Do you want to be heard in the EU? HRWF can be your voice in Brussels.

FEATURED NEWS

IRAN

Christian convert lashed 80 times for drinking Communion wine

Christian convert among women prisoners of conscience to describe 'white torture'


22 October 2020

Website: https://hrwf.eu

IRAN
Iranian Christian convert lashed 80 times for drinking Communion wine
Article18 (14.10.2020) - https://bit.ly/37FuXUT - Iranian Christian convert Mohammad Reza (Youhan) Omidi was today lashed 80 times for drinking wine as part of Holy Communion.

It is illegal for Muslim Iranians to drink alcohol, but exceptions are made for recognised religious minorities, including Christians. However, Iran does not recognise converts as Christians.

This lack of recognition is also the reason Youhan spent the last two years in prison and is now living in internal exile – because of his membership of a house-church, which is the only available Christian fellowship for converts in Iran.

Youhan began his two-year term in exile in the southwestern city of Borazjan one month ago today.

Then, on Saturday 10 October, he received a summons from the authorities in his home city of Rasht, more than 1,000km north of Borazjan, to travel back home at his own expense to receive his lashes.

Youhan and two of his fellow house-church members, Mohammad Ali (Yasser) Mossayebzadeh and Zaman (Saheb) Fadaee, were sentenced to the 80 lashes in September 2016 – by a Rasht civil and revolutionary court which at the same time refused to convict them of "acting against national security" by conducting house-churches.

That conviction – and accompanying 10-year sentences – was instead imposed on them, and their pastor Yousef Nadarkhani, a year later by a revolutionary court in Tehran.

This was not Youhan's first experience of lashes. Youhan was also given 80lashes in 2013, alongside one other house-church member, forthe same reason: they had used wine with Communion.

However, on both occasions friends of Youhan say he was grateful for the relative leniency shown him by those carrying out the sentence, after he explained to them that he had not acted with impropriety but had only shared in one cup of wine as an act of worship to God.


IRAN
Christian convert among women prisoners of conscience to describe 'white torture'
By Fred Petrossian
Article18 (08.10.2020) - https://bit.ly/31vFa25 - Christian convert Mary Mohammadi is among 12 female current and former prisoners of conscience interviewed as part of a new book on "white torture" inside Iran's prisons.

The book, written by Narges Mohammadi, who was yesterday released after over five years in prison, also includes the testimonies of two Baha'is and two Sufi dervishes – other oppressed religious minorities in Iran – and British-Iranian national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.

The 12 interviewees highlight the numerous ways in which "white torture" was used against them, including solitary confinement, prolonged interrogations, threats to family members, and lack of access to medical care.

The author warns that the effects of these tortures will be lifelong.

Christian convert Mary Mohammadi, who served six months in prison for her membership of a house-church and was given another suspended sentence earlier this year for her part in Tehran protests, explained the "terrible" insults she was subjected to, particularly targeting her parents and her Christian faith.

"For example, they would call the church a gambling house, or say, 'Why do you read the Bible? Go read the Qur'an!'" Mary explained.

"They would go into the most private corners of my life, which had nothing to do with them at all, and make derogatory remarks. And I couldn't understand why, when I was interrogated about Christianity, I was blindfolded and made to face the wall – and they would only take it off when I was writing – but then when they wanted to talk to me about personal issues as a woman, I was not blindfolded and made to look at them."

Mary said that some questions they asked her were "very personal, and no-one has the right to question you about them", and that "after long, heavy interrogations, I cried, I called on Christ, I spoke to Him, and I prayed".

'I'd rather be interrogated than left alone in my cell'

One of the most striking elements of the book is the interviewees' depictions of the immense loneliness they experienced in solitary confinement.

Nigara Afsharzadeh, a Turkmen national given a five-year sentence in 2014 for alleged spying, explains how she was reduced to talking to ants.

"The cell was silent and there was no sound," she said. "I scoured the cell just to find something like an ant, and whenever I did, I would talk to it for hours.

"When they brought me lunch, I would crush up some rice and throw it on the floor to attract an ant. I just wanted another living thing in my cell! I was overjoyed when a fly came in one time!"

Sedigheh Moradi, who has spent several periods in prison for her alleged links to dissident groups, explained how on one occasion she was so happy to be joined in her cell by another prisoner, a Christian woman, that "when she came into the cell and took off her blindfold, I hugged and kissed her".

Baha'i former prisoner of conscience Sima Kiani summed up the sentiment of so many others when she said: "I would rather be interrogated than left alone in a cell."

Rights activist Atena Daemi, who is currently serving a new two-year sentence after already spending five years in prison, explained solitary confinement as "like a closed box" or "a tin which you feel is being pounded outside by a hammer, to crush it".

"All the time, suddenly and without warning, they will open the door with a loud crash," she said. "They have the power to do whatever they want with you, and you have no power at all."

Threats and deprivations

Another pattern in the book is the huge range of different tactics employed by interrogators in an effort to bend the prisoner to their will.

The former prisoners explain that during interrogations it became clear that the interrogators weren't looking so much for information – they said it seemed they already knew everything – but that instead they sought only to demoralise the prisoner so much that they would confess to their alleged crimes and do anything else they wanted.

