HORRIFIC NEW PHOTOS OF IRAN'S TORTURE OF GAYS Plus, 87 Arrested in Raid on "Gay" PartyI wrote the following report for Gay City News -- New York's largest lesbian and gay weekly -- which publishes it tomorrow:
Also, Iranian authorities staged a brutal and violent May 10 raid on a birthday party in Esfahan which they suspected was a gay party, beating the guests and arresting 87 people, including four women, one of whom had a child with her. Some 80 of those arrested made bail or were released immediately but face possible prosecution in the future; while 17 of those arrested were imprisoned awaiting trial, and a judge told their families that they would be charged with “homosexual conduct” (hamjensgarai in Persian) and the consumption of alcohol.
According to the most
recent telephonic reports from Esfahan received by Arsham Parsi, (photo
right) “I’ve been told that Farhad faces prison and perhaps execution,” Parsi said by telephone from Toronto, where he has been living since he was granted asylum by Canada last year as a sexual refugee from persecution in Iran.
Police and members of the Basiji -- the thuggish parapolice attached to the Revolutionary Guards, who are used to enforce morality -- severely beat the Esfahan party guests, both inside the house where the party was held and in the street outside it, resulting in broken bones for some of the partyers, according to these accounts by eyewitnesses and guests at the party. A voice-mail left on the office telephone of the IRQO by one of those arrested said, “The police beat us so hard that one of us threw himself out of the third-floor window and broke his legs; he is now in hospital. When we were arrested, we were forced to sleep on the floor, and the police were walking on us. We don’t have any voice here and you are our voice, please tell the world about our horrible situation in Iran, it is our daily life.”
Parsi told this reporter
that eight of those jailed were transgendered or had been wearing female
attire, that they had all denied having had anal intercourse with men, but
that police had subsequently had them examined by a legal medical officer
who claimed he had found evidence of anal sexual intercourse on the part
of “most of them.” Parsi said those examined all told the arraignment
judge that was because they had been raped, but the Parsi added that he had received a telephone call from one of the transgendered who was arrested, and that “she told me the awful story about that night and her jail experience. She told me that the police kept bags over their heads while they were in jail, and that they were hardly allowed to go to the toilet -- they were permitted to use a toilet only twice in the four days they were in jail.” (Right, another photo ot the tortured gay couple.) Esfahan is Iran’s third largest city, with a population of 1,600,000, and is also home to one of Iran’s most important nuclear facilities, and thus is under tight police control and surveillance.
Further evidence of the
brutality of Iran’s heavy-handed theocracy towards homosexuals Parsi, who spoke to the fled gay couple by telephone, said that “the police told them, ‘The 80 lashes are just for your immoral parties. For your tafkhiz you will get a lot more.’” Fearful of imprisonment and more torture on the tafkhiz charge, the couple fled Iran just days before their trial on that charge. The violent Esfahan raid and jailings were vigorously denounced by both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
Amnesty’s statement said
in part, “Amnesty International opposes the criminalization of consensual
adult sexual relations conducted in private and urges the Iranian
authorities to urgently review law and practice to ensure that no one can
be prosecuted for such reasons…AI is concerned that [some of] the men may
be held because of what they were wearing at the time of their arrest…If
this is the case, then they are prisoners of conscience, detained solely
for the peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of
Joe Stork, deputy
director of the Middle East division of Human Rights Watch, noted that the
Esfahan raid came as the regime of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was
conducting a new campaign against “immoral behavior,” begun in April, that
includes a stringent crackdown on women who violate rigorous Islamic dress
codes. According to Iran’s semi-official Mehr News Agency, police said on
April 25 that 150,000 people had been detained so far in this campaign. On
May 13, police told the same news agency that 17,000 people had been
stopped and interrogated at Iranian airports since the campaign began, of
whom 850 women had been detained and released only after signing “In Iran, the walls of homes are transparent and the halls of justice opaque,” HRW’s Stork said, adding: “This ‘morality’ campaign shows how fragile respect for privacy and personal dignity is in Iran today.”
IRQO’s Parsi told this
reporter that Farhad and Farnam (photo
below right) were among five new Parsi said that his organization can only afford two such safe houses in Turkey, and that “both are very, very small and dirty, with totally inadequate toilet facilities and no way to bathe properly.” Added Parsi, “We now have over 30 gay, lesbian, and transgendered Iranian refugees in Turkey who totally depend on IRQO’s support -- they cannot get jobs in Turkey, where there is a lot of homophobia and transphobia -- and our small budget simply cannot adequately meet their needs. We appeal to all our brothers and sisters in the West not to forget the suffering of LGBT Iranians, or that we urgently need your donations.” Contributions to the Iranian Queer Organization -- an all-volunteer group that is the largest Iranian LGBT association, with over 40,000 people on its e-mail list -- may be made on credit cards via a secure PayPal account through the organization’s website at http://www.pglo.net/ |