Visualizar en: Francés - Español
Effect given to the recommendations of the Committee and the Governing Body
Effect given to the recommendations of the Committee and the Governing Body- 36. The Committee last examined this case, in which the complainant
alleged the continued repression of teachers and the obstruction of their exercise of
legitimate trade union activities, including the arrest and detention of teachers
following protest demonstrations, at its November 2008 meeting [see 351st Report, paras
910–989]. On that occasion, the Committee made the following recommendations [see 351st
Report, para. 989]:
- (a) The Committee requests the Government
to amend the existing legislative framework so as to ensure that employers’ and
workers’ organizations may exercise their freedom of association rights freely and
without interference by the public authorities.
- (b) The
Committee requests the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that
trade unionists may exercise their freedom of association rights, including the
right to peaceful assembly, without fear of intervention by the authorities. It
further requests the Government to ensure that the competent authorities receive
adequate instructions so as to eliminate the danger entailed by the use of excessive
violence when controlling demonstrations.
- (c) The
Committee requests the Government to undertake an independent inquiry into the
allegations of ill-treatment endured by trade unionists in the course of their
detention and, if they are proven true, to compensate the concerned parties for any
damages suffered.
- (d) The Committee urges the Government
to ensure that the charges against all the trade unionists relating to their
participation in the March-May 2007 protests are immediately dropped, that their
sentences are annulled, and that they are fully compensated for any damages suffered
as a result of the convictions.
- (e) The Committee urges
the Government to immediately stay the execution of Farzad Kamangar’s death
sentence, annul his conviction and secure his release from detention. It also
requests the Government to undertake an independent inquiry into the allegations of
torture inflicted upon Mr Kamangar during his detention and, if proven true, to
compensate him for any damages suffered as a result of the said treatment. Further
noting the allegation that several members of the “Save Farzad Committee”
established to demonstrate solidarity with Mr Kamangar have been arrested, detained,
and subject to threats and intimidation, the Committee requests the Government to
take the necessary steps to ensure that trade unionists may exercise their freedom
of association rights, including the right to engage in peaceful expressions of
solidarity, without fear of intervention by the authorities.
- (f) The Committee requests the Government to initiate an
independent inquiry into the allegations of discriminatory suspension and, if they
are proven true, to lift the suspensions and any other prejudicial measures and
compensate the parties concerned for any damages, including back pay, incurred as a
result of their imposition.
- (g) The Committee requests the
Government to take the necessary measures, including the lifting of the bans on the
Teachers’ Pen and the publication of news concerning protests or other
labour-related activities, to ensure the right of trade unions to issue publications
and express its opinions to the press. It further requests the Government to ensure
the return of Mr Khaksari’s passport, as well as the exercise of the right of
workers’ organizations to join the federation and confederation of their own
choosing - including the right to participate in international trade union meetings
- free from interference by the authorities. The Committee furthermore requests the
Government to initiate an independent inquiry into the confiscation of trade
unionists’ property during the April and October 2007 raids on trade unionists’
residences and, if the confiscations are found to be in violation of freedom of
association principles, to fully compensate the parties concerned for any losses
incurred.
- (h) The Committee expresses its deep concern
with the seriousness of the trade union climate in the Islamic Republic of Iran and
calls the Governing Body’s special attention to the situation. It once again
requests the Government to accept a direct contacts mission in respect of the
matters currently pending before the Committee.
- 37. In their communications dated 28 September and 12 November 2015,
Education International (EI) and ITUC provide additional information concerning
arbitrary detention of teacher unionists, obstacles to attending international union
meetings and the use of violence to disperse a peaceful demonstration. EI indicates that
persecution of teachers and their organizations continues; the recurrent and widespread
protests of teachers against their low wages (below the national poverty line) are met
by crackdown and criminalization; the authorities increased pressure on teachers and
their associations prior to the opening of schools on 23 September 2015 with the intent
to create a climate of fear and intimidation and to prevent further protests; teacher
unionists face arrest, arbitrary detention and prosecution for exercising their
legitimate rights to freedom of expression and association, generally being charged for
acting against national security, and do not have any guarantee of due process and fair
trial.
