Baha'is as a Middle East Controversy

UN expresses "deep concern"

U.N. GENERAL ASSEMBLY EXPRESSES "DEEP CONCERN" ABOUT HUMAN RIGHTS IN
IRAN

UNITED NATIONS, 19 December 2007 (BWNS) -- The United Nations General
Assembly yesterday adopted a resolution expressing "deep concern" about
"ongoing systematic violations of human rights" in Iran.

Adopted by a final vote of 73 to 53, with 55 abstentions, the
resolution took note of repression and persecution aimed by the Iranian
government at groups ranging from women and women's rights defenders to the
news media and labor groups, as well as various ethnic and religious
minorities, including Baha'is.

"We are happy that the General Assembly, the most globally
representative body of United Nations, has seen fit once again this year to call
attention to the dire situation in Iran, where Baha'is and other groups
continue to face oppression and persecution by the government," said
Bani Dugal, the principal representative of the Baha'i International
Community to the United Nations.

"Our hope now is that the Iranian government will heed the opinion of
the international community and stop the systematic violation of human
rights directed against its own people," said Ms. Dugal.

The resolution, put forward by Canada and co-sponsored by 41 other
countries, describes the deteriorating human rights situation in Iran,
expressing "serious concern" about "confirmed instances" of "torture and
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including flogging
and amputations"; public executions, including stoning, and "arrests,
violent repression, and sentencing of women exercising their right to
peaceful assembly, a campaign of intimidation against women's human rights
defenders, and continuing discrimination against women and girls."

The resolution, the 20th on Iran since 1985, also notes "increasing
discrimination and other human rights violations against persons belonging
to religious, ethnic, linguistic or other minorities" including Arabs,
Azeris, Baluchis, Kurds, Christians, Jews, Sufis and Sunni Muslims and
Baha'is.

Regarding Baha'is, the resolution notes particularly that there have
been "attacks on Baha'is and their faith in State-sponsored media,
increasing evidence of efforts by the State to identify and monitor Baha'is
and prevention of (Baha'is) from attending university and from
sustaining themselves economically; an increase in cases of arbitrary arrest and
detention."


To view the photos and additional features click here:
http://news.bahai.org

--
 
Egyptian court to rule on religious freedom cases...

EGYPT COURT TO RULE NEXT WEEK ON NEW RELIGIOUS FREEDOM CASES

CAIRO, 20 December 2007 (BWNS) -- A court is expected to rule early
next week on two cases related to the government's policy on religious
affiliation and national identity papers, an issue that has been hotly
debated here in recent months and a focus of international human rights
concerns.

The first case involves a lawsuit by the father of twin children, who
is seeking to obtain proper birth certificates for them. The second
concerns a college student, who needs a national identity card to re-enroll
in university.

Both are set for "final judgment" by the Court of Administrative
Justice in Cairo on 25 December 2007. In both cases, the individuals involved
are unable to obtain government identification papers because they are
Baha'is.

"The world has increasingly come to understand the basic injustice
imposed by the Egyptian government's policies on religious affiliation and
official documents -- and the court has before it in these two cases
the chance once again to right that wrong," said Bani Dugal, the
principal representative of the Baha'i International Community.

"Last year, under pressure from Muslim fundamentalists, the Supreme
Administrative Court rejected a lower court decision that had required the
government to include the word 'Baha'i' on official documents. These
two new cases offer a compromise solution, asking merely that the
religious affiliation field be left blank or filled in with the word
'other,'" added Ms. Dugal.

The government requires all identification papers to list religious
affiliation but then restricts the choice to the three officially
recognized religions -- Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Baha'is are thus
unable to obtain identification papers because they refuse to lie about
their religious affiliation.

Without national identity cards -- or, as in the case of the twin
children, birth certificates -- Baha'is and others caught in the law's
contradictory requirements are deprived of a wide range of citizenship
rights, such as access to employment, education, and medical and financial
services.

MORE

These problems were highlighted in a report issued in November by Human
Rights Watch and the Cairo-based Egyptian Initiative for Personal
Rights (EIPR).

"Employers, both public and private, by law cannot hire someone without
an ID, and academic institutions require IDs for admission," said the
report. "Obtaining a marriage license or a passport requires a birth
certificate; inheritance, pensions, and death benefits are contingent on
death certificates. The Ministry of Health has even refused to provide
immunizations to some Baha'i children because the Interior Ministry
would not issue them birth certificates accurately listing their Baha'i
religion."

The issuance of birth certificates is at the heart of the first case,
which concerns 14-year-old twins Imad and Nancy Rauf Hindi. Their
father, Rauf Hindi, obtained birth certificates that recognized their Baha'i
affiliation when they were born.

But new policies require computer generated certificates, and the
computer system locks out any religious affiliation but the three officially
recognized religions. And without birth certificates, the children are
unable to enroll in school in Egypt.

