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Issue Number 51, dated 10/5/98
32 Baha'i's arrested (Serial 5111)
The assault of press freedom has been accompanied by attacks on
Iranian Baha'is, with 32 members of the outlawed sect arrested in a
3-day nation-wide sweep in 14 different cities that ended on October
1.
Gerald Filson, a spokesman for the Baha'i Community of Canada,
said that most of those arrested were faculty members of the Baha'i
Institute of Higher Education, also known as the Baha'i Open
University. Baha'i property was seized in 14 cities across Iran,
including Tehran, Tabriz, Hamedan, Zanjan and Khorramabad, on orders
of the Ministry of Information and Security (MOIS). Filson said the
purpose of the arrests appeared to be to force closure of the Baha'i
Open University, established to give Baha'is an opportunity to get an
education, since the authorities have prevented Baha'is from
completing high school or attending universities in Iran.
Gholamhossain Amini, a board member of the Baha'i Institute of
Higher Education who was released in Tehran shortly after his arrest,
was told to convey the message that the Baha'i institution must
close, according to Baha'i representatives.
The crackdown comes after an Islamic court in Mashad confirmed
death sentences handed down earlier this year against two Baha'is for
converting a Muslim woman to the Baha'i faith, Cyrus Zabihi-Moghaddam
and Hedayat Kashefi Najafabadi. A third Baha'i, Ataullah Hamid
Nasirizadeh, was told orally that his death sentence had been
commuted to ten years imprisonment. The three were arrested in
October 1997 along with a fourth Baha'i, Ruhollah Rowhani. Rowhani
was executed on July 21, despite the refusal of Iran's Supreme Court
to confirm the death sentence handed down in Mashad against him. The
woman they allegedly converted has claimed she was born a Baha'i.
These latest death sentences bring to seven the total number of
Baha'is facing execution in Iran. In Washington, U.S. State
Department spokesman James Rubin called on the Iranian authorities
not to carry out the executions. "We have urged publicly and will
continue to urge publicly that the government of Iran protect members
of the Baha'i faith," Rubin said on Oct. 1.
President Khatami has not commented on the situation of Baha'is in
Iran, except for vague statements calling for religious tolerance.
The Resalati faction in Iran, which existed under the Shah and
continues to demonstrate strong support from the Bazaar, has long
sought to repress the Baha'i's. After widespread repression of the
Baha'is during the first few years of the Revolution, including 200
executions, the regime refrained from high-profile acts of repression
against the Baha'i community until last year, perhaps in response to
extensive lobbying by the U.S. and European Baha'i community on
behalf of human rights in Iran. If so, the upsurge in anti-Baha'i
actions could mean that the regime no longer fears U.S. or European
reprisals.
©Copyright 1996, Middle East Data Project, Inc.
Original Story
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