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HRW: New Arrests of Iranian and Kurdish
Labor Activists in Iran
31.1.2012
By
Human Rights Watch |
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January
31, 2012
NEW YORK,
— Iranian authorities should immediately release
dozens of labor and independent trade union
activists imprisoned for speaking out peacefully in
defense of workers, Human Rights Watch said today.
Convictions solely for the peaceful exercise of
freedom of association and assembly should be
quashed, and charges should be dropped against
others facing prosecution for these reasons, Human
Rights Watch said.
The latest round of arrests took place in Iran’s
Tehran, East Azerbaijan and Kurdistan provinces. The
authorities summoned four activists in mid-January
2012 to begin serving long sentences imposed in
2011. On January 28, authorities arrested Alireza
Akhavan, a teacher and labor rights activist, in his
home in Tehran. It is not know where he is currently
being held. On January 18, security forces arrested
Mohammad Jarrahi in his home in Tabriz. Three days
earlier, intelligence agents arrested Shahrokh
Zamani, another Tabriz labor rights leader, and
summoned two others also in Tabriz. Authorities also
arrested Shays Amani, a prominent rights activist
and member of an independent trade union in the city
of Sanandaj on January 16. Earlier in the month
authorities detained Mehdi Shandeez and transferred
to Ward 350 of Evin prison in Tehran. All those
arrested are labor activists or members of
independent trade unions not authorized by the
government.
“Independent trade unions have played a critical
role in protecting workers’ rights under Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad’s presidency,” said Joe Stork, deputy
Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “This
latest round of arrests continues a long and ugly
tradition of targeting independent trade unions to
enforce full state control over these groups.”
Authorities initially arrested Zamani on June 7,
2011, in connection with his activities as a member
of an independent painters’ syndicate and a board
member of the Committee to Pursue the Establishment
of Labor Unions. Branch 1 of the Revolutionary Court
in Tabriz sentenced him to 11 years in prison for
“participating in the organization of an unlawful
group opposing the state … with the aim of
disrupting national security by way of workers’
strikes and armed rebellion,” “assembly and
collusion to further illegal activities,” and
“propaganda against the regime.”
In the same case, the court sentenced Jarrahi, who
was arrested on June 20, to five years in prison for
organizing an “unlawful” group called the Democratic
Workers Movement, and Nima Pouryaghoub to five years
on the same charge plus an additional year for
“propaganda against the regime.” Sassan Vahebivash
was sentenced to six months for related activities.
Pouryaghoub and Vahebivash are engineering students
at Tabriz’s Azad University.
Authorities freed the four defendants after they
posted bail, but, in November 2011, Branch 6 of the
East Azerbaijan appeals’ court confirmed the
original sentences handed down by the trial court.
Authorities did not summon the defendants to serve
their prison terms until this year.
According to Iranian media reports, Amani, a
prominent labor rights activist in Sanandaj
(Kurdistan province) and a board member of the Iran
Free Workers’ Union (IFWU), was arrested after he
went to the prosecutor’s office in Sanandaj to
inquire about the status of two other activists who
had been detained earlier in January.
Human Rights Watch is concerned about the well-being
of several other prominent labor and trade union
activists currently serving prison sentences,
including Reza Shahabi,www.ekurd.net
Ali Nejati, Ebrahim Madadi, and Behnam Ebrahimzadeh.
Madadi is vice-president and Shahabi is treasurer of
the Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus
Company (SWTSBC). Madadi is serving a
three-and-a-half-year sentence on charges of
endangering national security. Shahabi was arrested
on June 12, 2010. A revolutionary court in Tehran
tried him of endangering national security and
“propaganda against the state” on May 25, 2011, but
there has been no ruling in his case yet.
According to a source familiar with his case,
Shahabi spent 18 months in Tehran’s Evin prison
without charge, including several months in solitary
confinement, and suffers from serious neck and back
pain. Shahabi is in Imam Khomeini hospital in Tehran
after ending a 30-day hunger strike on December 22
to protest his detention and the authorities’
refusal to provide proper medical care.
Two other activists, Ali Nejati and Behnam
Ebrahimzadeh, who are serving one and five-year
prison terms, respectively, on national security
charges related to their independent trade union
activities, also suffer from serious medical
conditions. According to information received by
Human Rights Watch, both Nejati and Ebrahimzadeh
asked for long-term furloughs from prison so they
could seek proper medical care, but judicial
officials have denied their requests.
Nejati is a former president and current board
member of the Haft Tappeh Sugar Cane Workers’
Syndicate (HTSCW), and is in Ahvaz’s Dezful prison
in southwest Iran. Ebrahimzadeh is in Evin prison.
The IFWU and the bus workers’ and sugar cane
workers’ unions, are among the largest and most
active independent trade unions in Iran. Iran’s
labor law does not recognize the right to create
labor unions independent of government-sanctioned
groups. Since 2005, authorities have repeatedly
harassed, summoned, arrested, convicted, and
sentenced workers who are affiliated with these
independent trade unions and harassed their
families.
Most of these arrests have taken place during
International Workers’ Day celebrations or strikes
the unions have called, often for back wages that
have not been paid for months. Mansour Osanlou, the
current president of the bus workers’ group, was
sentenced to five years in prison on charges of
“acting against the national security” and
“propaganda against the state” following several
arrests between 2005 and 2007. Authorities allowed
Osanlou to leave Evin prison in June after he had
served about four years of his sentence, but could
still summon him to serve the rest. Human Rights
Watch called on the judiciary to quash Osanlou’s
sentence.
Independent unions have protested amendments to the
current labor law introduced by President
Ahmadinejad. The amendments, currently being
reviewed by Iran’s parliament, make it easier for
employers to fire workers and reduce workers’
benefits such as annual vacation days.
Article 22 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR), and Article 8 of the
International Covenant on Economic, Social, and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR) protect the right to form
and join labor unions. Iran is a signatory to both
of these treaties. Iran is also a member of
International Labour Organization (ILO), but has so
far refused to sign covenants 87 (Freedom of
Association and the Protection of the Right to
Organize Convention) and 98 (Right to Organize and
Collective Bargaining Convention) of the ILO treaty.
“Labor activists have been at the forefront of the
struggle for freedom of association and assembly in
Iran, and they have paid a heavy price,” Stork said.
“Iranian law should recognize the right to organize
independent unions and release activists who have
committed no crime other than representing the
interests of their constituents.”
Copyright © 2012, respective
author or news agency,
hrw.org
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