Thank you very much for inviting me.
I am the executive director of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, and I have submitted a statement, but I wanted to say a few words as well.
We are right now in the throes of an investigation while preparing a report on the human rights abuses that followed the June 12 presidential elections in Iran. While the human rights situation has fallen from the headlines and we are not seeing massive demonstrations—in the west, anyway—it continues, and in fact there's reason to believe that the human rights situation has become worse since June and July.
There is not much reliable information right now, as I'm sure you know. Foreign journalists are essentially barred from operating within Iran. Domestic journalists are being arrested, and we have received word that many are on their way out of the country. Some have already managed to leave the country. This is not a good sign.
In September, three organizations that were investigating prisoner abuses were closed down: the Association to Defend Prisoners Rights, as well as the two campaign offices of the two major opposition figures, Mousavi and Karoubi.
We see four areas of concern right now. These are not new to Iran, and that's one thing I'd like to say, that how the Iranian government is reacting to expressions of dissent and calls for more democracy is not surprising. These are methods that they've used since the revolution—and probably before. The four areas are the demonstrations, the arrests and imprisonments, the trials, and the executions.
The demonstrations, of course, went on pretty much until the end of July. There have been a few after that. They were brutally put down: people were killed, people were hurt. The Government of Iran states that 27 people were killed in connection with the demonstrations. Reliable sources put the number at 72. We believe it's probably actually much greater than that.
Many demonstrators were arrested. However, other people were also arrested and continue to be arrested. Journalists were arrested; lawyers were arrested; leaders of human rights organizations, women's rights organizations, and Kurdish rights organizations were arrested; and students were arrested. Recently, earlier this week, 60 members of the Islamic Iran Participation Front were also arrested. This is not even a party; it's an opposition movement. So we're still watching these arrests go on.
Once people are in prison in Iran, the political prisoners are subject to very harsh conditions, often including torture. They're interrogated. They spend lengthy periods in solitary confinement. They often are not allowed to speak with their lawyers or their families. We're seeing a lot of pleas and demonstrations lately by family members and lawyers asking to have contact with their clients.
People do die in prison in Iran on a fairly regular basis, I hate to say it, for lack of medical care and because of the treatment they've undergone.
Many people are forced to confess. That is the goal of a lot of these treatments. And there have been, of course, a series of demonstrators and other activists “confessing” on Iranian television. Many of them, even after they confess, are still kept in prison.
We saw, beginning on August 1, some mass show trials. On August 1, a trial of about 11 men was shown on state television. It was a picture of men in pajama-like prison outfits, looking emaciated, some dazed and some confused. A document called an indictment was read. It wasn't a legal indictment as we or the Iranian judicial system would recognize, but more of a political statement about their fomenting velvet revolutions and corresponding with foreign human rights organizations and foreign governments.
The second trial took place on August 8. It was much the same event. There was a second indictment.
After that, apparently the show trials did not have the desired effect and they have not been public since then. We believe there have been three sessions after the initial sessions at the beginning of August. However, people have been sentenced.
The first sentences came down last week. The first four were for executions, and those sentences were not for demonstrators. Three of the men had been arrested before the presidential elections. The first three were sentenced to death for allegedly being members of a monarchist movement. One of them, a man named Ali-Zamani, gave a televised confession on Iranian television stating that he had travelled overseas and met with monarchists and had come back to Iran with a goal of fomenting trouble and so forth. But he never did anything and was arrested before he actually did anything.
The fourth person is allegedly a member of the Mojahedin-e Khalq, a movement that has been fighting the Iranian government since the revolution, sometimes violently.
I believe there are about 20 people after that who have been sentenced that we know of thus far. They have various terms for imprisonment and whippings. One, of course, is the Iranian American scholar, Kian Tajbakhsh, who was sentenced to 15 years based largely on the fact that he had at one time received money from George Soros.
Lastly, I just want to mention something that gets lost sometimes in the conversation about the post-election upheaval, which is that executions are not new to Iran. It is the country with the second highest number of executions after China. But these really escalated between the presidential elections on June 12 and President Ahmadinejad's inauguration on August 5. The government announced that it had executed 115 people in that time. It did not name them, so we don't know who they were. At that time, or soon thereafter, a moratorium was supposedly put on executions. However, earlier this month, a young man was executed for a crime that he committed when he was under the age of 18. He was reportedly actually hung by the mother of the young man whom he had killed in a street fight.
So I would urge this committee as well as the Canadian and U.S. governments to not forget about human rights when we are in dialogue with the Iranian government. This situation has not gone away; it's just more underground.
Thank you.