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Thursday,
February 26, 2004
The U.S.
Department of States
The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The Islamic
Republic of Iran is a constitutional, theocratic republic in which Shi'a
Muslim clergy dominate the key power structures. The Supreme Leader of
the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ali Khamene'i, dominates a tri-cameral
division of power among legislative, executive, and judicial branches.
Khamene'i directly controls the armed forces and exercises indirect control
over the internal security forces, the judiciary, and other key institutions.
The executive branch was headed by President Mohammad Khatami, who won
a second 4-year term in June 2001, with 77 percent of the popular vote
in a multiparty election. The legislative branch featured a popularly
elected 290-seat Islamic Consultative Assembly, Majlis, which develops
and passes legislation. Reformist and moderate candidates won a landslide
victory for 4-year terms in the 2000 Majlis election, gaining a clear
majority of that body. However, the 12-member Guardian Council, which
reviews all legislation passed by the Majlis for adherence to Islamic
and constitutional principles, blocked much of the reform legislation.
The 34-member Expediency Council is empowered to resolve legislative impasses
between the Guardian Council and the Majlis. The Constitution provides
that "the judiciary is an independent power"; however, the judicial branch
is widely perceived as heavily biased against pro-Khatami reformist forces.
Several agencies
share responsibility for law enforcement and maintenance of order, including
the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, the Ministry of Interior, and
the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp, a military force established after
the revolution. Paramilitary volunteer forces known as Basijis, and various
gangs of men known as the Ansar-e Hezbollah (Helpers of the Party of God),
or more simply "plain clothes," acted as vigilantes aligned with extreme
conservative members of the leadership. Civilian authorities did not fully
maintain effective control of the security forces and there were instances
in which elements of the security forces acted independently of government
authority. The regular and the paramilitary security forces both committed
numerous, serious human rights abuses.
The mixed economy depends on oil and gas for 80 percent of its export
earnings. The population was approximately 68 million. All large-scale
industry is publicly owned and administered by the State. Large para-statal
charitable foundations called bonyads, most with strong connections to
the clerical regime, controlled as much as a third of the country's economy
and exercised considerable influence. The Government heavily subsidized
basic foodstuffs and energy costs. Government mismanagement and corruption
negatively affected economic performance. The official unemployment rate
was approximately 16 percent, although other estimates were higher. Estimated
inflation was 17 percent with economic growth at 6 percent during the
year.
The Government's poor human rights record worsened, and it continued to
commit numerous, serious abuses. The right of citizens to change their
government was restricted significantly. Continuing serious abuses included:
summary executions; disappearances; torture and other degrading treatment,
reportedly including severe punishments such as beheading and flogging;
poor prison conditions; arbitrary arrest and detention; lack of habeas
corpus or access to counsel and prolonged and incommunicado detention.
Citizens often did not receive due process or fair trials. The Government
infringed on citizens' privacy rights, and restricted freedom of speech,
press, assembly, association and religion.
An intense political struggle continued during the year between a broad
popular movement favoring greater liberalization in government policies,
particularly in the area of human rights, and certain hard-line elements
in the Government and society, which viewed such reforms as a threat to
the survival of the Islamic Republic. In many cases, this struggle was
played out within the Government itself, with reformists and hard-liners
squaring off in divisive internal debates. As in the past, reformist members
of parliament were harassed, prosecuted, and threatened with jail for
statements made under parliamentary immunity.
The Government restricted the work of human rights groups; however, it
permitted visits during the year by the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention and the U.N. Special Rapporteur for the Promotion and Protection
of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression. Violence and legal
and societal discrimination against women were problems. The Government
restricted the work of human rights groups. The Government discriminated
against minorities and severely restricted workers' rights, including
freedom of association and the right to organize and bargain collectively.
Child labor persisted. Vigilante groups, with strong ties to certain members
of the Government, enforced their interpretation of appropriate social
behavior through intimidation and violence. There were reports of trafficking
in persons.
In October, lawyer and human rights activist Shirin Ebadi was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in advancing human rights both in the
country and internationally.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
There were reports of political killings. The Government was responsible
for numerous killings during the year, including executions following
trials in which there was a lack of due process. Government affiliated
vigilante groups also were responsible for extrajudicial killings.
The law criminalized dissent and applied the death penalty to offenses
such as "attempts against the security of the State, outrage against high-ranking
officials, and insults against the memory of Imam Khomeini and against
the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic." Citizens continued to be
tried and sentenced to death in the absence of sufficient procedural safeguards.
Exiles and human rights monitors alleged that many of those supposedly
executed for criminal offenses, such as narcotics trafficking, actually
were political dissidents. Supporters of outlawed political groups, or
in the case of the Mujahedin-e Khalq, a terrorist organization, were believed
to constitute a large number of those executed each year.
In July, an Iranian-Canadian photographer, Zahra Kazemi, died in custody
after being arrested for taking photographs at Evin prison in Tehran.
After initially claiming that she had died as a result of a stroke, the
Government subsequently admitted that she died as a result of a blow to
the head and charged individuals involved in her detention. The Government
also denied Canada's request, based on her son's statement, that Kazemi's
remains be sent to Canada for further autopsy and burial. The Government
claimed to be following the wishes of her mother that she be buried in
the country, but the mother later said that she was coerced into making
the request.
Two political activists associated with the outlawed Komala party, Sassan
al-Kanaan and Mohammad Golabi, were executed in February and March. The
Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI), an opposition party, alleged
that the Government executed party member Jalil Zewal in December, after
9 years in prison during which he was reportedly subjected to torture.
KDPI member Ramin Sharifi was also executed in December after his arrest
in July. Mohammad Golabi was reportedly tortured while in detention. Sassan
al-Kanaan's execution was reportedly carried out while his mother was
in Tehran meeting on his behalf with the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention. KPI reports that hard-line vigilante groups killed at least
seven other Kurdish civilians were killed during the year.
The 1998 murders of prominent political activists Darioush and Parvaneh
Forouhar, writers Mohammad Mokhtari and Mohammad Pouyandeh, and the disappearance
of political activist Pirouz Davani continued to cause controversy about
what is perceived to be the Government's cover-up of involvement by high-level
officials. Prominent investigative journalist Akbar Ganji, who was arrested
in 2000 and sentenced to 6 years in prison for his reporting on the case,
remained in prison (see Sections 1.d. and 1.e.). In 2001, the Special
Representative for Iran of the Commission on Human Rights (UNSR) also
reported claims that there were more than 80 killings or disappearances
over a 10-year period as part of a wider campaign to silence dissent.
Members of religious minority groups, including the Baha'is, evangelical
Christians, and Sunni clerics were killed in recent years, allegedly by
government agents or directly at the hands of authorities.
b. Disappearance
Little reliable information was available regarding the number of disappearances
during the year.
The Government announced that approximately 4,000 persons--both protesters
and vigilantes--were arrested in connection with pro-reform protests in
June and stated that roughly 2,000 remained in jail in mid-July. There
were no reliable statistics to indicate how many protestors were still
being held at year's end.
According to Baha'i sources, since 1979 15 Baha'i have disappeared and
are presumed dead. The KDPI noted the continued detention of six Iranian
Kurds arrested in 1996 with no subsequent word on their whereabouts. The
Families of Iranian Jewish Prisoners (FIJP) have heard anecdotal stories
that some of 12 Jewish citizens, who disappeared while attempting to escape
from the country in the 1990s, were being held in prison (see Section
2.c.).
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The Constitution forbids the use of torture; however, there were numerous
credible reports that security forces and prison personnel continued to
torture detainees and prisoners. Some prison facilities, including Tehran's
Evin prison, were notorious for the cruel and prolonged acts of torture
inflicted upon political opponents of the Government. Common methods included
suspension for long periods in contorted positions, burning with cigarettes,
sleep deprivation, and most frequently, severe and repeated beatings with
cables or other instruments on the back and on the soles of the feet.
