Detained Leftist Students on Brink of Freedom

نویسنده
Shirin Karimi

Although the Ministry of Intelligence has accused leftist students arrested during a student ‎gathering earlier this month of “acting against national security,” deputy head of the Majlis ‎National Security Committee announced yesterday in a meeting with the families of detained ‎students that “almost all of the detainees are students who have not committed any serious crime, ‎but who have committed minor violations and will be punished lightly and accordingly.” ‎

According to Nasser Zarafshan, who represents the detained students, more than 30 students ‎have been arrested. A committee has been formed to follow up on the release of the detained ‎students. In a statement released yesterday, the committee reported, “based on prior ‎arrangements, the families of detained students met today, Tuesday, 28 Azar of 1386 [December ‎‎18, 2007], at 13:30, with Mr. Mohammadi, deputy head of the National Security Committee. ‎Mr. Mohammadi, who attended the meeting half an hour late, was confronted by the families the ‎students about reports of harsh treatment of detainees at Evin’s Ward 209. The families of ‎students announced that even though reports of physical torture of their loved ones came from ‎unofficial channels, they themselves had witnessed their loved ones being subjected to physical ‎and psychological torture.“‎

The report continues, “In response to these protests, Mr. Mohammadi announced that ‎representatives from the ministry of intelligence had briefed the lawmakers extensively about he ‎details of these cases in a span of four meetings.” ‎

Previously, Nasser Zarafshan told Rooz, “all of the detainees are students. We have the name of ‎their universities, their years, and exact information about them. The number of the detainees is ‎around 32, although there is some discrepancy about the names of 1 or 2 people and whether ‎they were arrested or not. Other than that, the identity of the rest of them is clear. That’s why I ‎don’t know that the ministry of intelligence means by ‘anarchist’ and ‘fabricated documents,’ ‎although the ministry’s statement does not specify any names. If they mean the student ‎movement, I have to say that those labels do not apply to these students. These detainees are ‎students and did not become students yesterday or the day before. I hope that this not an ‎example of a case in which they sew the clothes too big and now they have to fatten the body to ‎fit the clothes. In effect, they went too far and now they want to justify it by throwing these ‎wrong labels around.” ‎

Protests were held in universities across Iran in response to the mass arrest of leftist students. ‎Protests at the Shahid Rajai University were the latest instance. Students have announced that ‎they will continue to protest until their colleagues are released from detention. ‎