Monday, September 29, 2008

Human Rights Council unable to act strongly

International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)

Press release

Human Rights Council unable to act strongly



Geneva, Paris, 24 September 2008 – At the conclusion of the ninth session of the Human Rights Council, the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) remains deeply concerned by the lack of mobilisation of a majority of Member States to protect victims of human rights violations in countries where they are the most vulnerable.

Although satisfied by the renewal of the mandate on the situation of Human Rights in Sudan, FIDH deplores the reduction of the length of the mandate to six months (instead of one year), interpreted by the Ambassador of Sudan as a sign of the “improvement” of the situation. For Souhayr Belhassen, President of the FIDH, “ we haven't seen any improvements on the ground, certainly not on the victims' side.”

FIDH also welcomes the renewal of the Council's mandates on Cambodia and Burundi, but regrets that the latter be also reduced to six months (as a domino effect from the Sudanese text), and that it's future be conditioned to the establishment of a national human rights commission, while the human rights challenges, notably the persecution of human rights defenders, require today far greater actions.

Finally, FIDH regrets the Council's absence of action on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, in spite of the continuous deterioration of the situation, the rise in the repression, and the application of death penalty to juveniles. FIDH also regrets the lack of action on Uzbekistan, in spite of the confidentiality of the procedure for which the country was examined.

As regards thematic issues, FIDH welcomes the report presented by the Special Rapporteur on racial discrimination on the concept of “defamation of religion”, recommending to move away from the sociological concept used in various Council resolutions, to use instead the legal notion of ‘incitement to hatred’. FIDH calls on Member States to fully endorse this recommendation and reflect it in resolutions adopted and declarations made within the Human Rights Council.

Press contact : Karine Appy + 33 1 43 55 25 18, kappy@fidh.org

--
Karine Appy
Attachée de presse
Press Officer
FIDH
17 passage de la main d'or
75011 Paris
France
Tél : 00 33 1 43 55 14 12
Fax : 00 33 1 43 55 18 80
http://www.fidh.org

Sunday, September 21, 2008

On the 26th day of the Hunger Strike of Kurdish Prisoner their Health Condition has Greatly Worsened

 
On the 26th day of the Hunger Strike of Kurdish Prisoner their Health Condition has Greatly Worsened
2008-09-20


freethepoliticalprisoner.jpg Committee for the Support of Hunger Strike for Kurdish Political Prisoners

According to Recent news from the Urumiye Prison, the health condition of 9 prisoners who were taken to solitary confinement 9 days ago has greatly worsened.

These prisoners are being held in cells that are four (4) meters long, and are also used as washrooms. Prisoners who have dared to complain about the situation have been subjected to severe physical and psychological torture. The prisoners have also been threatened that "these cells will become their graves".

According to other prisoners who have seen these 9 prisoners they suffer from extremely serious illnesses including blood infested daiharea, different types of infection and skin problems. Other prisoners in Urumiye Prison are extremely disturbed about the inhumane treatment of these 9 prisoners.

The Committee for the Support of Hunger Strike for Kurdish Political Prisoners is extremely concerned about the inhumane treatment of these 9 prisoners, and while condemning the inhumane treatment of these prisoners, urge all freedom loving people and international human rights organizations to take steps to help save their lives.


Translated by: Sayeh Hassan

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Iran's Women's Rights Activists Are Being Smeared