Prisoners also reported beatings about the ears, inducing partial or complete
deafness, and punching in the eyes, leading to partial or complete blindness.
In August, the Council of Guardians rejected a bill on accession to the
U.N. Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment. The Majlis amended the bill in late December,
reportedly addressing Council of Guardians concerns over the monetary
costs of joining the convention. The Council of Guardians also rejected
in mid-2002 a bill passed by the Majlis to end torture and forced confessions.
In July 2002, in an effort to combat "un-Islamic behavior" and social
corruption among the young, the Government announced the formation of
a new "morality force." The force was meant to enforce the Islamic Republic's
strict rules of moral behavior. Press reports indicated that members of
this force chased and beat persons in the streets for offenses such as
listening to music, or in the case of women, wearing makeup or clothing
that was not modest enough (see Section 1.f.). While not uniformly enforced,
in November, 7 women in Shiraz were reportedly sentenced to 50 lashes
for disrespectful behavior during the month of Ramadan.
In March, activist Siamak Pourzand was re-imprisoned after his provisional
release in November 2002. After his arrest in 2001, Siamak Pourzand was
tried in March 2002 behind closed doors and sentenced to 11 years in prison
for "undermining state security through his links with monarchists and
counter-revolutionaries." Press reports said that he had confessed to
his crimes at his trial, but his wife claimed that the confession was
extracted under duress. Pourzand suffered severe health problems while
held incommunicado, reportedly including a heart attack, and was allegedly
denied proper medical treatment. At year's end, he remained in jail.
In April, Former Deputy Prime Minister and longtime political dissident,
Abbas Amir-Entezam was re-imprisoned, after his release in 2002 for medical
reasons. Amir-Entezam was reportedly incarcerated for calling for a referendum
on whether the country should remain under clerical rule during a speech
at Tehran University. He was reportedly a frequent victim of torture in
prison and has had numerous medical problems as a result, including a
ruptured eardrum due to repeated beatings, kidney failure resulting from
denial of access to toilet facilities, and an untreated prostate condition.
He reported having been taken on numerous occasions before a firing squad
(see Section 1.e.).
In July, an Iranian-Canadian photographer, Zahra Kazemi, died in custody
as a result of a blow to the head (see Section 1.a.).
In November, four men were reportedly sentenced to death by stoning for
involvement in kidnapping and rape. In December 2002, the Government officially
suspended the practices of amputation and lapidation or stoning--a form
of capital punishment for adultery and other crimes, although the law
has not been rescinded.
During the year, Amnesty International (AI) reported at least six cases
of amputation.
Prison conditions in the country were poor. Some prisoners were held in
solitary confinement or denied adequate food or medical care to force
confessions. After its February visit, the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary
Detentions reported that "for the first time since its establishment,
[the Working Group] has been confronted with a strategy of widespread
use of solitary confinement for its own sake and not for traditional disciplinary
purposes." The Working Group described Sector 209 of Evin Prison as a
"prison within a prison," designed for the "systematic, large-scale use
of absolute solitary confinement, frequently for long periods."
The 2001 report by the UNSR noted a significant increase in the prison
population and reports of overcrowding and unrest. In March, the nongovernmental
organization (NGO) Penal Reform International (PRI) reported that 180,000
prisoners occupied facilities constructed to hold a maximum of 65,000
persons. In July, the head of the National Prisons Organization (NPO)
assessed the number of prisoners at 156,000.
The UNSR reported that much of the prisoner abuse occurred in unofficial
detention centers run by the secret service and military. The UNSR further
reported that the unofficial detention centers were to be brought under
the control of the NNPO during 2001; however, November press reports indicated
that a number of unofficial detention centers continued to operate outside
NPO control. The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention raised this
issue with the country's Article 90 Parliamentary Commission, generating
a Commission inquiry that reportedly confirmed the existence of numerous
unofficial prisons.
In March, PRI announced a cooperative initiative with authorities to improve
prison conditions through workshops and training of judges and prison
administrators. The report of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
noted that the judicial authorities expressed the need for prison reform,
but observed that implementation had been limited.
The Government generally has not granted access to human rights monitors
other than the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); however,
it permitted visits to imprisoned dissidents by U.N. human rights officials
during the year (see Section 4). U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
officials visited Evin prison in Tehran--including sector 209, in which
many political prisoners were believed held--as well as Esfahan and Shiraz
prisons, the Shiraz military prison, and police stations in each city.
The Working Group interviewed approximately 140 "ordinary" prisoners plus
14 out of a requested 45 inmates described as political prisoners and
prisoners of conscience. The Working Group described the authorities'
cooperation as "on the whole positive," although it noted problems with
fulfillment of follow-up requests generated by the visit and disappointment
over arrests carried out after the Group's departure. Following his November
visit to the country, the UNSR for the Promotion and Protection of the
Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression noted that his delegation met
with almost 40 dissidents, both in and out of prison.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention; however, these
practices remained common. There is reportedly no legal time limit for
incommunicado detention, nor any judicial means to determine the legality
of detention. In the period immediately following arrest, many detainees
were held incommunicado and denied access to lawyers and family members.
Suspects may be held for questioning in jails or in local Revolutionary
Guard offices.
The security forces often did not inform family members of a prisoner's
welfare and location. Authorities often denied visits by family members
and legal counsel. In addition, families of executed prisoners did not
always receive notification of the prisoners' deaths. Those who did receive
such information reportedly were forced on occasion to pay the Government
to retrieve the body of their relative.
In January, the Government released Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, amid
reports of health problems after 5 years of house arrest. Montazeri was
formerly the designated successor of the late Spiritual Leader, Ayatollah
Khomeini, who became an outspoken critic of the Supreme Leader (see Section
2.a.). In recent years, the Government has used the practice of house
arrest to restrict the movements and ability to communicate of senior
Shi'a religious leaders whose views regarding political and governance
issues were at variance with the ruling orthodoxy.
In July, the press reported that Iranian-American academic Dariush Zahedi
was detained during a private visit to the country and reportedly held
in solitary confinement in Evin prison. Parliament officials noted that
Zahedi was held on suspicion of espionage but, after a 40-day investigation,
was cleared by the Ministry of Intelligence. However, Zahedi remained
in detention after the case was transferred to the judiciary, reportedly
at the intervention of Tehran's chief prosecutor. Zahedi was released
on $250,000 (approximately 2 million rials) bail in November and, though
technically free to leave the country, is still subject to criminal prosecution.
In November, security agents briefly arrested two sons of Ayatollah Hossein
Ali Montazeri, the dissident cleric released from house arrest in January
(see Section 1.d.). The arrests were reportedly in response to the sons'
attempts to refurbish a building purchased by the family for use as a
teaching facility. The Qom mosque and Koranic school at which Montazeri
formerly taught has remained closed since 1997, when comments by the cleric
questioning the authority of the Supreme Leader sparked attacks on the
school and his home by Ansar-e Hezbollah mobs.
In November, student activist Ahmed Batebi met with the UNSR for the Promotion
and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression, while
on medical leave from prison where he is serving a 15-year sentence for
participating in the 1999 student demonstrations. He was re-arrested shortly
afterward and at year's end, he was reportedly being held in Evin prison.
In July 2002, the Government permanently dissolved the Freedom Movement,
the country's oldest opposition party, and sentenced over 30 of its members
to jail terms ranging from 4 months to 10 years on charges of trying to
overthrow the Islamic system. Other members were barred from political
activity for up to 10 years, and ordered to pay fines up to more than
$6,000 (approximately 48,000 rials).
Numerous publishers, editors, and journalists were either detained, jailed,
and fined, or were prohibited from publishing their writings during the
year (see Section 2.a.).
Adherents of the Baha'i faith continued to face arbitrary arrest and detention.
