Iranian Committee for the Defense of Freedom and Human Rights
The Iranian Committee for the Defense of Freedom and Human Rights (Persian: جمعیت ایرانی دفاع از آزادی و حقوق بشر) was an Iranian organization that was founded in 1977.[3]
Abbreviation | ICDFHR |
---|---|
Formation | October 1977 |
Headquarters | Tehran, Iran |
Chairman | Mehdi Bazargan (1977–1979)[1] Asghar Sayyed Javadi (1979–1980) |
Vice Chairman | Asghar Sayyed Javadi (1977–1979)[1] Abdolkarim Lahiji (1979–1980) |
Spokesperson | Abdolkarim Lahiji[1] |
Treasurer | Nasser Minachi[2] |
Establishment
At the initiative Abolfazl Zanjani and Fathollah Banisadr, and through personal contacts and friendship circles, the organization was founded in fall 1977 n the house of Karim Sanjabi.[4] The headquarter was in a house next to Hosseiniyeh Ershad, first under cover of a legal firm owned by Ahmad Sayyed Javadi and Asadollah Mobasheri, and then officially as the ICDFHR office.[5]
Activities
Their first act was to send an open letter to Kurt Waldheim, Secretary-General of the United Nations, complaining about systematic violations of human rights in Iran.[3] The letter was drafted by Hasan Nazih and delivered to the UN by Fereydun Sahabi.[1]
On 7 December 1977, the group made its existence public[1] and held its first public press conference on 12 January 1978. Two days later, Waldheim came to Tehran for an official visit and confirmed that he had received an appeal from the group.[6] Americans such as William J. Butler, Ramsey Clark, Richard Cottam and Richard A. Falk were in touch with the organization.[1][5]
After Iranian Revolution, ICDFHR collected money from the Red Lion and Sun Society and the National Iranian Oil Company, respectively headed by Kazem Sami and Hasan Nazih who were both founding members of the group. Summed with the money collected from the civil society (e.g. philanthropists and bazaari merchants), the organization provided financial assistance to some 800 political prisoners of the former regime who were recently released from the prison.[7]
Composition
Houchang Chehabi describes the group as the main organization that represented "the intellectual, reformist, middle class" opposition to Pahlavi dynasty.[7]
The founders of the ICDFHR were opposition figures, resembling the National Front (II)'s central council of I960, which included secular and religious personalities. Among the twenty-nine members of the founding council, only eleven were religious-oriented, however, secular members were also politically close to Mehdi Bazargan and Freedom Movement of Iran, an Islamic party.[4] The seven-man executive council of the ICDFHR had equal representation of both factions, and elected Bazargan as the chairman with 6 votes to 1.[1] Following the revolution, ICDFHR executive council members who were appointed to office in the Interim Government of Iran resigned from the group, and it became more secular.[7]
Crackdown
Members of the ICDFHR came under pressure from SAVAK. On 8 April 1978, the same day that Habibollah Peyman was beaten up in the street, three others –Moghaddam, Bazargan and Sanjabi– received death threats.[6]
In November 1980, after the cabinet of Bazargan resigned as a result of hostage crisis, ICDFHR office was attacked and everything there from documents to furniture was either destroyed or taken away.[8]
References
- Chehabi 1986, p. 443
- Chehabi 1986, p. 460
- Abrahamian 1986, p. 503
- Chehabi 1986, pp. 441–442
- Chehabi 1986, p. C445
- Chehabi 1986, p. 444
- Chehabi 1986, p. 446
- Chehabi 1986, p. 447
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Chehabi, Houchang Esfandiar (1986). Modernist Shi'ism and Politics: The Liberation Movement of Iran (PhD Dissertation). I/II. Yale University. ASIN B0007CAVDC.
External links
- Statute of ICDFHR (PDF) (in Persian), Freedom Movement of Iran