America
and the world stands up for the people of Iran... H-II:
Support for
National Society
of Film Critics Statement On Jailed Iranian Directors: Humanitarian
Intervention Initiative, 12 January 2011.
In The News
The
International Film Festival Rotterdam adds free screenings of
films by Iranian filmmakers Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof to the
festival’s programme. On the festival’s website, the IFFR posts
portraits of festival visitors holding name cards of both filmmakers as
a protest against their conviction. -- Protest
against conviction Iranian filmmakers Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof
: 2012 International Film Festival Rotterdam.
--------------------------------------
12 January
2011
Humanitarian Resource Institute
Phone: (203) 668-0282
Url: www.humanitarian.net
United Nations Arts Initiative
Arts Integration Into Education
Url: www.unarts.org
Twitter: unarts
Humanitarian Intervention Initiative (H-II)
Url: http://www.unarts.org/H-II
H-II: Support for
National Society
of Film Critics Statement On Jailed Iranian Directors
The death of Neda Agha-Soltani, [1] blood gushing from her body as she
died, was aired by media networks "In a Death Seen Around the World, a
Symbol of Iranian Protests." [2]
Neda's death represented the starting point for
intensive Human Rights Reporting, Evidence Collection and Witness
Protection. [3, 4] Today, 192 United Nations countries are now
engaged in efforts
to advance formal legal action for Crimes Against Humanity, [5,6]
including Genocide within the country of Iran.
In the report " The Massacre of Political Prisoners in 1988" [7]
published by the Abdorraham Boroumand Foundation, [8] author
Geoffrey Robertson QC finds that the state of Iran has committed four
exceptionally serious breaches of jus cogens rules of international law
which entail both state responsibility and individual accountability
for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Geoffrey Robertson QC [9] is founder and Head of Doughty
Street
Chambers, London. He has appeared in many countries as counsel in
leading
cases in constitutional, human rights, criminal and international law
and
served as the first President and Appeal Judge in the UN War Crimes
Court
in Sierra Leone, where he authored landmark decisions on the limits of
amnesties,
the illegality of recruiting child soldiers and other critical issues
in
the development of international criminal law. In 2008, he was
appointed
by the UN Secretary-General as one of the “distinguished jurist”
members
of the UN Internal Justice Council.
Genocide of Children in Iran [10] has also been
added
to the list of war crimes and crimes
against humanity
for a International Criminal Tribunal by the UN Human
Rights
Commission. The failure of the international
community
to protect these populations for close to three decades, from
1979-present,
has prompted a call for attorneys in every UN country to join and
support
the International Bar Association Human Rights Institute. [11]
According to the Boston Globe article "Jailed Iranian filmmakers' works
can still be seen — here," [12] we read:
During the “Green Revolution’’ of summer 2009 that
followed
Iran’s disputed presidential election, Panahi was arrested while
attending
the funeral of Neda Agha-Soltan, a peaceful protester whose murder was
captured on videotape and seen by a global audience. No charges were
specified; Panahi was released but banned from leaving the country. On
March 1, 2010, Panahi [13] and Rasoulof [14] were arrested again and
taken with family and friends to Tehran’s Evin Prison. An international
outcry and petitions from dozens of filmmakers, including Francis Ford
Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and the Coen brothers,
followed.
Last
month, both men were convicted of “assembly and colluding with the
intention
to commit crimes against the country’s national security and propaganda
against the Islamic Republic.’’ Essentially, they’re guilty of being
filmmakers
and of having a point of view. Both received six years in prison, but
Panahi’s
sentence carries an especially cruel codicil: He has been banned from
making
movies for 20 years.
STATEMENT
ON
JAILED IRANIAN DIRECTORS [15]
On December 18, 2010, an Iranian court
sentenced
Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof to six years in prison and banned
both
from filmmaking for 20 years for “colluding in gatherings and making
propaganda against the regime.”
The members of the National Society of Film Critics add their voices to
those of the many other individuals and organizations who have
protested this injustice. We strongly urge the Iranian government to
release both artists, whose work can only further the advancement of
such values as justice, compassion, tolerance, and human dignity. Jafar
Panahi’s films in particular have won international awards, earned the
accolades of critics all over the
world, and delighted and inspired audiences everywhere they are shown.
Not
only
does the court’s decision impose an outrageous penalty on artists whose
sole crime is telling the truth, but it deprives Iran and the world of
future works by filmmakers of outstanding talent and vision.
We
intend
our protest to affirm the value of artistic expression and the power of
cinema to transcend political differences and unite people in their
common
humanity. We hope that the Iranian government will recognize the wisdom
of releasing Mr. Panahi and Mr. Rasoulof immediately in the name of
these
universal principles.
Country
Music
Association Artist H-II: Stephen
Michael
Apatow is founder of the Humanitarian Resource Institute and United
Nations
Arts Initiative. Since 1989, national project development and advocacy
work included the formation of Humanitarian Resource Institute
(www.humanitarian.net),
to "Bridge Unmet Needs to Untapped Resources." Today, this work
continues
through the United Nations Arts Initiative (www.unarts.org) and global
promotion
of "Arts Integration Into Education." He is also a Member/Publisher:
American
Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP).
References:
1. Death
of Neda Agha-Soltan: Wickpedia. Url: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neda_Soltani
2. In a Death Seen Around the World, a Symbol of Iranian
Protests: New York Times, 22 June 2009.Url: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/23/world/middleeast/23neda.html?ref=middleeast
3. H-II: G-192 Human Rights Reporting - Evidence Collection -
Witness Protection, Humanitarian Resource Institute Humanitarian
Intervention Initiative, 23 June 2009. Url: http://www.unarts.org/news/nedasoltan_6232009.html
4. H-II Iran: Humanitarian Intervention Initiative. Url: http://www.unarts.org/H-II/Iran
5. Iran: Crimes Against Humanity: New Legal Standard: Humanitarian
Resource Institute, 4 January 2011. Url: http://www.unarts.org/H-II/ref/142011OHCHR.html
6. Crimes Against Humanity: Religious Justification: Humanitarian
Resource Institute, 7 January 2011. Url: http://www.unarts.org/H-II/ref/172011OHCHR.html
7. The Massacre of Political Prisoners in 1988: Geoffrey Robertson QC,
Abdorraham Boroumand Foundation. Url: http://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/files/Iran
Massacre Report.pdf Alt: http://www.unarts.org/H-II/ref/IMReport1988.pdf
8. Abdorraham Boroumand Foundation. Url: http://www.iranrights.org/
9. Geoffrey Robertson QC: Doughty Street Chambers. Url: http://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/barristers/geoffrey_robertson_qc.cfm
10. Ahmadinejad's World: Matthias Küntzel, 30 July 2006.
Url: http://www.matthiaskuentzel.de/contents/ahmadinejads-world
11. International Bar Association Human Rights Institute: Url: http://www.ibanet.org/IBAHRI.aspx
12. Jailed Iranian filmmakers' works can still be seen — here: Boston
Globe, 9 January 2011. Url: http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2011/01/09/jailed_iranian_filmmakers_works_can_still_be_seen__here/
13.Jafar Panahi - IMDb: Url: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0070159/
14. Mohammad Rasoulof - IMDb: Url: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1488024/
15. Statement On jailed Iranian Directors: National Society Of Film
Critics 2010 Awards & Statements, 8 January 2011. Url: http://moviecitynews.com/2011/01/national-society-of-film-critics-2010-awards-statements/
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