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Ahwaz
Human Rights Organization
P.O. Box 679, Lorton,
Virginia 22199 USA
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Fax 703.266.0330 www.ahwazstudies.org
Urgent Action
3 more Ahwazi-Arabs were executed
today
To:
General Secretary of the United Nations,
World Leaders,
International Human Rights Organizations and NGOs, and
to the World Media:
Once again, in a blatant defiance to the United
Nations the European Commission
and international human rights organizations, this
morning hang 3 more Iranian (Ahwazi) Arab opposition activists. Their names are as follows:
1. Ghasem Salami, 41, married with 6 children
2. Majad Albughbish, 30, single from Maashur (Mahshahr)
3 Abdolreza Sanawati, 34, married from Ahwaz City
This brings the number of
executions of Ahwazi Arabs in the past two months to 10.
Yesterday, Mr.
Risan Sawari, a 32 years old Ahwazi-Arab teacher, married from Kut-Abdullah
in Ahwaz, was killed under torture in Mali-Rah IRGC prison in
Ahwaz-City. Mr. Sawari has been on
hunger strike for the past 20 days protesting his prison conditions- including
over a year detention in solitary confinement, no family visitation rights or
the rights to see a lawyer. Mr. Sawari was a civil rights activist, and member of
al-Wafagh Party, a reformist political party under former president Khatami.
On 10 January 2007, independent experts
appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council, Mr. Philip Alston, the
Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Mr.
Leandro Despouy, the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers,
and Mr. Manfred Nowak, the Special Rapporteur on torture, issued a statement
urging the Iranian Government to "stop the imminent execution of seven men
belonging to the Ahwazi Arab minority and grant them a fair and public hearing http://www.ahwaz.org.uk/2007/01/unhcr-iran-must-stop-executions-of.html
On 24
January four out of the seven, Mohammad Chaabpour,
Abdolamir Farjolah Chaab, Alireza Asakereh, and Khalaf Khanafereh (Khazirawi) were executed in defiance of the UN plea and the international
Community and contrary to Islamic faith which
prohibits execution in the month of Moharam,
The remaining three are to be executed tomorrow.
On Tuesday
December 19, 2006, the
Khuzestan branch of the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) reported that Malek
Banitamim, Abdullah Solaimani, and Ali Matorizadeh were executed for
"waging war on God" in Ahwaz City. This was done one day after the UN Security
Council passed a resolution condemning Iran’s human rights violations.
On March of this
year 2 other ethnic Ahwazi Arabs, Ali Afrawi-(age 17) and Mehdi Nawaseri (20 years old), were publicly hang in Ahwaz City for similar charges,
after a TV broadcast of their “confession” was shown a day earlier on Khuzestan
TV.
On November 13, 2006, the Iranian regime broadcast
videos of forced confessions of 11 Ahwazi Arabs on Khuzestan TV but due to
international outrage including unanimous condemnation by the European
Parliament in a resolution on November 16, 2006, as well as a resolution by 48
British MPs and similar actions by other EU parliaments, the execution of the
these men were delayed.
On November 9, Abbas Jaafari Dowlatabadi, head of Iran’s Judiciary in the southern province of Khuzistan, told the Islamic Republic News Agency that Iran’s Supreme Court has confirmed the execution sentence
of at least 19 of the 35 Iranian Arabs sentenced to death by Ahwaz Revolutionary Court.
On 8 June, 2006, Khuzestan
Revolutionary Court announced that 35 indigenous Ahwazi Arabs (including 3 brothers) were
sentenced to death following a one-day trial in absence of lawyers or
witnesses. Two of these 35 men sentenced to death, Nazem Bureihi and Abdolreza
Nawaseri, were already serving prison sentences for insurgency at the time of
the bomb attacks for which the regime claims they were responsible for. “One of the
wonders of the Iranian Judiciary is that it can accuse a person of carrying out
bombings while he’s in prison,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, director of the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch. “That
lays bare the arbitrariness of his conviction.”
These men have been
found guilty of allegedly bombing oil installations at Southwestern Iranian province of Khuzesatn (al-Ahwaz),
homeland to 5 million Ahwazi-Arabs. All men are members of the
persecuted Ahwazi community. The trials were deeply flawed, according to Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch and other international and Iranian human rights organizations... The convictions are evidently arbitrary and are
intended to collectively punish Ahwazi Arabs for opposing the regime.
All these men were
tortured into making false confessions. Their lawyers were not allowed to see
them prior to their trial and they were given the prosecution case only hours
before the start of the trial, which was held in secret. The lawyers for the
condemned men ( Khalil Saeedi, Mansur
Atashneh, Dr Abdulhasan Haidari, Jawad Tariri, Faisal Saeedi and Taheri Nasab),
all
Ahwazi-Arabs but one, have been arrested for complaining about the illegal and
unjust nature of the men's trials. They have been charged with threatening
national security.
Although Ahwazi-Arab homeland
in Iran's Khuzestan province is one of the most oil-rich
regions in the world and represents up to 90 per cent of Iran's oil production. Yet this community endures extreme
levels of poverty, unemployment and illiteracy. Ahwazis are subjected to repression,
racial discrimination and faced with land confiscation, forced displacement and
forced assimilation.
Peaceful opposition among Ahwazi Arabs to the Iranian regime's racist policies of
ethnic cleansing has been brutally suppressed. Since April 15, 2005 the beginning of the Ahwazi Intifada (Uprising), over
25,000 Ahwazis were arrested, at least 131 were killed and over 150 were
disappeared (believed to have been tortured and killed by Iranian security
forces). Iranian authorities level accusations against the USA, Great Britain and Israel as the cause of Ahwazi demands for democracy, social
and economic justice. Ethnic cleansing against Iranian-Arabs in Khuzestan has
intensified since the mid-1990s, particularly following the election of Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
We
urge for an immediate action to pressure the Iranian government to commute the
remaining sentences. We also urge establishment of a body under the auspices of
the UN Human Rights Commission to investigate these killings. Thank You
Ahwazi
Human Rights Organization
AHRO-USA P.O. Box 679, Lorton,
Virginia 22199
AHRO- UK P. O. Box
17725, London, N5 2WP, U.K.
1.http://www.ahwazstudies.org/main/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1499&Itemid=47&lang=EN
2. http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/en/cfsp/92611.pdf
3. http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE130512006?open&of=ENG-IRN
4.http://www.ahwazstudies.org/main/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1578&Itemid=47&lang=EN
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