- 38. In particular, the complainants allege that:
- – On 1 March
2015, Milad Darvish, a labour activist, filmmaker, and honorary member of the
Iranian Teachers’ Trade Association (ITTA), was detained when a group of teachers
protested over a review of job classifications in front of the National Assembly. He
was detained for 12 days in Evin prison. On 22 August 2015, he was arrested again
and charged with propaganda against the system and acting against national security.
On 27 September 2015, Mr Darvish was released on a bail of 50 million Iranian tomans
(500 million Iranian rials (IRR)).
- – On 20 April 2015, four days after
thousands of teachers protested against low wages in 37 cities in Iran, Alireza
Hashemi, head of the ITTA was detained and transferred to Evin prison to serve a
five-year sentence originally handed down in 2013.
- – On 25 May 2015, Ali
Akbar Baghani was summoned by the authorities to serve a suspended six-year sentence
issued in 2006 on charges of propaganda against the regime. The authorities provided
no information about the reasons for carrying out the sentence at that
time.
- – On 27 June 2015, Esmail Abdi, the General Secretary of the
ITTA-Tehran, was taken into custody after he had been prevented from travelling to
Armenia to obtain a travel visa to Canada, where he had been invited to attend EI’s
7th World Congress as representative of the Cooperative Council of Iranian Teachers’
Trade Associations (CCITTA) and guest speaker. Mr Abdi’s passport was confiscated at
the border and he was instructed to return to Tehran in order to meet with the
prosecutors. After having reported to the prosecutor’s office, he was arrested, held
in solitary confinement and later transferred to the general ward of Evin prison. In
October 2015, there was still no information about the charges brought against him
and since his file is considered a “national security” case, his lawyer is not
recognized by the judiciary and only lawyers selected by the Government can
represent him. Mr Abdi had already been detained several times and had been
sentenced to a conditional ten years of imprisonment. During the teachers’ protests
in April 2015, he was summoned and threatened that the sentence would be executed if
he did not resign from his union position but his resignation was rejected by the
board of the ITTA-Tehran. The unjustified detention of the union leader had angered
the community of teachers and there had been active responses to his arrest
throughout the country.
- – Rasoul Bodaghi is one of the numerous teacher
activists who were arrested following post-election demonstrations of June 2009. Mr
Bodaghi was charged for assembly and collusion with the intent to disrupt national
security as well as for propaganda against the State. He was sentenced to a six-year
sentence and banned for five years from social and cultural activities. Despite
having completed his prison term in August 2015, new charges were brought against
him and he was condemned to a further three years in custody.
- – On 17 August
2015, Mahmoud Bagheri, board member of the ITTA-Tehran was released after having
been imprisoned for 44 months.
- – On 31 August 2015, following a ruling by
the branch 2 of the Evin prison Court, Mohammadreza Niknejad and Mehdi Bohlouli,
board member and member of the ITTA-Tehran respectively, were both arrested in raids
to their homes in Tehran with intelligence agents seizing their belongings; charges
against them included attending teachers’ gatherings. On 29 September 2015, they
were released on an IRR3 billion bail. Ali-Hossein Panahei, member of the
ITTA-Tehran, was arrested in the city of Sanandaj. All three workers will have to
face trials.
- – On 5 September 2015, Mahmoud Beheshti Langroodi, leader of
the ITTA-Tehran, was part of a meeting between the ITTA and the authorities to
discuss the problems teachers in Iran continue to face. The next day, Mr Beheshti
Langroodi was arrested by security forces at his home following an order for arrest.
Security forces searched his home and confiscated some of his belongings. Mr
Beheshti Langroodi is currently detained in Evin prison.
- – Abdolreza
Ghanbari, a university lecturer and teacher unionist, has been detained since
January 2010. He was first condemned to death for enmity with God but in June 2013,
a Revolutionary Court commuted the sentence to 15 years of imprisonment and exiled
him in Borazjan in the South of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- – On 7 October
2015, 14 teachers were arrested and detained for several hours in a detention centre
in Tehran for scheduling a peaceful protest. They were told that they would be
arrested again if they participated in the protest scheduled on 8 October
2015.
