April 19, 2019
Amnesty International (AI) has listed Iran among 50 countries using “bullying techniques and repressive regulations” to prevent non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from doing their work.
The February 21 report, titled “Laws Designed to Silence: The Global Crackdown on Civil Society Organizations,” accuses Tehran of suppressing NGOs by designing laws and regulations to criminalize and otherwise hinder their activity.
“Governments across the world are increasingly attacking non-governmental organizations (NGOs) by creating laws that subject them and their staff to surveillance, nightmarish bureaucratic hurdles, and the ever-present threat of imprisonment,” the report said.
In the case of Iran, the report says authorities exploit provisions in the Islamic Penal Code to criminalize the activities of NGOs.
“This has resulted not only in stopping independent human rights organizations from being able to register and operate, but also in the criminalization of even informal networks or campaigns, such as Step by Step to Stop the Death Penalty (also known by its Persian acronym, LEGAM). Consequently, individuals like prominent lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and human rights defender Narges Mohammadi have been convicted and sentenced to lengthy prison terms in connection with their involvement with LEGAM and other similar loose networks and campaigns,” the report read.
According to AI, the Islamic Republic often cites laws like those against “assembly and colluding to commit crimes against national security” (Article 610), “forming a group composed of more than two people with the purpose of disrupting national security” (Article 498), and “membership of a group with the purpose of disrupting national security” (Article 499), to criminalize the activities of human rights defenders and civil society organizations.
AI says these laws “contravene the principle of legality as they are overly broad and vague, allowing the authorities to apply them arbitrarily.”
Furthermore, the rights watchdog asserts that the number of verdicts issued against human rights activists has significantly increased since widespread protests rocked the country in 2009 over the re-election of President Mahmud Ahmadi-nejad.