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December 13, 2025 8:43 pm

Iran: Weaponizing Justice System to Persecute Bahá’ís

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GENEVA—December 10, 2025—Iranian authorities are escalating their repression of Bahá’ís,
with a recent series of harsh prison sentences and asset confiscations, the Bahá’í International
Community (BIC) and Human Rights Watch said today. Iran’s judiciary has been leading the
persecution of Bahá’ís, amid increasing public incitement to discrimination by state officials, hate
propaganda, and disinformation targeting the religious minority community.
“Iranian authorities are relentlessly persecuting Bahá’ís, depriving them of the most basic human
rights in what amounts to ongoing crimes against humanity—solely because of their faith,” said
Bahar Saba, senior Iran researcher at Human Rights Watch. “There is virtually not a single aspect
of the lives of Bahá’ís in Iran that has not been affected by these egregious violations and crimes
under international law.”
The latest government crackdown, which intensified following the Israel-Iran conflict in June
2025, has involved arbitrary arrests, interrogations, unjust convictions, and imprisonments, as
well as property confiscations.
Between June and November 2025, the BIC documented more than 750 persecutory acts across
Iran, three times the number recorded during the same period in 2024. These incidents include
over 200 raids on homes and businesses, followed by interrogations, resulting in the detention
and arrest of at least 110 Bahá’ís. Revolutionary Courts held hearings for more than 100
individuals and issued new sentences against Bahá’ís, each ranging from two to ten years in
prison. At least 45 people were summoned to begin serving their prison sentences during this
period. Among those imprisoned are mothers who have been separated from their young children.
“A justice system that should deliver fairness and neutrality and serve as refuge against
oppression instead serves as a weapon of persecution against Bahá’ís, dissidents, and other
religious and ethnic minorities in Iran,” said Simin Fahandej, Representative of the Bahá’í
International Community to the United Nations in Geneva.
Judges in Iran have a track record of appalling disregard for due process and extreme religious
prejudice against Bahá’ís, Iran’s largest non-Muslim religious minority. Over the past 45 years, a
number of policy documents—developed in accordance with a 1991 memorandum signed by
Iran’s supreme leader—have exposed the government’s deliberate and systematic policy to
persecute Bahá’ís, including through the country’s justice system.
In April 2025, the European Union imposed sanctions on sections of Iran’s judiciary as well as
several judges and prosecutors for human rights violations, including the persecution of Bahá’ís.
“In case after case, the Iranian judiciary has shown itself unwilling to play its sacred duty as a
promoter of justice,” Fahandej said. “Instead, it has stained its hands and its record with verdicts

reeking of persecution and religious prejudice. These verdicts have been issued by judges who,
time and again, have sought not justice but the suppression of the Bahá’í community and are
deeply complicit in the state’s machinery of repression.”
The latest wave of persecution against Bahá’ís has been marked by detentions in circumstances
that may amount to enforced disappearances and an escalation in long prison sentences following
grossly unfair trials. In some cases, courts have insisted on handing down harsh sentences after
the Supreme Court overturned verdicts and ordered retrials, or officials have reopened criminal
proceedings against Bahá’ís following acquittals.
According to information obtained by the BIC, on November 12, security forces in Gorgan,
Golestan province, arrested Farhad Fahandej after searching his home and seizing his personal
belongings. His whereabouts, the reason for the arrest, and any charges against him remained
unknown for weeks after the arrest. Fahandej had previously spent 15 years in prison in
connection with his religious beliefs.
In late October 2025 in Semnan, Anisa Fanaian, a Bahá’í woman imprisoned in the past for her
faith, was convicted of vaguely-worded charges by Branch 10 of the Semnan Appeals Court and
sentenced to eight years in prison. The verdict came after the Supreme Court had overturned a
lower court verdict against her, following a judicial review request, and sent the case back for
retrial.
In another deeply alarming case that bears all the hallmarks of the state wielding the judiciary as a
tool of repression, the authorities have reopened criminal cases against 26 Bahá’ís in Shiraz.
According to information obtained by the BIC, the 26 were acquitted following a Supreme Court

decision that overturned their convictions and sentences in 2022 and ordered a retrial. The re-
initiation of criminal proceedings in the case reportedly comes at the request of a former

provincial chief justice pursuant to domestic law procedures that strongly suggests the direct
involvement of the head of the judiciary. Information obtained by the BIC also indicates that
many of the 26 were subjected to torture and ill-treatment at the time of their initial arrests in
2016. In an incident emblematic of judicial officials’ violations of the most basic due process
guarantees, the former chief justice insulted the defense lawyer in the case during a routine
follow-up meeting, threw him out of his office, saying: “They’re not suspects, they’re criminals.”
In a case in Kerman on November 29, 2025, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported
that the Appeal Court in the province had sentenced Shahram Fallah, 64, to nine years and six
months in prison—reduced from over 13 years—and a year of internal exile on charges of
“deviant educational and propagation activities contrary to Shar’ia” and “forming a group to
disrupt national security.” The charges mirror those used in other cases to criminalize peaceful
Bahá’í belief.
In Hamadan, six Bahá’í women—Neda Mohebbi, Atefeh Zahedi, Farideh Ayyoubi, Noura
Ayyoubi, Zarrindokht Ahadzadeh, and Jaleh Rezaie—were taken into custody on 26 October to
serve their prison terms. Authorities had sentenced five of them to six years in prison and the
sixth to a seven-year term. The women, some of them mothers of young children, faced charges
of “deviant educational and propagation activities contrary to Shar’ia” and “membership in the
Bahá’í sect.”

In Karaj, Nahid Behrouzi was sentenced on October 6 to harsh punishment, including five years
in prison and the confiscation of personal property for “deviant educational and propagation
activities contrary to the holy Shar’ia.” According to information obtained by the BIC, several
agents violently arrested her without a warrant on August 29, 2024. She suffered bruises and a
nosebleed as a result. She was subsequently detained for 65 days without access to a lawyer or
proper medical care. During trial, her lawyer was denied full access to her case file and no
evidence was presented to support the charges.
In Shiraz, Roya Sabet, a resident of the UAE who had come to Iran to care for her elderly parents,
was arrested on October 25, 2025 by agents of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and
transferred to Adelabad Prison to enforce a 10-year prison sentence she had previously received.
Information reviewed by the BIC showed that she had been convicted in May 2025 on baseless
charges of “collaboration with citizens of the Israeli government” and “forming a group against
national security.” She also faces a two-year travel ban and a five-year ban for online activities.
In another case that is emblematic of the intensification of the state crackdown on Bahá’í women,
on September 28, 2025, authorities upheld prison sentences of between five and ten years against
10 Bahá’í women in Isfahan, for “propaganda against the Islamic Republic” and “participation in
deviant propagation and educational activities contrary to the holy Shari’a.”
Authorities’ policy of economic dispossession of Bahá’ís has also continued unabated. In a recent
case in Isfahan, the BIC found that authorities had invoked Article 49 of the Constitution, a
clause enabling the state to seize “illegal” assets, to appropriate the legitimate properties of 20
Bahá’ís in the province including their homes, vehicles, and bank accounts without due process.
“All individuals involved in crimes under international law committed against Bahá’ís in Iran,
including prosecutorial and judicial officials, should be held accountable,” Human Right Watch’s
Bahar Saba said.

Sanjeevni Today
Author: Sanjeevni Today

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