Note: This report, updated regularly, is provided as a service to news media and others desiring details of the situation of the Baha'is in Iran. All information has been verified by the Baha'i International Community.
Words in italics have been altered or added since the previous update.
The seven members of a Baha’i coordinating committee remain in Evin Prison in Tehran. Fears are growing for their safety, especially since a government prosecutor was quoted in the press as saying the individuals had “confessed” to operating an “illegal” organization with ties to Israel and other countries – charges that are denied by the Baha’i International Community in the strongest possible terms. (See BWNS article.)
Further, the Baha’i International Community believes that Iranian authorities are trying to prevent the seven Baha’is from obtaining legal counsel by maligning Mrs. Shirin Ebadi, a prominent human-rights attorney and Nobel laureate who announced that she and her colleagues at the Defenders of Human Rights Centre in Iran were prepared to help defend the Baha’is. (See official Baha’i statement dated 12 August 2008.)
Accusations began circulating in the government-backed news media that Mrs. Ebadi or her daughter had converted to the Baha’i Faith, despite the fact that Mrs. Ebadi has stated clearly that she and her daughter are Muslims. The Baha’i International Community confirms that neither of them are members of any Baha’i group.
The seven members of the Baha’i coordinating committee that are imprisoned are Mrs. Fariba Kamalabadi, Mr. Jamaloddin Khanjani, Mr. Afif Naeimi, Mr. Saeid Rezaie, Mr. Behrouz Tavakkoli, Mr. Vahid Tizfahm, and Mrs. Mahvash Sabet. The first six have been detained since May, and Mrs. Sabet since March.
None have been allowed access to an attorney, and – despite what has been reported in the media – their families have not received notice of any formal charges against any of them.
Three Baha’is in Tehran were arrested and jailed on 19 August for no known reason. All three, Mr. Touraj Amini, Mr. Iraj Amini, and Mr. Payman Amoui, were first detained in March but had been released until this re-arrest.
Their detention brings to at least 25 the number of Baha’is known to be held by authorities in Iran.
Reports coming out of Iran indicate that the broad-based, government-backed campaign to stamp out the Baha’i community continues unabated.
Examples of a few of the recent attacks:
Three Baha’is in Mashhad received telephone threats and were later intentionally run over by a car. Two of the individuals were killed and the third was seriously injured.
After authorities first suggested that the fire that destroyed the home of the Shaaker family in Kerman had been caused by an electrical problem, the fire department of that city has now confirmed that arson was the cause. The fire was reported last month by the Baha’i World News Service as one of a string of apparent arson attacks against Baha’is. (See BWNS article.)
The official Islamic Republic News Agency published a special report on 13 August claiming that Bahá’ís were planning to plant a bomb at the Tehran International Exhibition a few months ago. Seyyed Kazem Mousavi, a historian on modern Iran, claimed to have uncovered and put a stop to a criminal plot that may have resulted in a great human catastrophe. The Baha’i International Community categorically denies that Baha’is planned any such attack.
More cemetery desecrations have been reported, and, in addition, three Baha’is who participated in a burial in a Baha’i cemetery that has been in use for 15 years were arrested and convicted of “taking part in the illegal occupation and use of government property.” The three were fined and ordered to “cease their occupation of the said property” (the cemetery) and to “return it to its prior condition” (that is, exhume the interred Baha’i).
Baha’i students continue to be barred from university, and new evidence indicates that they are being identified as Baha’is early in the application process and are being blocked even from going online to check their test scores.
E-mails from an anonymous sender containing unfounded allegations of immoral behavior at Bahá’í gatherings have circulated within Iran. The e-mails contained obscene images along with Bahá’í holy symbols.
Two Iranian Baha’is living in Europe have received a letter with detailed threats and ending with the words “Death to Baha’is.”
Kayhan, the government-backed national daily newspaper, in late July launched a news series of anti-Baha’i articles. They consist of excerpts from a newly published book that purports to be the memoirs of a man who recounts immoral and unethical behavior of family members and others that he says are Baha’is.
At the beginning of this year, the same newspaper published a separate series of 40 articles critical of the Baha’is, and Iranian television has also broadcast programs attempting to create ill will against the Baha’i Faith and the Baha’is.
On 30 July, the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington passed a resolution condemning the persecution of the Baha’is in Iran. The vote was 408-3.
This followed the statement a month earlier by six Nobel Peace Prize laureates – organized as the Nobel Women’s Initiative, with an office in Ottawa, Canada – calling for the unconditional release of the seven Iranian Baha’is who are members of the coordinating committee. Founders of the Nobel Women’s Initiative are Mairead Corrigan Maguire, Betty Williams, Rigoberta Menchu Tum, Jody Williams, Dr. Shirin Ebadi, and Wangari Muta Maathai.
Since the arrests of the prominent Baha’is in mid-May, many governments and organizations around the world have expressed concern, including the European Union, the White House, the Iranian Researchers’ Association, the International Commission of Jurists, the Federation for Human Rights, the Institute on Religion and Public Policy, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, and the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom.
Examples of the statements:
The European Union, in its statement of 21 May, first expressed concern about the arrests, then said: “The EU reiterates its serious concern about the continuing systematic discrimination and harassment of the Iranian Baha'is on the grounds of their religion.”
The White House, in a statement issued on 14 June by National Security Counsel spokesman Gordeon Johndroe: “The Iranian regime’s human rights record is shameful. A month ago today, the regime arrested six Baha’i leaders solely on the grounds of their religion. They should be released immediately. Iran should uphold the basic human right to practice religion and should end its persecution of the Baha’i community.”
The International Commission of Jurists said in a press release that the six Baha’is were “arbitrarily arrested” and should be “released immediately or charged with a recognizable offense.” Despite reports that the Baha’is were supposedly arrested “for security reasons, not for their faith,” the ICJ said it considers there to be “sufficient evidence to show that they may have been arrested in relation to their peaceful activities as members of the national coordinating group of Baha’is in Iran.”
Two prominent attorneys in India and a lawyers’ group in Bangladesh have written to the Iranian government asking that the human rights of the detainees be honored, and that at a minimum they are allowed counsel, visits from relatives, and information about the exact charges to be brought against them.
The government of Australia addressed the following statement to the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva: “Australia is deeply concerned by news that several Bahá'í leaders were arrested in Iran on 14 May. It is not clear if they have been charged with any specific crime, and it appears the accused have not had access to legal counsel or family members. Australia considers that the Council needs to play an active role in ensuring the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of religion or belief.”
Five Canadian academics, all natives of Iran but not members of the Baha’i Faith, have written to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon calling the arrest of the Baha’is the “latest affront to universally accepted human rights” that “joins a growing list of violations the Iranian government has committed against a wide range of those who wish merely to have the opportunity to contribute the the well-bing of Iran. …”
Scottish religious leaders, including the moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and the cardinal who heads the Roman Catholic Church there, have called on the Iranian authorities “to fulfil their obligations under the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights with regards to religious freedom and ensure the immediate and safe release of these prisoners.”
Among others who have issued statements are:
Harassment of Baha’is is pervasive and includes many incidents of all of the following: