Letter reveals government policy of
expelling Baha'i university studentsIn Iran, repression of the Baha’i community is official government policy.
This policy is outlined in a previously secret memorandum
that was uncovered and published by the U.N. Human Rights Commission in
1993. Written by the Iranian Supreme Revolutionary Cultural Council in
1991 and signed by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, this document provides
a blueprint for the suppression of the Iranian Baha’i community. It
contains specific guidelines for dealing with the Baha'is so that
“their progress and development are blocked.”
Some 300,000 Baha’is live throughout Iran, making the Baha’i Faith the country’s largest minority religion. Baha’is have been targets of discrimination and violence in Iran since the religion began there in the mid-nineteenth century. More than 200 Baha’is were killed in Iran between 1978 and 1998, the majority by execution, and thousands more were imprisoned.
Today the Iranian government regards Baha’is as apostates and
“unprotected infidels.” Baha’is in Iran have no legal rights, and they
are not permitted to elect leaders of their community. The Baha’i Faith
has no clergy, and community affairs are coordinated by democratically
elected governing councils called Spiritual Assemblies.
Baha'is in Iran are systematically denied jobs, pensions and the
right to inherit property. More than 10,000 Baha’is have been dismissed
from government and university posts since Iran’s 1979 revolution.
A letter from an Iranian university,
Payame Noor, states that it is Iranian government policy to prevent
Baha'is, on account of their religion, from enrolling in universities
and that they must be expelled if discovered to have enrolled. A confidential letter
issued in 2006 by the director general of the Central Security Office
of Iran’s Ministry of Science, Research and Technology instructs
eighty-one Iranian universities to expel any student who is discovered
to be a Baha'i.
Baha'is have been barred from institutions of higher education since 1980.
All Baha’i cemeteries, holy places and community properties were
seized soon after the 1979 revolution. None have been returned, and
many sites of the greatest historical significance to Baha’is have been
destroyed.
In November 2004, the Baha’is of Iran wrote a courteous letter
to then-President Mohammad Khatami in which they requested that their
civil and human rights be respected. Since that letter was distributed,
Baha’is throughout the country have been arrested and detained for
varying periods of time.
The above statements are excerpts from the site below.
see for further information :www.Bahai.us
Laila