The second lawsuit was filed by the EIPR last February on behalf of
18-year-old Hussein Hosni Bakhit Abdel-Massih, who was suspended from the
Suez Canal University's Higher Institute of Social Work in January 2006
due to his inability to obtain an identity card because of his refusal
to falsely identify himself as either a Muslim, a Christian, or a Jew.

In both cases, lawyers representing the Baha'is have made it clear that
they are willing to settle for cards or documents on which the
religious affiliation field is left blank or filled in, perhaps, as "other."

This solution is what makes these two cases different from the lawsuit
that was rejected by the Supreme Administrative Court last year, said
Hossam Baghat, director of the EIPR.

"The negative ruling by the Supreme Administrative Court has forced us
to file these new cases," said Mr. Baghat, whose organization has been
at the forefront of defending Egyptian Baha'is in this controversy.
"The facts are extremely similar to the case that we lost last year, but
we are calling this time for documents without any religious
affiliation.

"For us, this is really the test for the government and the judiciary
on this issue. Because if the main problem is the fact that the Baha'i
Faith is not recognized in Egypt, then there should be no grounds for
them to deny these Egyptian citizens documents that are necessary for
their daily life without any reference to religion."

Mr. Baghat said the cases also have implications for religious freedom
in general in Egypt.

"So far, the problem only affects Egyptian Baha'is, but the same
problem could arise in theory with Egyptians who are adherents of Buddhism or
Hinduism," said Mr. Baghat. "But it is also important for people who
do not wish to be identified with any religion, which is a right
guaranteed by both Egyptian and international law."

For Egyptian Baha'is, the facts of life on the ground continue to
deteriorate in the absence of a solution, said Labib Hanna, a spokesperson
for the Egyptian Baha'i community.

"We are not able to do anything without valid identification papers,"
said Dr. Hanna, who is a professor of mathematics at Cairo University.
"We cannot renew a driver's license, we cannot obtain permanent
employment, and we cannot send our children to school."

He said many Baha'is are able to meet the needs of daily life by taking
temporary positions, dealing with banks, schools, or other
institutions where they have an established relationship, or by continuing to use
old, paper-based identification cards that allowed for other options in
the religious affiliation field.

"We are trying to survive," said Dr. Hanna. "But it is difficult. We
are struggling."


To view the photos and additional features click here:
http://news.bahai.org

--
 
A victory for religious freedom:

EGYPT COURT UPHOLDS BAHA'I PLEA IN RELIGIOUS FREEDOM CASES

CAIRO, 29 January 2008 (BWNS) -- In a victory for religious freedom, a
lower administrative court here today ruled in favor of two lawsuits
that sought to resolve the government's contradictory policy on religious
affiliation and identification papers.

The Court of Administrative Justice in Cairo upheld arguments made in
two cases concerning Baha'is who have sought to restore their full
citizenship rights by asking that they be allowed to leave the religious
affiliation field blank on official documents.

"Given the degree to which issues of religious freedom stand at the
heart of human rights issues in the Middle East, the world should cheer at
the decision in these two cases today," said Bani Dugal, the principal
representative of the Baha'i International Community to the United
Nations.

"The compromise offered by the Baha'is in these two cases opens the
door to a way to reconcile a government policy that was clearly
incompatible with international law -- as well as common sense," said Ms. Dugal.

"Our hope now is that the government will quickly implement the court's
decision and allow Baha'is once again to enjoy the full rights of
citizenship to which they are duly entitled," said Ms. Dugal.

The decisions today concerned two cases, both filed by Baha'is, over
the issue of how they are to be identified on government documents.

The first case involves a lawsuit by the father of twin children, who
is seeking to obtain proper birth certificates for them. The second
concerns a college student, who needs a national identity card to re-enroll
in university.

The government requires all identification papers to list religious
affiliation but restricts the choice to the three officially recognized
religions -- Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Baha'is are thus unable to
obtain identification papers because they refuse to lie about their
religious affiliation.

Without national identify cards -- or, as in the case of the twin
children, birth certificates -- Baha'is and others caught in the law's
contradictory requirements are deprived of a wide range of citizenship
rights, such as access to employment, education, and medical and financial
services.

These problems were highlighted in a report issued in November by Human
Rights Watch and the Cairo-based Egyptian Initiative for Personal
Rights (EIPR).

"Employers, both public and private, by law cannot hire someone without
an ID, and academic institutions require IDs for admission," said the
report. "Obtaining a marriage license or a passport requires a birth
certificate; inheritance, pensions, and death benefits are contingent on
death certificates. The Ministry of Health has even refused to provide
immunizations to some Baha'i children because the Interior Ministry
would not issue them birth certificates accurately listing their Baha'i
religion."

