New Wave of Persecutions for Iranian Bahais
PARIS, Nov 17 (Reuters) - French members of the Bahai faith said on
Tuesday that fellow believers in Iran were the target of a new wave of
persecution, caught in a power struggle between reformists and Islamic
fundamentalists.
"When there is a struggle for power, it is always the minorities who
are caught in between and become scapegoats," Foad Saberan, a Frenchman
of Iranian origin, told a news conference marking the 100th anniversary
of an organised French Bahai community.
He said Iran's 350,000 Bahais were persecuted by Moslem fundamentalists
seeking to undermine President Mohammad Khatami, a moderate Shi'ite cleric.
"The president is clearly a humanist who favours protecting religious
minorities. His overtures to Iranian Christians are unprecedented in
Iranian history. Because of that, hardliners are trying to strangle the
Bahais," Saberan said.
Khatami plans to visit France in February, his first visit to a European
country since being elected in 1997. The French Bahais said they planned
to appeal to him then in favour of co-religionists in Iran, including
several sentenced to death.
The Bahai faith originated from a Moslem splinter group in Iran 150
years ago. It claims six million members worldwide, including in mainly
Moslem Iran, where it is officially termed "a misleading and wayward
sect."
Bahais abroad say more than 200 members of their faith have been
executed in Iran for their religious beliefs since the 1979 Islamic
revolution.
The French Bahais accused Iranian authorities last month of launching a
major crackdown against Bahais in 14 cities, arresting 36 people and
looting more than 500 homes.
Those arrested were professors and teachers conducting "open
university"-type courses for young Bahais, said by their French fellow
believers to be banned by the authorities from attending universities.
French Bahai members told reporters all but four of those arrested
in the crackdown on educators had since been released, but prevented
from resuming teaching.
"But the regime is still hounding the Bahais. Now, those who received
pensions have not only seen pension payments halted but their possessions
are being confiscated to reimburse the state for pensions paid in the
past," Saberan alleged.
He also said Bahai graveyards were being bulldozed without
families being told where remains were taken.
But the French Bahais said two Iranians said to have had death sentences
confirmed against them in September, Sirus Zabihi-Muqaddam and Hedayat
Kashefi Najafabadi, were still alive and human rights groups across the world
were working to save them. They were said to have been arrested in October
1997 for violating a ban on holding meetings about family life.
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