Monday, May 08, 2006

MIXED BAG OF NEWS ON LABOR ACTIVISTS IN IRAN


Several workers who have been held in jail since a demonstration in Saqez, Iran on May Day of 2004 are being released.

In Saqez this year, the security forces attempted to shut down the independent May Day event in the city, but the large number of participants deterred them from doing so. However, the police blockaded the area to prevent further participation of people in the event.

A May Day rally in Teheran, organized by the Syndicate of Workers of the Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, was attacked by hundreds of police. Numerous union members and students from various universities in Tehran were arrested during the police assault. As of May 6, 2006 all of the detainees have been released although some with restrictive bail conditions. Many still will have to appear in court to face possible charges. Many members of the board of directors of the syndicate, including some of those arrested on May first, have already been charged with serious allegations including “propaganda against the regime” and “practices against the national security” and will have to face trial in the near future.

Mansour Osanloo, the President of the Syndicate of Workers of the Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, has been in prison since December 22nd, 2005.

The following is a Report by International Alliance in Support of Workers in Iran.


Iran: Repeal of Prison Sentences Against the Saqez Labour Activists!

Congratulations to All Our Fellow Workers around the World on the Repeal of Prison Sentences Against the Saqez Labour Activists!

On Saturday, May 1st, 2004, hundreds of workers and their families in the City of Saqez, Kurdistan province, staged a rally and march to commemorate the International Workers’ Day. The event was organized by “the First of May Council”, which was a committee consists of the city’s labour activists that acted independently from the government-sponsored Workers’ House. At about 5:00 p. m., the Islamic Republic’s intelligence and security forces as well as the “plain clothes” units attacked marchers, as the result of which about 50 participants were arrested and taken into custody. They were accused of participating in a May Day celebration. The same evening all those arrested were released with the exception of 7 people: Hadi Tanoumand, Esmail Khodkam, Borhan Divargar, Jalal Hosseini, Mohamad AbdiPour, Mohsen Hakimi and Mahmoud Salehi. The seven remaining activists started a hunger strike from the moment they were held in protest against their unlawful detentions and the violent methods used to detain them. The 7 detainees were held without charge for 12 days in Sannadaj and Saqez, while they were still on hunger strike and their health had deteriorated. They were released on May 12th, 2004 on heavy bail conditions.

These seven labour leaders were prosecuted, during a process that took over 18 months, mostly behind closed doors, for “organizing an illegal gathering” as well as other charges including “conspiring to commit criminal acts against national security” and sympathizing with Komala, which is a well-known banned socialist organization in Iran’s Kurdistan. Although all charges pertaining to association with the Komala were withdrawn, Mahmoud Salehi, the former President of the Bakery Workers’ Association of the city of Saqez and the current spokesperson for the Coordinating Committee to Form Worker’s Organisation, was sentenced to 5 years imprisonment and 3 years in exile in the city of Ghorveh. Jalal Hosseini, a member of the Bakery Workers’ Association of the city of Saqez, was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment, whereas Hadi Tanomand and Esmail Khodkam were acquitted. A couple days later, the Saqez Revolutionary Court sentenced Mohsen Hakimi, Borhan Divargar and Mohammad Abdipour to two years imprisonment. Hence five out of the seven initially charged had been sentenced.

There have been massive campaigns, organized both in Iran and abroad, against the arrests and subsequent charges against the Saqez Seven. Iranian labour, social and political activists and the international labour movements, including the ICFTU, Global Unions federations and national labour organizations all over the world, have been pressuring the Iranian government to drop the charges made against the “Saqez Seven” and to respect the right to organize, assembly and association for workers in Iran.

As a result of such a strong campaign both in the country and internationally as well as the resolve of the Saqez Seven and their families all the sentences against Mahmoud Salehi, Jalal Hosseini, Mohsen Hakimi, Borhan Divargar and Mohammad Abdipour were finally overturned this week by the Kurdistan Province Court of Appeal, Division 7.

It is absolutely imperative to emphasize that regardless of any possible attempts by the Iranian government and the judiciary system to get back to these fellow workers or other labour activists in the future, and despite the fact that Mansour Osanlou, the president of the Syndicate of Tehran transport workers, has been in custody for more than 4 months without any trials, the repeal of the sentences against the Saqez labour activists is considered a great victory for the Iranian working class and the labour movements in Iran. It also proves that true international labour solidarity efforts can and will make a huge difference in our struggles for workers’ rights and freedoms.

International Alliance in Support of Workers in Iran

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