Hunger Strikes in Iran Protest Upsurge in Harsh Sentences, Treatment of Christians
Prisoners send a counter-message for the signal the government is sending
By Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
TEHRAN, IRAN (ANS – Aug. 8, 2017) -- Morning Star News (www.morningstarnews.org)
is reporting that two Christian prisoners in Iran recently went on
hunger strikes to protest increasingly harsh treatment of those arrested
for house-church activities.
The
online Christian human rights watchdog organization said that since
June 2016, courts in Iran have given 11 Christians prison sentences of
at least 10 years, mostly on charges related to house-church activities
for converts from Islam, according to advocacy group Middle East Concern
(MEC).
The
hunger strikes are meant to draw attention to the severity of the
sentences, as well as the poor treatment these prisoners often receive
once they are in custody, according to human rights advocates. The abuse
includes being held without charges, detained for long periods without
trial and prolonged isolation and interrogation.
“It’s
one of the ways, in a way, to raise objections to the Judiciary of the
Islamic Republic of Iran,” MEC’s Nikoo Cordman said. “Because they don’t
treat them well, don’t care for their concerns, don’t hear them out.
This is the only way, in some cases.”
Amin
Afshar Naderi lost 10 kilograms (22 lbs.) after a 21-day hunger strike
in Evin Prison that ended when he was released on $80,000 bail on
Tuesday (July 25). Naderi, a convert from Islam, is serving a 15-year
sentence for charges that include “acting against national security” and
“insulting the sacred,” according to MEC. The 15 years may include time
already served, according to the group.
Shortly
after Naderi went on the hunger strike, 30-year-old Ebrahim Firoozi
declared a 10-day hunger strike on July 17 while serving a four-year
sentence.
“The
government of Iran does not determine or confirm the Christian faith of
people, and this matter is entirely within the jurisdiction of the
Church,” Firoozi wrote in a letter to the Prosecutor General of Tehran
the day before he started the strike.
Among
those sentenced to 10-year sentences in the past year are Pastor Victor
Bet Tamraz, Hadi Asgari, Yousef Nadarkhani, Mohammad Reza Omidi, Yasser
Mossayebzadeh, Saheb Fadaie, Naser Navard Goltapeh, Bahram Nasibov,
Yusif Farhadov and Eldar Gurbanov, according to MEC.
The sentences were handed down by Judge Ahmadzadeh, according to MEC.
All
but Tamraz are converts to Christianity. The theocratic regime seems to
view Christian converts as having betrayed Islam and the state itself,
according to advocacy group Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW).
Morning
Star News said that Christian converts from Islam in Iran may face
charges of apostasy, though such a charge is rare, according to MEC’s
Cordman. In the last 10 years, advocates say, the government has put
growing pressure on the country’s rapidly spreading Christian community.
“It’s
a testament to how harsh the Iranian regime is acting against
Christians, specifically Christian converts, trying to destabilize the
church and ruin and destroy the existence of the church,” Cordman said.
Family Hardship
Naderi
was arrested along with Hadi Asgari and a few other Christians on Aug.
26, 2016 while attending a picnic in Firuzkooh, northeast of Tehran,
according to CSW. Previously he had been arrested at a Christmas
celebration on Dec. 26, 2014 at the Tehran home of Pastor Victor Bet
Tamraz.
Naderi was given a 15-year sentence and a two-year ban on July 3 and 4, which may include time already served, according to MEC.
Tamraz,
who is an ethnic Assyrian Christian, and Asgari were both sentenced at
the same time as Naderi to 10 years in prison and were also given
two-year travel bans, according to MEC. Charges for Tamraz included
“conducting evangelism,” “illegal house-church activities” and “Bible
printing and distribution,” while those against Asgari included, “acting
against national security” and “organizing and creating house
churches.”
Tamraz was released on bail March 1, 2015, according to MEC, and Hadi remains in prison.
All have filed appeals against their sentencing.
Morning
Star News explained that obtaining high bail amounts creates severe
hardships on the families of detained Christians. By keeping Christians
incarcerated for long periods, the government sends a threatening
message of deterrence to other underground Christians, rights advocates
said.
Three days after Naderi started his hunger strike, he released a letter to the judiciary condemning his treatment in prison.