According to Baha'i sources, four Baha'is remained in prison for practicing
their faith at year's end, one facing a life sentence, two facing sentences
of 15 years, and the fourth a 4-year sentence. A small number of Baha'is
were and have been in detention at any given time. Sources claimed that
such arrests were carried out to "terrorize" the community and to disrupt
the lives of its members. Others were arrested, charged, and then quickly
released. However, the charges against them often were not dropped, generating
continued apprehension (see section 2.c.).
During the year, the Government continued to exchange with Iraq prisoners
of war (POWs) and the remains of deceased fighters from the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq
war. In March, the Government agreed to release over 900 remaining Iraqi
POWs in exchange for 349 Iranian POWs.
The Government did not use forced exile, and no information was available
regarding whether the law prohibits forced exile; however, the Government
used internal exile as a punishment. Many dissidents and ethnic and religious
minorities left and continue to leave the country due to a perception
of threat from the Government.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides that the judiciary is "an independent power";
however, in practice the court system was subject to government and religious
influence. It served as the principal vehicle of the Government to restrict
freedom and reform in the society. U.N. representatives, including the
UNSR, and the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, and independent
human rights organizations noted the absence of procedural safeguards
in criminal trials.
There are several different court systems. The two most active are the
traditional courts, which adjudicate civil and criminal offenses, and
the Islamic Revolutionary Courts. The latter try offenses viewed as potentially
threatening to the Islamic Republic, including threats to internal or
external security, narcotics and economic crimes, and official corruption.
A special clerical court examines alleged transgressions within the clerical
establishment, and a military court investigates crimes committed in connection
with military or security duties by members of the army, police, and the
Revolutionary Guards. A press court hears complaints against publishers,
editors, and writers in the media. The Supreme Court has limited review
authority.
After the revolution, the judicial system was revised to conform to an
Islamic canon based on the Koran, Sunna, and other Islamic sources. Article
157 provides that the Head of the Judiciary, currently Ayatollah Mahmoud
Hashemi Shahrudi, shall be a cleric chosen by the Supreme Leader. The
head of the Supreme Court and Prosecutor General also must be clerics.
Women were barred from serving as judges.
Many aspects of the pre-revolutionary judicial system survived in the
civil and criminal courts. For example, defendants have the right to a
public trial, may choose their own lawyer, and have the right of appeal.
Panels of judges adjudicate trials. There is no jury system in the civil
and criminal courts. If post-revolutionary statutes did not address a
situation, the Government advised judges to give precedence to their own
knowledge and interpretation of Islamic law.
The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention noted in its report failures
of due process in the court system, caused by the absence of a "culture
of counsel" and the concentration of authority in the hands of a judge
who prosecutes, investigates, and decides cases. The Working Group called
for active involvement of counsel in cases, from the custody and investigation
phase through the trial and appeals phases. The Working Group welcomed
the 2002 reinstatement of prosecution services, after a 7-year suspension,
but noted that the reforms have thus far only been applied in three jurisdictions.
Trials in the Revolutionary Courts, in which crimes against national security
and other principal offenses are heard, were notorious for their disregard
of international standards of fairness. Revolutionary Court judges acted
as both prosecutor and judge in the same case, and judges were chosen
in part based on their ideological commitment to the system. Pretrial
detention often was prolonged and defendants lacked access to attorneys.
Indictments often lacked clarity and included undefined offenses such
as "anti-revolutionary behavior," "moral corruption," and "siding with
global arrogance." Defendants did not have the right to confront their
accusers. Secret or summary trials of 5 minutes duration occurred. Others
were show trials that were intended merely to highlight a coerced public
confession.
The legitimacy of the Special Clerical Court (SCC) system continued to
be a subject of debate. The clerical courts, which investigate offenses
and crimes committed by clerics, and which are overseen directly by the
Supreme Leader, were not provided for in the Constitution, and operated
outside the domain of the judiciary. In particular, critics alleged that
the clerical courts were used to prosecute clerics for expressing controversial
ideas and for participating in activities outside the sphere of religion,
such as journalism. The recommendations of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention included a call to abolish both the Special Clerical Courts
and the Revolutionary Courts, which were described as "responsible for
many of the cases of arbitrary detention for crimes of opinion."
No accurate estimates were available regarding the number of citizens
imprisoned for their political beliefs. In November, the UNSR for the
Promotion and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Expression and Opinion
estimated the number to be in the hundreds. The Government has arrested,
convicted, and sentenced persons on questionable criminal charges, including
drug trafficking, when their actual "offenses" were political. The Government
has charged members of religious minorities with crimes such as "confronting
the regime" and apostasy, and conducted trials in these cases in the same
manner as threats to national security.
In March 2002, after a trial behind closed doors but with his lawyer present,
Nasser Zarafshan, the attorney representing the families of the victims
of the 1998 extrajudicial killings of dissidents by intelligence ministry
officials, was sentenced to 5 years in prison and 70 lashes. He was charged
with leaking confidential information pertaining to the trial. Human Rights
Watch (HRW) reported that he was also charged with "having weapons and
alcohol at his law firm." Zarafshan was originally arrested in 2000 but
released after a month pending trial. An appeals court upheld his conviction
in July 2002. In November, the Supreme Court reportedly dismissed his
appeal (see Section 1.a.).
Several other human rights lawyers were also reportedly abused, among
them Mohammad Dadkhah, who participated in the defense of members of the
Iran Freedom Movement and is a founding member of the Iranian Center for
Protection of Human Rights, and Abdol Fattah Soltani, who was reportedly
charged for raising accusations of torture during the 2002 defense of
a number of political prisoners. In 2002, Dadkhah was sentenced to 5 months
in jail and banned from practicing law for 10 years; Soltani was sentenced
to 4 months in prison and barred from practicing law for 5 years. Both
men reportedly began their jail terms in January. The U.N. Working Group
on Arbitrary Detention included among its recommendations the need for
guaranteeing the immunity of counsel in pleading cases as an essential
element of the right to due process.
In November 2002, academic Hashem Aghajari was sentenced to death at a
closed trial for the crime of blaspheming against Islam during a speech
in Hamedan. In addition to the death sentence, he was sentenced to 74
lashes, exile to a remote desert location, 8 years in jail, and a ban
on teaching for 10 years. The death sentence was widely denounced both
domestically and abroad. President Khatami and hundreds of Majlis members
questioned the verdict. In February, the Supreme Court revoked his death
sentence, but the case was sent back to the lower court for retrial. No
verdict was issued by year's end (see Section 2.b.).
Former Deputy Prime Minister and longtime political dissident, Abbas Amir-Entezam
was re-imprisoned in April, after his release in 2002 for medical reasons.
Amir-Entezam, who has spent much of the past 24 years in prison, was reportedly
incarcerated for calling for a referendum on whether the country should
remain under clerical rule during a speech at Tehran University (see Section
1.c.).
The trials in 2000 and 2001 of 13 Jewish citizens on charges related to
espionage for Israel were marked by a lack of due process. Ten of the
original 13 were sentenced to jail terms ranging from 4 to 13 years. The
last five in prison were reportedly released in April (see Section 2.c.).
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution states that "reputation, life, property, (and) dwelling(s)"
are protected from trespass except as "provided by law;" however, the
Government infringed on these rights. Security forces monitored the social
activities of citizens, entered homes and offices, monitored telephone
conversations, and opened mail without court authorization.
Vigilante violence included attacking young persons considered too "un-Islamic"
in their dress or activities, invading private homes, abusing unmarried
couples, and disrupting concerts or other forms of popular entertainment.
Attacks targeted women whose clothing did not cover their hair and all
parts of their body except the hands and face, or those who wore makeup
or nail polish.
