Amnesty International
Three more men at risk of execution
Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2006 15:30:14 +0000
PUBLIC AI Index: MDE 13/123/2006
Further Information on UA 301/06 (MDE 13/126/2006, 13 November 2006)
Fear of imminent execution
IRAN Abdullah Suleymani (m) aged 27
Abdulreza Sanawati Zergani (m)
Qasem Salamat (m) aged 43
Mohammad Jaab Pour (m)
Abdulamir Farjallah Jaab (m)
Alireza Asakreh (m)
Majed Alboghubaish (m)
Khalaf Derhab Khudayrawi (m)
Malek Banitamim (m) aged 30
New names: Abdul Husain Haribi (m)
Husain Maramazi (m)
Husain Asakreh (m)
The nine men named above remain at risk of imminent execution. A
further
three members of Iran's Arab minority, Abdul Husain Haribi, Husain
Maramazi
and Husain Asakreh, have also since reportedly been sentenced to death
in
connection with involvement in bomb explosions.
On 13 November, an Iranian local television station, Khuzestan TV,
broadcast a documentary which included the “confessions†of 10
men:
Abdullah Suleymani, Abdulreza Sanawati Zergani, Qasem Salamat,
Mohammad
Jaab Pour, Abdulamir Farjallah Jaab, Alireza Asakreh, Majed
Alboghubaish,
Khalaf Derhab Khudayrawi, Malek Banitamim, and a tenth man, named as
Ali
Motairi Nejad. The 10 men had been sentenced to death in connection
with
involvement in bomb explosions which took place in major cities in
Khuzestan Province in 2005. Amnesty International believes this man to
be
Ali Matouri Zadeh, who was arrested along with his pregnant wife on 28
February 2006 (see UA 107/06, MDE
13/042/2006, 28 April 2006 and follow
up). In the programme, the 10 people, said to be members of a group
named
Al-e Naser, (a little-known Iranian Arab militant group that is not
known
to have been active since the time of the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s)
"confessed" to their involvement in the bomb explosions.
Unconfirmed reports suggest that the men may be executed in their home
towns and villages in Khuzestan province.
Following a one-day closed trial at a Revolutionary Court in Shadegan
in
Khuzestan province on 16 November 2006, Abdul Husain Haribi, Husain
Maramazi and Husain Asakreh were reportedly sentenced to death,
accused of
bombing oil pipelines in Khuzestan. Amnesty International does not
have any
further details about their case.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Much of Iran's Arab community lives in the province of Khuzestan,
which
borders Iraq. The province is strategically important because it is
the
site of
much of Iran’s oil reserves, but the Arab population does not
feel
it has benefited as much from the oil revenue as the Persian
population.
Historically, the Arab community has been marginalised and
discriminated
against. Tension has mounted among the Arab population since April
2005,
after it was alleged that the government planned to disperse the
country's
Arab population or to force them to relinquish their Arab identity.
Hundreds were arrested and there have been reports of torture.
Following
bomb explosions in Ahvaz City in June and October 2005, which killed
at
least 14 people, and explosions at oil installations in September and
October, the cycle of violence intensified, with hundreds people
reportedly
arrested. Further bombings on 24 January 2006, in which at least six
people
were killed, were followed by further mass arrests. Two men, Mehdi
Nawaseri
and Ali Awdeh Afrawi, were executed in public on 2 March after they
were
convicted of involvement in the October bombings. Their executions
followed
unfair trials before a Revolutionary Court during which they are
believed
to have been denied access to lawyers, and their "confessions", along
with
those of seven other men, were broadcast on television. At least 13
other
Iranian Arabs are also reportedly under sentence of death, accused of
involvement in the bombings, distributing material against the state,
having contact with dissident organizations operating abroad, and
endangering state security. Amnesty International recognizes the right
and
responsibility of governments to bring to justice those suspected of
criminal offences, but is unconditionally opposed to the death penalty
as
the ultimate violation of the right to life. Please see Iran: Death
Sentences appeal case – 11 Iranian Arab men facing death sentences,
AI
Index MDE 13/051/2006, May 2006).
RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send
appeals to arrive as quickly as possible,
in English, Arabic, Persian or your own language:
- expressing grave concern that the twelve men (naming them) may be in
imminent danger of execution;
- urging the Iranian authorities to commute their death sentences
immediately;
- asking for details of the men's trial proceedings, including the
specific
charges against them, whether they have been granted access to
independent
lawyers of their choice, and, if indeed convicted and sentenced to
death,
whether they have been allowed to appeal against their convictions and
sentences, as required by Article 14 (5) of the International Covenant
on
Civil and Political Rights;
- acknowledging that governments have a responsibility to bring to
justice
those suspected of criminal offences, but stating your unconditional
opposition to the death penalty, as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and
degrading punishment and violation of the right to
life.
APPEALS TO:
Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the
Supreme
Leader
Shoahada Street, Qom, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: info@leader.or
istiftaa@wilayah.org
Fax: +98 251 774 2228 (mark “FAO the Office of HE Ayatollah al Udhma
Khameneiâ€)
Salutation: Your Excellency
COPIES TO:
President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran,
Islamic
Republic of Iran
Email: dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir
via website: www.president.ir/email
Salutation: Your Excellency
and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International
Secretariat,
or your section office, if sending appeals after 18 January 2007.
Working to protect human rights worldwide
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