An On-Going Wave of Intensified Political Repression
The Emergency Campaign was inspired and formed in solidarity with a call from supporters, friends, and families of Iran’s political prisoners and the “Burn the Cage, Free the Birds” movement (BTC) in Europe to free Iran’s political prisoners. This campaign is based on the assessment that the 2017 and November 2019 uprisings in Iran were extremely significant, and “oxygenated all of Iranian society,” as the BTC wrote. Iran’s reactionary theocrats took them as a grave, potential threat to their whole system and responded with murderous violence.(1)
(@burn_the_cage - Instagram 4/22/20 Caption translated from Farsi: Citizens rallied in front of the mall [in Tehran] to protest the closure of their shops and the closure of the passage, chanting "Political Prisoners Must Be Released" in support of political prisoners...)
Then, beginning in October 2020, as the anniversary of the 2019 uprising approached, the IRI launched a massive new wave of arbitrary arrests against labor, women's, and human rights activists; dissident intellectuals and artists; protesters and revolutionaries; and members of religious and oppressed minorities.
This wave of intense repression is continuing. As this sham trial took place on April 28, widespread, near daily reports of outrageous IRI arrests, brutality, and torture continued to pour out. “The number of persecutions and prosecutions of peaceful activists in Iran from all walks of life has been increasing tremendously,” Ghaemi says.
This savage repression includes arbitrary executions: Iran executed at least 246 people last year, according to an Amnesty International report, including juveniles, political opponents and journalists.
It includes wantonly putting the lives of prisoners of conscience in grave immediate danger:
- Vahid and Habib Afkari, brothers of famed Iranian wrestler #NavidAfkari who was executed 8 months ago, remain in prolonged solitary confinement, have been severely tortured, and are now facing threats of execution, perhaps because they witnessed their brother’s execution.
- Iranian-Swedish academic Ahmadreza Djalali is reportedly close to death as a result of months prolonged solitary confinement in a cramped cell where he’s kept awake by bright lights which are on around the clock.
- Imprisoned documentary filmmaker Mohammad Nourizad is also reportedly very near death (see below).
Female political prisoners in Iran increasingly face psychological torture, including being arbitrarily moved far from their homes and families. “There is a lack of drinking water, and lots of illnesses and contagious diseases,” a prison activist told the Guardian. “The guards intentionally plan for non-political prisoners to attack them.”
Intensification of targeting and persecution Baha’is. Baha’is are the largest non-Muslim religious minority in Iran numbering some 300,000. They’ve been systematically persecuted for years, but now they’re under intensifying assault, including raids on their homes, baseless arrests – even demanding they bury their dead in the graves of those massacred in the 1980s for their opposition to the Islamic Republic.
Students demand justice for imprisoned colleagues: Hundreds of students and graduates of Tehran’s Sharif Technology University reportedly signed a letter demanding imprisoned Sharif University students Ali Younesi and Amirhossein Moradi receive a fair trial. Younesi (who helped Iran’s national team win a gold medal in the 12th International Olympiad on Astronomy and Astrophysics) and Moradi were arrested in April 2020 for allegedly having ties with anti-regime organizations and charged with “corruption on earth,” which can carry the death penalty. They’ve been subjected to solitary confinement and other forms of abuse and exposed to COVID while in prison.
Prisoners Lives Still Hanging the Balance
All this and much more shows that the lives of Iran’s political prisoners still hang in the balance and it remains crucial to come to their aid by signing, circulating and publishing our Campaign’s Emergency Appeal: The Lives of Iran’s Political Prisoners Hang in the Balance—We Must ACT Now!
This Campaign is important not only in stopping a grave injustice, but in defending courageous Iranian resisters and strengthening the possibility of a better world and better future for the people of Iran. As BTC wrote, “it is very vital to stop this machinery of cruel persecution of the masses and political, social and literary activists…It is imperative for revolutionaries and all social movements in Iran to defeat this and future waves of state repression…because with the continuation of this repression, none of the just struggles will thrive and develop.”
Standing with the people of Iran is especially important for people in the U.S. given this country’s history of threatening, intervening and attacking Iran, and at this particular moment. The U.S., Iran and other global powers are now engaged in talks to revive their 2015 nuclear agreement, and there is speculation in the media that Iran’s political prisoners may be used as pawns or bargaining chips in various ways by the different parties involved.
That makes the Emergency Appeal’s stance all the more timely and important:
The governments of the U.S. and Iran act from their national interests. And, in this instance, we the people of the U.S. and Iran, along with the people of the world, have OUR shared interests, as part of getting to a better world: to unite to defend the political prisoners of Iran. In the U.S., we have a special responsibility to unite very broadly against this vile repression by the IRI, and to actively oppose any war moves by the U.S. government that would bring even more unbearable suffering to the people of Iran.
All those who stand for justice and yearn for a better world must rally to the cause of freeing Iran’s political prisoners NOW!
We say to the Islamic Republic of Iran FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS NOW.
We say to the US government NO THREATS OR WAR MOVES AGAINST IRAN, LIFT US SANCTIONS.
(1) Hadi Ghaemi of CHRI told Sunsara Taylor, “The security and the armed forces who were brought to meet the protesters began shooting from moment one – and they shoot to kill, that’s what has shocked the people of Iran. In November 2019, the purpose was to kill as many people as possible, so they were shooting at the head and chest directly, I personally believe, talking to people in Iran, given this happened in 90 small and big towns spontaneously, and the response was the same.”