Authorities entered homes to remove television satellite dishes, or to
disrupt private gatherings in which unmarried men and women socialized,
or where alcohol, mixed dancing, or other forbidden activities were offered
or took place. The Government campaign against satellite dishes continued,
although enforcement appeared to be arbitrary and sporadic, varying widely
with the political climate and the individuals involved. Press reports
from November noted that, after a roughly 4-month hiatus, security authorities
resumed efforts to remove satellite dishes from Tehran homes, confiscating
450 dishes in 1 neighborhood during a single day. A Revolutionary Court
order reportedly mandated the security forces to dismantle all satellite
dishes in Tehran and confiscate any satellite-related equipment found
during house searches.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of the press, except when published
ideas are "contrary to Islamic principles, or are detrimental to public
rights;" however, the Government restricted freedom of speech and of the
press in practice. Since the election of President Khatami, the independent
press, especially newspapers and magazines, played an increasingly important
role in providing a forum for an intense debate regarding reform in the
society. However, basic legal safeguards for freedom of expression did
not exist, and the independent press was subjected to arbitrary enforcement
measures by elements of the Government, notably the judiciary, which treated
such debates as a threat.
The Government continued to harass senior Shi'a religious and political
leaders and their followers who dissent from the ruling conservative establishment.
In July 2002, the Friday prayer leader of Isfahan, Ayatollah Jalaleddin
Taheri, resigned and, in a written statement, said he could no longer
tolerate the corruption and repression of the country's clerical leadership.
The Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic appoints Friday prayer leaders,
who are the senior religious authorities in their districts. According
to HRW, the conservative establishment attempted to limit the damage by
restricting coverage of Taheri's statement.
In October, reformist parliamentarian and outspoken critic Mohsen Armin
was sentenced to 6 months in prison for insulting a conservative parliament
member, according to press reports. The judge reportedly also stripped
Armin of his "social rights" for 1 year for not appearing in court. Armin
ascribed his absence from court to his assumption that he held parliamentary
immunity. At year's end, Armin had not been imprisoned.
In January 2002, reformist members of Parliament staged a walkout to protest
pro-reform Parliamentarian Hossein Loqmanian's imprisonment, which led
the Supreme Leader to pardon him after he had spent several weeks in prison.
In late 2001, Loqmanian began serving a 13-month sentence for insulting
the judiciary. He became the first Majlis member to serve a jail sentence.
In spring 2001, security forces arrested parliament member Fatima Haghighatjoo
for inciting public opinion and insulting the judiciary for criticizing
the arrest of a female journalist and claiming that the Government tortured
prisoners. She was the first sitting Majlis member to face prosecution
for statements made under cover of immunity. Haghighatjoo was sentenced
to 17 months in prison, though she has not yet served time.
Newspapers and magazines represented a wide variety of political and social
perspectives, many allied with members of the Government. Many subjects
were tolerated, including criticism of certain government policies. However,
the Press Law prohibits the publishing of a broad and ill-defined category
of subjects, including material "insulting Islam and its sanctities" or
"promoting subjects that might damage the foundation of the Islamic Republic."
Prohibited topics include fault-finding comments regarding the personality
and achievements of the late Leader of the Revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini;
direct criticism of the Supreme Leader; assailing the principle of velayat-e
faqih, or rule by a supreme religious leader; questioning the tenets of
certain Islamic legal principles; publishing sensitive or classified material
affecting national security; promotion of the views of certain dissident
clerics, including Ayatollah Montazeri; and advocating rights or autonomy
for ethnic minorities.
The Press Law established the Press Supervisory Board, which is composed
of the Minister of Islamic Culture and Guidance, a Supreme Court judge,
a Member of Parliament, and a university professor appointed by the Minister
of Islamic Culture and Guidance. The Board is responsible for issuing
press licenses and for examining complaints filed against publications
or individual journalists, editors, or publishers. In certain cases, the
Press Supervisory Board may refer complaints to the Press Court for further
action, including closure. Its hearings were conducted in public with
a jury composed of clerics, government officials, and editors of government-controlled
newspapers. The jury was empowered to recommend to the presiding judge
the guilt or innocence of defendants and the severity of any penalty to
be imposed, although these recommendations were not legally binding.
Since 2000, approximately 100 newspapers and magazines have been closed
for varying lengths of time. In the last few years, some human rights
groups asserted that the increasingly conservative Press Court assumed
responsibility for cases before Press Supervisory Board consideration,
often resulting in harsher judgments. Recent efforts to amend the press
laws have not met with success, although in October, parliament passed
a law limiting the duration of temporary press closures to a maximum of
10 days for newspapers, 4 weeks for weeklies or bi-weeklies, 2 months
for monthlies, and 3 months for other publications. The importance of
the legislation was to stop the practice of extending "temporary" bans
indefinitely.
Public officials frequently lodged complaints against journalists, editors,
and publishers. Offending writers were subject to lawsuits and fines.
Suspension from journalistic activities and imprisonment were common punishments
for guilty verdicts for offenses ranging from "fabrication" to "propaganda
against the State" to "insulting the leadership of the Islamic Republic."
Freedom of the press continued to deteriorate during the year. Many newspapers
and magazines were closed, and many of their managers were sentenced to
jail and, sometimes, lashings. Several dozen pro-reform newspapers continued
to publish, most with heavy self-censorship. When shut down, others often
opened to take their place. A number of Internet news sites continued
to operate from outside the country. There is little information on the
extent of readership inside the country.
Dozens of individual editors and journalists have been charged and tried
by the Press Court in recent years, and several prominent journalists
were jailed for long periods without trial. Others have been sentenced
to prison terms or exorbitant fines. At year's end, at least 10 journalists,
editors, and publishers remained in prison, according to Reporters Without
Borders (RSF). Journalists imprisoned during the year include: Ali-Reza
Jabari, arrested in March and sentenced to 3 years in prison and 253 lashes;
Iraj Jamshidi, imprisoned without trial and held mostly in isolation since
July; Taghi Rahmani, held in solitary confinement since June and reportedly
sentenced in a separate case to 13 years in jail; and Reza Alijani and
Hoda Saber, both held since June, and reportedly sentenced in separate
cases to 6 and 10 years, respectively. In October, journalist Mohsen Sazgara
was released from jail amid rumors of ill health, after 4 months in prison
on charges of inciting protest.
In January, the judiciary halted efforts by deputy speaker of the Majlis,
Mohammad-Reza Khatami, to re-open the banned newspaper Norouz under the
new name Rouz-e No, by extending the 6-month ban on the original publication.
Khatami was slated to replace former Norouz editor and parliament member
Mohsen Mirdamadi, who was sentenced despite parliamentary immunity in
May 2002 to 6 months in jail and banned from practicing journalism for
4 years for "insulting the state, publishing lies, and insulting Islamic
institutions." At year's end, there were no reports that Mirdamadi had
been imprisoned.
In January, the newspaper Hayat-e No was banned and editor Alireza Eshraghi
arrested after the paper reprinted a 1937 U.S. cartoon about President
Franklin Roosevelt's battle with the Supreme Court. The authorities deemed
that the judge portrayed too closely resembled the late Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini. The daily Hamshahri was also temporarily suspended in January
after refusing to print an article from the chief of a state-run trade
union.
In January, the Press Court also closed the reformist daily Bahar after
the newspaper ran an article about a company whose shareholders include
former president Hashemi Rafsanjani, former judiciary head Ayatollah Yazdi,
and Ahmad Janati, head of the Council of the Guardians of the Revolution.
Bahar was first closed in 2000 and had only re-opened in December 2002.
In February, according to AI, Abbas Abdi and Hussein Qazian, were sentenced
to 8 and 9 years, respectively, in the National Institute for Research
Studies and Opinion Polls case. In April, an appeals court reduced the
sentences to 4 years and 6 months for each. The third defendant in the
case, Behrouz Geranpayeh, was reportedly released on bail in January,
pending a final ruling. The case originated in October 2002, when the
judicial authorities closed the Institute which had found in a poll commissioned
by the Majlis that a majority of citizens supported dialogue with the
United States. The defendants were charged with spying for the United
States, illegal contacts with foreign embassies, working with anti-regime
groups, and carrying out research on the order of a foreign polling organization.
