Personal tools
You are here: Home Statements and Reports BIC Statements Oral Statement to the Eight Session of the Human Rights Coucil

Oral Statement to the Eight Session of the Human Rights Coucil

Oral Statement of the Bahá’í International Community to the Eighth Session of the Human Rights Council (Geneva, June 6, 2008)

Oral Statement of the Bahá’í International Community to the Eighth Session of the Human Rights Council
Geneva, Switzerland

June 6, 2008

 

Mr. President,

On 14 May 2008, six members of the Bahá'í leadership in Iran were summarily arrested in Tehran.  Officers of the Intelligence Ministry entered their homes, carried out extensive searches, and have arbitrarily detained them ever since, without charge.  To date, we have not received any information about where they are being held.  They have not been given access to legal counsel, nor have their relatives been able to contact them.

The seventh member of the group has been in custody since 5 March 2008, when she was summoned to Mashhad by the Intelligence Ministry, ostensibly because she was required to answer questions about a burial in the Bahá'í cemetery there.  Like the others, she is still being held incommunicado.

These seven people compose the group that coordinates the activities of the Bahá'í religious minority in the absence of a National Spiritual Assembly in Iran.  In each country, the Bahá'í community has an elected governing body, but the Assembly in Iran was disbanded by order of the authorities in 1981.

Mr. President, a spokesperson of the Iranian government, Mr. Gholam Hossein Elham, said in a press conference that these arrests had nothing to do with ideology, and Representatives of the Islamic Republic have repeated in various international fora – including at the Human Rights Council – that, in Iran, no one is prosecuted for his or her beliefs.  But fallacious accusations continue to be levelled against Bahá'ís.  The mere fact that the government tells Bahá’ís they can be released, if they agree to recant their faith, clearly demonstrates that the real issue is their religious beliefs, which they freely share with their fellow citizens – a right laid down in Article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which the government of Iran is signatory.

While denying that religion is the issue, the authorities provide a platform, in mosques, in government sponsored media and even in schools across the country, for incitement to hatred and defamation of the Bahá'í Faith.  And when violent acts are committed – such as attempting to set a man on fire, demolishing people’s homes, or exhuming remains and crushing the bones under the wheels of a car – the perpetrators enjoy total impunity.

The Bahá'í International Community believes that it is high time that the Human Rights Council called for the Islamic Republic of Iran to abide by its international commitments.  As a first step, the Council should call upon Iran to release the Bahá'í leadership and grant all Iranian Bahá'ís their individual and collective human rights.

 

BIC Document #08-0606

Document Actions

© 2008 Baha'i International Community

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.