Source:
Amnesty International
Ayatollah Sayed Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi, prisoner of
conscience
Ayatollah
Sayed Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi, a 50-year-old Shi’a cleric,
is currently imprisoned in Evin Prison in Tehran for his peaceful
religious opinions. Amnesty International considers him to be a
prisoner of conscience. He suffers from a range of serious
ailments, including a cardio-vascular condition and a kidney
disorder. He has not been receiving necessary medical treatment in
detention and there is a serious concern that his health is
deteriorating.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi advocates the removal of religion from the political
basis of the Iranian state. He was arrested at his home in Tehran
on 8 October 2006 along with more than 300 of his followers,
during violent clashes with security forces. He and 17 followers
were initially sentenced to death, but the death sentences were
later dropped. On 13 August 2007 he was sentenced to serve one
year in prison in Tehran, followed by ten years in prison in
another part of the country. In addition to his sentence of 11
years' imprisonment, Ayatollah Boroujerdi was also defrocked
(banned from wearing his clerical robes and thereby from
practicing his clerical duties), and his house and all his
belongings were confiscated. For more information, please see the
background section below the action.
Take
Action
Please
write to the following officials:
Leader
of the Islamic Republic
His
Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The
Office of the Supreme Leader, Islamic Republic Street - Shahid
Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran,
Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:
info@leader.ir
Chief
Prosecutor of the Special Court for the Clergy
Hojjatoleslam
val moslemin Shaykh Mohammad Salimi
c/o
Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Justice Building, Panzdah-Khordad
Square, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:
+98 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)
Email:
info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (mark: FAO
Hojjatoleslam val moslemin Salimi)
Dear
Your Excellency:
I am
writing to you to express my deep concern about the continued
imprisonment of Sayed Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi, a 50-year-old
Shi’a cleric. He was sentenced to prison for his peaceful
religious opinions. I am also very concerned that his health has
been deteriorating in detention and that he has not been given
access to necessary medical treatment.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi has been an advocate for the separation of religion
from the political basis of the state. He was arrested with more
than 300 of his followers in October 2006. Originally sentenced to
death, his sentence was commuted on 13 August 2007 to eleven years
in prison. He had reportedly been found guilty of at least 30
charges, including "waging war against God" (Moharebeh);
acts against national security; publicly calling political
leadership by the clergy (Velayat-e Faqih) unlawful; having links
with anti-revolutionaries and spies; and using the term
"religious dictatorship" instead of "Islamic
Republic" in public discourse and radio interviews. Four of
his followers Majid Alasti, Mehrdad Souri, Mohammad-Reza Sadeghi
and Massoud Samavatiyan had their prison sentences upheld on 3
September 2008.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi was reportedly ill-treated in detention. He suffers
from a number of serious medical conditions including high blood
pressure, a cardio-vascular disorder, and a kidney ailment. He has
reportedly lost a considerable amount of weight in detention.
I
urge you to insure that while he is in prison, Ayatollah
Boroujerdi be treated humanely and that he be given prompt access
to necessary medical attention and to his attorney. Ayatolloah
Boroujerdi and his followers Majid Alasti, Mehrdad Souri,
Mohammad-Reza Sadeghi and Massoud Samavatiyan are prisoners of
conscience, detained solely for the peaceful expression of their
opinions. I therefore urge that they be immediately and
unconditionally released from prison. Thank you very much for your
attention.
Background
Since
1994 Ayatollah Boroujerdi says he has been summoned repeatedly
before the Special Court for the Clergy and has been detained in
Towhid and Evin Prisons. He has reportedly developed heart and
kidney problems as a result of torture. His father was a prominent
cleric who refused to accept the principle of velayat-e faqih
(rule of the [Islamic] jurisconsult, or of those who know Islamic
law), on which the Islamic Republic of Iran is based. He died in
2002 and his grave in the Masjed-e Nour mosque in Tehran has
reportedly been desecrated and the mosque taken over by the state.
On 30
June 2006 the Ayatollah conducted a large religious
ceremony at the Shahid Keshvari stadium in Tehran. On 30 July
2006, the security forces reportedly arrested several of his
family and followers at their homes. The security forces also
reportedly tried to arrest the Ayatollah himself, but were
prevented from doing so by his followers. At least 41 of his
followers were reportedly arrested in the courtyard of his house
in Tehran during the morning of 28 September 2006. Those arrested
were taken to Section 209 of Evin Prison where they were held for
about three weeks. Some were reportedly tortured. Among those
detained during the series of arrests were the Ayatollah’s
80-year-old mother and six-month-old grandson.