Government intelligence officials had publicly stated that the accused
were not spies. According to press reports, President Khatami also rejected
the charges, stating that the Intelligence and Foreign Ministries had
cleared the pollsters' work. Reformist parliamentarians were reportedly
barred from the court and the defendants were not allowed to see their
families or their attorneys.
In October, RSF reported that the Government closed the newspaper Avay-e
Kordestan, marking the first time a Kurdish language newspaper was banned
in the country.
The Government directly controlled and maintained a monopoly over all
television and radio broadcasting facilities; programming reflected the
Government's political and socio-religious ideology. Because newspapers
and other print media had a limited circulation outside large cities,
radio and television served as the principal news source for many citizens.
Satellite dishes that received foreign television broadcasts were forbidden;
however, many citizens, particularly the wealthy, owned them. In December
2002, the Majlis passed a bill legalizing private ownership of satellite
receiving equipment. However, the Guardians Council rejected the legislation
in January on constitutional and religious grounds. The Government reportedly
acted to block foreign satellite transmissions during the year using powerful
jamming signals (see Section 1.f.).
The Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance was in charge of screening
books prior to publication to ensure that they did not contain offensive
material. However, some books and pamphlets critical of the Government
were published without reprisal. The Ministry inspected foreign printed
materials prior to their release on the market. In August, author of "Iran's
women Musicians," Toka Maleki, its publisher Jaafar Homai, and cultural
critic Banafsheh Samgis received prison terms for publishing and publicly
commenting on the book, which was deemed to contain "lies" about Islamic
history. Translator of the book, "Women behind Veil and Well-Dressed Men,"
Maliheh Moghazei and Ministry of Culture and the Islamic Guidance Director
General Majid Sayyad also received prison terms in connection with the
book's publication.
The Government effectively censored domestic films, since it remained
the main source of production funding. Producers must submit scripts and
film proposals to government officials in advance of funding approval.
However, such government restrictions appeared to have eased in recent
years.
The Government censored Internet sites. In May, a government spokesman
acknowledged state attempts to block access to "immoral" websites. The
judiciary also announced the creation of a special unit to handle Internet-related
issues. According to press reporting, the judiciary highlighted over twenty
subject areas to be blocked, including: insulting Islam, opposing the
Constitution, insulting the Supreme Leader or making false accusations
about officials, undermining national unity and solidarity, creating pessimism
among the people regarding the Islamic system, and propagating prostitution
and drugs.
The Government restricted academic freedom. Government informers were
common on university campuses. Admission to universities was politicized;
all applicants had to pass "character tests" in which officials screened
out applicants critical of the Government's ideology. To obtain tenure,
professors had to refrain from criticism of the authorities.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution permits assemblies and marches "provided they do not
violate the principles of Islam;" however, in practice the Government
restricted freedom of assembly and closely monitored gatherings to prevent
anti-government protest. Such gatherings included public entertainment
and lectures, student gatherings, labor protests, funeral processions,
and Friday prayer gatherings.
During a wave of student protests in June, vigilantes beat many protestors,
and police arrested approximately 4,000 persons (both protestors and vigilantes),
according to government figures shortly after the protests. The Government
banned demonstrations planned for July 9 to commemorate the killing of
several students by security forces in demonstrations held in 1999 and
arrested more student activists at that time (see Sections 1.b. and 1.f.).
Paramilitary organizations such as the Ansar-e Hezbollah, a group of vigilantes
who seek to enforce their vision of appropriate revolutionary comportment
upon the society, harassed, beat, and intimidated those who demonstrated
publicly for reform. Ansar-e Hezbollah gangs were used to harass journalists,
intimidate dissident clerics, and disrupt peaceful gatherings (see Section
2.b.). Ansar-e Hezbollah cells were organized throughout the country and
some were reportedly linked to individual members of the country's leadership.
In June, during a wave of pro-reform protests, members of vigilante groups,
such as Ansar-e Hezbollah, attacked protestors, according to press reports.
Ansar-e Hezbollah members reportedly stormed a university dormitory in
Tehran, destroyed student property, and injured more than 50 students.
Some vigilantes were reportedly included among those arrested by authorities
during the clashes. Vigilantes who attacked a demonstration in Shiraz
reportedly killed one protestor. Before being transferred to Government
custody, vigilantes reportedly seized and beat, journalist Ensafali Hedayat.
Vigilante groups were also reported to have attacked protestors during
pro-reform demonstrations near Tehran University in December.
In December, vigilantes beat reformist parliamentarian, Mohsen Mirdamadi,
as he began a speech in Yazd. President Khatami ordered a crackdown on
vigilantes after the attack; five individuals were subsequently arrested.
At year's end, there was no further information on the status of their
detention.
In November 2002, the Aghajari verdict sparked large and ongoing protests
at universities throughout the country (see Section 1.e.). Students boycotted
classes for almost 2 weeks and staged the largest pro-reform demonstrations
in 3 years, with crowds of up to 5,000 at any given location. In late
December 2002, two students were given jail terms for their protests against
the Aghajari sentence. Hojatollah Rahimi was sentenced to 2 years in prison
and 70 lashes for "insulting religious sanctities and issuing an insulting
declaration." Co-defendant Parviz Torkashvand was sentenced to 4 months
in jail and 40 lashes.
A government clampdown using Basiji and other forces restored quiet for
2 weeks, until a large demonstration occurred at the University of Tehran,
attended by over 2,000 within the walls of the campus, and with a larger
crowd outside. Law enforcement officials and "plainclothes" forces wielding
batons, whips, and belts suppressed the protest. Basiji violently dispersed
subsequent demonstrations.
The Constitution provides for the establishment of political parties,
professional associations, Islamic religious groups, and organizations
for recognized religious minorities, provided that such groups do not
violate the principles of "freedom, sovereignty, and national unity,"
or question Islam as the basis of the Islamic Republic; however, the Government
limited freedom of association, in practice.
In 2001, the Government provisionally closed the 50-year-old Iran Freedom
Movement political party for "attempting to overthrow the Islamic regime,"
and the Government permanently banned it in 2002. In response to the permanent
dissolution of the movement, President Khatami warned against the banning
of political groups, saying that suppression did not eliminate ideas;
they were simply forced underground and continue to grow (see Sections
1.d. and 1.e.).
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution declares that the "official religion of Iran is Islam
and the doctrine followed is that of Ja'fari (Twelver) Shi'ism." the Constitution
also states that "other Islamic denominations are to be accorded full
respect," and recognizes Zoroastrians, Christians, and Jews, the country's
pre-Islamic religions, as "protected" religious minorities; however, in
practice The Government restricted freedom of religion. Religions not
specifically protected under the Constitution did not enjoy freedom of
religion. This situation most directly affected the approximately 300,000
followers of the Baha'i faith, who were not recognized by the Government
as a community and were considered to belong to an outlawed political
organization. The central feature of the country's Islamic republican
system is rule by a "religious jurisconsult." Its senior leadership, including
the Supreme Leader of the Revolution, the President, the Head of the Judiciary,
and the Speaker of the Islamic Consultative Assembly (Parliament) was
composed principally of Shi'a clergymen.
The Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) monitored closely religious
activity. Adherents of recognized religious minorities were not required
to register individually with the Government. However, their community,
religious, and cultural organizations, as well as schools and public events,
were monitored closely. The population was approximately 99 percent Muslim,
of which 89 percent were Shi'a and 10 percent Sunni (mostly Turkomans,
Arabs, Baluchis, and Kurds). Baha'i, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Jewish
communities constituted less than 1 percent of the population.
