Voice of Kurdish-American Radio for Democracy, Peace and Freedom
Iran's Harassed Kurdish Minority
vokradio.com, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Iran's Harassed Kurdish Minority
24 February 2009
Human rights monitors say Iranian authorities continue to detain and harass men and women of Iran's ethnic Kurdish minority. According to the Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan, an independent human rights group, more than 100 ethnic Kurdish literary, cultural, and civil activists from Kermanshah and Ilam have petitioned Iranian authorities for the release of Mehdi Hamidi and Abbass Jalilian, from detention.
Mehdi Hamidi, an Iranian Air Force officer, and Kurdish cultural
rights activist, has reportedly been held without charges for weeks by
Iranian security services. Human rights activists say Abbas Jalilian, a
noted Iranian Kurdish author and linguist, is being held incommunicado
by Iranian authorities.
The signatories to the petition stated
they "object to the detention of Mehdi Hamidi and Abbas Jalilian and
support their cultural and literary efforts to enrich the Kurdish
culture and language from south Kurdistan, especially the work of
Jalilian by publishing numerous books, and demand their immediate
release."
Amnesty International, in its recent report on human
rights in Iran, expressed concern over the treatment of ethnic Kurdish
prisoner of conscience Ronak Safarzadeh. Arrested shortly after
distributing leaflets and collecting signatures for Campaign for
Equality, she has been held in detention for over 15 months.
Farzad
Kamangar, an ethnic Kurdish teacher and human rights defender, has been
sentenced to death for so-called "crimes against national security" - a
catch-all charge used to incarcerate those, like Mr. Kamangar, who
peacefully oppose the current policies.
In January 2009, Human
Rights Watch announced the award of its Hellman/Hammett grant, a grant
given to persecuted writers, to Iranian Kurdish human rights activist
Sadegh Kahboudvand. Mr. Kahboudvand is serving a 10-year prison term
for his writings and is reportedly in urgent need of medical care.
By
criminalizing dissent, the Iranian government increases the
disaffection among its ethnic and religious minorities, along with many
other Iranians who want their government to respect the rights of all
its citizens. The U.S. urges the Iranian government to observe the
basic human rights of all the Iranian people.