- – On 15 October 2015, Mr Ramin Zandnia, an active member of
ITTA-Kurdistan for about 15 years, an environmentalist and a well-known teacher in
Kurdistan, was arrested by the Revolutionary Army, along with his wife Ms Parvin
Mohammadi, a human rights activist, and their eight-year-old daughter, while they
were travelling from Ankara, Turkey where Mr Zandnia went, as representative of the
CCITTA, to support the leaders of the Confederation of Public Sector Workers’ Unions
(KESK) in court. The security forces questioned Mr Zandnia’s daughter before leaving
her with her aunt at the end of the day. Mr Zandnia and Ms Mohammadi were taken to
one of the camps in Saqez, Kurdistan where they underwent severe interrogation and
were told that they would be transferred to Sanandaj, the capital of the Kurdistan
province the next day. Their current whereabouts are unknown. Mr Zandnia was told
that he was accused of being a spy for international unions. He had previously been
arrested several times and was once sentenced to four months in prison, which had
been suspended for two years.
- 39. EI also alleges that several teacher unionists were prevented from
travelling abroad to attend international trade union events. In particular, four
representatives of the CCITTA registered to attend EI’s 7th World Congress in Ottawa,
Canada in July 2015 but none of them could attend the event. While two did not obtain
their visas from the Canadian authorities, the other two were held by the Iranian
authorities: Esmail Abdi was arrested on 27 June 2015 after his passport was seized to
prevent him from travelling to Armenia to obtain a visa for Canada and Peyman Nodinian
had his passport seized on 15 June 2015 as he was travelling to Armenia for the same
reason. EI alleges that the efforts of the authorities to prevent teacher unionists from
attending EI’s World Congress constitute an infringement of international human rights
Conventions protecting freedom of expression and association, as well as the right to
travel.
- 40. EI further alleges that, on 22 July 2015, the authorities used
violence to brutally disperse a protest of over 2,000 teachers who had gathered from
many cities to peacefully assemble in front of the Parliament in Tehran at the
initiative of the CCITTA. The teachers asked for the release of their colleagues and
requested the Government to guarantee the rights of all education workers and unionists
as prescribed by international instruments and Conventions and to promote quality public
education for all. Despite the severe crackdown, the protest continued until noon and a
large number of teachers were present although they were scattered around. The nearby
metro station and adjacent streets were full of security forces and plain-clothes
agents, with reports indicating that there were up to five security officers in plain
clothes for each teacher. Motorcycle riders from the special anti-riot forces roamed the
streets to terrorize people and cell phones were confiscated to prevent protesters from
taking pictures. According to EI, security forces arrested over 200 protesters, out of
which 92 were taken to temporary detention centre in Vozara Street in Tehran, where they
received a speech by the attorney general, were detained for several hours and were
subsequently released, with the exception of six teacher activists who were kept in
custody.
- 41. In its communication dated 26 October 2015, the Government states
that pursuing labour rights through union protests is one of the fundamental rights
recognized by articles 26 and 27 of the Constitution, an implicit reference to it is
also made in sections 142 and 143 of the Labour Act and section 73(e) of the Act on the
5th Economic Development Plan provides that strengthening workers’ and employers’
organizations entails their legal right to union protests. In execution of articles 26
and 27 of the Constitution, the Government also adopted a by-law on managing trade union
demands in 2011. Over the last two years, many decisions and measures have been taken to
address teachers’ unions’ demands including improvement of payments and upgrading their
status and part of such decisions had already been implemented. The Government also
states that it is prepared to receive ILO technical assistance on exchange of
experiences and take advantage of training on management of labour gatherings.
- 42. The Government further indicates that:
- – Mehdi Bohluli and
Mohammadreza Niknejad were arrested on 1 September 2015 and were released on bail on
29 September 2015.
- – Alireza Hashemi had previously been arrested in March
2006, following the assembly of teachers in front of the National Parliament and
imprisoned for three years. However, the decision was overturned and he was
acquitted on appeal. In 2010, he was charged with assembly and collusion to disturb
national security and propagation against the State and was sentenced to a five-year
term of imprisonment with the execution of the sentence delayed until 19 April 2015.