Members of the country's religious minorities, particularly Bahai's, reported
imprisonment, harassment, and intimidation based on their religious beliefs.
All religious minorities suffered varying degrees of officially sanctioned
discrimination, particularly in the areas of employment, education, and
housing. The Government generally allowed recognized religious minorities
to conduct religious education of their adherents, although it restricted
this right considerably in some cases. Religious minorities, by law and
practice, are barred from election to a representative body, except to
the five Majlis seats reserved for minorities, and from holding senior
government or military positions. Members of religious minorities were
allowed to vote, but they could not run for President. Although the Constitution
mandates an Islamic Army, members of religious minority communities sometimes
served in the military.
The Government allowed recognized religious minorities to establish community
centers and certain privately-financed cultural, social, sports, or charitable
associations. However, since 1983 the Government has denied the Baha'i
community the right to assemble officially or to maintain administrative
institutions.
The legal system discriminated against religious minorities, awarding
lower monetary compensation in injury and death lawsuits for non-Muslims
than for Muslims and imposing heavier punishments on non-Muslims than
on Muslims. In April, the Council of Guardians rejected a bill passed
by the Majlis in late 2002 equalizing the "blood money" paid to the families
of male crime victims except for Bahai's. Proselytizing of Muslims by
non-Muslims is illegal and the Government was harsh in its response, in
particular against Baha'is and evangelical Christians. The Government
did not ensure the right of citizens to change or recant their religion.
Apostasy, specifically conversion from Islam, is punishable by death.
Although Sunni Muslims are accorded full respect under the terms of the
Constitution, some Sunni groups claimed to be discriminated against by
the Government.
Baha'is were considered apostates because of their claim to a religious
revelation subsequent to that of the Prophet Mohammed. The Government
defined the Baha'i faith as a political "sect" linked to the Pahlavi monarchy
and therefore, as counterrevolutionary. Historically at risk, Baha'is
often have suffered increased levels of mistreatment during times of political
unrest. Baha'is may not teach or practice their faith or maintain links
with co-religionists abroad. The Government continued to imprison and
detain Baha'is based on their religious beliefs. A 2001 Ministry of Justice
report indicated that government policy aimed at the eventual elimination
of the Baha'is as a community.
In 2001, the UNSR estimated the Christian community at approximately 300,000.
Of these, the majority were ethnic Armenians and Assyro-Chaldeans. Protestant
denominations and evangelical churches also were active, but reported
restrictions on their activities. The authorities became particularly
vigilant in recent years in curbing proselytizing activities by evangelical
Christians.
Estimates of the size of the ewish community varied from 25,000 to 30,000,
a substantial reduction from the estimated 75,000 to 80,000 Jews in the
country prior to the 1979 revolution. While Jews were a recognized religious
minority, allegations of official discrimination were frequent. The Government's
anti-Israel stance, and the perception among many citizens that Jewish
citizens supported Zionism and the State of Israel, created a threatening
atmosphere for the small community. Jews limited their contact with and
did not openly express support for Israel out of fear of reprisal. Jewish
leaders reportedly were reluctant to draw attention to official mistreatment
of their community due to fear of government reprisal.
The Government carefully monitored the statements and views of the country's
senior Muslim religious leaders. It has restricted the movement of several
who have been under house arrest for years.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2003 International Religious Freedom
Report.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
The Government placed some restrictions on these rights. Citizens may
travel within the country and change their place of residence without
obtaining official permission. The Government required exit permits (a
validation stamp in the passport) for foreign travel for draft-age men
and citizens who were politically suspect. Some citizens, particularly
those whose skills were in short supply and who were educated at government
expense, must post bonds to obtain exit permits. The Government restricted
the movement of certain religious minorities and several religious leaders
(see Sections 1.d. and 2.c.).
Citizens returning from abroad sometimes were subjected to searches and
extensive questioning by government authorities for evidence of anti-government
activities abroad. Recorded and printed material, personal correspondence,
and photographs were subject to confiscation.
The Government permitted Jews to travel abroad, but often denied them
multiple-exit permits issued to other citizens. Baha'is often experienced
difficulty in obtaining passports.
Women must obtain the permission of their husband, father, or other male
relative to obtain a passport. Married women must receive written permission
from their husbands before being allowed to leave the country.
The law contains provisions for granting refugee status to persons who
meet the definition in the 1951 U.N. Convention Relating to the Status
of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol. There were no reports of the forced
return of persons to a country where they feared persecution; however,
there were reports that the Government deported refugees deemed "illegal"
entrants into the country. In times of economic uncertainty, the Government
increased pressure on refugees to return to their home countries. The
Government generally cooperated with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in assisting refugees.
The country hosted a large refugee population, mostly Afghans, as well
as a significant number of Iraqis. At year's end, UNHCR estimated that
approximately 1 million refugees from Afghanistan remained in the country.
Up to 500,000 Afghan refugees have returned to Afghanistan since early
2002, including approximately 100,000 during the first half of the year,
according to UNHCR. The Government denied UNHCR concerns that the Government
was pressing them to leave. Most refugees subsisted on itinerant labor.
The Government accused many Afghans of involvement in drug trafficking.
After the September 2001 terrorist attacks, the Government sealed its
border in anticipation of a war in Afghanistan and a resulting wave of
refugees. The Government set up several refugee camps just inside Afghanistan
to deal with the crisis.
The UNHCR estimated that there were approximately 200,000 Iraqi refugees
in the country, the majority of whom were Iraqi Kurds, but also including
Shi'a Arabs. Iraq expelled many of the Iraqi refugees at the beginning
of the Iran-Iraq war because of their suspected Iranian origin. In numerous
instances, both the Iraqi and Iranian Governments disputed their citizenship,
rendering many of them stateless. Other Iraqi refugees arrived following
Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. During the year, the Government took
substantial steps to prepare for the possibility of new Iraqi refugees,
but significant outflows never appeared. In November, UNHCR initiated
a pilot repatriation of refugees from the country and had repatriated
a few hundred to Iraq by early December. According to press reports, refugee
officials speculated that up to three-quarters of the 200,000 refugees
in the country may have crossed back into Iraq without formal assistance
since April.
Although the Government claimed to host more than 30,000 refugees of other
nationalities, including Tajiks, Bosnians, Azeris, Eritreans, Somalis,
Bangladeshis, and Pakistanis, it did not provide information about them
or allow the UNHCR or other organizations access to them.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
Their Government
The right of citizens to change their government is restricted significantly.
The Supreme Leader, the recognized Head of State, is elected by the Assembly
of Experts, and can only be removed by a vote of this same Assembly. The
Assembly itself is restricted to clerics, who serve an 8-year term and
are chosen by popular vote from a list approved by the Government. There
is no separation of state and religion, and clerical influence pervades
the Government, especially in appointed, rather than elected, positions.
The Government effectively controlled the selection of candidates for
elections. The Council of Guardians, which reviews all laws for consistency
with Islamic law and the Constitution, also screens candidates for election
for ideological, political, and religious suitability. It accepts only
candidates who support a theocratic state; clerics who disagree with government
policies or with a conservative view of the Islamic state also have been
disqualified. Two bills approved by the Majlis in late 2002 to expand
presidential power and limit the Council of Guardian's ability to disqualify
candidates were rejected by the Council of Guardians at mid-year.
Regularly scheduled elections are held for the Presidency, the Majlis,
and the Assembly of Experts. Mohammad Khatami, a former Minister of Culture
and Islamic Guidance who was impeached in 1992 by the Majlis for "liberalism"
and "negligence," was elected President in 1997 and reelected in 2001
with 77 percent of the vote. The UNSR reported that the Guardian Council
significantly limited the number of candidates permitted to run in elections
and noted that the Interior Minister denounced the "unprincipled disqualification"
of candidates.
Elections were held in the fall of 1998 for the 86-member Assembly of
Experts. The Council of Guardians disqualified numerous candidates, which
led to criticism from many observers that the Government improperly predetermined
the election results.
