A/HRC/4/21/Add.1
page 49
Response from the Government dated 20 July 2006 to both the urgent appeal dated 9 June
2006 and the communication dated 13 June 2006
204. The Government indicated that, according to information received from the Judiciary of
the Islamic Republic of Iran, a group of 64 individuals had attempted to pass as representatives of
Governmental cultural organizations such as the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of
Islamic Guidance, or even as people from different NGOs, such as Nonahalan Emrooz (NGO for
children), Koodakan Donya (Association of Protection of the Rights of the Child) and people
from Shiraz Municipality Council.
205. Legal action was taken by a number of these organizations against this group. A large
number of these 64 individuals are not Bahá’ís, so the action based on belief has been denied.
After legal investigations, 61 persons have released 51 of them based on bail. The three
remaining were eventually in custody for further investigations and finally released on bail. It has
been claimed that their activities were done in the context of UNICEF’s training programmes in
Shiraz. This was denied by the UNICEF Office in Teheran.
Observations
206. The Special Rapporteur is grateful for the Government’s response and she would like to
refer to her earlier observations concerning the urgent appeal sent on 16 February 2006 also
regarding the situation of Bahá’í followers in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Kazakhstan
Urgent appeal sent on 9 December 2005 jointly with the Special Rapporteur on the question
of torture
207. The Special Rapporteurs brought to the attention of the Government information they had
received regarding an unknown number of Uzbek asylum seekers, including Abdurakhman
Ibragimov, Tohirjon Abdusamatov, Shoimat Shorakhmedov, who were registered asylumseekers, Alisher Mirzakholov, Abdurauf Kholmuratov, Alijon Mirganiev, Farkhod Islamov
and possibly Rukhiddin Fakhrutdinov, a former imam from Tashkent. According to the
information received, they were arrested in southern Kazakhstan starting from 23 November
2005. Their whereabouts are not known. All of them are wanted by Uzbek authorities on charges
of “religious extremism.” Concern is expressed that these persons may be at risk of torture or illtreatment if they are returned to Uzbekistan.
208. Moreover, the Special Rapporteur on torture received information concerning 10
persons, including Nozim Rakhmonov, an asylum-seeker who had registered his application
with UNHCR, Azomodin Kosimjonov and Sharafutdin Latipov. According to the information
received, they were arrested by Kazakhstani authorities on 28 November 2005 in Shymkent, and
handed over to the Uzbek authorities at the border between the two countries later that same
night. They are now in the custody of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Tashkent. No judicial
review of the cases had taken place before the return.