He is currently serving his sentence in Evin prison, but on 29 June 2015, the
Minister of Education hosted Mr Hashemi’s family and in his capacity as Minister
subsequently requested a commutation of his sentence.
- – On 22 August 2015,
an indictment was issued against Esmail Abdi on charges of assembly and collusion to
commit crimes against national security and propagation against the State, and the
case had been sent to the court.
- – Ali-Hossein Panahi is being prosecuted
for having insulted the Supreme Leader. His case had been referred to the court of
Sanandaj where he was sentenced on 16 September 2015 to two years of discretionary
imprisonment after investigation and verification of the alleged offence. The
verdict is not yet final but the charges are not linked to union
activities.
- – Rasoul Bodaghi was charged with assembly and collusion to
commit crimes against national security and propagation against the State. On 24
July 2010, he was sentenced to a five-year term of imprisonment and one year in
prison taking into account the time previously spent in detention. Mr Bodaghi lodged
an appeal against the verdict, which was investigated by Branch 54 of Tehran
Province Court of Appeal but on 15 January 2011, it was rejected. Since 1 September
2010, Mr Bodaghi has thus been serving his prison sentence in Rajaee Shahr prison,
has enjoyed all health and welfare amenities available and has received medical
treatment outside the prison on five occasions.
- – Mr Milad Darvish was
acquitted of all charges.
- 43. In its communication dated 16 January 2016, the Government indicates
that the Teachers Association of Iran has always demanded for salary increase and the
Government has always tried to positively respond to such labour demands despite
economic problems facing the country. The Ministry of Education proposed a Teachers’
Classification Scheme to motivate teachers to further build their capabilities, improve
the quality of their teaching services, enhance educational effectiveness, provide more
economic opportunities and improve teachers’ living conditions. According to the scheme,
teachers, high-school teachers, art teachers, educational trainers, counsellors, health
trainers, principals and assistant principals of schools and education and training
institutions are classified into five primary, basic, senior, expert and certified
professional ranks and those categorized will be entitled to 15, 25, 35 and 50 per cent
increments of job allowance respectively. On 24 April 2015, the Council of Ministers
approved the proposal and on 31 August 2015, the procedure for application of the scheme
was approved by the President Council for Management and Human Capital Development. On 6
September 2015, the necessary directives were issued by the Minister of Education as
well as the new employment orders for salary increase. Based on the available data, more
than 700,000 teachers are subjected to the scheme. According to the Government, such
initiatives will further motivate teachers to improve their ability and quality of
teaching services and provide teachers with economic opportunities to upgrade their
living conditions.
- 44. With regard to the issues raised by the Committee in its previous
recommendations, the Government indicates that it had performed necessary reviews and
discussed with the Ministry of Education, which committed to taking due consideration of
claims as well as demands for freedom of association and right to organize and make
every effort in this regard. According to the Government, some points raised by the
Committee are irrelevant to labour matters and freedom of association, some issues have
been addressed legally and others have been settled. The Government states that only a
few subject matters still exist and are being dealt with and will be finalized.
Following inquiries from the judiciary regarding the persons in question, it was stated
that the charges had nothing to do with labour activities, as the workers had been
investigated or interrogated for having committed offences against national security or
in relation to terrorist or subversive groups.
- 45. Finally, the Committee notes that the Government provided extensive
information relating to this case in a communication dated 26 October 2016 which it will
examine when it next considers this case.
