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"The early morning raids on the homes of these prominent Baha'is were well-coordinated, and it is clear they represent a high-level effort to strike again at the Baha'is and to intimidate the Iranian Baha'i community at large."
Islamic Tolerance Alert. "Iran's arrest of Baha'is condemned," from CNN, May 16:
(CNN) -- Six Baha'i leaders in Iran were seized and imprisoned this week, the religious group said. The act prompted condemnation and concern from the movement and a top American religious freedom panel.
Iranian intelligence agents searched the homes of the six on Wednesday and then whisked them away, according to the Baha'i's World News Service. The report said the six are in Evin prison and that the arrests follow the detention in March of another Baha'i leader.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry could not immediately be reached for comment, and the incident has not been mentioned in Iran's state-run media.
"Their only crime is their practice of the Baha'i faith," said Bani Dugal, the principal representative of the Baha'i international community to the United Nations.
The group -- regarded as the largest non-Muslim religious minority in Iran -- says the arrests are reminiscent of roundups and killings of Baha'is that took place in Iran two decades ago.
"Especially disturbing is how this latest sweep recalls the wholesale arrest or abduction of the members of two national Iranian Baha'i governing councils in the early 1980s -- which led to the disappearance or execution of 17 individuals," Dugal said.
"The early morning raids on the homes of these prominent Baha'is were well-coordinated, and it is clear they represent a high-level effort to strike again at the Baha'is and to intimidate the Iranian Baha'i community at large," she added.
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom -- a government panel that advises the president and Congress -- condemned the Wednesday arrests, as well as another in March. The commission chairman called the acts the "latest sign of the rapidly deteriorating status of religious freedom and other human rights in Iran."
The commission said the seven were members of an informal Baha'i group that tended to the needs of the community after the Iranian government banned all formal Baha'i activity in 1983.
The commission chairman, Michael Cromartie, echoed the fears that the "development signals a return to the darkest days of repression in Iran in the 1980s when Baha'is were routinely arrested, imprisoned, and executed."
The Baha'is are regarded as "apostates" in Iran and have been persecuted there for years.
"Since 1979, Iranian authorities have killed more than 200 Baha'i leaders, thousands have been arrested and imprisoned, and more than 10,000 have been dismissed from government and university jobs," the commission said.
The commission said that since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power a few years ago, Baha'is "have been harassed, physically attacked, arrested, and imprisoned."
Posted by Marisol at May 16, 2008 12:48 PM
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Bahaism was, at heart, an attempt to moderate and reform Islam during the nineteen century. This was the movement that naive Westerns want to see rise within Islam today. But Islam already spoke, and has crushed Bahaism wherever it appeared in "Dar al Islam". This is because Mohammad bluntly stated there is not to be any reform and he is the "last prophet."
http://www.bravenewsworld.blogspot.com
Posted by: Max Publius
at May 16, 2008 1:35 PM
"The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom -- a government panel that advises the president and Congress -- condemned the Wednesday arrests, as well as another in March."
I will bet the Iranian ayatollahs have their panites pulled tight now...which really hurts when you are laughing.
Posted by: pulsar182
at May 16, 2008 6:20 PM
But, But, But....................as Omer Shabani would say "there is no compulsion in religion".
Wait, that just means that unbelievers cannot compel Muslims to adopt their religions. Just one of the many interpretations of the Qur'an.
Posted by: tanstaafl
at May 17, 2008 5:44 PM
Obama must be pissed at these Baha'is.
His plans for talks with Achmadinejad, "without preconditions", are looking stupider and more catastrophically naive by the day.
Can't the Baha'is just die quietly so he doesn't come off as a complete geopolitical moron?
at May 17, 2008 10:47 PM
test
at May 17, 2008 11:37 PM
Bahai'ism is very much a universalist brotherhood, peace, kindness and good-will sort of religion.
And the bahais I have met, are very much what you would expect of people raised that way.
And these are the people that the mohammedans want to kill!
They've been murdering them with glee and abandon for generations.
Posted by: joeblough
at May 18, 2008 1:07 PM
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