The Bahá’í International Community Joins Others Calling for the Release of Narges Mohammadi

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Source: www.bic.org

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Geneva—14 December 2016On the occasion of International Human Rights Day, the Baha’i International Community joins many in calling for the immediate release of Narges Mohammadi, a human rights defender imprisoned in Iran.

“On this day which is meant to celebrate human rights, we join myriads of individuals and organizations to call on the Iranian government to abide by its international obligations, and also its own constitution, and therefore to immediately release Ms. Mohammadi,” said Ms. Ala’i. “We urge the government to use the contributions, skills, and talents of citizens instead of putting them behind bars.”

Ms. Mohammadi, a lifelong champion of human rights and gender equality, is currently serving a 16-year sentence for alleged crimes related to her human rights activities. She is currently in poor health and needs medical treatment.

Ms. Mohammadi was originally arrested in 2009 on charges of “gathering and colluding to commit crimes against national security,” “spreading propaganda against the system,” and “founding an illegal group” for her efforts to end the death penalty for juveniles.

She was imprisoned in April 2012 but was released three months later to receive treatment for a severe neurological condition. She was re-arrested in May 2015 – and an appeals court upheld her conviction and the harsh sentence in September.

Her situation has drawn international condemnation.

In September, Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Research and Advocacy Director, said “Narges Mohammadi is a prominent advocate of human rights and a prisoner of conscience. She should be lauded for her courage not locked in a prison cell for 16 years.”

Sarah Leah Whitson of Human Rights Watch said in October that “Mohammadi’s unjust sentence is the latest example of the judiciary crushing dissent, sentencing people who speak out against government abuses to years behind bars.”

The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said earlier in the year: “We are appalled by the sentencing of a prominent Iranian anti-death penalty campaigner, Narges Mohammadi, to 16 years’ imprisonment in charges that stem from her courageous human rights work.”

And the Nobel Women’s Initiative has stated that “Mohammadi’s re-arrest and harsh sentence sends a signal that Iran is using the criminal justice system as a tool of repression. Mohammadi’s peaceful activities are protected by international human rights law and treaties to which Iran is a signatory. Her detention is unjust and unlawful.”

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One Response

  1. Brooks Garis

    December 25, 2016 1:01 pm

    It is always encouraging for a people to know that extremism and bulling are outside the bounds of what is acceptable to them. In such times, ordinary people consider it good citizenship to bravely stand up for those weaker than themselves. Then there comes a day when, from within the majority population, there is a claim that the majority is being exploited, taken advantage of, suffering loss of status, loss of dignity and loss of what is rightfully theirs. And now it becomes easy to raise popular voices in support of that claim, because in this there is no risk. Easy enough to raise indignation against a non-existent bully, to march in great numbers against the helpless knowing that when their march reaches it’s fearsome target there is no great devil awaiting them, just a farmer, his wife and a couple of children. And for the slaying of these helpless ones, the killers will receive no day in court, but instead a greeting of praise for helping to vindicate the honor of the well-established and powerful from a phantom threat of their own invention. The accepted convention has now shifted and now bullying and extremism become the popular norm. But soon enough, there comes another day when, in this altered context, a brave someone arises to confront the new normal of bullying and extremism, someone who defends the defenseless from being reinvented as a public threat. This is Ms. Narges Mohammadi. In a brighter heaven she would be an ordinary citizen doing her civic duty, praiseworthy, though not extraordinary. But this is today, and in this benighted age in Iran Ms. Narges Mohammadi’s courage is extraordinary. She is plotted against and condemned by the authorities in order to perpetuate their earthly power. In this dark era the authorities no longer reflect the golden lessons and spiritual conduct of a noble, Islamic people. Our hope is that they will quickly come to see that their tawdry fears are very wide of the mark of the ideal they claim to uphold and seeing that, they will free Ms. Mohammadi to continue her good work.

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