human rights watch

söndag 20 januari 2019

Iran TV broadcasts activists’ forced confessions, arrests female activist


Iran TV broadcasts activists’ forced confessions, arrests female activist.


Iran’s state run TV has broadcasted the forced confessions of a number of labor activists in the southern province of Khuzestan depicting them as being linked to “communist separatist movements”.
The show called “20:30” which makes political propaganda for the security apparatus of the regime is known for broadcasting the forced confessions of political prisoners.
The latest forced confessions of Haft Tapeh Sugarcane factory labor activists Esmail Bakhshi and Ali Nejati and activist and journalist Sepideh Qolian were shown as part of the “Burned Schemes” report on workers’ protests and labor unions.
The activists made the so-called confession dictated to them by the Islamic Republic’s security agencies in the usual style of the 20:30 program.
According to show, the activists were seeking to “overthrow” the state on orders of US President Donald Trump.
Sepideh Qolian and Esmail Bakhshi making forced confession on Iran’s state TV, IRIB in the “Burned Schemes” show.
Esmail Bakhshi and Sepideh Qolian were released from prison after almost 30 days of detention in mid-December 2018. Ali Nejati is still in prison despite his dire health condition.
Activist Sepideh Qolian reacted to the broadcasting of the forced confessions in her tweets.
“Even if you bring 5,000 Haft Tapeh Sugarcane workers in front of the camera for forced confessions with lashes and batons, it will not make the fact that you are corrupt and cruel any less significant,” she tweeted.
“The images that were broadcasted of me proves what I said before that I was torturedduring my incarceration. I will follow up my torture accusations more seriously and now that my confessions were broadcasted, I demand that my court be held publicly,” she said in another tweet.
She was detained a few hours after her tweets.
According to the Revolutionary Guards Corps affiliated Tasnim new agency, she was arrested this morning along with her brother, Mehdi. The news agency claimed that her brother had assaulted the female agents that wanted to arrest his sister.
Update: According to the Telegram channel of the Haft Tapeh Sugarcane Syndicate, Esmail Bakhshi was also arrested today after security forces raided his home.
Bakhshi and Qolian had previously accused Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence of torturing them in prison.
“The psychological torture was much worse than the physical torture. I don’t know what they did that my hands still shake. The ground used to shake under my feet but they degraded me and changed my personality while in prison. Despite my medication, I still sometimes suffer severe psychological attacks,” Esmail Bakshi wrote in his Instagram account weeks after his release.
Qolian also recounted the tortures she endured in her tweets.
“I wish that the only method of torture was the beatings. The most painful part was the sexual accusations that they bombarded me with in a place where I knew no one would hear even if I cried out,” she had tweeted.
“On the last day, the interrogator told me that if I say anything when I leave prison they would broadcast the forced confessions that me and Esmail Bakhshi made on the news and that they will turn us into dust,” she wrote adding that she was humiliated and degraded because of the color of her hair and the style of her clothing.
Almost all the regime’s officials rallied to reject the accusations of Esmail Bakhshi, who said that the intelligence agency of the south province of Khuzestan had tortured him “to the brink of death” during his 30 day incarceration.
A presidential official even said that the state and the Ministry of Intelligence reserved the right to press charges against the labor activist for “undermining the state” and that his claims were nothing more than “propaganda”.
Just thinking about the 30 days of the violent and inhumane treatment still brings tears to my eyes and makes me tremble. During our arrest, Esmail Bakhshitried to shield me from the agents’ beatings but he was beaten so badly himself, that he passed out,” Sepideh Qolian wrote backing the labor activist’s accounts of torture in Iran.
Read more: 
The labor activist was also put under pressure to withdraw his claims of torture.

Regime denies torture

The Iranian regime denies the use of torture despite thousands of reports from as early as the 80’s that prove the regime uses torture to extract forced confessions from prisoners or to break the spirit of political prisoners.
Despite the regime’s claims that torture is against the law in Iran, ordinary Iranians cannot press charges when they are abused in prison. If an Iranian dares challenge the state with torture claims, they are more or less made to regret ever accusing the government of torture.
Torture in the Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist, or Vilayat-e Faqih in Persian, is not comparable to torture in any other country. The extent of the brutality of torture is entwined in the essence and ideology of the state, which it defines as “Tazir”, invented by the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ruhollah Khomeini.
Article 38 of Iran’s Constitution states that “All forms of torture for the purpose of extracting confession or acquiring information are forbidden. Compulsion of individuals to testify, confess, or take an oath is not permissible; and any testimony, confession, or oath obtained under duress is devoid of value and credence. Violation of this article is liable to punishment in accordance with the law.”
Despite this, torture in all its forms have been used during the Islamic Republic’s almost 40 years of existence. The use of torture is so prevalent that the United Nations has adopted 65 resolutions condemning Iran’s use of torture and other human rights violations.
irannewswire

Inga kommentarer:

Skicka en kommentar