FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kit Cosby (202) 833-8990
June 16, 1998
CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE TOLD THAT
PERSECUTION OF THE BAHÁ'ÍS IN IRAN CONTINUES
UNABATED
Washington, D.C., June 16 The Bahá'ís in Iran continue to be
subjected to arbitrary arrests and detentions, confiscation of
properties, denial of access to higher education and other forms of
pressure to recant their faith, a spokesman for the U.S.
Bahá'í community said today at a congressional hearing on
religious persecution abroad.
Testifying before the House International Relations Subcommittee
on International Operations and Human Rights, Dr. Firuz Kazemzadeh
said that there has been no sign of change toward the Bahá'ís
and that in some ways the pressure against the Bahá'í community
has intensified this year.
"To a Western mind it is difficult to understand why a regime which
is gradually permitting a degree of pluralism in political and social
life should be bent on suppressing an apolitical minority which poses
no threat," Dr. Kazemzadeh said.
"The explanation lies in the sinister interaction of political
opportunism and unexamined religious prejudice determining all
aspects of the matter. Whenever political leaders have felt a
need to divert public attention from some economic, social, or
political issue, they have found the Bahá'í community an
easy target because of the senseless hostility and prejudice
inculcated in the public by generations of ecclesiastical
propaganda," he said.
Dr. Kazemzadeh cited the case of a Bahá'í children's class that
was held at the home of a Bahá'í family in Mashhad. On May 1,
1998 armed guards surrounded the house and took the teacher, the owner
of the house, and twelve students aged 15 and 16 into custody. The
Bahá'ís were not allowed to contact a lawyer and no official
charges were filed, but after a hasty trial the two adults were
sentenced to three years' imprisonment. The youth were given a suspended
sentence of five years' imprisonment to be activated if they were ever
caught attending a Bahá'í class again.
Since 1979 more than 200 Bahá'ís have been killed and fifteen
Bahá'í leaders have disappeared and are presumed dead. As of
June 1998 sixteen Bahá'ís are in prison because of their
religious beliefs. Four of the prisoners are on death row, two of them
on charges of apostasy.
America's 130,000 Bahá'ís reside in more than 7,000 cities and
towns across the United States and represent all races, cultures and
ethnic origins. Some 10,000 Iranian Bahá'ís have taken refuge
in the U.S. since 1979.
©Copyright 1998 The National Spiritual Assembly of the
Bahá'ís of the United States.
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