On 10
October 2006, an unattributed article entitled “On
the plot of Kazemeyni-Boroujerdi; Propagating Islam with the
assistance of the BBC and CIA” appeared in the
Iranian newspaper Keyhan. The article described
the clash during Ayatollah Bojoujerdi’s arrest as part of a plot
by Western intelligence services such as those of the USA, Israel
and the UK to use ethnic and religious minorities to damage Iran,
and referred to the fact that the Ayatollah had made telephone
calls to foreign radio stations such as the Persian-language
service of Radio Free Europe (Radio Farda) and the British
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) before his arrest.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi's health deteriorated partially as a result of a hunger
strike which he started on 19 February 2007. He began his
hunger strike to protest the conditions of his detention, and the
authorities’ refusal to grant him temporary leave from prison to
visit his dying mother prior to her death on 14 February 2007 and
to attend her funeral. He was detained in a cold cell without a
heater during the winter months. In addition, he allegedly
suffered torture and ill-treatment during interrogation.
When he appeared before the Special Court for the Clergy (SCC)
between 18 and 20 March 2007, an eyewitness reported that he
appeared to be bleeding from his mouth, and possibly occasionally
coughing up blood. He was reportedly unable to walk upright.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi reportedly appeared at a hearing before the SCC on or
around 14 February 2007. According to reports, he may have been
charged with “acting against state security.” He had no access
to legal representation and he has reportedly complained that he
does not know "what they want from him". His bail was
allegedly set at five billion Iranian Rials (about $US 564,000).
He is reportedly unable to pay this sum.
On 18
February, the cleric's eldest son, Sayed Mahdi Kazemeyni
Boroujerdi, was arrested and was detained in Section 209 of Evin
Prison, although Amnesty International is not aware of the reasons
for his reported detention. Prior to this, since January 2007,
both he and another son, Sayed Mohammad, had been summoned several
times to appear before the SCC for questioning, allegedly in
connection with the activities of their father. On 20 February,
Ayatollah Sayed Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi's wife – whose name
is not known to Amnesty International, was also summoned to appear
before the SCC.
On 13
March 2007, an ‘interview’ with Ayatollah Boroujerdi was
reportedly shown on local television in Iran. Apparently filmed in
Evin Prison, where there is a specially equipped room for such
programs, and entitled ‘Lying Claims’, he was wearing a prison
uniform. Amnesty International was told that in the program
Ayatollah Boroujerdi referred to his ‘lies’ and how his poor
followers believed these and how most of his followers were women.
Amnesty International was also told that his behavior and manner
of speaking made it clear that he was under great stress.
Ayatollah
Boroujerdi was sentenced to death in Branch 3 of the Special Court
for the Clergy (SCC) on 10 June 2007, after an unfair and closed
trial. Six of his followers were also sentenced to death on 13
June 2007. Ayatollah Boroujerdi was reportedly found guilty of at
least 30 charges, including "waging war against God" (Moharebeh),
for which the punishment is death; acts against national security;
publicly calling political leadership by the clergy (Velayat-e
Faqih) unlawful; having links with anti-revolutionaries and spies;
and using the term "religious dictatorship" instead of
"Islamic Republic" in public discourse and radio
interviews. Also sentenced to death were: Massoud Samavatiyan,
Alireza Montazer Sa’eb, Ali Shahrabi Farahani, Habib Qouti,
Ahmad Karimiyan (m), Majid Alasti. On 13 August 2007 Ayatollah
Borouderdi’s death sentence was commuted to 11 years
imprisonment. The death sentences against his followers were also
commuted to prison sentences.
Ayatollah
Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi continues to be held in Evin Prison
in Tehran, where his medical condition has gravely deteriorated.
On 10 September 2008, Ayatollah Boroujerdi's wife and the family
lawyer went to Evin Prison in order for the Ayatollah to sign
papers nominating the lawyer. They were denied access to Ayatollah
Boroujerdi by the prison authorities. Without prior warning Ayatollah
Boroujerdi was summoned to appear before the Special Court
for the Clergy (SCC) on 1 September. The SCC tried to force him to
give an interview to a government newspaper recanting
his beliefs and seeking forgiveness from Iran’s Supreme Leader.
On 2 September 2008, his doctor wrote
to Iran’s judicial authorities informing them of his patient’s
urgent, multiple and complex medical conditions that require
immediate medical care outside of the prison. The doctor submitted
a diagnosis of Ayatollah Boroujerdi’s heart condition, which is
causing chest pains, suggesting that important arteries may be
blocked. The Ayatollah also suffers from a kidney condition that
causes considerable pain and he has lost around 40kg whilst in
detention. He is also in a very poor psychological state.
At
the conclusion of their appeals, four other followers, Majid
Alasti, Mehrdad Souri, Mohammad-Reza Sadeghi and Massoud
Samavatiyan, had their prison sentences upheld by the SCC on 3
September 2008. Majid Alasti was sentenced to four years’
imprisonment to be served in exile in Zanjan prison, 330 km
northwest of Tehran. Mehrdad Souri and Mohammad-Reza Sadeghi were
sentenced to two years’ imprisonment and are now held in Evin
Prison. Massoud Samavatiyan was sentenced to five years’
imprisonment to be served in exile in Khoramabad, Lorestan
province, western Iran.