lunedì 25 novembre 2013

Un appello per Omid Kokabee



Durante un incontro della manifestazione di Bookcity, che si è tenuta dal 21 al 24 novembre a Milano, incontro di cui vi parlaremo a breve, ci è stato consegnato il seguente appello, che abbiamo deciso di pubblicare nella sua interezza e in inglese, così come è stato scritto.


Omid Kokabee was born in 1982 and is an Iranian experimental laser physicist at the University of Texas in Austin. He was arrested in Iran after returning from the United States to visit his family in February 2011. He was charged with “communicating with a hostile government” and “illegitimate/illegal earnings”, and was sentenced to ten years in prison.

Kokabee is from Iran's Turkmen ethnic group, the majority of whom are Sunni Muslim, a religious minority in Iran. He was ranked 29th in the Iranian universities' entrance exam, which is held annualy with more than one million partecipants. He entered Sharif University of Tecnology in Teheran in 2000 and completed a double major undergraduate program in applied physics and mechanical engineering.
He later obtained his Master's degree in photonics at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia and his PhD at the Institute oh Photonic Sciences, ICFO, in Barcelona. Omid started his second PhD at the University of Texas in Austin in 2010. He has published more than twenty collaborative papers including seven journal publications.

During winter break in 2011, Kokabee traveled to Iran to visit his family. He was arrested at Imam Khomeini International Airport on his return trip to the United States in February 2011. he was subject to solitary confinement for 36 days after his arrest. In an open letter, Kokabee wrote that the authorities were trying to obtain his collaboration for the Iranian nuclear program by threatening him and his family.

After 15 months of detention without trial and postponement of two trials in July and October 2011, kokabee was put in trial in Teheran in May 2012. According to his lawyer, Saeed Khalili, Kokabee was charged with having relations with a hostile country and receiving illegitimate funds. Kokabee was tried before judge Abolghasem Salavati with a group of 10 to 15 others in the same sassion, under the collective charge of collaborating with Israeli authorities. While other prisoners confessed to their guilt in a TV broadcast, Kokabee consistently denied all charges and did not speak in court. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison. The sentence was confirmed in an appeal trial in August 2012.

Several physics associations, including the American Physical Society, the International Optics Society SPIE, the Otical Society of America, and the European Optical Society, have protested his imprisonment by writing open letters to Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. In its letter, the American Physical Society states that:

Mr. Kobabee has no training in nuclear physics, is not politically active, and is not associated with any political movement in Iran. Rather, his primary concerns were his science studies in the field of optics. This area of physics has essentially no overlap with nuclear technology”.

In a letter written in March 2013 from Section 350 of Evin Prison, Kokabee writes that he was asked to collaborate with the military before and during his detention but has always refused.

On september 23, 2013, the American Physical Society, the principal professional society of physicists in the United States, announced that Kokabee has been selected as a co-recipient of its 2014 Andrei Sakharov Prize, which recognizes outstanding leadership of scientists upholding human rights. He was cited for “his courage in refusing to use his physics knowledge to work on projects that he deemed harmful to humanity in the face of extreme physical and psychological pressure”.

Omid is not in good health. He suffers from kidney and stomach problems, which he had from childhood but have severely worsened in prison. His requests to be sent to a hospital outside of the prison have been denied.

Omid teaches English, Spanish and French to his cellmates and has translated two books from English to Persian in the prison. Recently, he submitted a paper on laser to Iran's annual physics conference and, after acceptance, he was invited for an oral presentation, but the prison authorities did not allow him to attend the conference.

Please help bring Omid home by writing a letter to Iran's Justice Minister, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi, at this address:

Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi
Minister of Justice
Valie asr Avenue, north of Pastor Intersection
Bonbaste Azizi 4
Theran, Iran