E/CN.4/2006/5/Add.1
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179.
The Special Rapporteurs brought to the attention of the Government the
situation of Mr. Shahrukh Ta'ef, Mr. Kayvan Rahimiyan, and his wife Ms.
Fereshteh Subhani, three prominent Bahá'ís , who were arrested on 6 March 2005 in
Tehran by agents of the Intelligence agency. No reasons were given for their arrests.
Their family members and other Bahá'ís had been unsuccessful in locating them. It
was also reported that on the same day, early in the morning, seven or eight agents
entered the home of Mr. and M s. Rahimiyan and ransacked their house. They took
away a quantity of documents; books; printed material; a copy machine and other
possessions.
180.
It was further reported that Mr. Mehran Kawsari was re-arrested on 8
March 2005. He had been previously arrested for distributing a letter to the President
of the Republic denouncing the destruction on 2-3 February 2005 of the Bahá'í
cemetery of Yazd. Mr. Kawsari was sentenced to three years imprisonment. He was
held in Evin prison. Mr. Bahram Mashhadi, another Bahá'ís previously detained,
who was the subject of a communication sent on 15 December 2004, w as also rearrested and given a one-year sentence for the same alleged offence.
181.
According to the source, these actions coincided with the launch of a
campaign against the Bahá'ís in government-controlled media. In an article published
on 8 January 2005 in Jomhouri-e-Eslami newspaper, the Bahá'ís letter to the President
of the Republic was portrayed as a "provocative" activity by the Bahá'ís and as "part
of a plan by the United States" to exert pressure on Iran. Another article appeared in a
Yazd newspaper complaining about the Bahá'ís.
Response from the Government dated 27 May 2005
182. The Government indicated that Mr. Shahrukh Ta'ef has been charged with
financial corruption and the legal proceedings were underway. Mr. Mehran Kawsari
had been charged for mea sures against the internal security of the State. The
preliminary proceedings had been carried out and, since he had filed an appeal, his
case had been sent to the Tehran Appellate Court for consideration. He refused the
offer of bail and has remained in custody.
Urgent appeal sent on 12 April 2005
183.
Follow -up communication concerning the situation of Mr. Hamid
Pourmand, a 47-year-old lay pastor with the Assembly of God Church in Bandar-I
Bushehr who was the subject of a previous communication on 3 November 2004.
Recent reports indicated that, on 16 February 2005, a Tehran military court found him
guilty of deceiving the armed forces by not declaring that he was a convert from
Islam. The Court reportedly sentenced him to three years in jail. He was reportedly
held at the Evin Prison in Tehran where he had allegedly spent most of his
imprisonment in solitary confinement. The verdict of the military court was reportedly
under appeal to the Supreme Court. Besides, concerns had been expressed that, on 4
April 2005, he was allegedly told that he would be produced before a Shariah Court
within 7 to 10 days, on two separate charges of apostasy and proselytizing, the first of
which is a capital crime in the Islamic Republic of Iran.