The issuance of birth certificates is at the heart of the first case,
which concerns 14-year-old twins Imad and Nancy Rauf Hindi. Their
father, Rauf Hindi, obtained birth certificates that recognized their Baha'i
affiliation when they were born.

But new policies require computer generated certificates, and the
computer system locks out any religious affiliation but the three officially
recognized religions. And without birth certificates, the children are
unable to enroll in school in Egypt.

The second lawsuit was filed by the EIPR last February on behalf of
18-year-old Hussein Hosni Bakhit Abdel-Massih, who was suspended from the
Suez Canal University's Higher Institute of Social Work in January 2006
due to his inability to obtain an identity card because of his refusal
to falsely identify himself as either a Muslim, a Christian, or a Jew.

In both cases, lawyers representing the Baha'is have made it clear that
they were willing to settle for cards or documents on which the
religious affiliation field is left blank or filled in, perhaps, as "other."

This solution is what makes these two cases different from the lawsuit
that was rejected by the Supreme Administrative Court last year. In
that ruling, the Supreme Administrative Court rejected a decision by the
lower that upheld the right of Baha'is to be properly identified on
government documents.

For more information go to:

<a href="<http://news.bahai.org/">http://news.bahai.org/</a>
 
Concerns for Baha'i prisoners in Iran...

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL, US STATE DEPARTMENT CALL FOR RELEASE OF BAHA'I
PRISONERS IN IRAN

GENEVA, 30 January 2008 (BWNS) -- In the wake of a US State Department
call for Iran to release Baha'i prisoners, Amnesty International has
issued an "urgent action" appeal on their behalf.

The three prisoners were taken into custody in Shiraz, Iran, last
November and are serving a four-year sentence on charges connected entirely
with their belief and practice in the Baha'i Faith.

"We urge the regime to release all individuals held without due process
and a fair trial, including the three young Baha'i teachers being held
in a Ministry of Intelligence detention center in Shiraz," said Sean
McCormack, a spokesman for the State Department on 23 January 2008.

Amnesty International issued its appeal on 25 January. It calls for
human rights activists around the world to write directly to Iranian
government officials on behalf of the Baha'i prisoners, asking why they have
been detained and calling on authorities not to ill-treat or torture
them.

"Haleh Rouhi Jahromi, Raha Sabet Sarvestani and Sasan Taqva, all
Baha'is (a religious minority), have been detained by the Ministry of
Intelligence in Shiraz since 19 November 2007," states the appeal, which was
posted on Amnesty International's Web site on 25 January 2008.

"Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian,
Arabic, English or your own language," the appeal advises, "stating that
Amnesty International would consider them to be prisoners of conscience
if they are detained because of their Baha'i faith... calling for their
release if they are not to be charged with a recognizably criminal
offence and brought to trial promptly and fairly" and "calling on the
authorities not to torture or ill-treat them..."

The Amnesty International appeal recounts the story of the three
prisoners, who were initially part of a group of 54 Baha'is who were arrested
in May 2006 as they took part in an effort to educate underprivileged
children in Shiraz.

Most of the 54 were released after a few days, although Ms. Rouhi, Ms.
Sabet and Mr. Taqva were held for about a month. Then, in August 2007,
53 of those arrested were notified by a local court that they were
accused of "offenses relating to state security," according to the appeal.

Ms. Rouhi, Ms. Sabet and Mr. Taqva, moreover, were sentenced to four
years in prison, although they remained out on bail. Then, on 19 November
2007, the three were told by telephone to go to the Ministry of
Information office in Shiraz to retrieve items that had been confiscated in
the May 2006 arrests. Instead, they were incarcerated.

"When they did not return home, family members who had accompanied them
were given conflicting information by intelligence officials," says
the appeal. "The officials tried to claim that the three had not entered
the building, even though their relatives had seen them do so.
Eventually, their relatives were informed that the three were still being held
at the Office of the Ministry of Intelligence in Shiraz."

The appeal lists the ages of the prisoners as follows: Ms. Rouhi, 29;
Ms. Sabet, 33; and Mr. Taqva, 32.

According to the AI Web site, urgent action appeals are transmitted to
a network of more than 100,000 human rights activists in 70 countries.

Diane Ala'i, the representative of the Baha'i International Community
to the United Nations in Geneva, said that the BIC is gravely concerned
for the welfare of the three Baha'i prisoners.

"We hope that the urgent action appeal from Amnesty International, as a
signal from human rights defenders worldwide, and the US State
Department's statement, will help resolve their unjust detentions," she said.

Ms. Ala'i said the appeal was especially timely because Mr. Taqva has
an injured leg, from an automobile accident before his imprisonment,
which requires medical attention.

"The problem with his leg is extremely serious and painful," said Ms.
Ala'i. "It is understood that he requires surgery to remove a metal pin
that had been inserted previously."