Run Date: 09/17/08
By Nayereh TohidiWeNews commentator
Women's rights activists recently succeeded in stalling a bill to ease polygamy, temporary marriage and male-bias in divorce. But Nayereh Tohidi says a nasty smear campaign and continuous arrest show the adversity they are up against.
Editor's Note: The following is a commentary. The opinions expressed are those of the author and not necessarily the views of Women's eNews.
(WOMENSENEWS)--In Iran , the government of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently proposed a bill and, in Orwellian fashion, named it the "Family Protection Law."
If passed it would have threatened the stability, equilibrium, and mental health of families by reinforcing and facilitating polygamy, temporary marriage, and men's privileged position with regard to divorce.
The good news: A diverse coalition of women's rights activists and even some moderate clerics and politicians persuaded a judicial commission to drop some of the most contested articles and Majles, the Parliament, passed an amended version on Sept. 9. This version makes second marriage contingent upon the first wife's consent and does not attach any tax on the amount of dowry to be paid to wife in case of divorce.
The bad news: The amended family law and many other laws pertaining to personal status are still very male biased. Temporary marriage (muta), for example, remains a prerogative for married and unmarried men without even requiring its registration. Activists campaigning to change that those laws are still under attack, with five women recently sentenced to prison terms of between six months and four years.
A major sign of the negative climate is a wave of smear campaigns recently waged against those activists, chief among them Shirin Ebadi, the leading human rights lawyer. Similar campaigns in the 1990s were harbingers of homicides.
A series of articles published in early August by the official Islamic Republic News Agency made dangerous allegations against Ebadi, her family, and the Center for the Defense of Human Rights that she founded and chairs.
The articles charged Ebadi, a Women's eNews 21 Leader, with supporting sexual license, promiscuity, and prostitution. They called her a Zionist agent and alleged that the international Zionist Lobby was behind her winning the 2003 Nobel Prize.
The articles also claimed that Ebadi's daughter has converted to the Bahai faith, a dangerous accusation because Iran does not recognize Bahaism as a religion and its followers have faced severe discrimination and persecution.
Trumped-Up Charges
Several human rights groups, including the Nobel Women Initiative (founded by six female Nobel Peace Prize winners) have compared the accusations to trumped-up charges brought up by the same media against dissident intellectuals in the 1990s that led to several mysterious assassinations now known as "the serial killings."
Women's status in Iran is paradoxical and complex. Many rural women and those living in small towns suffer from old restrictions and practices such as domestic violence and "honor killing."
As for urban women: While economic necessity compels many to work outside the home, their employment opportunities are limited and often face discrimination and harassment. According to official records, in the course of the past year alone, more than 20,000 women have been attacked by "moral squads" and put under temporary police arrest for breaking Islamic dress code.
At the same time, Iranian women have made remarkable strides. Literacy rates among younger generations have risen above 90 percent, and a drastic decline in the fertility rate (now less than two children per woman) and improvements in health and life expectancy have paralleled strides in higher education and income generation. Women are now more than 60 percent of university students and are active in many non-traditional occupations such as medicine, law, engineering and architecture.
Women played a significant role in the reform movement of the late 1990s by massive participation in presidential, parliamentary, and municipal elections. But since then, women's participating in formal politics has waned along with the reform movement.
Laws Lagging Behind New Realities
Women's legal rights within marriage and the family--so-called personal status--have remained backward and at odds with their proven capacities. While women in Iran have produced best-selling novels and internationally award-winning films, barbaric practices such as stoning to death for adultery are still legal.
Two years ago, in August 2006, 200 women (and also some men) began a grassroots effort known as the "One Million Signatures Campaign" to change discriminatory laws. It was modelled after a similar 1992 campaign by Moroccan women, which produced progressive changes in the family law in that country. In Iran , the plan was to present one million signatures to the Majles and press legislators to enact equal-rights legislation. But continuous attacks and arrest of those collecting signatures have slowed the process and caused organizers to extend the two-year target.
Despite intimidation and arrests, this campaign has grown into a network of thousands of activists in more than 30 cities. It has also mobilized support among Iranians abroad and gained increasing recognition and solidarity among transnational networks of feminists and women's rights activists.
Appealing to Anxieties
To thwart such efforts from fuelling a counter cultural movement in the Iranian population--70 percent of whom are now younger than 30--the radical Islamists are appealing to traditionalists' anxieties about changing sexual mores and gender views. One recent article published in August in the state-run newspaper Keyhan called for "courageous and gutsy revolutionaries who can do the job" (i.e., continue to carry out attacks on the women's rights activists).
U.S. policy toward Iran and the continuous threat of military attack have further complicated the situation. In 2003 the allocation of $75 million in U.S. aid to Iranian civil rights organizations spurred the government to repress all voices of dissent. Any civil society organizations or individuals doing effective work toward democracy and human-women's rights were accused of being agents in a U.S. plan for regime change.
While the hard-liners and radical Islamists cast peaceful and transparent campaigns as national security threats, that charge is better applied to them. Their belligerent foreign policies have brought sanctions and economic hardship and created the danger of military attacks on Iran .
And while they blast off allegations of sexual license and prostitution against women seeking equal rights and egalitarian family relations they promote polygamy and temporary marriage, both frowned upon by the majority of Iranians. Many Sunni and even many Shii Muslims view temporary marriage as little more than legalized prostitution.
Iranian women's rights activists are contributing to a slow, persistent process of building a civil society grounded on egalitarian and democratic values that would nourish national security and peace with justice. Their efforts are not tied to any national security interest. They are part of a universal quest by civilized people for a peaceful and humane society.
Nayereh Tohidi is chair and professor of the Department of Gender and Women's Studies, California State University , Northridge and a Research Associate at the Center for Near Eastern Studies, UCLA.
Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at http://us.mc564.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=editors@womensenews.org.
www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3743

Wednesday, September 17, 2008


An International Call to End all Executions of Juvenile Offenders


CRIN - Child Rights Information Network

AN INTERNATIONAL CALL TO END ALL EXECUTIONS OF JUVENILE OFFENDERS:


عربي  - Français - Español - Farsi


Implement the Prohibition against the Juvenile Death Penalty in Law and Practice 

Go straight to petition

Every state in the world has ratified or acceded to treaties obligating them to ensure that juvenile offenders--persons under 18 at the time of the crime-are never sentenced to death. The overwhelming majority of states comply with this obligation: only five states* are known to have executed juvenile offenders since 2005.

