Here are extracts from a report by Amnesty International which documents the outrages carried out by Iranian militia and police. Vids and the full text is at the link.
Human rights violations in Iran are now as bad as at any time in the past 20 years, Amnesty International has said in a new report on the aftermath of last June’s presidential election.
"The Iranian leadership must ensure that the many allegations of torture, including rape, unlawful killings and other abuses are fully and independently investigated," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme.
The report, Iran: Election contested, repression compounded describes patterns of abuse before, during and, particularly, after the June election, when the authorities deployed the Basij militia and Revolutionary Guards to suppress mass protests against its disputed outcome.It includes testimonies from individuals who were detained during the protests, some of whom have since been forced to flee the country.
One former detainee says he was held at the notorious Kahrizak detention centre for some 58 days, being held in a shipping container throughout, and only allowed to contact his family after 43 days.
During interrogation, he was told that his son had been detained and would be raped if he did not "confess" and he was then beaten with a baton until he lost consciousness. He said there were more than 70 other detainees held in the container with him.
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Jump To Comment: 1Maryam Hosseinkhah who was imprisoned in Iran for defending Womens rights is now studying at nUI Galway. She spoke at the recent NGO Front Line Conference. in Dublin.
Maryam Hosseinkhah, a journalist and women’s rights campaigner who has found temporary refuge in Ireland, said yesterday that the credibility of the regime was now questioned at home and abroad. “Before the elections, there were people who wouldn’t even sign up to our gender rights campaign but who are now taking to the streets to protest.
“A regime is never strong if it has to resort to violence,” she said at a lecture organised by NGO Front Line at Trinity College Dublin to mark UN human rights day.
Ms Hosseinkhah described how she was arrested in 2007 for campaigning on behalf of the One Million Signatures Campaign in Iran, which aims to repeal a host of discriminatory laws against women.
“I was placed in a cell for 45 days, which I shared with another 20 women – some of whom had been convicted for murder. I was really afraid at first but when they told me their life stories I realised they were victims. They were the most vulnerable people, who often didn’t have money, education or families for protection,” she said.
Two fellow prisoners were executed when she was in prison and there were about 40 women on death row, said Ms Hosseinkhah, who describes her time in jail as a “human rights training course”.
Women in Iran face discriminatory laws in the fields of divorce, marriage, inheritance and many other areas, which make their position in society precarious, said Ms Hosseinkhah.
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