Ms. Ala'i said that charges against the three, rather than involving
any legitimate concern over "state security" stem entirely from
accusations by the court that the Baha'is had been involved in the "indirect
teaching" of the Baha'i Faith.

"In fact," said Ms. Ala'i, "the three individuals were engaged in an
effort to help underprivileged children in their city, through a program
of training that emphasizes moral virtues.

"It is mind-boggling that the government of Iran would consider such
efforts to be any type of threat -- and wholly unwarranted that such
activities should result in lengthy prison sentence.

"There is no doubt that these three are prisoners of conscience, held
solely because of their belief in and practice of the Baha'i Faith,"
said Ms. Ala'i. "We know this because among those arrested in May 2006
were some individuals who are not Baha'is. They were released within a day
and have never faced charges."

The US State Department statement also took note of the "death under
suspicious circumstances" of Ebrahim Lotfallahi, an Iranian student of
Kurdish descent detained by the Ministry of Intelligence on January 6.
"We call on Iranian authorities to conduct a full investigation," said
Mr. McCormack. His statement also expressed concern over the continued
detention of three Amir Kabir University students.

The Amnesty International appeal can be read in full at
http://www.amnesty.org/en/report/info/MDE13/017/2008

The US Department of State statement can be read at:
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/jan/99632.htm


To view the photos and additional features click here:
http://news.bahai.org
 
News from Iran:

Iran Sentences Baha'is to Prison

11 hours ago
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran on Tuesday said more than 50 followers of the minority Baha'i faith were convicted of distributing propaganda against the country's Islamic regime, state media reported.
Ali Reza Jamshidi, Iran's judiciary spokesman, said three people, who were in custody in southern city of Shiraz, were sentenced to four years in prison. Another 51 Baha'i followers were given one-year suspended prison terms, Jamshidi said, according to the official IRNA news agency.
Last year, Baha'i communities abroad had reported that a group of followers were detained in Shiraz, located about 550 miles south of Tehran, while helping poor communities there.
Iran had been the cradle of the Baha'i faith in the middle of the 19th century. But the faith was banned after the 1979 Islamic revolution, and it is not recognized in the Iranian constitution as a religious minority.
The Baha'i faith was founded in the 1860s by a Persian nobleman, Baha'u'llah, who claimed to be a new prophet in the series of prophets that included Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. Islam considers Muhammad to be the last of the prophets.
 
Re: News from Iran:

Iran Sentences Baha'is to Prison
Iran had been the cradle of the Baha'i faith in the middle of the 19th century. But the faith was banned after the 1979 Islamic revolution, and it is not recognized in the Iranian constitution as a religious minority.
The Baha'i faith was founded in the 1860s by a Persian nobleman, Baha'u'llah, who claimed to be a new prophet in the series of prophets that included Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. Islam considers Muhammad to be the last of the prophets.

Don't they know they can keep Islam as the official state religion and allow Baha'is, the largest religious minority in Iran, freedom of religion? Look at Sweden... isn't the state religion the Lutheran Church? Anyone born in Sweden is considered Lutheran if they don't specifically choose another religion. Iran could do the same with Shi'ih Islam. Anyone born there could be considered Shi'ih unless they choose otherwise, and choice there needs to be. For Jews, for Zoroastrians, for Christians, for Sunnis, for Baha'is. Choice there needs to be.

But I also want to post this:

"O My servants! Sorrow not if, in these days and on this earthly plane, things contrary to your wishes have been ordained and manifested by God, for days of blissful joy, of heavenly delight, are assuredly in store for you. Worlds, holy and spiritually glorious, will be unveiled to your eyes. You are destined by Him, in this world and hereafter, to partake of their benefits, to share in their joys, and to obtain a portion of their sustaining grace. To each and every one of them you will, no doubt, attain." -Baha'u'llah
 
For Haleh, Raha and Sasan ....

masthead-title.png

bwns_8172-460.jpg
Haleh Rouhi

Amnesty International, US State Department call for release of Baha'i prisoners in Iran

GENEVA
29 January 2008 (BWNS)


In the wake of a US State Department call for Iran to release Baha'i prisoners, Amnesty International has issued an "urgent action" appeal on their behalf.
The three prisoners were taken into custody in Shiraz, Iran, last November and are serving a four-year sentence on charges connected entirely with their belief and practice in the Baha'i Faith.
"We urge the regime to release all individuals held without due process and a fair trial, including the three young Baha'i teachers being held in a Ministry of Intelligence detention center in Shiraz," said Sean McCormack, a spokesman for the State Department on 23 January 2008.
Amnesty International issued its appeal on 25 January. It calls for human rights activists around the world to write directly to Iranian government officials on behalf of the Baha'i prisoners, asking why they have been detained and calling on authorities not to ill-treat or torture them.
"Haleh Rouhi Jahromi, Raha Sabet Sarvestani and Sasan Taqva, all Baha'is (a religious minority), have been detained by the Ministry of Intelligence in Shiraz since 19 November 2007," states the appeal, which was posted on Amnesty International's Web site on 25 January 2008.
"Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language," the appeal advises, "stating that Amnesty International would consider them to be prisoners of conscience if they are detained because of their Baha'i faith... calling for their release if they are not to be charged with a recognizably criminal offence and brought to trial promptly and fairly" and "calling on the authorities not to torture or ill-treat them..."



