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AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Public Statement
12 January 2010
AI Index: MDE 13/007/2010
Iran: Halt executions of Kurdish and other political prisoners
Amnesty International is calling on the Iranian authorities not
to execute at least 17 members of Iran’s Kurdish minority,
including one woman – Zeynab Jalalian - who are on death row
after their conviction of political offences. The organization
fears that they could be executed at any time, particularly in
light of the execution of two other Kurds in Iran in recent
months, most recently Fasih Yasmini in Khoy on 6 January 2010.
All were convicted after unfair trials for moharebeh
(enmity against God) for membership of banned Kurdish opposition
groups, mainly the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (known by
its Kurdish acronym PJAK), an armed group, and Komala, a Marxist
organization. Some are reported to have been tortured in
detention and to have been denied access to a lawyer.
The executed man, Fasih (Fateh) Yasmini was arrested during
clashes between PJAK and Iranian security forces in the village
of Hendavan, near Khoy, in or around February 2008. It is not
clear whether Fasih Yasmini was involved in these clashes or
not. He was reportedly among a number of villagers arrested,
including five girls, his father Hossein Yasmini, and another
man Fahim Reza-Zadeh, who are said to have been taken to a
Ministry of Intelligence detention facility in Khoy, where Fasih
Yasmini was reportedly tortured. His family had no news of him
for about two months.
Hossein Yasmini is currently serving a two-year prison sentence,
while Fahim Reza-Zadeh was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment
to be served in exile. Fasih Yasmini’s death sentence by the
Khoy Revolutionary court is believed to have been upheld on
appeal by Branch 10 of the Appeal Court of West Azerbaijan
Province and by the Supreme Court and he was executed without
his lawyer being informed – a requirement under Iranian law – on
6 January. Fasih Yasmini’s family have not been given his body,
possibly to prevent them holding a funeral or memorial service
for him. Amnesty International condemns this execution.
Ali Saremi (or Sarami), aged 62, was sentenced to death for
moharebeh on 29 December 2009 after being convicted of
membership of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran
(PMOI), an opposition group based in Iraq. He was arrested in
September 2007 after speaking at a commemoration at the Khavaran
cemetery in Tehran for the victims of the 1988 “prison massacre”
and has been held since. Amnesty International issued an urgent
action on his and six other’s behalf in November 2007 (see
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/128/2007/en).
Held without trial for many months, mostly in Evin Prison, his
final court session took place on 16 November in Branch 15 of
the Revolutionary Court. Two days after demonstrations against
the government on Ashoura on 27 December 2009 were violently
repressed by security forces, he was told that he had been
sentenced to death. The Iranian authorities have blamed various
groups for organizing the demonstrations, including the PMOI and
a “Marxist grouplet”. Ali Saremi has a son in the PMOI who lives
in Camp Ashraf, Iraq, whom he has visited. Ali Saremi has spent
23 years in prison for his political activities both before and
after the Islamic Revolution in Iran.
Background
Since the unrest which followed the disputed presidential
election in June 2009, Amnesty International has documented an
increase in the number of executions in Iran, and the Iranian
authorities have threatened to try demonstrators for
moharebeh, moves which appear designed to dissuade people
from participating in demonstrations against the government.
The 17 Kurds on death row for political offences are reported to
be:
1. Zeynab Jalalian [f]
2. Habibollah Latifi
3. Sherko Moarefi
4. Farhad Vakili
5. Farzad Kamangar
6. Ali Haydarian
7. Hossein Khezri
8. Rashid Akhkandi
9. Mohammad Amin Agoushi
10. Ahmad Pouladkhani
11. Sayed Sami Hosseini
12. Sayed Jamal Mohammadi
13. Rostam Arkiya
14. Mostafa Salimi
15. Anwar Rostami
16. Hassan Talai
17. Iraj Mohammadi
For further information about Kurds on death row, please see
Iran: Worsening Repression of Dissent as Election Approaches,
February 2009, AI Index: MDE 13/012/2009 at
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/012/2009/en
and Iran: Death penalty/ torture and ill-treatment, 30 May 2008
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/075/2008/en
Iran: Further Information on death
penalty/torture/ill-treatment, 11 July 2008
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/094/2008/en
Iran: Death penalty / torture and ill-treatment, 18 December
2008
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/176/2008/en
Iran: Halt Executions of Kurdish Prisoners, 8 October 2009
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/102/2009/en
Iran: Kurdish man faces execution on 11 November 2009
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/119/2009/en
Iran: Further information: Iranian Kurdish man executed
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/121/2009/en
Iranian authorities must halt imminent execution of Kurdish man,
13 November 2009
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/iranian-authorities-must-stop-imminent-execution-kurdish-man-20091113
For information about the “prison massacre” see: Iran: The 20th
anniversary of 1988 "prison massacre", 19 August 2008, AI Index
MDE 13/118/2008,
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/118/2008/en
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