Tuesday , 30 April 2024

IRAN: TORTURED PRISONERS IN NEED OF MEDICAL CARE

Amnesty – Scores of Ahwazi Arab prisoners in Sheiban prison, Khuzestan province, require medical care for injuries caused by beatings and metal pellets fired by security forces on 31 March during protests over the spread of COVID-19 in the prison.

Three prisoners, Hossein Silawi, Ali Khasraji and Naser Khafaji, remain forcibly disappeared. At least seven others, including prisoners of conscience Jaber Alboshokeh and Mokhtar Alboshokeh, have been crammed into a single cell intended for solitary confinement and are on hunger strike.

First UA: 69/20 Index: MDE 13/2237/2020 Iran Date: 30 April 2020 URGENT ACTION TORTURED PRISONERS IN NEED OF MEDICAL CARE

Scores of Ahwazi Arab prisoners in Sheiban prison, Khuzestan province, require medical care for injuries caused by beatings and metal pellets fired by security forces on 31 March during protests over the spread of COVID-19 in the prison. Three prisoners, Hossein Silawi, Ali Khasraji and Naser Khafaji, remain forcibly disappeared. At least seven others, including prisoners of conscience Jaber Alboshokeh and Mokhtar Alboshokeh, have been crammed into a single cell intended for solitary confinement and are on hunger strike.

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Head of the Judiciary Ebrahim Raisi c/o Permanent Mission of Iran to the UN Chemin du Petit-Saconnex 28, 1209 Geneva, Switzerland Instagram account: raisi_org Dear Mr Raisi, Scores of Ahwazi Arab prisoners in section 5 of Sheiban prison in Ahvaz, Khuzestan province, require medical care for injuries caused by beatings and metal pellets fired by security forces during the violent repression of protests that erupted in the prison on 31 March 2020 over the authorities’ failure to address concerns related to the spread of COVID-19 in the prison.

Prisoners in need of medical care include minority rights activist Mohammad Ali Amouri, reportedly suffering from chest and head injuries; Abdolreza Obeidawi, reportedly suffering from gastrointestinal complications resulting from beatings to the stomach and loss of sight in one eye due to pellet injuries; and Abdolzahra (Zuhair) Heleichi, Abdulemam Zayeri, Sajad Deilami, Ali Ka’ab Umair, Jaber Alboshokeh and his brother Mokhtar Alboshokeh, reportedly suffering from wound infections.

Since 31 March, prison and intelligence officials have suspended family visits in Sheiban prison and only allowed prisoners to call their families daily for one minute. According to accounts by relatives, they have also subjected dozens of prisoners to periods of enforced disappearance accompanied by torture and other ill-treatment. Officials continue to conceal the fate and whereabouts of Hossein Silawi, Ali Khasraji and Naser Khafaji from their families after having transferred them to an unknown location on 31 March.

At least seven prisoners who were returned to Sheiban prison by 13 April, after also being forcibly disappeared since 31 March, including Jaber Alboshokeh, Mokhtar Alboshokeh, Ali Mojadam, Moieen Khanafereh, Jamil Heidary, Jasem Heidary and Abdolrazagh Obeidawi, have since been crammed into a cell intended for solitary confinement, without access to regular phone calls. Relatives learnt that the seven men embarked on a hunger strike on 23 April.

Prisoners held in section 5 of Sheiban prison have told their families that most prisoners in their section are injured and facing new criminal charges for the prison protests.

I urge you to release all prisoners of conscience including Mohammad Ali Amouri, Jaber Alboshokeh and Mokhtar Alboshokeh. Please ensure that they and other prisoners in Sheiban prison including Abdolreza Obeidawi, Abdolrazagh Obeidawi, Abdulemam Zayeri, Ali Ka’ab Umair, Ali Khasraji, Ali Mojadam, Hossein Silawi, Jamil Heidary, Jasem Heidary, Moieen Khanafereh, Naser Khafaji, Sajad Deilami, and Abdolzahra (Zuhair) Heleichi receive medical care as well as regular contact with their families and lawyers.

Please ensure independent investigations are conducted into the allegations of enforced disappearance and torture during and after the protests on 31 March and prisoners are protected from torture and other ill-treatment. Yours sincerely,

First UA: 69/20 Index: MDE 13/2237/2020 Iran Date: 30 April 2020

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Section 5 of Sheiban prison in Ahvaz, Khuzestan province is believed to house over 150 prisoners held for politically motivated reasons, including prisoners of conscience. On 31 March 2020, these prisoners, together with hundreds of others held in other sections, staged protests over fears of contracting the new coronavirus (COVID-19); shortage of sanitary products; inadequate testing, prevention and treatment measures; and the authorities’ refusal to grant prison leave.

