
IRAN: fear of reprisal against baluch population following suicide attack in Pishin by
armed group
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
20 October 2009 AI Index: MDE 13/112/2009 IRAN: fear of reprisal against baluch population following suicide attack in
Pishin by armed group In the light of media reports that many civilians were among the dead and injured, Amnesty
International fears that a suicide attack in south-eastern Iran on 18 October 2009, claimed by the People's Resistance
Movement of Iran (PRMI) may have been disproportionate and in violation of the principles of international humanitarian
law that the PRMI has pledged to uphold. The organization is also concerned at reports that the PRMI has threatened
the lives of local members of parliament. The organization is also concerned about the Iranian government's promise to
have a "crushing response" in reaction to the attack as this is likely to lead to human rights violations. Amnesty
International’s fears are heightened by the Iranian authorities’ reaction in the past to such attacks and the
reprisals taken against the Baluch civilian population by carrying out arbitrary arrests, torturing suspects and summarily
executing Baluch prisoners on death row. According to news reports, at least 42 people died and a dozen of people were
injured in a suicide attack in the Sistan-Baluchistan province in south-eastern Iran. The attack targeted a group of
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards commanders who were visiting the district of Pishin near the borders with Pakistan to
meet local tribal leaders. At least six Revolutionary Guards leaders were killed and many of the other casualties are
believed to have been civilians, including tribal leaders. The PRMI is a Baluch armed group opposed to the Iranian
government and which claims to be fighting on behalf of Baluchis and Sunnis, and is also known as Jondallah. In recent
years, the PRMI has carried out several attacks on Iranian governmental forces in Sistan-Baluchistan province, carrying
out bombings, including suicide attacks, and killing captured officials. Amnesty International has repeatedly condemned
such abuses. Shortly before the presidential elections in June, a PRMI member carried out a suicide bomb attack on a
mosque in the provincial capital of Zahedan on 28 May. At least 25 people were reported to have been killed and dozens
more were injured. The PRMI said that the attack was a reprisal for the execution of several Sunni clerics in recent years.
Less than 48 hours after the bombing, three men were hanged in public near the site of the attack amid claims that they
were responsible. Later comments clarified that the three men had been in detention at the time of the bombing, but that
they had "confessed" to providing the explosives used in the bombing. Further unrest broke out afterwards with up to ten
people killed, and dozens arrested. Subsequently on 14 July 2009 13 Baluch prisoners whom the authorities said were
PRMI members and had been convicted of “enmity against God” for "kidnapping foreigners, killing
innocents and of carrying out terrorist acts for the Jondallah group," were executed in prison in Zahedan Earlier, five days
after the February 2007 bombing of a bus carrying Revolutionary Guards personnel in Zahedan, the authorities
announced the execution of Nasrollah Shanbezehi. Arrested in the hours after the bombing, he was hanged in public at
the site of the bombing. At the time of his execution, pictures showed an injury on his face. He was said to have been
tried and sentenced by a branch of the Revolutionary Court after his televised "confession" had been broadcast the day
after the bombing. Baluchi sources have said that he was arrested because he was taking a picture of the bus with his
mobile phone. Although Amnesty International believes that Iran has a responsibility to maintain security and bring those
responsible to human rights violations to justice, the Iranian authorities must act in accordance with international human
rights law. The PRMI must also immediately desist from carrying out human rights abuses, such as attacks on civilians
including local politicians, indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks, hostage-taking, and the killing of hostages or of
captured members of the security forces. Background Iran's Baluch minority suffer discrimination by the state authorities
leading to gross violations of their economic, social and cultural rights. They live mainly in the provinces of Sistan-
Baluchistan and Kerman, and are believed to constitute between one to three per cent of the country’s total
population of around 70 million. They are mostly Sunni Muslims, whereas the majority of Iran’s population are
Shi'a Muslims. For further information, see http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/iran-presidential-electionamid-
unrest-and-ongoing-human-rights-violations-20090605 http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/irangovernment-
must-stop-executions-14-men-20090713 and Iran:Human Rights Abuses against the Baluchi minority
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/104/2007 Public Document **************************************** For more
information please call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566 or email:
press@amnesty.org International Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW, UK
www.amnesty.org
TGMACS
http://www.tgmacs.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=1445
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