you and cut
you.”
Additionally,
Iranian courts routinely accept coerced confessions, incentivizing torture
to secure convictions — and sometimes death sentences — for crimes real or
imagined. Last September, the regime executed three young Kurdish Iranians. UN human rights
monitors claimed the three were compelled to “confess” after being beaten, put
in stress positions, and threatened with rape. Just two months ago,
Tehran executed two 17-year-old boys after reportedly
flogging them until they “confessed.”
Not content with
using torture to aid prosecutions, the regime employs it to punish the
convicted, including by executing them. Capital-punishment methods include stoning, throwing
them from a height to their deaths, and even hanging from cranes — a punishment
in which, as Vice reports, “the condemned is slowly lifted from the ground by
his neck and left to dangle in the noose” and consequently “[i]t can take more
than 20 minutes to die.” Punishments for lesser crimes include blinding,
amputation, and flogging.
The U.S. and
other Western countries should act against Iran’s use of torture not only out
of commitment to human rights, but because the regime is using this tactic
against Americans and other Westerners. Tehran held American journalist Jason Rezaian hostage for two-and-a-half years,
subjecting him to solitary confinement, sleep deprivation, and a lack of
medical care. Former U.S. marine Amir Hekmati was whipped, tasered, hit with batons,
put in stress positions; sleep deprived, and force-fed and then deprived of
addictive medication so that he would suffer the effects of withdrawal.
Nazanin
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British aid worker held hostage since 2016, is serving a
five-year sentence on spurious charges of seeking to overthrow the regime.
She spent months in solitary confinement — and the authorities’
extorted 6,000 British pounds from her family by threatening to send her back
into solitary. Her husband said that her treatment amounts to “psychological
torture.” She and her husband recently engaged in a hunger strike to demand her release.
Unfortunately,
however, while the U.S. and European Union issued routine annual statements on
June 26 condemning the use of torture, both have failed to follow up on their
words with action.
In practice, the
EU has chosen money over human lives. The 2015 nuclear deal paved the way for
European companies to do business with Iran. European governments are so
desperate not to rock the boat that they have not sanctioned even one new
Iranian official for human rights abuses since the pact was finalized — even
after the imprisonment of European citizens like Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe —
including 40 individuals and entities already sanctioned by the U.S.
Instead, they
are sprinting to grease trade with Iran by injecting a
credit line of several million euros into a new mechanism, known as INSTEX,
designed to facilitate transactions while avoiding U.S. sanctions. Such trade
could generate billions of dollars for the regime, including its torture-happy
judicial system.
The U.S., to its
credit, has increased economic pressure on the regime, restoring and increasing
sanctions to deter European trade. Yet while the Trump administration touts its
“maximum pressure” policy on Iran, it hasn’t sanctioned many of the regime’s
human rights abusers — including more than 60 officials sanctioned years ago by
the EU. And it hasn’t included an end to all violations of human rights in
its 12 requirements for a new deal.
The Europeans and
Americans can still reverse their ignominious course and do more to stand up
for victims of Iranian torture. The Europeans should terminate Instex and work
with the U.S. to harmonize and expand their human-rights sanctions lists. They
should also join the U.S. in demanding a new deal with Iran that would lift
sanctions only in exchange for Tehran ceasing the totality of its malign
behavior, including torture and other violations of the Iranian people’s human
rights.
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