According to information obtained by Amnesty International, prison officers and security forces used unnecessary or excessive force from the outset to quash the protests. As the protests devolved into riots in some sections, with some prisoners setting items on fire, guards in riot gear indiscriminately fired live ammunition, tear gas and metal pellets at prisoners, according to reports from recently released prisoners, prisoners’ families and Ahwazi Arab human rights activists who are in contact with sources inside the prison. Based on these reports, up to 20 prisoners are feared to have died from suffocation, burns or fatal gunshot injuries and several hundred were injured.

Prisoners held in section 5 of Sheiban prison have reported that later in the day, prison officers forced them to pass through what was described by prisoners as a “tunnel of torture” leading to the prison yard. This involved prison guards standing on both sides of the prisoners and striking prisoners repeatedly on their backs and heads with batons and cables as they forced them to run from their cells to the prison yard. According to the testimony of one recently released prisoner, prisoners were forced to walk barefoot on shattered glass scattered on the path to the prison yard. Once in the prison yard, prisoners were questioned one by one over their role in the protests. Dozens were then blindfolded and transferred to an unknown location.

For the next two weeks, the authorities refused to reveal their fate and whereabouts to their families. The majority were returned to section 5 of Sheiban prison by 13 April as it emerged that they had been held in a ministry of intelligence detention centre in Ahvaz, and interrogated and tortured there. According to information obtained by Amnesty International, most prisoners currently held in section 5 of Sheiban prison for political reasons are at risk of facing new criminal proceedings in relation to the prison protests. Some have been in prison for periods ranging between 10 and 20 years and if convicted of the new charges would be less like to qualify for furloughs and pardons.

They include Mohammad Ali Amouri (12 years in prison), Abdulemam Zayeri (15 years in prison), Ali Manbouhi (20 years in prison), Nazem Berihi (18 years in prison), Rahim Afravi (20 years in prison), Abdolzahra (Zuhair) Heleichi (15 years in prison) and Yahya Naseri (15 years in prison). Minority rights activists Mohammad Ali Amouri, Jaber Alboshokeh and Mokhtar Alboshokeh have been sentenced to life imprisonment for their peaceful activities for a now-disbanded cultural rights group called Al-Hiwar (meaning “Dialogue” in Arabic).

At the end of March, after reports that inmates from several prisons had tested positive for COVID-19, thousands of prisoners in at least eight prisons in Iran staged protests at the authorities’ failure to adequately protect them, sparking deadly responses from security forces. In several prisons, lethal force was used to suppress protests. Around 36 prisoners are feared to have been killed and hundreds of others injured, according to credible sources.

Torture and other ill-treatment are absolutely prohibited under international law including Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a state party. International law requires states to conduct prompt, independent and thorough investigations into all allegations of torture and other ill-treatment, bring those responsible to justice, and ensure that victims have access to an effective remedy and receive reparation, including rehabilitation. Under international law, authorities must ensure that all prisoners have prompt access to medical care.

Authorities also have a duty to provide detainees with reasonable facilities to communicate with and receive visits from family and friends. Such visits are fundamental safeguards against torture and other ill-treatment. The concealment of the fate or whereabouts of detainees constitutes enforced disappearance, which is a crime under international law. Khuzestan province has a large Arab population who generally self-identify as “Ahwazi Arabs”.

Despite Khuzestan’s natural resource wealth, the province suffers from severe socioeconomic deprivation and high levels of air and water pollution. Concentrated in poor urban outskirts lacking basic facilities, Ahwazi Arabs face discrimination in employment, housing, access to political office and the exercise of cultural, linguistic, civil and political rights. The inability to use their mother language as a medium of instruction for primary education is also a source of deep resentment and frustration.

PREFERRED LANGUAGE TO ADDRESS TARGET: Persian or English You can also write in your own language.

PLEASE TAKE ACTION AS SOON AS POSSIBLE UNTIL: 11 June 2020

Please check with the Amnesty office in your country if you wish to send appeals after the deadline. NAME AND PREFFERED PRONOUN: Mohammad Ali Amouri, Jaber Alboshokeh, Mokhtar Alboshokeh, Abdolreza Obeidawi, Abdolrazagh Obeidawi, Abdulemam Zayeri, Ali Ka’ab Umair, Ali Khasraji, Ali Mojadam, Hossein Silawi, Jamil Heidary, Jasem Heidary, Moieen Khanafereh, Naser Khafaji, Sajad Deilami, and Abdolzahra (Zuhair) Heleichi. All pronouns are he/him.

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