E/CN.4/1996/95/Add.2
page 14
concerning the Baha’i question, including the stipulation that "the measures
taken by the Government against the Baha’is should be designed to obstruct
their evolution and development".
59.
In the religious field, the Baha’i representatives and other non-official
persons noted that the right to profess and practise the Baha’i faith had been
denied. Since 1983, the Baha’i organization had apparently been prohibited by
the Government, as a result of which the Baha’is had been denied the right to
meet and to elect and operate administrative institutions. Since, by virtue
of its fundamental principles, the Baha’i faith had no clergy, the very
existence of the Baha’is as a viable religious community was apparently being
threatened in the absence of those institutions. According to the same
sources, the authorities had also confiscated Baha’i communal property,
particularly since 1979, and Baha’i holy places had been desecrated and, in
numerous cases, destroyed.
60.
According to the same sources, the Baha’i cemeteries had been bulldozed
and their tombs ransacked. However, the President of the Islamic Commission
on Human Rights stated that this information was false and erroneous. He
indicated that, in some cases, cemeteries had been demolished for health
reasons and this applied to both Baha’i and Muslim tombs. In his view, those
rumours were politically motivated. The Baha’i community was apparently also
having difficulty in burying its dead and identifying the location of tombs.
It was allowed to use only waste ground for burials and was forbidden to erect
inscribed gravestones. The Baha’i representatives also said that pressure was
being brought to bear on them with a view to securing their conversion to
Islam by depriving them of freedom, of means of subsistence, of their personal
property and of the possibility of studying at universities.
(b)
In the socio-cultural field
61.
Being denied the status of a recognized religious minority, the Baha’is
cannot enjoy the rights associated with that recognition such as, in
particular, political representation and the application of their religious
law in their personal affairs and in those of their community. In response to
the authorities’ affirmations concerning the rights of the Baha’is as Iranian
citizens (see above, paras. 10 to 20, "Minorities" and paras. 28 to 32, "In
the religious field"), the Baha’i representatives drew attention to the policy
of repression to which they were being subjected, including the ban on their
organization and the confiscation of their property: all the community’s
property, and particularly the property of the Baha’i social institutions
serving the members of all religions, had allegedly been expropriated by the
State.
62.
Personal property, including residential premises, of the Baha’i
community has also allegedly been confiscated. Baha’i marriages and divorces
are not legally recognized and their right of succession is not respected.
With regard to freedom of movement, including departure from the country and
the issue of passports or exit visas, all Baha’is without exception face major
obstacles. It should be noted that the religious affiliation must be
specified on the passport application form.