bwns_8173-160.jpg




Sasan Taqva


The Amnesty International appeal recounts the story of the three prisoners, who were initially part of a group of 54 Baha'is who were arrested in May 2006 as they took part in an effort to educate underprivileged children in Shiraz.
Most of the 54 were released after a few days, although Ms. Rouhi, Ms. Sabet and Mr. Taqva were held for about a month. Then, in August 2007, 53 of those arrested were notified by a local court that they were accused of "offenses relating to state security," according to the appeal.
Ms. Rouhi, Ms. Sabet and Mr. Taqva, moreover, were sentenced to four years in prison, although they remained out on bail. Then, on 19 November 2007, the three were told by telephone to go to the Ministry of Information office in Shiraz to retrieve items that had been confiscated in the May 2006 arrests. Instead, they were incarcerated.
bwns_8174-160.jpg
Raha Sabet



"When they did not return home, family members who had accompanied them were given conflicting information by intelligence officials," says the appeal. "The officials tried to claim that the three had not entered the building, even though their relatives had seen them do so. Eventually, their relatives were informed that the three were still being held at the Office of the Ministry of Intelligence in Shiraz."
The appeal lists the ages of the prisoners as follows: Ms. Rouhi, 29; Ms. Sabet, 33; and Mr. Taqva, 32.
According to the AI Web site, urgent action appeals are transmitted to a network of more than 100,000 human rights activists in 70 countries.
Diane Ala'i, the representative of the Baha'i International Community to the United Nations in Geneva, said that the BIC is gravely concerned for the welfare of the three Baha'i prisoners.
"We hope that the urgent action appeal from Amnesty International, as a signal from human rights defenders worldwide, and the US State Department's statement, will help resolve their unjust detentions," she said.
Ms. Ala'i said the appeal was especially timely because Mr. Taqva has an injured leg, from an automobile accident before his imprisonment, which requires medical attention.
"The problem with his leg is extremely serious and painful," said Ms. Ala'i. "It is understood that he requires surgery to remove a metal pin that had been inserted previously."
Ms. Ala'i said that charges against the three, rather than involving any legitimate concern over "state security" stem entirely from accusations by the court that the Baha'is had been involved in the "indirect teaching" of the Baha'i Faith.
"In fact," said Ms. Ala'i, "the three individuals were engaged in an effort to help underprivileged children in their city, through a program of training that emphasizes moral virtues.
"It is mind-boggling that the government of Iran would consider such efforts to be any type of threat -- and wholly unwarranted that such activities should result in lengthy prison sentence.
"There is no doubt that these three are prisoners of conscience, held solely because of their belief in and practice of the Baha'i Faith," said Ms. Ala'i. "We know this because among those arrested in May 2006 were some individuals who are not Baha'is. They were released within a day and have never faced charges."
The US State Department statement also took note of the "death under suspicious circumstances" of Ebrahim Lotfallahi, an Iranian student of Kurdish descent detained by the Ministry of Intelligence on January 6. "We call on Iranian authorities to conduct a full investigation," said Mr. McCormack. His statement also expressed concern over the continued detention of three Amir Kabir University students.
The Amnesty International appeal can be read in full at: http://www.amnesty.org/en/report/info/MDE13/017/2008
The US Department of State statement can be read at: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/jan/99632.htm
Read this story in Persian
 
"Yet another ruse..."

New tactic obstructs Baha'i enrollments in Iranian universities

GENEVA
31 January 2008 (BWNS)