- 46. The Committee notes that the additional information provided by the
complainants denounces the general climate of fear and intimidation in the Islamic
Republic of Iran and contains specific allegations of persecution, arrest,
interrogation, arbitrary detention and prosecution of teacher trade unionists for
legitimate trade union activities. The Committee notes that the alleged acts occurred
between March and October 2015, often in the context of demonstrations and protests,
which were at times accompanied by raids on houses and confiscation of personal
belongings and concern the following trade unionists: Milad Darvish, Alireza Hashemi,
Ali Akbar Bahgani, Esmail Abdi, Rasoul Bodaghi, Mahmoud Bagheri, Mohammadreza Niknejad,
Mehdi Bohlouli, Ali-Hossein Panahei, Mahmoud Beheshti Langroodi, Abdolreza Ghanbari,
Ramin Zandnia and Parvin Mohammadi, as well as 14 other teachers. Observing that many
teacher unionists were arrested and convicted for “enmity with God”, “assembly and
collusion with the intent to disrupt national security” and “propagation against the
regime” and that its previous examination of this case revealed the imposition of
similar charges on other trade unionists, the Committee notes with concern the
allegation that the judicial procedures often lacked guarantees of due process and fair
trial, were followed by severe sentences, including imprisonment for several years, and
that some of the convicted unionists had had their charges renewed upon completion of
their prison sentences. The Committee also notes with deep concern the allegation that
the whereabouts of Mr Zandnia and Ms Mohammadi have been unknown since their arrest on
15 October 2015.
- 47. The Committee notes the Government’s indication that it has always
tried to respond positively to labour demands and many measures had been taken over the
last two years to address teachers’ unions’ demands, such as the adoption of the
Teachers’ Classification Scheme, which aims at enhancing educational effectiveness and
providing teachers with economic opportunities to upgrade their living conditions.
Further noting the Government’s observations in relation to some of the specific
allegations put forward by the complainants concerning Milad Darvish, Alireza Hashemi,
Esmail Abdi, Rasoul Bodaghi, Mehdi Bohluli, Mohammadreza Niknejad and Ali-Hossein
Panahi, the Committee observes that most of the information provided amounts to general
affirmation of the charges and the dates of arrest, judgment and release from custody,
if applicable, and provides little detail as to the precise circumstances and reasons
for arrest or the judicial guarantees applied to the trials. The Committee also notes
that, while the complainants allege that the above measures were motivated by legitimate
trade union activities, the Government denies that the charges were connected to trade
union activities and affirms that the workers were accused of having committed offences
against national security or in relation to terrorist or subversive groups,. The
Committee regrets that the Government fails to provide information on the specific
allegations concerning Ramin Zandnia, Parvin Mohammadi and 14 other union members, as
well as the raids of houses, confiscation of personal belongings and renewal of charges
after completion of prison sentences.
- 48. The Committee also understands that in February 2016, Mr Abdi was
sentenced to six years of imprisonment, and, that between April and May 2016, Mr Abdi,
Mr Beheshti Langroodi and Mr Bodaghi appear to have been temporarily released from
prison while awaiting trial and that Mr Bodaghi was charged with “insulting the supreme
leader”.
- 49. Taking into account all of the above, as well as the its previous
recommendations in this case, the Committee considers that the situation described
raises serious concerns as to the climate for freely exercising trade union activity and
may be characterized by regular violations of civil liberties and systematic use of the
criminal law to punish trade unionists for exercising legitimate trade union activities.
In this regard, the Committee recalls that the detention of trade unionists for reasons
connected with their activities in defence of the interests of workers constitutes a
serious interference with civil liberties in general and with trade union rights in
particular. In cases where the complainants alleged that trade union leaders or workers
had been arrested for trade union activities, and the governments’ replies amounted to
general denials of the allegation or were simply to the effect that the arrests were
made for subversive activities, for reasons of internal security or for common law
crimes, the Committee has always followed the rule that the governments concerned should
be requested to submit further and as precise information as possible concerning the
arrests, particularly in connection with the legal or judicial proceedings instituted as
a result thereof and the result of such proceedings in order to be able to make a proper
examination of the allegations [see Digest of decisions and principles of the Freedom of
Association Committee, fifth (revised) edition, 2006, paras 64 and 111]. In light of
these principles and bearing in mind the prosecution of many trade unionists on charges
of propaganda against the State and acting against national security, the Committee
requests the Government to ensure that the charges against trade unionists relating to
their participation in peaceful demonstrations and legitimate trade union activities
between March and October 2015, are immediately dropped, that their sentences are
annulled and the detained workers released and that they are fully compensated for any
damages suffered as a result of the convictions. The Committee further requests the
Government to initiate an independent inquiry into the confiscation of trade unionists’
property during the raids on their residences and, if confiscations are found to be in
violation of freedom of association principles, to fully compensate the parties
concerned for any losses incurred. The Committee urges the Government to take the
necessary measures to institute an independent inquiry as to the arrest and detention of
Mr Zandnia and Ms Mohammadi in order to identify their current whereabouts, determine
the reasons for their detention and fully compensate them for any damage suffered. The
Committee requests the Government to inform it of any developments in these
matters.
