Guest
Contributor
Nir Boms
Nir Boms is a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense
of Democracies and at the Council for Democracy and Tolerance.
Iran's
Summer Song of Dissent
The annual crackdown on "social corruption"...
[Nir Boms and Reza Bulorchi] 7/6/04
In recent
years, summer in Iran has been marked by uprisings, strikes,
public protests
and the government’s harsh crackdown
against them. There are signs this summer will be no different.
As the anniversary
of the anti-government uprising of July 1999 approaches, widespread
arrests of students and women are taking
place. Some students are nabbed from their dormitories by plainclothes
Revolutionary Guard agents, while many others are served arrest
warrants. The US International Bureau of Broadcasting’s
Radio Farda reported on May 29 that, “the persistent summoning
and detention of students all over the country has caused fear
and insecurity in universities.”
Tehran's
Prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi has ordered a crackdown on "social corruption,” saying that, “a serious
fight has started to tackle the spread of social corruption in
society, especially the improper dress code.” Youth, particularly
women, are the main targets of such campaigns.
These repressive
actions are in line with a series of preventive measures taken
by the
Iranian regime to neutralize Iran’s
democracy movement and to subdue an increasingly restive population.
The state-controlled
daily Ressalat expressed concern over the spread of popular
uprisings, stating “certainly, the psychological
atmosphere of June and July requires the vigilance of the Hezbollah
as never before.”
Similar repressive
measures last year gave rise to number of arrests and executions. “The (Iranian) Government's poor
human rights record worsened in 2003” states the recent
Country Report on Human Rights Practices published by the U.S.
State Department. “Continuing serious abuses included:
summary executions; disappearances; torture and other degrading
treatment, severe punishments such as beheading and flogging;
poor prison conditions; arbitrary arrest and detention.”
According
to an appalling report by the Human Rights Watch, Iran’s rulers “through the systematic use of indefinite
solitary confinement of political prisoners, physical torture
of student activists and denial of basic due process rights" work
to silence the dissidents.
In May,
perhaps in light of the increasing concerns about Iran’s
rampant human rights violations—particularly
the torture death of the Iranian-borne Canadian photojournalist
Zahra Kazemi last summer—Iranian Judiciary Chief Mahmoud
Shahroudi ordered a ban on the use of torture. But in Iran, torture
is not an issue of action but one of definition.
Although
torture had already been banned in Iran’s 1979
Constitution, it remained the mullahs’ preferred weapon
of choice in dealing with dissidents. In fact, Shahroudi’s
decree was an explicit admission that widespread torture continues.
Most of the
practices that fall under the “religious punishments” in
Iran’s penal code, such as lashing, amputations, eye-gouging
and stoning to death, are banned by the Convention Against Torture.
In the perverted lexicon of the mullahs, these “punishments” are
not considered torture.
In early
June,
the state-run daily Kayhan reported that four prisoners had
been sentenced to death for “waging
war on God” and “corrupting the Earth,” a charge
that is usually saved for political dissidents. The daily added
that the right hand and left leg of two other prisoners will
be amputated.
Inside prisons,
a religious judge can arbitrarily issue an order for “Tazir,” a religious term for physical punishment
of the detainee that ranges from lashing the victim to solitary
confinement and electric shock. The torture ban, of course, does
not apply to “Tazir.”
The memoir of Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri, an 82-year-old
senior Iranian cleric and former designated successor to Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, documents many of the atrocities committed
by the clerical regime.
Among the damning revelations is the text of a 1986 private
letter to Khomeini. Complaining about the ill treatment of prisoners,
Montazeri wrote in part:
Do you know
that crimes are being committed in the prisons of the Islamic
Republic
in the name of Islam the like of which was
never seen in the Shah’s evil regime?
Do you know that a large number of prisoners have been killed
under torture by their interrogators?
Do you know
that in (city of) Mashad prison, some 25 girls had to have
their ovaries
or uterus removed as a result of what had
been done to them…?
Do you know that in some prisons of the Islamic Republic young
girls are being raped by force?...
Despite such
repression, Iran's pro-democracy activists will be active once
again this
summer, planning the next march, rally
or public protest. Although the U.S and Europe regularly condemn
Iran's human-rights record, they have done little to promote
the efforts of Iran’s democracy movement in its struggle
to unseat Iran’s ruling tyrants. This summer, perhaps,
they will find time to do more.CRO
Nir Boms is a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense
of Democracies. Reza Bulorchi is the Executive Director of the
US
Alliance for
Democratic Iran.
This
piece first appeared
at In
The National Interest
§
|