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Iranian persecution of Bahais minority ‘crime vs. humanity’

PARIS, France – Human Rights Watch said on Monday the Iranian authorities’ persecution of the Bahai minority since the Islamic revolution of 1979 constitutes a crime against humanity.

The New York-based group said that the Bahais, Iran’s largest non-Muslim minority, faced repression including arbitrary arrest, property confiscation, restrictions on school and job opportunities, and even the right to a dignified burial.

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“The cumulative impact of authorities’ decades-long systematic repression is an intentional and severe deprivation of Bahais’ fundamental rights and amounts to the crime against humanity of persecution,” HRW said.

It argued that this fell within the scope of the International Criminal Court (ICC) whose statute defines persecution as the intentional and severe deprivation of fundamental rights contrary to international law on national, religious or ethnic grounds.

HRW said that while the intensity of violations against Bahais “has varied over time”, the persecution of the community has remained constant, “impacting virtually every aspect of Bahais’ private and public lives”.

It said the Islamic republic holds “extreme animus against adherents of the Bahai faith” and repression of the minority was enshrined in Iranian law and is official government policy.

“Iranian authorities deprive Bahais of their fundamental rights in every aspect of their lives, not due to their actions, but simply for belonging to a faith group,” said Michael Page, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

“It is critically important to increase international pressure on Iran to end this crime against humanity.”

This is believed to be the first time a leading international organisation has labelled Iran’s treatment of the Bahais as a crime against humanity.

Unlike other minorities, Bahais do not have their faith recognised by Iran’s constitution and have no reserved seats in parliament.

How many members of the community remain in Iran is not known, but activists believe there could still be several hundred thousand.

The Bahai faith is a relatively young monotheistic religion with spiritual roots dating back to the early 19th century in Iran.

HRW said that as a religious minority unrecognised in Iran’s constitution Bahais are prohibited from freely holding prayers, even in private.

They have been the target of “periodic state-backed incitement to hatred campaigns” while intelligence and judicial authorities regularly raid Bahais’ homes, confiscate their belongings and arrest or summon them for questioning.

Senior community figures Mahvash Sabet, a 71-year-old poet, and Fariba Kamalabadi, 61, were both arrested in July 2022 and are serving 10-year jail sentences.

Both had been previously jailed by the authorities over the past two decades.

Iranian authorities continue “to systematically prevent students who identify as Bahai from registering at universities”, HRW said, while Bahais are effectively banned from most public sector jobs.

Even in death, “local authorities interfere with burial processes and refuse to allow Bahais to bury their loved ones in historically Bahai cemeteries”, it added.

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