Saturday, May 19, 2007
Nobel Laureate Condemns Arrest Of Iranian-American Scholar
5/18/07Nobel Laureate Condemns Arrest Of Iranian-American Scholar
May 18, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi has condemned the arrest of Iranian-American scholar Haleh Esfandiari as a violation of Iranian laws. Ebadi has announced that her Tehran-based legal group intends to defend Esfandiari, but says that Iranian judiciary officials have not yet cleared the way for her team to represent the prisoner, nor to meet with her.
Ebadi told Radio Farda on May 17 that Iranian authorities have also not yet informed her legal team of the charges against Esfandiari, who is being held in Iran's notorious Evin prison.
"Unfortunately,” said Ebadi, “the style of the Revolutionary Court regarding those charged with political crimes is such that it never allows lawyers to meet their clients or to be informed about the charge against them or the reasons for it. All of these actions I mentioned are against the law and we have always protested against [such actions]."
“The charges that have been brought against Haleh Esfandiari by some extremist newspapers are baseless.”
Ebadi said that by denying Esfandiari access to legal representation, Iranian authorities are violating Iranian law.
Esfandiari, the director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington's Middle East Program, had traveled to Iran in December to visit her 93-year-old grandmother.
She was taken to Tehran's Evin prison on May 8 following repeated interrogations by intelligence officials.
Accused Of 'Security' Crimes
Esfandiari had been under virtual house arrest since December 30, when, according to the Wilson center, three masked gunmen ambushed her taxi and stole her luggage -- including her Iranian and American passports -- while she was heading to Tehran airport for her departure to Washington.
Tehran said earlier this week that Esfandiari has been detained on security charges.
On May 12, the hard-line daily "Kayhan" accused Esfandiari of involvement in efforts to topple Iran's Islamic regime, and alleged that she is a main element of Israeli efforts to spur revolution in Iran.
Esfandiari’s husband has denied the accusations against his wife.
Ebadi has also dismissed the suspicions as groundless, saying: “The charges that have been brought against Haleh Esfandiari by some extremist newspapers are baseless and they're not compatible with her personality, behavior, or her past.”
U.S. officials have condemned Esfandiari's arrest, and human rights groups have called for her immediate release.
In Iran, a prominent human rights defender, Emad Baghi, told Radio Farda that Tehran should give Esfandiari fair treatment.
"Judiciary and security officials should act based on human rights laws and respect the principles of a fair trial,” Baghi said. “Unfortunately, the problem we are facing here is that a government paper has used the expression 'spy' about [Esfandiari] before she has been put on trial. This happens at a time when that person is in prison and is not able to defend herself."
Iranian officials have said that Esfandiari's arrest was based on Iranian laws and that she will be treated like any other Iranian national.
Esfandiari was born in Iran and holds U.S. citizenship.
(Radio Farda contributed to this report)