FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 31, 1997
The State Department Spokesman today strongly condemned recent
Iranian Supreme Court decisions upholding death sentences imposed
on two Iranian Baha'is who had been convicted of apostasy. The
two Baha'is, Mr. Musa Talibi and Mr. Zabihullah Mahrami, were
convicted in separate trials before Revolutionary Courts in 1995
and 1996 respectively, and have been in prison for several months.
"The United States Government strongly condemns this action
and calls on the government of Iran to release these men,"
declared State Department Spokesman Nicholas Burns in a special
statement released today. "We urge the Government of Iran
to free all prisoners of conscience and to ensure freedom of religion
and other basic human rights."
"The Iranian Supreme Court's actions are but the latest and
most distressing reminder of Iran's continuing campaign to destroy
the Baha'i community," declared Firuz Kazemzadeh, spokesman
for the 130,000-member American Baha'i community. Since 1980,
more than 200 Iranian Baha'is have been executed on account of
their religion, and thousands more have been imprisoned. Two
other Baha'is face death sentences; they have been in prison since
1989.
A confidential Iranian government policy document which was revealed
in 1993 calls for a wide range of economic and social pressures
to be imposed against Baha'is. With more than 300,000 adherents,
Baha'is are Iran's largest religious minority group.
Dr. Kazemzadeh noted that the Court's reaffirmation of the apostasy
convictions holds "chilling implications" for Moslems
who have converted to Christianity or others who have converted
from Islam. They could face possible death sentences if they
should be prosecuted for apostasy.
The State Department appealed twice during the past year for Iran
to repudiate the apostasy convictions of the two Baha'is. The
United Nations Special Rapporteur on Religious Intolerance also
called for the Iranian authorities to set aside the death sentences
passed on Baha'is. His recommendations were specifically endorsed
by the U.N. General Assembly in a resolution adopted in December
1996.