More than a million students take Iran's national university entrance examination each year. So Halaku Rahmaniyan was extremely pleased when he learned he had placed 76th from the top.
"I was happy, because I knew that it was a good result and that I could enter any subject in any university with that ranking," the 18-year-old student from Tehran wrote in a blog recently.
He did not understand why, then, he still had not been accepted anywhere by December. So Mr. Rahmaniyan called the national Education Measurement and Evaluation Organization (EMEO), which administers the exam, and spoke with a top official.
The official, too, was puzzled -- until Mr. Rahmaniyan said he was a Baha'i.
"Suddenly, after the word 'Baha'i,' he discontinued the call," wrote Mr. Rahmaniyan.
Then he received a letter from the EMEO.
"Respectfully, in response to your request for the issuance of a certificate of ranking for the year 2007, we would like to inform you that owing to you having an incomplete file, issuance of a certificate of ranking is not possible," stated the letter.
The story is one of many from Iran in recent months that highlight the latest tactic by the Iranian government in its long-running campaign to block Baha'is from access to higher education: to claim that their examination files are somehow "incomplete."
Almost 800 of the more than 1,000 Baha'is who sat for and properly completed the entrance exam in June 2007 have received word that their files are "incomplete" -- thus preventing their enrollment.
"These latest figures show that, despite its denials, the Iranian government is continuing its campaign to prevent Baha'is from going to university," said Diane Ala'i, the Baha'i International Community's representative to the United Nations in Geneva.
"The tactic of claiming that the examination files of Baha'i students are somehow 'incomplete' is yet another ruse by the government to act as if it respects human rights while covertly moving ahead with its persecution of Baha'is," said Ms. Ala'i, noting that none of the some 900 Baha'is who sat for the examination in 2006 received a notice of "incomplete files."
For more than 25 years, Baha'is have been banned from public and private universities in Iran. After pressure from the United Nations, governments, academic, educational, and human rights organizations, the government indicated in 2004 that it would stop asking university applicants about their religious affiliation, which seemed to open the door to Baha'i enrollments.
Each year since then, however, the government, which has been actively pursuing a campaign to identify all of the Baha'is in Iran and therefore is able to target Baha'i university students, has come up with some type of obstruction.
 
One of these years they'll have religious liberty in Iran. One of these years they'll have religious liberty for everyone in Egypt.

"Ye dwell in one world, and have been created through the operation of one Will. Blessed is he who mingleth with all men in a spirit of utmost kindliness and love." -Baha'u'llah

 
Helping underprivileged youth...

Iranian Baha'is sentenced to prison were helping underprivileged youth

GENEVA
6 February 2008 (BWNS)


Accusations by the Iranian government that 54 Baha'is were engaged in anti-regime "propaganda" when they were arrested almost two years ago are patently false, the Baha'i International Community said today.
In November, three of that group were re-arrested and imprisoned for four years. The others have reportedly been given suspended one-year sentences.
"Far from working against the government, the Baha'is who were arrested in May 2006 were engaged in a humanitarian project aimed at helping underprivileged young people in the city of Shiraz," said Diane Ala'i, the Baha'i International Community's representative to the United Nations in Geneva.
"Charges by the government that suggest otherwise are nothing less than an attempt to repress Iranian Baha'is generally and to deflect international criticism of Iran's human rights record," she said.
Concern over the status of the Baha'is sentenced in Shiraz was highlighted last week after an Iranian government spokesperson accused them of engaging in anti-government "propaganda," according to wire service reports. (While those reports put the total arrests at 54, Baha'i sources indicate that only 53 Baha'is were arrested in May 2006.)
That charge of anti-regime propaganda came several days after the US State Department and Amnesty International expressed concern over the fact that three of the Baha'is arrested had been summarily imprisoned in November for terms of four years.
Tutors and children gathered for class in Sahlabad, outside Shiraz, Iran. Such classes were shut down by the government in 2006.


According to Agence France-Presse, an Iranian judiciary spokesman, Ali Reza Jamshidi, confirmed the prison sentences for the three and also told reporters on 29 January that 51 others had received suspended one-year jail terms, conditional on their attendance of courses held by the state's Islamic Propaganda Organization.
"The accounts emerging from Iran tell of a government that is desperate to justify its actions in the jailing of three innocent people by accusing them of teaching the Baha'i Faith, which is synonymous with 'anti-regime propaganda' in the government's twisted perspective, said Ms. Ala'i. "This is further evidenced by the requirement that the others attend re-education classes, which are clearly aimed at coercing them away from their religious beliefs.
"While teaching the Baha'i Faith cannot be considered a crime of any sort, given that freedom of religion is protected by international law, the fact is that the Baha'is who were arrested almost two years ago in Shiraz were not working to spread Baha'i teachings -- rather they had initiated and were participating in a number of literacy and youth empowerment projects in various locations in and near Shiraz.
Class in Sahlabad, outside Shiraz, Iran.


"Moreover, the group had introduced the projects to the Islamic Council of the city of Shiraz in 2005 and had subsequently received a letter from the Cultural Commission granting permission to continue their activities," said Ms. Ala'i.
Ms. Ala'i also discussed charges, made in court documents, that the use of a workbook titled "Breezes of Confirmation," which focuses on teaching language skills and basic moral principles, constitutes part of the evidence that Baha'is were teaching the Baha'i Faith.
"The fact is," said Ms. Ala'i, " 'Breezes of Confirmation' makes no direct reference to the Baha'i Faith -- and its lessons reflect moral lessons common to all religions.
"In view of the government's continued rebuff of international appeals for the immediate release of the three prisoners, it is important to provide a detailed account, so as to set the record straight," said Ms. Ala'i. The names of the three are Haleh Rouhi Jahromi, 29; Raha Sabet Sarvestani , 33; and Sasan Taqva, 32.
Read an account of the development of the social service projects initiated by the Baha'i community of Shiraz.
View a sample lesson from the workbook "Breezes of Confirmation".

