Wednesday, June 24, 2026
  • English
  • Français
  • فارسی
  • عربى
PODCASTS
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee
No Result
View All Result
Home Articles
Foreign delegates go on guided tour to Evin Prison

Foreign delegates go on guided tour to Evin Prison

July 14, 2017
in Articles

Foreign Delegates go on Guided Tour to Evin Prison

The following article by Raha Bahraini, Amnesty International’s Iran researcher, appeared on the website of British daily INDEPENDENT on July 13, 2017.

 

Independent: Iran just gave foreign delegates a tour around a ‘luxury’ part of one of their most notorious prisons

A UK representative was present on the tour, viewing wings that house wealthier prisoners, while British-Iranian charity worker Nazanin Zaghari Ratcliffe languished in a building nearby

By: Raha Bahreini

Thursday 13 July 2017

Last week the Iranian authorities arranged a rare international visit to one of the country’s most infamous places of detention – Evin Prison in Tehran.

This visit wasn’t arranged for an international prison expert or a human rights body. It was for representatives of over forty foreign diplomatic missions from Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. The UK had a representative there.

The foreign delegates were shown around some limited areas of the prison, and there was a roundtable discussion, held outdoors in a lush garden. There are photos in circulation and you can see various countries’ flags perched on al fresco tables, the Union Jack amongst them. By the standards of diplomatic meetings, it all looks rather idyllic.

But what was it all for? For the Iranian authorities it was very clearly a PR exercise. In the days after the visit, Iranian state media outlets were flooded with gushing stories about Evin’s supposedly state-of-the-art conditions. The “excellent facilities” were showcased, including an in-house beauty salon, a gym, a library and even a restaurant. And articles featured congratulatory comments from the Indian, Indonesian, Portuguese and South Korean delegates.

What these stories left out was the fact that Evin is a vast prison complex made up of multiple buildings where conditions vary enormously. The visitors saw only a handful of sections in buildings 4 and 7, mostly housing wealthier prisoners convicted of financial crimes. In these areas prisoners have used their own money to improve conditions, buying carpets, curtains, televisions, air-conditioning units and kitchenware. The beauty salon, gym, library and restaurant are only accessible to prisoners held in building 7.

Away from these select parts of Evin, things are much bleaker. Research reveals widespread inhumane and unsanitary conditions. There’s chronic overcrowding, severely limited hot water, poor ventilation, and infestations of cockroaches and mice. Prisoners have described being forced to sleep on the floor because of a shortage of beds and being fed “barely edible” meals.

Unsurprisingly the visitors didn’t see any of this.

Ahead of the visit, some prisoners in building 4 were also transferred to create an illusion of humane living conditions. Walls were freshly repainted and the remaining prisoners warned against approaching the diplomats to voice any concerns they might have.

Meanwhile, the delegation was entirely barred from accessing areas of Evin controlled by the Ministry of Intelligence and Revolutionary Guards, where detainees are routinely held in prolonged solitary confinement and tortured. Similarly, they weren’t allowed to see where the dozens of prisoners of conscience are held. This includes building 350, where the prominent human rights lawyer Abdolfattah Soltani and severely-ill human rights activist Arash Sadeghi languish; building 8, which holds human rights activist Omid Alishenas; and the women prisoners’ wing where human rights activists Narges Mohammadi, Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee and Atena Daemi are serving their sentences.

And neither were they able to meet several dual-nationals jailed on spurious charges, including the British-Iranian charity worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe or the British-Iranian businessman Kamal Foroughi. Meanwhile, the Iranian-born Swedish resident Dr Ahmadreza Djalali was transferred to solitary confinement for the entire duration of the visit.

After the delegation had made their Potemkin village-like tour of Evin, Kazem Gharibabadi from Iran’s High Council of Human Rights said that Evin’s supposedly comfortable conditions are typical of the country’s high prison standards. With one ludicrous claim after another, he insisted that prisoners in Iran enjoy “perfect access to medical care” – notwithstanding a report from last year showing how Iran’s political prisoners are denied access to adequate medical care as a particularly cruel form of punishment.

Back in the real world, Gharibabadi’s remarks are an affront to the hundreds of prisoners – peaceful activists, journalists, intellectuals and human rights lawyers – who’ve suffered miserably at Evin throughout its disgraceful history. Every year, scores of prisoners in Evin and other prisons go on hunger strikes in protest at appalling conditions.

The unvarnished, un-PR-able truth about Evin Prison is that it’s a place of suffering and torment as well as a wider symbol of rampant political repression in Iran.

The foreign delegates may not have known the details of their highly-controlled visit in advance, but it should be clear to them now they’ve been used by the Iranian authorities in a piece of propaganda. They ought to speak out against torture and other ill-treatment of prisoners in Iran, as well as the arbitrary detention of human rights activists and other peaceful critics. And they ought to demand that the Iranian authorities open Evin and other Iranian prisons to independent international monitors.

This wasn’t a genuine prison visit; it was crude political theatre.

ShareTweetPinShareSendShare

Related Posts

Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: Broad Support for 10-point plan and Criticism of Western Appeasement

June 23, 2026
Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: Broad Support for 10-point plan and Criticism of Western Appeasement

On Sunday, June 21, 2026, the second day of the “Free Iran 2026 – Supporting the Democratic Alternative” conference was held at the headquarters of the National Council...

Read moreDetails

Iran: Prisoners in 57 Prisons Mark 126th Week of Hunger Strike Against the Death Penalty

June 23, 2026
Iran: Prisoners in 57 Prisons Mark 126th Week of Hunger Strike Against the Death Penalty

In the 126th week of the protest campaign "No to Executions Tuesdays," prisoners in 57 prisons across Iran staged a hunger strike on Tuesday, June 23, 2026, once...

