Medical News
Addiction
Allergies
Alternative Medicine
Asthma
Cancer
Cardiology
Chiropractic
Dental
Dermatology
Diabetes
Emergency
Family Medicine
General
Geriatrics
Hospitals
Infectious Diseases
Internal Medicine
Managed Care / HMO
Medical Products
Mental Health
Neurology
Nursing
Nutrition
OB / GYN
Pediatrics
Pharmaceuticals
Physical Therapy
Plastic Surgery
Psychology
Radiology / Imaging
Research
Sports Medicine
Surgery
Vision

Iran Asked to Free AIDS Doctors Held for Six Months on Illegitimate Charges

PHR Board Member Ali Khan speaks at a vigil for the Alaeis outside the Iranian Mission to the UN.
PHR Board Member Ali Khan speaks at a vigil for the Alaeis outside the Iranian Mission to the UN.

On the sixth-month anniversary of Iran's detention of Dr. Arash Alaei and Dr. Kamiar Alaei--Iranian brothers who are known worldwide as HIV/AIDS physicians -- Physicians for Human Rights (http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/), Human Rights Watch (http://www.hrw.org/), International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, and The Harvard Friends of Alaeis, and are asking Iran to free them immediately.

Cambridge, MA (Vocus) December 22, 2008 -- On the sixth-month anniversary of Iran's detention of Dr. Arash Alaei and Dr. Kamiar Alaei -- Iranian brothers who are known worldwide as HIV/AIDS physicians--international NGOs, academic institutions, and medical leaders from across the globe are asking Iran to free them immediately.

The doctors have been held in Tehran's notorious Evin prison since late June 2008. They were indicted this month on charges of communicating with an "enemy government" according to their attorney, Masoud Shafie. Iran should drop these illegitimate and politically motivated charges, the groups and leaders said.

In an exclusive interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Shafie said that the brothers have been indicted under article 508 of the Islamic Penal Code, which states that anyone found guilty of communicating with an "enemy government" shall be sentenced one-to-ten years in prison.

Bringing this charge against the Alaeis is likely to have a chilling effect on the Iranian medical community's ability to share their work and learn from global experts, which could undermine the health of the Iranian people.

The brothers have already been detained two months longer than Iranian penal code allows. According to Shafie, Articles 30-34 of the Code of Penal Procedure of the Islamic Republic of Iran allow for detentions but require that the investigating judge issue such detention orders for one month at a time and for no longer than four months.

The brothers are also legally eligible for bail, but the judge in the case has not issued bail nor held a bail hearing.

Over 3,100 people from more than 85 countries have signed an online petition demanding their release, which can be viewed at IranFreeTheDocs.org (http://iranfreethedocs.org/).

Several of the world's most accomplished HIV/AIDS and health experts--including the Global Fund executive director, Professor Michel Kazatchkine; the Partners in Health co-founder, Dr. Paul Farmer; Wafaa El-Sadr, MD, 2008 MacArthur Foundation Fellow MPH; Hossam E. Fadel, MD, of the Islamic Medical Association of North America; a 1993 Nobel laureate in medicine, Sir Richard Roberts PhD, FRS; and the Ugandan AIDS pioneer Dr. Peter Mugyenyi, have signed a letter urging the Alaei brothers' release (http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/library/letter-2008-12-01-call-to-release-alaeis.pdf).

Dr. Kamiar Alaei is a doctoral candidate at the SUNY Albany School of Public Health in Albany, New York and was expected to resume his studies there this fall. In 2007, he received a Master of Science degree in Population and International Health from the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

Dr. Arash Alaei is the former director of the International Education and Research Cooperation of the Iranian National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease. Since 1998, the Drs. Alaei have been carrying out HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention programs, particularly focused on harm reduction for injecting drug users.

In addition to their work in Iran, the Alaei brothers have held training courses for Afghan and Tajik medical workers and have worked to encourage regional cooperation among 12 Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries. Their efforts expanded the expertise of doctors in the region, advanced the progress of medical science, and earned Iran recognition as a model of best practice by the World Health Organization.

Media Contacts:

In Cambridge, Massachusetts, for Physicians for Human Rights, Jonathan Hutson (English): +1-857-919-5130 (mobile), jhutson (at) phrusa (dot) org.

In New York, for Human Rights Watch, Joe Amon (English): +1-212-216-1286; or +1-917-519-8930 (mobile) and Rebecca Schleifer (English): +1-212-216-1273; + 1-646-331 0324 (mobile)

Hadi Ghaemi, International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran: +1-917-669-5996 (mobile), hadighaemi (at) iranhumanrights (dot) org

Margaret Salmon, MD/MPH, The Harvard Friends of Alaeis: +1-617-460-4084, msalmon (at) llu (dot) edu, skype: msalmonmd

###

Simillar Articles

Human Rights Groups Petition Iran for Release of HIV/AIDS Doctors
Web Site and Petition Launched at www.IranFreeTheDocs.org .
Health System Collapse Requires International Intervention, Concludes PHR Report
An international team of doctors and human rights advocates convened by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) to conduct an emergency assessment of Zimbabwe's health crisis has found the health...
Physicians for Human Rights Demands Probe of Covert CIA Detention Center on British Soil
PHR Calls for Red Cross Access to all Detainees in US Custody
Hospital Patient Rights Day National Campaign Announced
To mark the launch of a web site and a blog, the National Institute for Patient Rights http://www.empowerpatients.com announced a campaign for a federally designated National Patient Rights Day for...
San Diego Attorney Provides Emergency Medical Relief to War Torn Gaza Strip
As the Palestinian death toll rises to over 700 in the conflict between Hamas and Israeli forces, the number of injured civilians in the Gaza Strip is estimated in the thousands, yet hospitals in...
Home Terms of Use Privacy Policy Contact Us