Five
Ahwazi Activists Sentenced to Death
The Iranian Supreme Judicial Council approved the death
sentences for 5 Ahwazi activists; Muhammad Ali Amuri Hadial Rachedi Hashim
Elshabani Jaber Albushokh and Mukhtar Albushokh. The Iranian revolutionary Court issued a death sentence
against them in July 2012 on charges of anti-God and the Prophet, propaganda
against the regime, and acting against Iran's national security. Some were
arrested in the "background" east of Ahwaz whereas others were handed
to Iran by the Iraqi authorities, after fleeing to Iraq, despite international
appeals not to extradite them to Iran.
The European Union has warned last June of high frequency executions against Ahwazi political activists in the region, which is located on the northern bank of the bay and enjoys enormous oil wealth.
The Iranian authorities last June executed four Ahwazi Arab
activists, three of them brothers in the same indictment.
Among those sentenced to death is Mohammed Ali Amuri, a
leader of the student movement and the organizers of the first festival
cultural and political Ahwazi Arabs in the Industrial University of Isfahan
during the relative openness with the country under the rule of former
President Mohammad Khatami.
Amuri was also director of the newspaper
"heritage". He has contributed to the launch of training courses for
Ahwazi students who wish to pursue their higher studies as well as organizing
poetry evenings and cultural background area east of Ahwaz.
Muhammad Ali Amuri has spent five years in the prisons of
Iraq on charges of illegal crossing of the border during his escape from the
oppression of the Iranian authorities, but Baghdad handed him over to Iran
after the expiration of the penalty, despite international appeals not to hand
him to Iran.
Amongst those sentenced is poet Hashem Elshabani, who is a
teacher of Arabic literature material in Ahwazi schools and is a student in
political science and poetry. He had also participated in the cultural and
literary festivals multiple times prior to his arrest.
The Iranian state television broadcasted the confessions of
Hashem ElShabani, who said he was planning to launch an armed organization with
his comrades and has ties with political activists abroad, he denied the
charges during the trial, which was held in June last year. He stressed that
the security men forced a false confessions under torture and said that before
the recording of confessions he was put in a tub of hot water.
Hadi Rashidi confession was also broadcasted on Iranian
state television were he said that he has ties to activists abroad and had
contributed to some of the operations carried out by local militants against
the security forces. But Rashidi also confirmed during the trial that he had been
subjected to torture.
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the European
Parliament, the British Parliament, the German Foreign State, and a number of
Iranian human rights organizations have demanded to stop the death sentence
being given to the five activists.
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