News : Islamic Republic Brings 15 Members Of Melli Mazhabi Political Activists To Trial From Jails. They Are Detained For Months Without Trials. Now They Are Being Tried In Secret Courts!
See Human Rights Watch Statement On This Trials Bellow:

 

 Human Rights Watch Condemns Trials of
15 Members of Melli Mazhabi  Political Activists!:  
Basic Rights Violated in Secret Detentions.

Iran: Trial of Political Activists Begins
Basic Rights Violated in Secret Detentions

(New York, January 8, 2002) -- Human Rights Watch today condemned the
Iranian government’s prosecution of fifteen members of the National
Religious Alliance (Melli Mazhabi) before a Revolutionary Court as a
violation of their basic rights to freedom of expression and freedom of
association. Human Rights Watch also charged that they have been held in
an unregulated detention center and denied basic due process rights.


The fifteen, including former cabinet minister Ezatollah Sahabi, are
scheduled to go on trial today before Branch 26 of Iran’s Revolutionary
Court in Tehran. All face charges of "acts against national security,"
planning to "overthrow the system," and “membership in the National
Religious Alliance.”

“These individuals have been persecuted solely for expressing their
political views in a peaceful and legal manner,” said Joe Stork,
Washington director of the Middle East and North Africa division of
Human Rights Watch. “The government has provided no evidence whatsoever
to justify their incarceration.”

The National Religious Alliance (NRA) is a loosely knit group of
activists who favor political reform and who advocate the implementation
of constitutional provisions to uphold the rule of law. The grouping,
which has no formal structure, came together to contest the
parliamentary elections of 2000.

Sahabi, arrested in December 2000, continues to be held in an unknown
location. The other fourteen, arrested in March 2001, were held
incommunicado for three months in a Tehran detention center known as
Prison 59. They were subsequently permitted short visits with immediate
family members outside the prison, in the main Ministry of Justice
building. For most of their detention they were held in solitary
confinement.

Nine of the detainees—Mohammad Maleki, Mohammad Hossein Rafiei, Alireza
Rajaei, Reza Alijani, Mohmmad Basteh Negar, Mahmoud Omrani, Massoud
Pedram, Morteza Kazemian and Mohmmad Mohammadi Ardehali—were released on
bail during the summer months of 2001. The other five—Taghi Rahmani,
Habibollah Payman, Reza Raeis-Toussi, Saeid Madani and Hoda Saber—remain
incarcerated in Prison 59.

Prison 59, located in a Revolutionary Guard military installation in
Eshratabad, in central Tehran, is an unregulated detention facility, not
formally part of the penal system. All of the detainees, many of whom
are elderly, have complained of harsh treatment while in detention. They
were beaten by their captors and for much of the time held in small
cells where they could only lie down in a cramped position.

Lawyers were not given any information about charges or evidence against
their clients until last week. Instructed that they would only be
allowed to review the prosecution files if they signed an undertaking
not to discuss the contents in public, they refused and therefore have
not yet seen the prosecution case against their clients.

Conditions of detention of several detainees have been especially
alarming. Human Rights Watch was told that while in detention, Ezatollah
Sahabi was hospitalized twice with heart attacks. His medications have
since been increased, but he has not been permitted to meet with his own
doctor. His family reports that during visits held outside his place of
detention, he has looked extremely weak and disoriented, although his
condition has reportedly improved in the last two months.

Dr. Habibollah Payman, 66, a dentist, suffers from severe kidney and
urinary tract problems, but was given only limited toilet access. He was
forced to use the drinking vessel in his cell to relieve himself,
rinsing it out when given access to the bathroom.

Dr. Raeis Toussi, 65, a law professor at Tehran University, had one
interrogation session which lasted more than 24 hours, and three that
exceeded 18 hours each, all of which exacerbated a serious back injury.

Hossein Mehr Pour, President Khatami’s representative on the Committee
to Oversee the Implementation of the Constitution, told family members
in September that the President’s office had requested from the
Judiciary permission to send an observer to visit with the detainees in
Prison 59, but was denied.

Hojatoleslam Marvi, Deputy Head of the Judiciary has told family members
that since the Ministry of Information has publicly criticized this
prosecution as having no merit, it was not possible to hold the
detainees in official prisons, where the Information Ministry is
responsible for security.

Revolutionary Court procedures, in which a single judge also serves as
prosecutor, violates Article 168 of the Constitution, which provides for
public trial by jury in cases involving “political offenses.” Safeguards
in the Iranian Criminal Procedure Code have also been ignored. Article
33 of the Criminal Procedure Code provides for a maximum of a month of
pre-trial detention without a hearing before a judge. No hearings on
extending detention have taken place in this case. Article 190 of the
Criminal Procedure Code also requires that defense lawyers be given full
access to prosecution documents, and time to review them.

   

 

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