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Bahai News: Baha'i International Community sends open letter to Iran's chief prosecutor


From "Brad Pokorny" <bradpokorny@comcast.net>
Date Fri, 6 Mar 2009 08:02:07 -0500

Baha'i International Community sends open letter to Iran's chief prosecutor

>Baha'i World News Service

>http://news.bahai.org

>For more information, contact: news@bahai.org

Baha'i International Community sends open letter to Iran's chief prosecutor

NEW YORK, 6 March 2009 (BWNS) - The Baha'i International Community has
issued an open letter to Iran's prosecutor general outlining the tragic
history of the persecution of Baha'is in that country, explaining their
innocence in the face of accusations made by the government, and asking for
fairness in any upcoming trial of seven Baha'i prisoners.

Sent late yesterday by email to Ayatollah Qorban-Ali Dorri-Najafabadi, the
letter also suggests that the government's continued oppression of Baha'is
will ultimately have a wide impact on Iranian society as a whole.

"Your Honor, the decisions to be taken by the judiciary in Iran in the
coming days will have implications that extend well beyond the Baha'i
community in that land -- what is at stake is the very cause of the freedom
of conscience for all the peoples of your nation," said the six-page letter,
dated 4 March 2009.

"It is our hope that, for the sanctity of Islam and the honor of Iran, the
judiciary will be fair in its judgment." 

The letter comes after a series of statements from Ayatollah Najafabadi
quoted in the Iranian news media leveling charges at the Baha'is and stating
that the ad hoc arrangements that tend to the spiritual and social affairs
of the Baha'i community of Iran are illegal.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran will not allow any movement to harm the
national security through illegal and unauthorized organizational
activities," he said, referring specifically to Baha'is, according to an
account published by the Islamic Republic News Agency.

The seven members of the group that had been coordinating the affairs of the
Baha'is at the national level and who have been in prison for some 10
months, responded to the declaration from their prison cell. They stated
that if the current arrangements for administering the affairs of the Baha'i
community are no longer acceptable to the government, to bring them to a
close would not present a major obstacle. They said this is now being done,
to further demonstrate the goodwill that the Baha'is have consistently shown
to the government for the past thirty years.  

The letter, which was also sent to the Permanent Mission of the Islamic
Republic of Iran to the United Nations and published late yesterday on the
Web site of the United Nations office of the Baha'i International Community,
carefully outlines the facts of the oppression of the Iranian Baha'i
community since the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979. 

"While the harassment and ill-treatment of Baha'is continued uninterrupted
during this period, they have been taken to new levels of intensity in
recent years as certain elements that have historically been bent on the
destruction of the Baha'i community have assumed growing influence in the
affairs of the country," says the Baha'i International Community in the
communication.

It notes that it was only in response to that persecution that small ad hoc
groups were set up to "tend to the spiritual and social needs" of Iran's
300,000 Baha'is - and that for more than 20 years the government has worked
with those structures. 

At the national level, the group was known as the "Yaran," which means
"Friends" in Persian. The "Khademin," or "Those Who Serve," performed a
similar function at the local level.  

"Then last year the seven members of the Yaran were imprisoned, one of them
in March and the remaining six in May. . The conditions of their
incarceration have varied in degree of severity over the course of the past
several months, with the five male members confined at one time to a cell no
more than ten square meters in size, with no bed," the Baha'i International
Community points out.

The seven are Mrs. Fariba Kamalabadi, Mr. Jamaloddin Khanjani, Mr. Afif
Naeimi, Mr. Saeid Rezaie, Mrs. Mahvash Sabet, Mr. Behrouz Tavakkoli, and Mr.
Vahid Tizfahm. All but one of the group were arrested on 14 May 2008 at
their homes in Tehran. Mrs. Sabet was arrested on 5 March 2008 while in
Mashhad.

"Finally," the letter continues, "after some nine months of imprisonment,
during which time not a shred of evidence could be found linking the members
of the Yaran to any wrongdoing, they were accused of 'espionage for Israel,
insulting religious sanctities and propaganda against the Islamic Republic,'
and it has been announced that their case will soon be submitted to court
with a request for indictment.

"This announcement was followed almost immediately by news reports which
indicated that you had written to the Minister of Intelligence stating that
the existence of the Yaran and the Khademin in Iran is illegal, while at the
same time raising the question of the constitutional right of Iranian
citizens to freedom of belief. You then made an official announcement to
this effect.

"Your Honor, the events of recent years and the nature of the accusations
made raise questions in the mind of every unbiased observer as to the intent
behind the systematic perpetration of injustice against the Baha'is of Iran.
Even if there might have been some misunderstandings about the motives of
the Baha'i community during the early turbulent days of the revolution, how
can such suspicions persist today? Can it be that any member of the esteemed
government of Iran truly believes the false accusations which have been
perpetuated about the Baha'is in that country?"

The letter also notes that many prominent Iranians have recently arisen to
defend Baha'is, linking the overall struggle for human rights in Iran and
the situation of the Baha'is. 

"And we hear in the voices raised by so many Iranians in defense of their
Baha'i compatriots echoes from their country's glorious past. What we cannot
help noting, with much gratitude towards them in our hearts, is that a
majority of those coming out in support of the beleaguered Baha'i community
are themselves suffering similar oppression as students and academics, as
journalists and social activists, as artists and poets, as progressive
thinkers and proponents of women's rights, and even as ordinary citizens."

>To read the full letter, go to:

http://bic.org/areas-of-work/persecution/prosecutor-general-iran-en.pdf

>To read the letter in Persian, go to:

http://bic.org/areas-of-work/persecution/prosecutor-general-iran-fa.pdf

For more information, go to http://news.bahai.org

> 


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