Blog/Latest News - 20th June 2011
Hunger Strikers Tell Families They Will Pay Any Price Until Situation Changes
The twelve prisoners inside Evin Prison’s Ward 350, who have been on hunger strike for two days protesting the deaths of Hoda Saber and Haleh Sahabi, told their families that they will continue their strike until there is conditions change. The wives of two of the prisoners, Feyzollah Arab Sorkhi and Emad Behavar, provided some information to the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.
Maryam Sharbatdar Ghods, Arab Sorkhi’s wife, described her husband’s conditions: “I don’t know about his physical condition. This is, after all, the third day of his hunger strike. My husband and I always had a negative perception of hunger strikes, as we thought when there are more appropriate ways for protesting a situation, why should one endanger his life through a hunger strike? I don’t know what the conditions inside prison were like for him to choose a hunger strike against his beliefs. A man was killed before their very eyes, after all. I believe that the decision he’s made is not an emotional one. He was sure this is the only way in which he can get his voice heard,” Sharbatdar Ghods said.
“I saw Mr. [Khosrow Amir] Sani today. I told him he should break his hunger strike, because he has been on a hunger strike for a long time, but he said that he would continue. He said ‘I broke my hunger strike a few days ago, but when everyone else started theirs, I joined them and I want to continue,” Sharbatdar Ghods said about the condition of Amir Sani, another prisoner who was on hunger strike with Hoda Saber.
Maryam Shafiee, Emad Behavar’s wife, also spoke with the Campaign after visiting her husband in prison today. “His psychological condition was good and he said that other prisoners are looking after them. But these are the first few days of hunger strike and I only hope that this will not last for too long. I am concerned. Emad said ‘I still can’t believe Saber’s death. This hunger strike is the least I can do to protest his death,” she said.
Maryam Shafiee, the wife of one of the strikers, Emad Behavar, told the Campaign that the prisoners were protesting the death of Saber and Sahabi with the aim of changing the situation of political prisoners generally.
She said that despite the request of Firouzeh Saber, Hoda Saber’s wife, and others to end the hunger strike, the prisoners “will not end their strike, and will continue until they get a reaction from judiciary officials. Emad said with this act they want the world to hear their pleas.”
“They want the officials to bring about change in the status of political prisoners,” Shafiee continued. “They are deprived of the rights guaranteed to ordinary prisoners such as phone calls, visitations, furloughs, and they and their families are subject to demeaning treatment. They said that they will pay any price until they attain their goal and their situation changes.”
Recently Added Content
- Speak Out for Imprisoned Students
- Student Group Report Calls for End to "Educational Apartheid"
- After 19 Months in Solitary, Death Row Inmate Finally Indicted
- Supreme Court Unlawfully Confirms Kurdish Prisoner’s Execution
- Weekly Cartoon: The Cartoonist's Sorrow
- Imprisoned Kurdish Citizen Transferred for Unknown Reason
- Imprisoned Student Beaten in Front of Parents
- Prominent Lawyer Mohammad Ali Dadkhah Sentenced To Nine Years
- CIVICUS: Iran must revoke harsh sentences against human rights defenders
- UN STATEMENT: Independent UN Experts Urge Iran to Ensure Protection for Rights Defenders
- “Confess on TV or Go to Prison,” Authorities Tell Dadkhah
- Student Group Report Calls for End to “Educational Apartheid”
- 4 Comments » - Iranian physicist sentenced to prison: Nature news and comment
- Weekly Cartoon: The Cartoonist’s Sorrow
- 2 Comments » - Malekpour Family Allowed Visit After Three Months
- Iran Tries to Neuter Foreign Media and International Press Freedoms
- “Confess on TV or Go to Prison,” Authorities Tell Dadkhah
- 1 Comment » - Detention Extended for Gonabadi Dervish Just Before Release
- UN STATEMENT: Independent UN Experts Urge Iran to Ensure Protection for Rights Defenders
- 1 Comment » - Weekly Cartoon (4): Iran’s Border Burdens
- CIVICUS: Iran must revoke harsh sentences against human rights defenders
- 1 Comment » - Protestant Pastor Sentenced to Six Years
- Let's not forget that Iran bans any education in mother tongue fro Azeris, Arabs...
- UN and other organizations should help this starres students to go back to their...
- a perfect report...
- it has nothing to do with Ahmadinejad. his ministers are under the orders of som...
- با سلام لطفاّ درمورد نقض حقوق بشر نژاد پرستی دولت مردان ایران و اینکه حقوق دی...
- I'm a Christian and I believe Dadkhah is a very brave Attorney. I respect him st...
- salam mani aziz mesle hamishe ziba tasir gozar...
- Strong and true!...
Women’s Rights
The Iranian women’s rights movement is the most vibrant social movement in Iran today. Having built an extensive grassroots base, Iranian women are campaigning to fight legal gender discrimination. The government routinely persecutes and prosecutes women’s rights activists.
Report on the Status of Women Human Rights Defenders — April 2009
The Systematic Repression of Women — May 2008
_____________________________________
More on Women’s Rights
- Sotoudeh’s Husband Says Wife is in Solitary Confinement
- 6 Comments » - Fruitless Efforts to Reduce Shahidi’s $600,000 Bail
- 1 Comment » - “I Think They Have Demands Of Her Which She Does Not Wish To Grant,” Says Sotoudeh’s Husband
- 3 Comments » - Mourning Mothers Request Nasrin Sotoudeh’s Release to Attend Father’s Funeral
Academic Freedom
During the past few years, Iranian universities have been experiencing a new phase of government intervention in academic affairs, which is considered a second Cultural Revolution. The present government policy is demonstrated on several fronts and is resulting in severe infringements on academic freedoms.
Report on the Situation of Academic Freedom on University Campuses — December 2008
_____________________________________
More on Academic Freedom
- Government Attacks Baha’i Online University, Detains 30 Instructors
- 6 Comments » - Another New Year Spent in Exile Prison for Ailing Student
- Faculty Member Dismissed for Publishing Articles
- Imprisoned Female Student Activists Denied Visitation Rights Again
- 1 Comment »
Workers’ Rights
Iranian workers and teachers are denied many protections of basic workers rights, as defined and articulated under longstanding international labor standards. Iranian workers are deprived of such fundamental rights both under Iranian labor law and in practice.
Background Information on the Rights of Workers in Iran — March 2008
_____________________________________
More on Workers’ Rights
- Labor Leader’s Sister Asks for His Release to Treat Three Blocked Arteries
- Taxi Drivers Strike to Protest Low Fares in Babol
- Unionist Reza Shahabi on Wet Hunger Strike
- 2 Comments » - Trade Unionist on Dry Hunger Strike, Grave Concerns for his Health
- 2 Comments » - Clampdown on Teachers and Labor Activists
- 1 Comment »




Make a Comment