Iran: Prosecute Officials in Detained Blogger’s Death
Beheshti Case Still Not Referred to Court; Family Members Harassed
March 7, 2013
http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/03/07/iran-prosecute-officials-detained-blogger-s-death
The failure to reveal what happened to Sattar Beheshti and start prosecuting those responsible, not to mention harassment of his family, suggests a cover-up.
Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director
(Although Beheshti died almost four months ago, there is no indication that the judiciary has concluded the criminal investigation into the officers accused of responsibility for his death, despite promises by officials that the case would be sent to the courts for prosecution before mid-February. Security officials have put his mother and other family members under close surveillance and have told them not to speak to the media or international rights organizations about the case, Human Rights Watch has learned.
“Four months after a blogger died in police custody, even his grieving family doesn’t know what happened to him,” said Nadim Houry, deputy
Officials informed the family of Beheshti’s death on November 6, seven days after cyber police raided his mother’s home at Robat Karim, near
Gohar Eshghi, Beheshti’s mother, told Human Rights Watch that an investigator from the prosecutor’s office visited her at her home on February 2. It was the first such visit to her home. The investigator said he was there to discuss the case, although the family has engaged a lawyer to represent them.
The investigator warned Eshgi against speaking to the media or others about her son’s death. He told her the case had been delayed partly because the authorities maintained that Beheshti’s father had not been “of sound mind” when he hired Giti Pourfazel as the family’s lawyer, which Eshgi said is untrue. She said the investigator’s contention appeared to be a delaying tactic to justify the authorities’ failure to deliver on promises they had made to the family about pursuing the legal case.
Pourfazel told Iran’s official Iranian Students’ News Agency in February that despite assurances by judiciary officials that the case would be transferred to the courts in mid-February, nothing had happened, and that the relevant authorities had so far failed to provide any information about where the case stands.
Eshghi told Human Rights Watch that she had initially followed the authorities’ instruction not to talk to the media about her son’s case but that she is no longer willing to remain silent in the face of the judiciary’s inaction. “All I want is for my son’s case to be taken up by the courts in an open trial,” she told Human Rights Watch. “I don’t want my son’s blood to have been spilled in vain.”
A parliamentary committee that investigated Baheshti’s death reported on January 7 that
Days after the news of Beheshti’s death broke, other prisoners in Ward 350 of Tehran’s Evin Prison, where many political prisoners are held, wrote to the authorities to say they had seen Beheshti before he died and that he had injuries that appeared to have been caused by beatings.
In December, amid international concern over Beheshti’s death, the authorities first removed the chief of
On February 26, Ayatollah Larijani, the head of
Both the United Nations secretary-general and the UN’s expert on
The special rapporteur expressed concern also about official harassment of members of Beheshti’s family, including physical assaults, during a memorial service on the 40th day after Beheshti’s death.
“Sattar Beheshti and his family deserve justice, and they deserve it now,” Houry said. “The judiciary should stop lying and bring those responsible for his death to justice. They need to send a clear message to all who torture or harm prisoners that they will be held fully accountable.”
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