Thursday, May 24, 2012


News / From Our Bureaus

Baha'is Barred From Leaving Iran

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The Baha'i representative to the United Nations says that 50 Baha'is in southern Iran have been barred from leaving the country, RFE/RL's Radio Farda reports.

Diane Alai of the Baha'i International Community told RFE/RL the Baha'is were arrested in 2006 for teaching classes to underprivileged children in suburban towns near Shiraz. She said three of them were sentenced to four years in jail and the others to one year in prison for their teaching activities.

Alai said the educational activities of the young Baha'is had nothing to do with promoting Baha'i beliefs. She says the reason for the travel ban is not clear.

Baha'is say hundreds of their followers have been jailed and executed since Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution. The government denies it has detained or executed people for their religious beliefs.

The Baha'i faith originated in Iran 150 years ago and has 5 million adherents worldwide, including an estimated 300,000 in Iran.
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by: Jake from: Wisconsin
April 01, 2010 03:05
Why do totalitarian regimes usually prevent critics from leaving when the opposite benefits everyone involved, especially with conspicuous minorities as in this case? Would Castro have endured for decades without the safety valve of letting dissenters escape to Florida with relative ease? If emigres become vocal critics, then the regime can simply accuse them of parroting lies and Western propaganda; they can even soften the accusations with condescending statements of concern for the emigres' well-being (because their statements were "obviously coerced"). And that's assuming the captive domestic audience even hears the critics, which is usually unlikely. For being such a socioeconomic train wreck, Cuba is still a powerful lesson in successful regime survival under geopolitical siege conditions. With Iran, it's been more a matter of luck on the regime's part and disunity on the opposition's part.

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