Elections were last held for the 290-seat Majlis in 2000 and were scheduled
to be held again in February 2004. Of more than 6,000 candidates, the
Council of Guardians disqualified 576 before the 2000 elections, a substantial
decrease from the 44 percent of candidates disqualified before the 1996
elections. Most of those disqualified were outspoken advocates of political
reform, including some of the most prominent supporters of President Khatami.
In 2001, by-elections were held for vacant Majlis seats. The Council of
Guardians reportedly disqualified 100 potential candidates, more than
one-quarter of those wishing to run. Furthermore, the Supreme Leader and
other conservatives within the Government used constitutional provisions
to block much of the early reform legislation passed by the Majlis.
In 1999, elections for nationwide local councils were held for the first
time since the 1979 revolution. Government figures indicated that roughly
280,000 candidates competed for 130,000 council seats across the nation.
Women were elected to seats in numerous districts. However, the Councils
did not appear to wield significant autonomy or authority. A second series
of municipal council elections took place in February. A combination of
low voter turnout (below 50 percent) and popular dissatisfaction with
both the performance of the councils and the record of reformists swept
many reformists from office.
Women held 9 out of 290 Majlis seats. There were no female cabinet members,
although several held high-level positions, such as Vice-President, and
a woman served as Presidential Adviser for Women's Affairs, and another
as head of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Majlis seats were reserved for elected Christian (three), Jewish (one)
and Zoroastrian (one) deputies. Religious minorities were barred from
being elected to any other seats on a representative body and from holding
senior government or military positions.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
The Government continued to restrict the work of local human rights groups.
The Government denies the universality of human rights and has stated
that human rights issues should be viewed in the context of a country's
"culture and beliefs."
Various professional groups representing writers, journalists, photographers,
and others attempted to monitor government restrictions in their fields,
as well as harassment and intimidation against individual members of their
professions. However, their ability to meet, organize, and effect change
was curtailed severely by the Government. There were domestic NGOs working
in areas such as health and population, women and development, youth,
environmental protection, human rights, and sustainable development. Some
reports estimate a few thousand local NGOs currently in operation.
International human rights NGOs such as HRW and AI were not permitted
to establish offices in or conduct regular investigative visits to the
country. Authorities barred HRW and AI representatives from attending
the European Union's late 2002 human rights talks in Tehran, despite the
EU's invitation. An October EU-Iran human rights dialogue was held in
Brussels to facilitate the participation of NGO representatives. The Government
also opened a human rights dialogue with Australia in 2002 and with Switzerland
in October.
The ICRC and the UNHCR both operated in the country. However, the Government
did not allow the UNSR to visit the country from 1997 to 2001, the last
year his mandate to monitor human rights in the country was in effect.
The Government allowed two visits by U.N. human rights representatives
during the year, one by the UNSR for the Promotion and Protection of the
Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression and one by a U.N. Working Group
on Arbitrary Detention. In December, the Plenary of the U.N. 58th General
Assembly adopted a resolution condemning the country for human rights
abuses, include public executions, amputation, torture, suppression of
free speech, and discrimination against women and minorities.
The Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC) was established in 1995 under
the authority of the head of the judiciary, who sits on its board as an
observer. In 1996 the Government established a human rights committee
in the Majlis, the Article 90 Commission, which receives and considers
complaints regarding violations of constitutional rights. However, many
observers believed that these committees lacked independence.
In October, the Article 90 Commission issued a report on the death in
custody of Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi. The report identified
Tehran's Chief Prosecutor and other members of the judiciary as being
directly involved in subjecting Kazemi to violent interrogations in Evin
Prison, and later attempting to cover up the cause of her death. The report
noted that Kazemi had applied for and received official government permission
to act as a journalist and photographer while in the country. The Article
90 Commission findings reportedly dismissed allegations of MOIS involvement
in Kazemi's death, though an MOIS officer was charged with her murder.
In October, lawyer and human rights activist Shirin Ebadi was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in advancing human rights both in the
country and internationally. Ms. Ebadi, who served as one of the first
female judges in the country before being forced to resign after the revolution,
has campaigned on behalf of women, children, and victims of government
repression. She represented the family of Darius and Parvaneh Forouhar,
killed in 1998, and of a student killed during the 1999 student protests,
which exposed links between vigilante groups and government officials
and led to her arrest in 2000. Ms. Ebadi is a founder of the Center for
the Defense of Human Rights, which represents defendants in political
cases. She has also agreed to represent the family of Ms. Kazemi.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Disability, Language, or
Social Status
In general the Government did not discriminate on the basis of race, disability,
language, or social status; however, it discriminated on the basis of
religion, sex, and ethnicity. Kurds, Azeris, and Ahwazi Arabs were not
allowed to study their languages.
Women
Although spousal abuse and violence against women occurred, statistics
were not available. Abuse in the family was considered a private matter
and seldom was discussed publicly. Rape is illegal, and subject to strict
penalties, but remained a widespread problem. The UNSR published statistics
provided by the IHRC indicating that, at the end of 2001, an estimated
1,000 of approximately 3,000 active files were related to women's issues.
Prostitution was illegal. Accurate information regarding the extent of
the problem was not widely available, although the issue received greater
attention as a result of the public's growing interest in social problems.
Press reports described prostitution as a widespread problem.
Provisions in the Islamic Civil and Penal Codes, in particular those sections
dealing with family and property law, discriminate against women. Shortly
after the 1979 revolution, the Government repealed the Family Protection
Law, a hallmark bill adopted in 1967 that had given women increased rights
in the home and workplace, and replaced it with a legal system based largely
on Shari'a practices. In 1998, the Majlis passed legislation that mandated
segregation of the sexes in the provision of medical care. In August,
the Guardian Council rejected a bill that would require the country to
adopt U.N. conventions on eliminating torture and ending discrimination
against women.
Even though the law permits it, marriage at the minimum age of 9 was rare.
In mid-2002, authorities approved a law that requires court approval for
the marriage of girls below the age of 13 and boys younger than 15. All
women must have the permission of their father or a male relative to marry.
The law allowed for the practice of temporary marriages based on a Shi'a
custom in which a woman or a girl may become the wife of a married or
single Muslim male after a simple and brief religious ceremony. The temporary
marriage may last any length of time. According to Shi'a Islamic law,
men may have as many temporary wives as they wish. Such wives are not
granted rights associated with traditional marriage.
The Penal Code includes provisions for the stoning of women and men convicted
of adultery, although judges were instructed at the end of 2002 to cease
imposing such sentences (see Section 1.c.). Women have the right to divorce
if their husband has signed a contract granting that right or if the husband
cannot provide for his family, is a drug addict, insane, or impotent.
However, a husband is not required to cite a reason for divorcing his
wife. In December 2002, a new law made the adjudication of cases in which
women demand divorces less arbitrary and less costly.
A widely used model marriage contract limits privileges accorded to men
by custom, and traditional interpretations of Islamic law recognize a
divorced woman's right to a share in the property that couples acquire
during their marriage and to increased alimony. Women who remarry are
forced to give the child's father custody of children from earlier marriages.
However, the law granted custody of minor children to the mother in certain
divorce cases in which the father is proven unfit to care for the child.
In November, women were granted the right to custody of both male and
female children up to 7 years of age; previously divorced women were allowed
to retain custody over boys only until 2two years of age.
The testimony of a woman is worth half that of a man in court. The "blood
money" paid to the family of a female crime victim is half the sum paid
for a man. A married woman must obtain the written consent of her husband
before traveling outside the country (see Section 2.d.).
Women had access to primary and advanced education; however, social and
legal constraints limited their professional opportunities. Women were
represented in many fields of the work force, and the Government has not
prevented women from entering many traditionally male-dominated fields.