Read moreDetails

Iranian Students Protest Imposed Academic Mandates Across Multiple Cities

June 22, 2026
Iranian Students Protest Imposed Academic Mandates Across Multiple Cities

Iranian students protest entered a new phase on Monday, June 22, 2026, as various cities across captive Iran witnessed rallies by high schoolers and university students. Brave schoolgirls...

Read moreDetails

Seven Students of Sharif University of Technology Expelled and Banned from Education

June 21, 2026
7 Students of Sharif University of Technology Expelled and Banned from Education

Two Female Students among the Expelled Students Seven students at Tehran’s Sharif University of Technology have been expelled by the disciplinary committee. They included two female students, Fatemeh...

Read moreDetails

45 Years of Resistance for a Free Iran; A Future Built on a Democratic Republic

June 21, 2026
45 Years of Resistance for a Free Iran; A Future Built on a Democratic Republic

Free Iran 2026 Summit Brings Together International Political Figures to Emphasize thePath Toward a Democratic Iran On Saturday, June 20, 2026, marking the 45th anniversary of the nationwide...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Ingrid Betancourt

Ingrid Betancourt, Free Iran gathering, July 1, 2017, Paris

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Documents

Crushed by Design: Structural Crises and Inequitable Policies Push Female-Headed Households to the Edge

Crushed by Design: Structural Crises and Inequitable Policies Push Female-Headed Households to the Edge

May 18, 2026

Introduction Life for the Iranian people under the religious dictatorship is fraught with hardship and peril from every perspective. Whether...

A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

March 8, 2026

Structural Inequality and State-Sanctioned Oppression of Women Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law” is the title of the NCRI Women’s Committee’s...

Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

March 3, 2026

On the eve of International Women’s Day 2026, the NCRI Women’s Committee presents its Annual Report 2026, offering a recap...

Monthlies

May 2026 Report: The Enduring Resistance of Iranian Women
Monthlies

May 2026 Report: The Enduring Resistance of Iranian Women

May 31, 2026
April 2026 Report: Mass Arrests of Women: Targeted Repression in Time of Crisis
Monthlies

April 2026 Report: Mass Arrests of Women in Iran

April 30, 2026
March 2026 Report: How Iranian Women Are Shaping the Resistance
Monthlies

March 2026 Report: Courage Under Fire

April 3, 2026
January 2026 Report: Women at the Core of the Uprising
Monthlies

January 2026 Report: Women at the Core of the Uprising

January 31, 2026

Articles

Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: Broad Support for 10-point plan and Criticism of Western Appeasement

Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: Broad Support for 10-point plan and Criticism of Western Appeasement

June 23, 2026

On Sunday, June 21, 2026, the second day of the “Free Iran 2026 – Supporting the Democratic Alternative” conference was...

45 Years of Resistance for a Free Iran; A Future Built on a Democratic Republic

45 Years of Resistance for a Free Iran; A Future Built on a Democratic Republic

June 21, 2026

Free Iran 2026 Summit Brings Together International Political Figures to Emphasize thePath Toward a Democratic Iran On Saturday, June 20,...

Iran's Water Crisis: Energy Imbalance, Popular Protests, and the Role of Women- Part 2

Iran’s Escalating Water Crisis: Energy Imbalance, Popular Protests, and the Role of Women

June 19, 2026

The water crisis in Iran has transcended a mere natural challenge, evolving into a human, environmental, and economic catastrophe. While...

The Fallen for Freedom

Shilan Salehi: Iran Regime Extorted 150 Million Tomans for Return of Her Body
The Fallen for Freedom

Shilan Salehi: Iran Regime Extorted 150 Million Tomans for Return of Her Body

June 13, 2026
Parnia Shad Bejarkenari: 23-Year-Old Woman Killed for Freedom in Iran
The Fallen for Freedom

Parnia Shad Bejarkenari: 23-Year-Old Woman Killed for Freedom in Iran

June 13, 2026
Nasim Pouraghaei was killed on the evening of January 8, 2026
The Fallen for Freedom

Nasim Pouraghaei

June 6, 2026
Setayesh Shafiei, The Girl Who Was the Sun
The Fallen for Freedom

Setayesh Shafiei, The Girl Who Was the Sun

June 4, 2026

ABOUT US

NCRI Women Committee

We work extensively with Iranian women outside the country and maintain a permanent contact with women inside Iran. The Women’s Committee is actively involved with many women’s rights organizations and NGO’s and the Iranian diaspora.
The committee is a major source of much of the information received from inside Iran with regards to women. Attending UN Human Rights Council meetings and other international or regional conferences on women’s issues and engaging in a relentless battle against the Iranian regime’s misogyny are part of the activities of members and associates of the committee.

CATEGORIES

  • Activities
  • Articles
  • Documents
  • Famous Women
  • Heroines in Chain
  • IWD Conferences
  • IWD Speeches
  • IWD Videos
  • Maryam Rajavi
  • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
  • Monthlies
  • Podcast
  • Reference Library
  • Solidarity
  • Statements
  • The Fallen for Freedom
  • Videos
  • Women in History
  • Women in Leadership
  • Women of Iranian Resistance
  • Women's News

BROWSE BY TAG

Child marriage coronavirus education execution forced hijab Gender Gap Generation Equality Honor killings Iran Teachers Maryam Akbari Monfared Nurses Plan on Women's Rights and Freedoms Poverty Prisoners Protests rural women Saba Kord Afshari The girl child Violence against women Women's Leadership Women Heads of Household Zeinab Jalalian

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • Publications
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • About Us
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • Ten Point Plan for Iran
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
  • Vanguards
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • Events
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • Video
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • Podcast
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • فارسی
  • عربی
  • Français

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.