Related Photos


Supporting documents

  • <LI class=documentTitle>Chronology of the social service projects initiated by the Baha'i community of Shiraz <LI class=pdf>Document 1: English (Adobe Acrobat 237KB)
  • Document 1: Persian (Adobe Acrobat 98KB)
Background

Persian

 
Re: Helping underprivileged youth...

"The accounts emerging from Iran tell of a government that is desperate to justify its actions in the jailing of three innocent people by accusing them of teaching the Baha'i Faith, which is synonymous with 'anti-regime propaganda' in the government's twisted perspective,

If they would take a minute to learn one thing about the Baha'i Faith, they should know that Baha'is are loyal to the governments of the countries in which we live.

"In every country where any of this people reside, they must behave towards the government of that country with loyalty, honesty and truthfulness. This is that which hath been revealed at the behest of Him Who is the Ordainer, the Ancient of Days." -Baha'u'llah
 
Declaration of the Presidency of the European Union:

07.02.2008


Declaration by the Presidency on behalf of the European Union on the deteriorating situation of the religious minority Baha’i in Iran

The EU expresses its serious concern at the worsening situation of ethnic and religious minorities in Iran, in particular to the plight of the Baha’i. According to reliable reports, the Iranian Judiciary confirmed that 54 Baha’is were sentenced by a court in Shiraz for ‘propaganda against the regime’. Three of the convicted Baha’is were sentenced to four years in prison, while 51 were given one year suspended prison terms.
The EU is concerned about the ongoing systematic discrimination and harassment of Baha'is in Iran, including the expulsion of university and high school students, restrictions on employment and anti-Baha'i propaganda campaigns in the Iranian media.
The EU wishes to express its firm opposition to all forms of discrimination, in particular regarding freedom of religion. In this context, the EU urges the Islamic Republic of Iran to release the Baha’i prisoners and stop prosecuting members of the Baha’i minority due to their belief and practice of the Baha'i Faith.
The Candidate Countries Croatia* and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia*, the Countries of the Stabilisation and Association Process and potential candidates Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and the EFTA countries Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, members of the European Economic Area, as well as Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova align themselves with this declaration.
* Croatia and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia continue to be part of the Stabilisation and Association Process.
 
USCIRF urges Egypt to enforce ruling:

USCIRF urges Egypt: Enforce court rulings


Posted on Feb 15, 2008 | by Katherine Kipp WASHINGTON (BP)--Egypt's government should "respect and enforce" two recent decisions by that nation's highest court, according to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom.

The decisions can advance religious freedom in Egypt, commission chairman Michael Cromartie said.

A Feb. 9 ruling reversed a lower court's prohibition on citizens being allowed to return to Christianity after converting to Islam.

And in January, the high court overturned a government ban on the ability of members of the Baha'i faith to obtain official identity documents. Before this ruling, only three faiths had been approved for registration documents -— Islam, Christianity and Judaism. Without one of those faiths listed on an identity card, followers of the minority Baha'i faith could not gain official recognition necessary to have access to several public services.

"The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights provides that the freedom of religion includes the 'freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of [one's] choice," Cromartie said in a written statement Feb. 13. "Egypt has a long and fabled history of religious diversity, and it is a tradition that can enrich the nation today. The government and the courts should protect the internationally recognized freedom of religion or belief for individuals of all faiths."

Even with the recent rulings, the commission remains concerned over violations of freedom of thought, conscience and religion in Egypt. The country is predominantly Muslim, and the government promotes and regulates Islam. The commission has placed Egypt on its watch list of countries that are not considered the world's worst violators of religious liberty but require monitoring because of discriminatory or repressive policies.

Religious minorities in Egypt continue to be discriminated against, becoming the victims of police harassment and societal violence, according to the commission.

In one example, a man sued the government after it rejected his request to officially change his religious affiliation on identity documents from Islam to Christianity. Other citizens who returned to Christianity were required to list their affiliation as "ex-Muslim."

The commission and the U.S. government recently urged the Egyptian government to remove or make optional the religious affiliation on identity cards in order to prevent discrimination against religious minorities.