However, women are barred from seeking the presidency and from appointment
to the judiciary. The law provides maternity, child care, and pension
benefits.
The Government enforced gender segregation in most public spaces, and
prohibited women from mixing openly with unmarried men or men not related
to them. Women must ride in a reserved section on public buses and enter
public buildings, universities, and airports through separate entrances.
Women were prohibited from attending male sporting events, although this
restriction did not appear to be enforced universally. While the enforcement
of conservative Islamic dress codes varied, what women wore in public
was not entirely a matter of personal choice. The authorities sometimes
harassed women if their dress or behavior was considered inappropriate,
and women may be sentenced to flogging or imprisonment for such violations
(see Section 1.c.). The law prohibits the publication of pictures of uncovered
women in the print media, including pictures of foreign women. There are
penalties for failure to observe Islamic dress codes at work.
Children
There is little current information available to assess Government efforts
toward assuring the welfare of children. Except in isolated areas of the
country, children had access to free education through the 12th grade
(compulsory to age 11), and to some form of health care.
There was not enough information available to reflect how the Government
dealt with child abuse (see Sections 6.c. and 6.d.).
Persons with Disabilities
There is no current information available regarding whether the Government
has legislated or otherwise mandated accessibility for persons with disabilities,
or whether discrimination against persons with disabilities is prohibited.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The Kurds sought greater autonomy from the central Government and continued
to suffer from government discrimination. Sunni Kurdish tensions with
the Shi'a dominated government predate the 1979 revolution. Kurds often
were suspected of harboring separatist or foreign sympathies. These suspicions
have led to sporadic outbreaks of fighting between government forces and
Kurdish groups. In recent years, greater Kurdish cultural expression has
been allowed and Kurdish publications and broadcasting have expanded.
However, there was still no public school education in the Kurdish language.
The KDPI claimed that the Government executed at least four Kurdish party
members and activists during the year. According to KDPI, plainclothes
vigilantes in five separate attacks killed seven more Kurds during the
year (see Section 1.a.). Other activists were reported imprisoned.
Azeris comprise roughly one-quarter of the country's population and are
well integrated into the Government and society. The Supreme Leader is
of Azeri descent, but complained of ethnic and linguistic discrimination,
including banning the Azeri language in schools, harassing Azeri activists
or organizers, and changing Azeri geographic names. The Government traditionally
viewed Azeri nationalism as threatening, particularly since the dissolution
of the Soviet Union and the creation of an independent Azerbaijan. Azeri
groups also claimed that there were a number of Azeri political prisoners
jailed for advocating cultural and language rights for Iranian Azerbaijanis.
The Government has charged several of them with "revolting against the
Islamic state."
Foreign representatives of the Ahwazi Arabs of Khuzistan, whose numbers
could range as high as 4 million or more, claimed that their community
in the southwest of the country suffered from discrimination, including
the right to study and speak Arabic. In July, authorities reportedly closed
two bilingual Arabic/Farsi newspapers, and imprisoned scores of political
activists. They asserted that the Government has ignored their appeals
to de-mine the vast stretches of Khuzistan, mined during the Iran-Iraq
War. They further stated that many Arabs, both Shi'a and Sunni, have been
imprisoned and tortured for criticizing government policies. According
to Ahwazi sources, political activist with the Islamic Wafagh Party, Kazem
Mojaddam, was sentenced to 2 years imprisonment in November after his
initial arrest in June on charges of secession and endangering internal
security.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Labor Code provides workers the right to establish unions; however,
the Government did not allow independent unions to exist. A national organization
known as the Workers' House was the sole authorized national labor organization.
It served primarily as a conduit for the Government to exert control over
workers. The leadership of the Workers' House coordinated activities with
Islamic labor councils, which were made up of representatives of the workers
and one representative of management in industrial, agricultural, and
service organizations of more than 35 employees. These councils also functioned
as instruments of government control, although they frequently were able
to block layoffs and dismissals.
According to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU),
the role of the Worker's House changed in recent years, and there was
more tolerance of workers' organizations, which included four nurses organizations,
a health workers' union, and a textile workers' union. The report also
notes that a 2000 law exempted companies with up to five employees from
the need to comply with labor legislation for 6 years. This law affected
approximately 3 million workers, making them easier to hire and fire.
The Labor Code allows employers and employees to establish guilds. The
guilds issued vocational licenses and helped members find jobs. Instances
of late or partial pay for government workers reportedly were common.
There were no known affiliations with international labor organizations.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
Workers did not have the right to organize independently and negotiate
collective bargaining agreements. The ICFTU noted that the presence of
security/intelligence forces in the workplace, as well as increasing use
of temporary contracts, acted as obstacles to organizing.
The law prohibits public sector strikes and the Government did not tolerate
any strike deemed to be at odds with its economic and labor policies;
however, strikes occurred. In addition to strikes, there were also work
stoppages and protests by oil, textile, electrical manufacturing, and
metal workers, as well as by the unemployed. Many of these protests were
due to non-payment of wage arrears, according to the ICFTU. In May, textile
workers in Behshar staged a hunger strike to protest non-payment of overdue
wages. Teachers staged demonstrations and sit-ins in several cities during
the year for improved working conditions and wage benefits.
It is not known whether labor legislation and practice in the export processing
zones (EPZs) differ from the law and practice in the rest of the country.
According to the ICFTU, labor legislation did not apply in the EPZs.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Bonded Labor
The Penal Code provides that the Government may require any person who
does not have work to take suitable employment; however, this did not
appear to be enforced regularly. The International Labor Organization
(ILO) has criticized this provision frequently as contravening ILO Convention
29 on forced labor. The law prohibits forced and bonded labor by children;
however, this was not enforced adequately, and such labor by children
was a serious problem.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The law prohibits forced and bonded labor by children; however, there
appears to be a serious problem with child labor. The Labor Law prohibits
employment of minors less than 15 years of age and places restrictions
on the employment of minors under age 18; however, laws pertaining to
child labor were not enforced adequately. The law permits children to
work in agriculture, domestic service, and some small businesses. The
law prohibits the employment of women and minors in hard labor or night
work. Information regarding the extent to which these regulations were
enforced was not available.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The Labor Code empowers the Supreme Labor Council to establish annual
minimum wage levels for each industrial sector and region; however, no
information was available regarding mechanisms used to set wages. It was
not known if the minimum wages were adjusted annually or enforced. The
Labor Code stipulates that the minimum wage should be sufficient to meet
the living expenses of a family and should take inflation into account.
However, under poor economic conditions, many middle-class citizens must
work at two or three jobs to support their families.
The Labor Code establishes a maximum 6-day, 48-hour workweek, with 1 weekly
rest day, normally Fridays, and at least 12 days of paid annual leave
and several paid public holidays.
According to the Labor Code, a Supreme Safety Council, chaired by the
Labor Minister or his representative, is responsible for promoting workplace
safety and health. Labor organizations outside the country have alleged
that hazardous work environments were common in the country and have resulted
in thousands of worker deaths per year. It was not known how well the
Ministry's inspectors enforced regulations. It was not known whether workers
could remove themselves from hazardous situations without risking the
loss of employment.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The law does not specifically prohibit trafficking in persons, and persons
reportedly were trafficked to, through, and from the country during the
year. It was difficult to measure the extent of the Government's efforts
to curb human trafficking, but national and international press reporting
indicated that Tehran has taken action against bandits involved in abducting
women and children and pursued agreements with neighboring states to curb
human trafficking. The Government has also reportedly arrested, convicted,
and executed numerous human trafficking offenders. During the year, police
reportedly arrested numerous members of prostitution rings and closed
down brothels.
In April, a court in Mashhad reportedly sentenced 53 individuals to 281
years in prison and 222 lashes on charges of abduction and slavery for
trafficking scores of young girls to Pakistan.
1. The United States does not have an embassy in Iran. This report draws
heavily on non-U.S. Government sources.
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