- 50. The Committee further notes with concern the allegation of increased
persecution, intimidation and pressure on teacher unionists as well as the confiscation
of the travel documents of Mr Abdi and Mr Nodinian in order to prevent them from
attending international union meetings. Regretting that the Government does not provide
any specific observations on this point, the Committee recalls that the rights of
workers’ and employers’ organizations can only be exercised in a climate that is free
from violence, pressure or threats of any kind against the leaders and members of these
organizations, and it is for governments to ensure that this principle is respected.
Participation by trade unionists in international trade union meetings is a fundamental
trade union right and governments should therefore abstain from any measure, such as
withholding travel documents, that would prevent representatives of workers’
organizations from exercising their mandate in full freedom and independence [see
Digest, op. cit., paras 44 and 153]. The Committee, therefore, requests the Government
to take the necessary measures to ensure the return of Mr Abdi’s and Mr Nodinian’s
travel documents and the free exercise of trade union rights, including participation in
international trade union meetings, without pressure or threat of any kind and to keep
it informed of any developments in this regard.
- 51. The Committee notes that the complainants also allege that the
protest of 22 July 2015 was dispersed by security forces, plain-clothes agents and
anti-riot forces. Noting with concern the allegation that the violent dispersal of the
protest, in which more than 2,000 teachers participated, was coupled with the arrest of
200 workers, 92 of whom were taken into temporary detention and released several hours
later, while six were kept in custody, the Committee regrets that the Government does
not provide any information on this point. In this regard, it wishes to emphasize that
workers should enjoy the right to peaceful demonstration to defend their occupational
interests. The authorities should resort to the use of force only in situations where
law and order is seriously threatened. The intervention of the forces of order should be
in due proportion to the danger to law and order that the authorities are attempting to
control and governments should take measures to ensure that the competent authorities
receive adequate instructions so as to eliminate the danger entailed by the use of
excessive violence when controlling demonstrations which might result in a disturbance
of the peace. The police authorities should be given precise instructions so that, in
cases where public order is not seriously threatened, people are not arrested simply for
having organized or participated in a demonstration [see Digest, op. cit., paras 133,
140 and 151]. The Committee requests the Government to take the necessary measures to
ensure that trade unionists may exercise their freedom of association rights, including
the right to peaceful assembly, without fear of intervention by the authorities and
trusts that the Government will ensure that the use of police and military force during
protests and demonstrations is strictly limited to situations where law and order are
seriously threatened, in line with the mentioned principles. It also requests the
Government to ensure that the competent authorities receive adequate instructions so as
to eliminate the danger entailed by the use of excessive violence when controlling
demonstrations.
- 52. With regard to its previous recommendations in this case, the
Committee notes the Government’s statement that the Ministry of Education is committed
to taking labour claims and demands for freedom of association and the right to organize
into due consideration and feels obligated to make every effort in this regard. It
further notes the Government’s indication that it is prepared to receive ILO technical
assistance on exchange of experiences and take advantage of training on management of
labour gatherings. In light of the seriousness of the matters raised in this case and
the trade union climate in the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Committee urges the
Government to engage with the ILO in the near future so as to identify the steps
necessary to create an environment where trade union rights can be freely
exercised.
- 53. Finally, the Committee must express its deepest regret and
condemnation over the execution of trade unionist Farzad Kamangar on 9 May 2010, who had
been detained in various prisons since July 2006 and, after a trial characterized by
procedural irregularities, found guilty in 2008 of endangering national security and
being in enmity with God. The Committee deeply deplores this act which is contrary to
the most basic principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the fact that
the Government has totally ignored its previous recommendations. The Committee draws the
Governing Body’s attention to the serious and urgent nature of this case.