USCIRF ADVOCATE: Kristina Arriaga
Country:
Iran
Key Fact:

Educator and Baha'i member

Charges:

Espionage, propaganda against the Islamic Republic, and establishment of an illegal administration

Sentence:

Mavash Sabet was released in September 2017 after serving her 10-year sentence under false charges.

Detained Since:

Mar 5, 2008

Release Date:

Sep 18, 2017

Biography:

Mahvash Sabet was born on February 4, 1953 in Ardestan, Iran. Ms. Sabet moved to Tehran when she was in the fifth grade and eventually received a bachelor’s degree in psychology. Ms. Sabet married Siyvash Sabet on May 21, 1973 and has a son and daughter.

Ms. Sabet began her career as a teacher and also worked as a principal at several schools.  Like thousands of other Iranian Baha’i educators after the Islamic Revolution, she was fired from her job and barred from working in public education. She then became director at the Baha’i Institute for Higher Education, a university established by the Baha’i community in 1987 to meet the educational needs of young people who have been systematically denied access to higher education by the Iranian government.

Ms. Sabet was one of the seven Baha’i leaders who were part of the ad hoc group known as “Yaran” or “Friends.” This group tended to the spiritual and social needs of the Iranian Baha’i community given the absence of formally elected Baha’i leadership. Ms. Sabet was the first of the Baha’i Seven to be arrested on March 5, 2008 after she was apprehended while visiting Mashhad. The Baha’i Seven were placed in solitary confinement for months, and spent a year behind bars without access to legal counsel. In 2010, the seven were tried and convicted of charges of “espionage” and “spreading propaganda against the regime.” They each were sentenced to 20 years in prison, the longest of any current prisoner of conscience in Iran.

In 2013, Iran passed a reformed Islamic Penal Code that stipulated that courts may carry out only the most severe punishment assigned to a prisoner, rather than carrying out multiple, similar punishments for related crimes. In early 2016, the Baha’i 7 were informed that this rule would be applied to their cases, reducing their imprisonment from 20 years to 10 years.

Ms. Sabet was held in Tehran’s Evin prison, along with other female prisoners of conscience, including Fariba Kamalabadi. Ms. Sabet wrote poems about her experiences while in prison, which she composed on scraps of paper and gave to friends and family. In 2013, they were published as a book, Prison Poems.

Mavash Sabet was released in September 2017 after serving her 10-year sentence under false charges.

Country:
Russia
Key Fact:

Said Nursi follower

Charges:

Organizing extremist activity

Sentence:

After three and a half years' imprisonment, Bagir Kazikhanov was reportedly released in October 2017.

Detained Since:

Apr 9, 2014

Release Date:

Oct 12, 2017

Biography:

Bagir Kazikhanov was born on September 9, 1983 in the Republic of Dagestan, an administrative entity of the Russian Federation.

Mr. Kazikhanov organized regular Islamic study sessions in rented flats between 2012 and 2014. During these sessions, he and his fellow Muslims studied the works of the Turkish Islamic revivalist theologian Said Nursi, along with watching football. Nursi, who died in 1960, was an ethnic Kurd who wrote a body of Quranic commentary advocating the modernization of Islamic education. Nursi also criticized the secular character of the post-Ottoman Turkish government, for which he was persecuted. Nursi’s emphasis on the integration of modern science into Islamic learning is said to have been an inspiration to Fethullah Gülen, the prominent exiled Turkish Islamic preacher. Although Nursi’s writings do not advocate hatred, violence, or the violation of human rights, many of Nursi’s works are banned in Russia, reportedly due to state opposition to foreign spiritual and cultural influence.

Mr. Kazikhanov was arrested in the city of Ulyanovsk on April 9, 2014, after participating in one of these study sessions, which authorities deemed to be the “organization of extremist activity” under the Criminal Code Article 282.2, Part 1. He was accused of recruiting a terrorist cell of Nursi followers as part of a supposed “Nurdzhular” movement, which officially was banned in Russia in 2008 but is widely believed to be a legal fiction invented for the purpose of prosecuting Nursi adherents. Mr. Kazikhanov was held in a pre-trial detention center from April to October 2014, and then placed under house arrest until his February 25, 2015, conviction by Judge Natalya Damayeva at the Lenin District Court in Ulyanovsk.  The Judge sentenced him to three and a half years’ imprisonment.

After three and a half years' imprisonment, Bagir Kazikhanov was reportedly released in October 2017.

Country:
Iran
Key Fact:

Developmental psychologist and Baha'i member

Charges:

Espionage, propaganda against the Islamic Republic, and establishment of an illegal administration

Sentence:

Fariba Kamalabadi was released in October 2017 after serving her full 10-year sentence under false charges.

Detained Since:

May 14, 2008

Release Date:

Oct 31, 2017

Biography:

Fariba Kamalabadi was born on September 12, 1962, in Tehran, Iran. Ms. Kamalabadi graduated from high school with honors but was barred from attending university due to her Baha’i faith.

In her mid-30s, Ms. Kamalabadi embarked on an eight-year period of informal study and eventually received an advanced degree in developmental psychology from the Baha’i Institute of Higher Education (BIHE), an alternative institution the Baha’i community of Iran established to provide higher education for its young people. The Iranian government does not recognize the BIHE.

Ms. Kamalabadi is one of the seven Baha’i leaders known as “Yaran” or “Friends,” who tended to the spiritual and social needs of the Iranian Baha’i community in the absence of formally elected Baha’i leadership due to restrictions by the Iranian government. The other six members are Mahvash Sabet, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Afif Naeimi, Saeid Rezaie, Behrouz Tavakkoli, and Vahid Tizfahm.

Ms. Kamalabadi was arrested on May 14, 2008 after an early morning raid on her home. Ms. Kamalabadi and the other Baha’i Seven were held incommunicado for weeks, placed in solitary confinement for months, and spent a year behind bars without access to legal counsel. In 2010, the seven were tried and convicted of charges of “espionage” and “spreading propaganda against the regime.” The Seven were sentenced to 20 years in prison, the longest of any current prisoner of conscience in Iran.

In 2013, Iran passed a reformed Islamic Penal Code that stipulated that courts may carry out only the most severe punishment assigned to a prisoner, rather than carrying out multiple, similar punishments for related crimes. In early 2016, the Baha’i 7 were informed that this rule would be applied to their cases, reducing their imprisonment from 20 years to 10 years.

Ms. Kamalabadi was released in October 2017 after serving her full 10-year sentence under false charges.

Ms. Kamalabadi was held in Tehran’s Evin prison, along with other female prisoners of conscience, including Mahvash Sabet.

Ms. Kamalabadi married fellow Baha’i Ruhollah Taefi in 1982 and they have three children, Vargha, Alhan, and Taraneh. Ms. Kamalabadi's father was fired from his job in the government health service in the 1980s because he was a Baha’i; he was later imprisoned and tortured.