UN human rights commission
urged to sanction Iran - March 2005
Iran
Reporters Without Borders said today it was "essential" that sanctions against
Iran are adopted without delay by the UN Commission on Human Rights, which began
its annual session yesterday in Geneva.
"After 19 years of successive condemnations, Iran has slipped through the
commission's net since 2001 on the grounds that the European Union is engaged in
a dialogue with Tehran, but violations of free expression and the physical
integrity of journalists have been continuing," the press freedom organization
said.
"The human rights commission must defend journalists who are censored,
threatened, arbitrarily detained, mistreated and sometimes tortured in Iran for
doing their job," Reporters Without Borders added. Relatives of Iranian
journalists who have been the victim of repression will demonstrate today into
Geneva to demand the justice they have so far failed to obtain, although they
complained to international judicial bodies three years ago.
The relatives of journalists Darioush and Paravaneh Forouhar, Mohammad Mokhtari,
Mohammad Jafar Pouyandeh and Pirouz Davani, as well as relatives of human rights
lawyer Nasser Zarafshan, will be among those participating in the protest, which
is supported by Reporters Without Borders.
More than 10 newspapers have been temporarily suspended or closed down
altogether and at least 60 journalists have been summoned for questioning since
the human rights commission's last session in March 2004. Many of these
journalist have been the victim of "white torture" in prison, in which they are
put in solitary confinement for several months and subjected to interrogation
sessions in which the soles of their feet are sometimes beaten with wire. With
13 journalists and bloggers currently detained, Iran is the Middle East's
biggest prison for the press.
Iran agreed in 2002 to accept visits from UN working groups but so far only two
have been able to go. A working group on arbitrary detention visited Iran from
15 to 27 February 2003, while one on free expression visited from 4 to 10
November 2004. The rapporteurs of the two groups reported : "a deterioration in
the situation of freedom of expression in Iran, with a growing number of
newspapers closed and journalists imprisoned, often beyond the legal limit for
provisional detention. The systematic repression of all critical opinion as
regards the regime's political or religious institutions has installed a climate
of fear leading to self-censorship and, in particular, the rapporteurs have
observed the use of arbitrary procedures by the judicial institutions violating
the most basic rights of defendants, who are tried in secret hearings without a
lawyer being present." The rapporteurs also noted "very harsh prison conditions,
including long periods in solitary confinement, that are equivalent to torture."
No measures have been adopted two years after the reports of these working
groups were published.
Reporters Without Borders defends imprisoned journalists and press freedom
throughout the world, as well as the right to inform the public and to be
informed, in accordance with Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. Reporters Without borders has nine national sections (in Austria,
Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United
Kingdom), representatives in Abidjan, Bangkok, Buenos Aires, Istanbul, Montreal,
Moscow, New York, Tokyo and Washington and more than a hundred correspondents
worldwide.
C Reporters Without Borders 2005