Yet over the last 3 ½ years at least 32 people in these five states have been executed for crimes committed while children, and well over 100 other juvenile offenders are known to be on death row. The true number of executions and death sentences could be much higher, as few countries make public information on death sentences against juvenile offenders.

The prohibition on the juvenile death penalty is absolute in treaty and customary law, but some states continue to execute juveniles offenders convicted of certain crimes, or allow judges to treat children as adults if the child shows signs of puberty. Even in states with clear legislation outlawing capital punishment for persons under 18 at the time of the crime, judges sometimes treat children as adults in capital cases because low rates of birth registration make it difficult for children to prove their age at the time of the crime, or because the child lacked access to competent legal assistance at crucial points during arrest, investigation and trial.

We, as local, national, regional, and international non-governmental organizations from every part of the world, call on each UN member state to fully implement the absolute ban on the juvenile death penalty, as required by customary law, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and as highlighted by the Secretary-General's recent study on violence against children.

We also urge United Nations member states at the 2008 UN General Assembly to:

1. Call on states that have yet to fully prohibit the juvenile death penalty to:

  • Immediately enact legislation banning the imposition of capital punishment on persons who were under 18 at the time of the crime, without exceptions.
  • Immediately implement a moratorium on all executions of persons convicted of crimes committed before age 18, pending passage of legislation banning the juvenile death penalty.
  • Review all existing death sentences passed on persons who were under 18 at the time of the crime and immediately commute those sentences to custodial or other sentences in conformity with international juvenile justice standards.


2. Call on states that have banned the juvenile death penalty to:

  • Ensure that children in conflict with the law have prompt access to legal assistance, including assistance in proving their age at the time of an alleged offense, and require police, prosecution, and judicial authorities to record the ages of children who come before them.
  • Promote universal birth registration.
  • Ensure that judicial authorities understand and enforce the ban on the juvenile death penalty, including by providing judges and prosecutors with training on its application, and by ordering a review of all death sentences where there is doubt that the individual was over 18 at the time of the offense.


3. Request the UN Secretary General to submit a report to the 64th session of the General Assembly on compliance with the absolute ban on the juvenile death penalty, including information on

  • the number of juvenile offenders currently sentenced to death, and the number executed during the last 5 years;
  • rates of birth registration
  • states' implementation of relevant domestic legislation, including mechanisms ensuring juvenile offenders have legal assistance at all stages of investigation and trial;
  • any other obstacles to full implementation of the ban on the juvenile death penalty.


Deadline for signing the petition is 13 October.

NOTE: please note that this petition is for organizations, not individuals.

Thank you.

*
Between January 1, 2005 and September 2, 2008, the following states are known to have executed 32 juvenile offenders: Iran (26), Saudi Arabia (2), Sudan (2), Pakistan (1), Yemen (1).

vokradio.com

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Conference for Massacre 1988

THE OBSERVATORY FOR THE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS


THE OBSERVATORY FOR THE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS


PRESS RELEASE

IRAN: Kurdish Human Rights Defenders pursue their hunger strike

Paris - Geneva, September 4, 2008. The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint programme of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), expresses its deepest concern over the hunger strike started on August 25, 2008 by several Kurdish prisoners, including human rights defenders, detained in Iran in order to protest against their detention and the conditions in which they are being detained.

The prisoners concerned by this hunger strike are all Kurdish, many of them being human rights defenders :

- Messrs. Adnan Hassanpour and Abdoulvahid (also known as Hiwa) Boutimar, two Kurdish journalists and active members of Iranian civil society, sentenced to death on July 16, 2007[1];

- Mr. Mohammad Sadigh Kaboudvand, a journalist and the President of the Association for the Defence of Human Rights in Kurdistan (RMMK), sentenced to ten years imprisonment at the end of May 2008[2];

- Ms. Hanna Abdi, a member of the women’s rights NGO Azar Mehr and an active member of the One Million Signatures Petition Campaign, sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on June 18, 2008[3];

- Ms. Ronak Safarzadeh, also a member of the One Million Signatures Petition Campaign, detained since October 9, 2007[4];

- Mr. Massoud Kordpour, one of the founding members of the Foundation for Democracy and Human Rights in Iranian Kurdistan, and a civil society activist working on human rights and environmental issues, detained since August 25, 2008[5];

- Mr. Yasser Goli, a student and Kurdish rights activist detained since October 9, 2007[6], and his mother, Ms. Fatemeh Goftari, a member of Azar Mehr, was arrested for the first time on January 14, 2008. Forty days after her arrest, her bail was set at 15 million tomans. She was arraigned and sentenced to eight months’ imprisonment about six months later. The sentence was subsequently reduced to three months by the Court of Appeals of Kurdistan. She began serving her prison sentence on August 22, 2008;

- Ms. Zeynab Bayazidi, a member of the One Million Signatures Petition Campaign, arrested on July 7, 2008 and sentenced on August 10, 2008 to four years’ imprisonment[7];

- Messrs. Farzad Kamangar and Ali Heydarian, both condemned to death after having been accused of collaboration with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)[8].