“It
has been a year now that I have tolerated all the insults from my
inmates, the prison guards and you all, while I have not done anything
wrong and have been deprived of basic needs. However, I have always
prayed for you to be fair and just,” Naderi wrote, adding that he was
hidden from international representatives when they visited the prison
on July 5.
Along
with procedural problems and intimidations, Christian converts also are
protesting treatment such as lack of medical care and not being
provided Christian literature, Cordman said, according to the Morning
Star News report.
Naderi
went on a previous hunger strike in February, along with Asgari, after
Asgari was not given medical care for a kidney infection. The two were
also protesting delays in their case, according to CSW.
Shortly
after their hunger strike ended, the head of the attorney general’s
office visited Evin Prison and, during the visit, promised to deal with
their case promptly, according to CSW. It was not clear if the promise
was a direct result of the hunger strike, Cordman said.
Since
Naderi’s recent release from prison, friends and family are praying and
working on improving his deteriorated health, including weight loss and
a blood pressure of 100/60, according to Mohabat News.
The physical deterioration of the hunger strikers and possible death can be a liability for the Iranian regime, Cordman said.
“Internationally
it pressures them to show front and face to the international world to
say they are upholding religious rights and are allowing religious
freedom,” she said.
‘Insulting Islamic Sacraments’
Firoozi
was given a sentence of more than five years in January for “acting
against national security through collusion and gathering,” according to
CSW.
He
had served 10-month sentence for “propaganda against the regime,”
“insulting Islamic sacraments” and “acting against national security”
and should have been released in January 2015.
The
30-year-old’s physical and mental health has weakened in prison,
according to Mohabat News, and he was not allowed to take leave to visit
his sick mother.
He started a hunger strike on July 17 in Rajai Shahr Prison in Karaj.
Previous Hunger Strikes
The
men are carrying on the tradition of previous prisoners, including
Maryam Naghash Zargaran, who was arrested in January 2013 in connection
with her work with a former prisoner and also charged with “acting
against national security,” according to CSW.
Zargaran
began her four-year sentence in July 2013 in Evin Prison. She started a
hunger strike in July 2016 after the prison was not able to address her
multiple health challenges, including a heart condition. She had been
allowed to leave prison in June 2016 to receive treatment after posting a
bond of $100,000 but was ordered to return later that month.
She
reportedly ended her hunger strike in early August 2016 at the request
of her family, according to CSW. She was allowed to receive treatment at
the end of that month, but her furlough was cancelled on Sep. 17 when
she felt she could not meet with the stipulated terms. She was allowed
to receive treatment again in December 2016, but on her return five days
later she was informed that 42 days had been added to her sentence.
Morning
Star News reported that in Christian support organization Open Doors’
list of countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, Iran had
a score of 85 out of 100 in the 2017 World Watch List, leaving it
ranked eight out of 50.
“House-church
leaders, anyone in a leadership position is mostly targeted,” Cordman
said. “They know the leader might be connected to other Christians, and
by taking the leader, they’ve dismantled the church.”
Because
Armenian and other ethnic churches are not allowed to have
Farsi-speaking worship services, a house church is the only option for a
Christian convert in Iran, and pressure on these churches has gradually
increased, Morning Star News stated in its report.
The
group concluded that various aid and rights groups affirm that the
underground church is growing in Iran despite the crackdown. As many as
450,000 Iranians are worshipping Christ within Iran’s borders, according
to Open Doors, and other organizations believe the figure could be as
high as 1 million in the country of 80.3 million.
“In
the past 10 years, there has been worse treatment of religious
minorities, specifically Christian converts,” Cordman said. “That is
probably because church has been growing as well. More people are coming
to Christ.”
Photo
captions:1) Ebrahim Firouzi, 30, has been on hunger strike before to
protest against the conditions in which he has been held in prison in
Rajaei Shahr Prison in Karaj, just to the west of Tehran. 2) Evin
Prison, Tehran. 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister, and an award-winning local cable-TV program
host/producer who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for ANS
since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. You may follow
Michael on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Michael-Ireland-Media-Missionary-234951783610/
and on Twitter at @Michael_ASSIST. Please consider helping Michael
cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted Church, by
logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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