URGENT ACTION

Iran/Syria: Further information on Forcible return/Fear of torture and ill-treatment

PUBLIC AI Index: MDE 13/091/2006
11 August 2006

Further Information on UA 132/06 (MDE 24/037/2006, 15 May 2006 and MDE
24/041/2006, 2 June 2006) – Forcible return/Fear of torture and ill-treatment

IRAN/SYRIA Faleh ‘Abdullah al-Mansuri (m), aged 60, President of the
Ahwazi Liberation Organisation (ALO), Dutch national
Rasool Mezrea’ (m), ALO member
Taher ‘Ali Mezrea’ (m), aged 40
Jamal ‘Obeidawi (previously named as ‘Abdawi / Obeidi) (m), aged 34, student
and Chair of Ahwazi Student Union in Syria
Amnesty International has learnt that Iranian Arabs Faleh ‘Abdullah al-Mansuri,
Rasool (or 'Abdulrasool) Mezrea', Jamal ‘Obeidawi (previously named in error as
two people: Jamal ‘Abdawi and Jamal Obeidi) and Taher ‘Ali Mezrea' were
reportedly forcibly returned to Iran from Syria on 16 May. It is believed that
they are being held incommunicado at an unknown location in Iran, and may be at
risk of torture, ill-treatment, and possibly execution.

The four were arrested by Political Security officers in the Syrian capital,
Damascus, on 11 May, along with three other men, Musa Suwari, Ahmad ‘Abd
al-Jaber Abiat, and ‘Issa Yassin al-Musawi. They were reportedly held
incommunicado at an unknown location. According to reports, Musa Suwari, Ahmad
Abd al-Jaber Abiat, and ‘Issa Yassin al-Musawi were released between 11 May
and 19 May.


Most of the men are said to have been recognised as refugees by the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Faleh ‘Abdullah al-Mansuri has
since acquired Dutch nationality. His son, Adnan al-Mansuri, was reportedly
informed of his father’s forcible return to Iran by the Dutch Ministry of
Foreign Affairs on 9 August. Returning refugees or any other individual to a
country where they are at risk of torture or ill-treatment or other serious
human rights abuses is a violation of Syria’s obligations under international
law, including the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment, to which it is a state party.

There is no further information on Sa’idAwda al-Saki, an Iranian Arab and a
recognized refugee, who was arrested at the same time as the men named above,
and was reportedly forcibly returned to Iran on 14 May. He is now held
incommunicado at an undisclosed location (see UA 150/06, MDE 13/054/2006, 26
May 2006).

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Much of Iran's Arab community lives in the province of Khuzestan which borders
Iraq. It is strategically important because it is the site of much of Iran’s
oil reserves, but the Arab population does not feel it has benefited as much
from the oil revenue as the Persian population. Historically, the Arab
community has been marginalised and discriminated against. Tension has mounted
among the Arab population since April 2005, after it was alleged that the
government planned to disperse the country's Arab population or to force them
to relinquish their Arab identity. Hundreds have been arrested and there have
been reports of torture. Following bomb explosions in Ahvaz City in June and
October 2005, which killed at least 14 people, and explosions at oil
installations in September and October, the cycle of violence has intensified,
with hundreds of people reportedly arrested. Further bombings on 24 January
2006, in which at least six people were killed, were followed by further mass
arrests. Two men, Mehdi Nawaseri and Ali Awdeh Afrawi, were executed in public
on 2 March after they were convicted of involvement in the October bombings.
Their executions followed unfair trials before a Revolutionary Court during
which they are believed to have been denied access to lawyers, and their
confessions, along with those of seven other men, were broadcast on television.
At least 10 other Iranian Arabs are also reportedly under sentence of death,
accused of involvement in the bombings, distributing material against the
state, having contact with dissident organizations operating abroad, and
endangering state security. Amnesty International recognizes the right and
responsibility of governments to bring to justice those suspected of criminal
offences, but is unconditionally opposed to the death penalty as the ultimate
violation of the right to life. Please see Iran: Death Sentences appeal case –
11 Iranian Arab men facing death sentences, AI Index MDE 13/051/2006, May 2006,
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE130512006?open&of=ENG-IRN


 

AI Index: MDE 13/091/2006

      

11 August 2006

 

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