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Iran: End Arrests on Immorality Charges
Mass Detentions, Home Raids Are Assaults on
Privacy
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/05/17/iran15942.htm
(New York,
May 17, 2007) –
Iran’s
arbitrary arrests of thousands of men and women in recent weeks under the
banner of “countering immoral behavior” threaten basic rights to privacy,
Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch called for the immediate
release of all those detained as part of this campaign, including more
than 80 people seized in a raid on a private gathering in the city of
Esfahan on May 10, 2007.
“In
Iran,
the walls of homes are transparent and the halls of justice are opaque,”
said Joe Stork, deputy director of the
Middle East division of Human Rights Watch. “This ‘morality’
campaign shows how fragile respect for privacy and personal dignity is in
Iran
today.”
Since early April 2007, Iranian police and militia known as basiji
have launched a nationwide crackdown against people they accuse of
deviating from official standards of dress or behavior. On April 14,
Iran’s Supreme Court overturned murder sentences against six basiji who
had killed five people in 2002 whom they considered “morally corrupt,”
contributing to a climate of impunity for the militia forces.
Ismail Ahmadi Moghadam, Iran’s chief of police, told the semi-official
Mehr News Agency on April 25 that “law enforcement agents detained 150,000
people” during the campaign and forced the majority of them to sign
”commitment letters,” to observe official dress codes before being
released. According to Moghadam, the police referred 86 people to the
judiciary for prosecution.
On May 13, Mahmoud Botshekan, the police chief for airport security, told
the semi-official Iranian Labor News Agency that his agents had stopped
and interrogated more than 17,000 people at Iranian airports during the
past month. He said that his agents detained 850 women, releasing them
only after they signed “commitment letters.” Another 130 people are being
prosecuted by the judiciary, he said.
A witness to the raid in
Esfahan
told Human Rights Watch that, around
10 p.m. on May 10, police and basiji raided a
private birthday party in an apartment building in the city. They
reportedly arrested 87 persons, including four women and at least eight
people who were accused of wearing the clothes of the opposite sex. The
police and basiji agents led those arrested to the street, stripped many
to the waist, and beat them until their backs and faces were bloody.
Several reportedly suffered broken bones.
The authorities reportedly released the four women the next day, along
with a child. While additional detainees have reportedly been released, an
undetermined number remain in custody. A judge told family members that
all those held will be charged with consumption of alcohol and
hamjensgarai (homosexual conduct).
Family members have apparently not been allowed to see those detained, and
they have been denied lawyers.
“When the authorities break doors and bones in the name of morality, the
rule of law is reduced to a mockery,” said Stork.
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