"These twin decisions can be helpful steps toward meaningful reform if respected by Egyptian authorities," Cromartie said. "After a long period of setbacks in the sphere of religious freedom, Egyptian courts have delivered some rulings that have the potential to help address aspects of these discriminatory policies. The next essential step is for these rulings to be fully implemented in practice."
--30--
Katherine Kipp is an intern with the Washington bureau of Baptist Press. More information on commission recommendations for Egypt can be found in its 2007 report at www.uscirf.gov.

Source:

Baptist Press - USCIRF urges Egypt: Enforce court rulings - News with a Christian Perspective
 
Iran: law violating human rights being considered:

Draft Iranian law threatens gross human rights violations

NEW YORK
22 February 2008 (BWNS)


The Iranian Parliament is considering legislation that would institutionalize a series of gross human rights violations, affecting not only Baha'is but many others, even outside of Iran, the Baha'i International Community said today.
Of greatest concern is a section that would mandate the death penalty for anyone who converts from Islam to another religion, a provision that would affect not only Baha'is but also Christians, Jews, and others.
"This proposed law goes against all human rights norms and standards, including international treaties that Iran itself has agreed to," said Bani Dugal, the principal representative of the Baha'i International Community to the United Nations.
"It is important for the international community to speak out, now, before it is too late and the draft code becomes Iran's law of the land."
The proposed law also would extend the government's reach over alleged security violations outside the country, give legal effect to discriminatory practices already in wide use against Baha'is and others, and redefine a series of "religious" and other crimes so vaguely as to place in jeopardy virtually any group facing government disapproval.
"If adopted, the code will permit the government and the clergy to act with impunity against Iran's citizens on the sole basis of their religious affiliation," said Ms. Dugal. "This is not only an affront to the people of Iran; it is an offense to all who seek to uphold fundamental human rights."
Ms. Dugal said the new section on religious conversion -- defined as apostasy -- is especially severe, in that its language mandates the death penalty for anyone who converts from Islam to another religion and does not immediately recant.
"The text uses the word Hadd, meaning that it explicitly sets death as a fixed punishment that cannot be changed, reduced or annulled," said Ms. Dugal. "In the past, the death penalty has been handed down -- and also carried out -- in apostasy cases, but it has never before been set down in law.
"The law also extends to naming as apostate any follower of a religion other than Islam who had one parent who was a Muslim at the time of his or her conception. Thus, for instance, the child of a Muslim and a Christian who chooses to adopt the Christian faith would be considered an apostate under the terms of the law and therefore subject to execution," Ms. Dugal said.
Another troubling section of the proposed code would extend "security" laws outside the country, exposing those outside Iran to the government's reach.
"Iran is apparently not content with targeting those it considers its opponents only within its borders," said Ms. Dugal, explaining that Article 112 of the proposed code refers to actions "against the government, the independence and the internal and external security of the country."
"Since the notion of 'security' is not defined in the law, any action can be qualified as such," Ms. Dugal said. "Indeed, many Iranian Baha'is have been falsely accused of activities against the security of the state.
"If the new penal code is adopted, Iranian Baha'is -- and others -- all over the world would likewise be liable for actions taken outside Iran that are considered contrary to Iran's security."
The code's vagueness with respect to "offending the sacred" and other crimes would give the government free license to act against any group it disapproves of, said Ms. Dugal. "The code includes articles that refer to the commission of unspecified crimes or felonies, as well as articles referring to those guilty of 'corruption and mischief on the earth,'" she said.
"It would also institute capital punishment for anyone who 'insults the Prophet,'" Ms. Dugal explained. "Such provisions place many groups, including Baha'is, in an extremely vulnerable position, since an 'insult' to the Prophet can be defined in almost any context, especially where religious belief is concerned."
In related developments, the president of the European Union recently expressed "serious concern" over the "deteriorating situation" of the Baha'i community in Iran.
"The EU expresses its serious concern at the worsening situation of ethnic and religious minorities in Iran, in particular to the plight of the Baha'i," said Dr. Dimitrij Rupel of Slovenia, the president of the EU.
"The EU is concerned about the ongoing systematic discrimination and harassment of Baha'is in Iran, including the expulsion of university and high school students, restrictions on employment and anti-Baha'i propaganda campaigns in the Iranian media."
 
The persecution of Baháí’s in Iran has spilled over to a high-profile non- Bahá’í citizen, an eminent personage no less than the 2003 Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi. On April 14 the AFP reported that she had been receiving death threats pinned to her office building entry, signed by the “Association of Anti- Bahá’ís.” Ebadi is not a Bahá’í, so what’s their beef?

Click below for more

The Geza Fracas

One of these years they'll have religious liberty in Iran

Hey,

Cyrus the Great once said:

And until I am the monarch, I will never let anyone take possession of movable and landed properties of the others by force or without compensation. Until I am alive, I prevent unpaid, forced labor. To day, I announce that everyone is free to choose a religion. People are free to live in all regions and take up a job provided that they never violate other's rights.
 
Back
Top