Among the tactics employed are frequent threats to family members.

Mahvash Shahriari, another Baha'i citizen who spent 10 years in prison, said the threats made against her husband and son were "the most difficult" aspects of her interrogations.

"The interrogator told me that your son comes here twice a week, and this is 'dangerous' because there he may have an 'accident', or that your husband shouldn't come because, if he does, he will be arrested and executed immediately for apostasy," she said.

Zahra Zahtabchi, who is serving a 10-year sentence for alleged links with the MKO opposition group, said that when she told her interrogators that her daughters may attend her trial, she was told: "Your sentence is death, so it would be better if they didn't come."

Meanwhile, Hengameh Shahidi, a journalist and rights activist sentenced in 2018 to 12 years and nine months in prison, explained how one interrogator told her that he loved her, and even waited for her after her release from prison so that he could propose to her.

"He promised that if I married him, he would close my case forever," she said. "My answer was that I was willing to accept any sentence imposed on me provided I never had to see him again."

Some of the tactics were more subtle. Reyhaneh Tabatabaei, another journalist and activist tried three times on charges of "propaganda against the state", explained that she had been given a war novel to read in prison, which she read seven times, and "later realised how reading this book and imagining scenes of war and killing and death, while in a cell, put more pressure on me".

But others were very obvious. Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is on temporary released from prison but still faces the threat of fresh charges, explained how she was denied medical care in prison, including even tablets prescribed for her, and that when prison guards came to bring her food, they would constantly sniff their noses, which put her off her food.

Sufi dervish Nazila Nouri, who spent a year in prison, said the toilet in her cell had no door, nor wall to provide you with any semblance of privacy.

"The sewage was leaking out, and the cell stunk so much that it made us nauseous," she said.

Resistance and hope

Yet despite all they have endured, there is a real message of hope in the book, evidence that any attempts to crush their spirits have failed.

"I know that the future of my country will be bright, and that prejudice, hatred and enmity will soon disappear," Sima Kiani says.

Hengameh Shahidi, who has undergone several hunger strikes during her incarceration, said such strikes have provided her and prisoners like her with a way of "showing resistance and protesting against oppression".

So while 'White Torture' is a book about pain, it is also a portrayal of hope and resistance.


Disclaimer: Human Rights Without Frontiers (HRWF) publishes information from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these communications are not necessarily those of HRWF.
Willy Fautré is the Editor-in-Chief. 


Other HRWF newsletters: Human Rights in the World | LGBTQI People & Human Rights | Religion & Security | Women's Rights & Gender Equality


Some activities of HRWF Int'l in 2020

Publication of HRWF report "In Prison for Their Faith 2020", 213 pages (28.09.2020)

Publication of an academic paper in the Journal of CESNUR (Vol. 4, Issue 5, Sept./October, pp 86-100) about the COVID and Protestant Churches in South Korea (09.2020)

Publication of an article in EU Reporter about the corruption of the judiciary in Ukraine (09.09.2020)

Publication of an article about the fight against corruption in Ukraine in EU Political Report (08.09.2019)

Participation of HRWF director Willy Fautré as a panelist for a webinar by Vilnius University "Jehovah's Witnesses and Their Opponents: Russia, the West, and Beyond" (03.09.2020)

Participation of HRWF director Willy Fautré as a panelist for a webinar with the Ukrainian think tank Polita "Dialogue Kyiv – Brussels on Justice Reform" (02.09.2020)

HRWF director interviewed by Newsweek about the persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses in Russia (28.07.2020)

Participation of HRWF's consultant on China and North Korea, Dr Zsuzsa Anna Ferenczy, as a panelist for a webinar on EU-China Dynamics (28.07.2020)

Participation of HRWF director as a panelist for a webinar about a Taoist group in Taiwan being harassed by the tax administration (22.07.2020)

Participation of HRWF director as a panelist for a webinar about the scapegoating of Shincheonji Church in South Korea (20.07.2020)

Participation of HRWF director as a panelist for a webinar about the 21st anniversary of the banning of Falun Gong in China (16.07.2020)

Publication of an article about the scapegoating of Shincheonji Church in EU Political Report (10.06.2019)

Submission of a complaint to the UN about children's rights in Croatia (27.05.2020)

Co-signatory of a submission to the UN Special Rapporteur on FORB about the scapegoating of the Shincheonji Church in South Korea (25.05.2020)

Publication of an article in EU Today about the integration of Western Balkans countries into the EU (22.05.2020)

Publication of an article in the EU Political Report by the director of HRWF titled "Serbs' continued fight for property rights in Croatia" (21.05.2020)

Publication of an article in the EU Reporter by the director of HRWF titled "Fascism and anti-Serb sentiments in Croatia"
(11.05.2020)
 
Publication of an academic paper in the Journal of CESNUR by the director of HRWF titled "Coercive Change of Religion in South Korea: The Case of the Shincheonji Church"
(05.05.2020)
Human Rights Without Frontiers Int'l www.hrwf.eu Phone: +32 2 345 61 45
Human Rights Without Frontiers International | Asbl - National Registration Number: 473809960,  Avenue d'Auderghem 61/16,
Brussels, 1040 Belgium