‘Vileness and brutality’: Mother in Iran jail for 13 years shares letter from inside ‘hell’ prison

A mother jailed in
Iran for 13 years has shared a letter from inside her “hell-like” prison.
Maryam Akbari Monfared
was detained in 2009 on the charge of being a supporter of the People’s
Mojahedin Organization of Iran.
Her three brothers and
one sister were killed by the Iranian regime, and she has been separated from
her three daughters since the night she was taken away.
Charities including
Amnesty International and the Center for Human Rights in Iran have long called
for her release but to no avail.
The mother-of-three has
now shared the letter as she enters her fourteenth year of incarceration, while
celebrating the protests that have gripped Iran in her absence.
“As of December 29, 2022, thirteen years have
passed since I was separated from my 4-year-old Sarah and my two 12-year-old
daughters on that winter midnight,” she writes.
“Without giving me a
chance to say goodbye to my loved ones, they took me to Evin prison to give
some explanations and made the ridiculous promise that ‘you will return to your
children in the morning’.
“This is not a
4,000-page story, but the pure reality of a life under the domination of
fascists who imposed it on us while we refused to give in.
“On this side of the
bars, in the dark desert of torture and oppression, as far as one can see -
even where one cannot see- there is just vileness and brutality.”
Amnesty has repeatedly
called for the 47 year-old’s release, describing her as a “prisoner of
conscience” being held in “inhumane” conditions.
The Centre for Human
Rights in Iran described the charges against her as “baseless” when it called
for an end to her “cruel and unlawful” imprisonment in 2019.
In the last year,
there has been a wave of protests against the Iran government particularly
following the death of 22 year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the
morality police.
In her letter, Ms Monfared
says she stands “shoulder to shoulder” with the families of loved ones who have
died.
“To my daughters and sons, who are bravely on
the streets... I say: if you are arrested, do not trust the interrogators even
an iota.
“To the grieving families... I say that I
share in their grief too. I hold their hands from here and stand shoulder to
shoulder with them, stronger than before, for justice.
“With the news of
every protest and every uprising, and with the sparks of this rebellious flame,
the hearts of women whose only hope of freedom is to break these iron gates are
filled with hope.”