Although detained in different prisons, they are all submitted to particular harsh treatments in detention: they are not allowed to see their lawyers and families like the other prisoners and they are isolated from other detainees. These Kurdish prisoners also wanted to protest against the unlawful trials they were subjected to.

The Observatory expresses its deep concern about the ongoing hunger strike of these human rights defenders, which is evidence of their harsh conditions of detention, and calls upon the Iranian authorities to guarantee to these prisoners conditions of detention that are in conformity with international standards.

Moreover, the Observatory urges the Iranian authorities to guarantee in all circumstances the physical and psychological integrity of all above-mentioned defenders, to release them immediately and unconditionally as their sentencing and detention are arbitrary as they only aim at sanctioning their human rights activities, and to guarantee unconditional access to their lawyers, families and any medical treatment they may require .

The Observatory further calls upon the Iranian authorities to put an end to any acts of harassment against all Iranian human rights defenders and to conform with the provisions of the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 9, 1998, especially its Article 1, which states that “everyone has the right, individually and in association with others, to promote and to strive for the protection and realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and international levels” and its Article 12.2, which provides that “the State shall take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent authorities of everyone, individually and in association with others, against any violence, threats, retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse discrimination, pressure or any other arbitrary action as a consequence of his or her legitimate exercise of the rights referred to in the present Declaration”.

The Observatory further wishes to insist on the fact that Iran had committed to uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights by presenting its candidacy to the Human Rights Council 2006 election and had insisted in this regard on the fact that the country had continuously put great efforts into safeguarding the status and inherent dignity of the human person as well as the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms. In order to ensure the continuation of these efforts, the Observatory urges the Islamic Republic of Iran to conform with international human rights standards.

For further information, please contact:

OMCT : Delphine Reculeau, + 41 22 809 49 39

FIDH : Gaël Grilhot, + 33 1 43 55 14 12



[1] See Observatory Annual Report 2007.

[2] See Observatory Annual Report 2007 and Urgent Appeal IRN 003/0707/ OBS 072.1.

[3] See Observatory Annual Report 2007 and Urgent Appeal IRN 013/1107/154.1.

[4] See Observatory Annual Report 2007.

[5] See Observatory Urgent Appeal IRN 009/0808/OBS 138.

[6] Mr. Goli suffers from a heart ailment and has been admitted to the hospital numerous times for treatment. After being in prison for three months, Mr. Goli was transferred to the Central Prison of Sanandaj on January 16, 2008. Until then, he was not allowed to meet with his family. Hi whole family has fought on his behalf to shed light on his condition and plight. His father, Mr. Saleh Goli, was arrested on October 31, 2007 in connection with his son’s case. His bail was set at 10 million tomans but he was subsequently released.

[7] According to Iranian law, a defendant must submit an appeal within 20 days of being sentenced, and a judgment cannot be issued in a case until those 20 days have passed. Ms. Bayazidi attempted to protest and appeal her sentence but a sentence by the Courts was issued on August 21, 2008, only 11 days after her sentencing. Her lawyer went to the Appeals Court on behalf of the defendant but was told that Ms. Bayazidi had already appeared in person and a decision had been reached.

[8] See the Joint Press Release of FIDH and the Iranian League for the Defense of Human Rights (LDDHI), March 4, 2008.



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URGENT APPEAL - THE OBSERVATORY

URGENT APPEAL - THE OBSERVATORY

IRN 009 / 0808 / OBS 138

Incommunicado detention

Iran

August 19, 2008

The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint programme of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), requests your urgent intervention in the following situation in Iran.


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Tuesday, September 2, 2008

From Bad to Worse and Beyond…

From Bad to Worse and Beyond…

Massive opposition to “Family Protection Bill”

The Discriminatory Family law in Iran is on the Brink of taking few steps Back!

“ Family Protection Bill “ passed swiftly and quietly in the first round of discussion in the legal and judicial commission of the Iranian parliament in July 2008 almost one year after it was drafted. The opposition to this bill has brought one of the largest coalition being forms to protest a bill in recent years. An inclusive and strikingly diverse group of women activists, feminists, human rights defenders and many secular as well as religious groups including some conservative and fundamentalist women groups are opposing this bill and demanding the government of Ahmadinejad to take action and prevented from being presented to the parliament for the final vote.

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