Iran: ITUC, ITF, Amnesty International Welcome Salehi Release

The ITUC, ITF and Amnesty International today welcomed the release on Sunday from Sanandaj prison, in Iran’s Kurdistan Province, of independent labour activist Mahmoud Salehi, after one year of imprisonment. Salehi, one of the co-founders of the Bakery Workers Trade Union in Saqez, had been the object of strong international lobbying by the international trade union and human rights’ organisations since 2007, when the ITUC, ITF and Amnesty International launched a series of joint demonstrations and protests in front of Iranian embassies around the world.

Brussels, 8 April 2008: The ITUC, ITF and Amnesty International today welcomed the release on Sunday from Sanandaj prison, in Iran’s Kurdistan Province, of independent labour activist Mahmoud Salehi, after one year of imprisonment. Salehi, one of the co-founders of the Bakery Workers Trade Union in Saqez, had been the object of strong international lobbying by the international trade union and human rights’ organisations since 2007, when the ITUC, ITF and Amnesty International launched a series of joint demonstrations and protests in front of Iranian embassies around the world.

Salehi was originally sentenced to four years of imprisonment for having organised an independent workers rally on International Labour Day, in Saqez on 1 May 2004. His sentence was reduced on appeal to one year prison and three years suspended, which he finally started serving on 9 April 2007 in Saqez, before being transferred to a high security prison in Sanandaj, capital of Kurdistan Province. His state of health severely deteriorated while in jail, after prison authorities repeatedly denied him proper medical care for acute kidney failure and other serious ailments.

An international Day of Action on 6 March 2008 had brought trade union and activists into the street in 35 countries, demonstrating for Salehi and Mansour Osanloo, the President of the Tehran bus drivers’ union (Sherkat-e Vahed), who remains in detention at Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison. One week later, the authorities levelled new charges against Salehi, who had originally been due for release on 23 March. Observers believe the new charges were brought against him as a reaction to the Day of Action and in retaliation for solidarity messages which Salehi had managed to smuggle out of jail. Salehi was eventually released on Sunday 6 April, reportedly on bail, and has since returned to Saqez, where he was met by family and friends.

The ITUC, ITF and Amnesty International express their satisfaction at Salehi’s release, but remind Iran’s authorities that Mansour Osanloo and other unjustly imprisoned trade unionists must be freed and all other threats of imprisonment against independent trade unionists for their legitimate activities be lifted. The International Labour Organisation (ILO) is expected next month to examine a number of international trade union complaints lodged against the Iranian government for violations of the internationally-guaranteed right to form and join trade unions.


The ITUC represents 168 million workers in 155 countries and territories and has 311 national affiliates.

For more information contact:
ITUC press office on +32 2 224 0204 or +32 476 621 018,
[email protected] or

ITF press officer Sam Dawson on +44 20 7940 9260,
[email protected] , or

Amnesty International’s press office on +44 20 7413 5566,
[email protected]