HRW: Ukraine Airline Victims’ Families Harassed, Abused
The Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that Iranian authorities have engaged in a campaign of harassment and abuse against families of people killed in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s (IRGC) downing of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 in January 2020.
The authorities indicted 10 people
for their role in the incident but have not provided any public information
about their identities, ranks, or the charges against them.
Governments participating in the
Flight 752 investigation should support family members of victims in pursuing a
path for justice and accountability, said HRW.
The organization interviewed 31
family members of victims and people with direct knowledge from October 2020 to
January 2021. They said that Iran’s security agencies had arbitrarily detained,
summoned, abusively interrogated, tortured, and otherwise mistreated victims’
family members.
The agencies also failed to return
victims’ possessions to their relatives and interfered with burial and memorial
gatherings in an apparent attempt to curtail efforts for accountability.
HRW deputy Middle East director
Michael Page said that IRGC killed 176 people without a shred of
accountability, and now Iran’s brutal security agencies are abusing victims’
family members to squash any hope for justice.
“Rather than attempting to regain people’s trust
through a transparent investigation and redress for the families, the
authorities are again silencing accountability efforts.”
On January 8, 2020, the Ukrainian
plane was downed close to Tehran’s Imam Khomeini international airport. After
several initial denials, the Armed Forces Central Command admitted on January
11 that IRGC had “mistakenly” shot down the passenger jet, killing all 176
passengers and crew on board.
Iranian authorities said that
“human error” by a missile operator led to launching two surface-to-air
missiles at the plane. But they did not disclose critical evidence supporting
the claim and have not provided any details of their judicial investigation.
The cabinet announced that it had
allocated $150,000 to compensate the family of each passenger.
On March 17, Iran’s Aircraft
Accident Investigation Board published its final report on the incident in
which it said, based on information provided by the military, that Iranian
missiles were launched at the plane due to a 105-degree miscalibration of the
launcher’s radar.
The report did not clarify
inconsistencies in the Iranian government’s findings raised by various
independent observers, including the UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial
executions in a detailed letter to the Iranian government in December.
The foreign affairs and transport
ministers of Canada, the intended destination of most of the passengers,
indicated that the report makes no attempt to answer critical questions about
what truly happened. “It appears incomplete and has no hard facts or evidence.”
On May 20, a Canadian court ruled
in a civil lawsuit that “on the balance of probabilities, the missile attacks
on Flight 752 were intentional and directly caused the deaths of all on board.”
After Iranian authorities admitted
they shot down the plane, protests broke out in several Iranian cities, and
security forces responded with rubber bullets, pepper spray, and tear gas.
Over the past year, courts have
sentenced at least 20 people in connection with their participation in
protests. At least three more participants are currently on trial.
At least 16 people said that
security agencies threatened them not to participate in interviews with foreign
media or had followed or summoned their relatives or friends who attended
memorials and filmed those attending these events.
In some cases, security forces
interrogated or detained family members for several hours, and in at least one
case, the authorities tortured a person in custody.
In another case, plainclothes
officers asked to meet a family member who had spoken against authorities’
conduct at a public place and threatened that person with prosecution.
Several of those interviewed said
that the authorities returned important documents from the victims, but did not
return any valuables, such as jewelry and electronic devices.
Videos and photos published two
days after the crash show bulldozers demolishing the site before authorities
had accepted responsibility for downing the plane, raising concerns that they
failed to secure evidence that was then destroyed or left unusable for
investigations or legal proceedings.