MOHAMMAD HABIBI, the official spokesperson of the Iranian Teachers Trade Association (ITTA) in Tehran, was arrested by agents of the Islamic Republic security forces at his workplace on Wednesday and taken to ward 209 of Evin prison.
This notorious ward is run by the Ministry of Intelligence and holds high-profile political prisoners, often under conditions of solitary confinement, constant interrogation, and routine torture.
Following Habibi’s arrest, the agents proceeded to ransack his home. According to the Co-ordinating Council of Iranian Teachers Trade Associations (CCITTA), Habibi was arrested where he teaches, in the Shahryar district of Tehran province, on the charge of spreading propaganda against the regime and society as well as conspiring against national security.
His arrest was accompanied by profanity and vulgar language on the part of the agents, directed at him.
The case against Habibi has been brought by the Ministry of Intelligence and Security of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
This latest arrest comes less than two months after his release from prison following a previous sentence of incarceration on account of his trade union activities.
Khadijeh Pakzamir, Habibi’s wife, said about his arrest: “Today [Wednesday April 5] at noon, four agents of the Intelligence Department of West Tehran Province went to the school at which he was teaching and, holding an arrest warrant, arrested my husband, Mohammad Habibi, and brought him home to search the house while directing obscenities at both him and me throughout. He was then transferred to ward 209 of Evin prison.”
Pakzamir also said that her husband had told her, in a telephone call from prison, that he had been “beaten in the car by the security forces” while en route to the prison.
Habibi had previously been arrested in Tehran on April 30 2022. His court hearing on the charges levelled against him, on account of his activities as the spokesperson of the ITTA, was held on Wednesday October 12 2022 in the Evin prison courthouse.
He was sentenced by Branch 26 of Tehran Revolutionary Court to three years and seven months’ imprisonment on the charge of assembly and collusion, one year of imprisonment on the charge of propaganda against the regime, and a two-year ban from membership and activities in political/trade union groups, as well as a ban on leaving the country.
There are now growing fears for the safety and wellbeing of Habibi as well as regarding the draconian punishment likely to be awaiting him — merely for his legitimate activities as the official spokesperson and representative of the ITTA, the main teachers’ and education workers’ trade union in Iran.
This arrest is seen as the latest cynical act by the regime to move against and quell one of the current focal points of organised opposition in the country, following continuous protests by teachers, education workers and retirees from the sector, over the recent Nowruz (Iranian new year) holidays. It is unusual for concerted trade union activity to continue without pause over Iran’s main festive period.
The ITTA members gathered outside government Education Ministry buildings and loudly protested, attracting evident support from the wider public.
The CCITTA was also one of the chief initiators and signatories of the 12-point charter for reform jointly issued on Tuesday February 14 by a coalition of independent trade unions and civil organisations inside Iran to huge popular acclaim.
This development has been warmly welcomed by progressive currents in the country and publicly endorsed by the incarcerated former prime minister and leader of the opposition Green Movement, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, among several other high-profile public figures.
The charter includes provisions such as the immediate and unconditional release of political prisoners; the public trials of the perpetrators of suppression of the popular protests; freedom of opinion, expression (including the media), assembly and industrial action; and immediate abolition of the death penalty as well as any type of torture. The recognition of women’s rights as equal to those of men has also been emphasised in the charter.
The arrest of Habibi also took place on the same day as a resurgence in public anger and distressing scenes amid reports of yet more mysterious poison gas attacks on girls’ school premises, leading to the hospitalisation of several female students, at the beginning of term following the new year holidays.
The Committee for Defence of Iranian People’s Rights (Codir) condemns the arrest and mistreatment of Mohammad Habibi, as another example of a politically motivated arrest by a dictatorship now under increasing pressure amid mounting public disaffection and defiance.
This latest news provides yet more evidence, if any were needed, of the Islamic Republic regime’s utter contempt for even basic democratic norms.
Habibi has been pursued solely on account of his legitimate trade union activities and now rejoins an already significant number of ITTA activists and members incarcerated in the regime’s brutal prisons — including their former secretary, Esmail Abdi.
It is testament to their unwavering resolve and stance that the teacher union activists currently account for one of the highest proportions of political prisoners from any single group or current in Iran today.
Codir calls for the immediate, unconditional, and safe release of Mohammad Habibi — and for a campaign of protest and pressure against the authorities in Iran for as long as this call remains unheeded.
We reiterate our longstanding demand for the release of all trade unionists, civic activists, and political prisoners in Iran, and a definitive end to the regime’s campaign of persecution against them.
Finally, Codir calls upon the NEU, NASUWT, UCU, and other trade unions to show their principled support for, and solidarity with, their beleaguered counterparts in Iran.
We likewise call upon the support of democratic, progressive and pro-peace forces around the world for the popular anti-dictatorship movement struggling inside Iran.
Source » morningstaronline