GENEVA– A group of United Nations human
rights experts today warned that over a dozen political prisoners in Iran ,
including some prominent human rights defenders, lawyers and political
activists, are at risk of death in detention due to their worsening health
conditions and the continued refusal by the Iranian authorities to provide them
with medical treatment.
“The condition of several prisoners of conscience with serious health problems
has been exacerbated by their continued detention and by repeated refusals to
allow their access to the medical facilities and treatment they so urgently
require,” the experts said.
“The denial of medical care, physical abuse, either in overcrowded prisons or
in solitary confinement and other forms of torture and ill-treatment exposes
prisoners to risk of serious injuries and death,” they said noting that
“unfortunately, Iranian prisons are no strangers to such tragedies, many of
which could have been avoided if authorities exercised proper care.”
The UN experts highlighted the cases of political prisoners including: human
rights defender Nargis Mohammadi, lawyer Abdulfattah Soltani, blogger Hossein
Ronaghi Maleki, religious figure Sayed Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi and experimental
laser physicist Omid Kokabee.
Mr. Kokabee was arrested in January 2011 upon his return from studies in the
United States and is currently serving a ten-year prison sentence for his
alleged ‘connections with a hostile government’. He was diagnosed with kidney
cancer and recently underwent surgery to remove his right kidney, a procedure
that could have been avoided, had he been provided with adequate and timely
access to proper treatment at an earlier stage. When the care is ultimately
provided, as Mr Kokabee’s case, patients are often transferred to and from
prisons chained to their beds.
“The situation of these prisoners and the continued disregard for their health
and well-being by the Iranian authorities is completely unacceptable,” the
experts stressed. “This is especially the case given that allegedly all of them
have been arrested, detained and convicted purely for their peaceful exercise
of their fundamental freedoms and rights.”
“We urge the authorities to consider the release of Mr Kokabee and other
political prisoners on medical or humanitarian grounds and to ensure their
well-being by facilitating regular access to medical care,” they said.
The human rights experts reminded the Iranian Government of its obligations
under international standards to respect the prisoners’ right to health and to
ensure their humane treatment. “Failure to provide adequate medical care to
prisoners is in breach of Iran’s international human rights obligations and
domestic standards,” they underscored.
“We have repeatedly drawn the attention of the Iranian authorities to
allegations related to the denial of access to medical care and to substandard
conditions of detention and urged them to embark on a more comprehensive prison
reform. We regret that the Government has so far failed to properly investigate
these allegations and take the necessary measures,” the human rights experts
concluded.
(*) The experts: Mr. Ahmed Shaheed,
UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic
of Iran; Mr. Dainius Pûras, UN Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to
the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health;
Mr. Juan E. Méndez, UN Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment; Mr. Maina Kiai, UN Special Rapporteur on
the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association; and Mr.
Seong-Phil Hong, Chair-Rapporteur of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention.
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