Iran Human RightsProminent Iranian journalist 'jailed for 16 months'

Prominent Iranian journalist ‘jailed for 16 months’

-

AFP: Iran has sentenced a prominent reformist journalist to 16 months in jail on charges of insulting President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and undermining the Islamic regime, he told AFP on Sunday.

TEHRAN (AFP) — Iran has sentenced a prominent reformist journalist to 16 months in jail on charges of insulting President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and undermining the Islamic regime, he told AFP on Sunday.

Mashallah Shamsolvaezin heads the Journalists’ Association of Iran and was the editor of several reformist dailies closed in a crackdown on the press between 1998 and 2000.

“I was sentenced to one year in prison on the charge of undermining the establishment for giving interviews to foreign TV networks and news agencies,” Shamsolvaezin said.

“I was also given a four-month sentence for calling Ahmadinejad a megalomaniac in an interview with Al-Arabiya TV which the prosecutors misinterpreted as crazy and so insulting the president,” he said.

One of the accusations mentioned in the verdict was “defending” in an analysis Nazak Afshar, an employee of the French embassy in Tehran who was jailed in the aftermath of Iran’s post-election unrest in 2009, he added.

Shamsolvaezin went on trial in October and has 20 days to appeal.

He was detained for over two months last year as Iran cracked down on government critics after mass protests broke out against Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election in June 2009.

Scores of journalists close to the opposition as well as reformist politicians, students and human rights activists have been arrested and many have since been sentenced to heavy jail terms.

The authorities meanwhile have targeted Iran’s flagship reformist newspaper Shargh in recent days, arresting its financial sponsor, three editors and a writer over “security-related crimes,” Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi told ISNA news agency.

Another Shargh journalist, Rayhaneh Tabatabai “was arrested at home this morning,” opposition website Kaleme.com said Sunday.

Shargh has survived several closures since Ahmadinejad became president in 2005.

Latest news

Amnesty International Calls Halting the Death Sentence of Toomaj Salehi

On Thursday, May 17, Amnesty International sent a letter to the head of the Iranian regime’s judiciary, calling for...

Around 6 Workers Die of Safety Incidents Every Day in Iran

Ali Ziaei, the head of the Crime Scene Investigation Group at the Iranian Forensics Organization, reported the deaths of...

Air Pollution Kills 26,000 People in Iran Every Year: Head of Environment Organization

Ali Salajegheh, the head of the Environmental Protection Organization admitted in a conference in Kerman on Monday, May 13...

Australia Sanctions Iranian Regime Navy and IRGC Commanders

On Tuesday, May 15, the Australian Government imposed targeted sanctions on five Iranian individuals and three entities, in response...

Iranian Regime Sabotage Plot Neutralized in Jordan

According to informed Jordanian sources, security authorities thwarted a suspicious plot led by the Iranian regime to smuggle weapons...

Iran Facing Infant Formula Scarcity Again

Iranian media have reported a new increase in the price of infant formula and announced that this trend has...

Must read

Political uncertainty brings jitters to Iran markets

Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Jul. 21 – The Tehran...

Iran to shut crude unit at largest refinery end-Oct

Reuters: Iran will shut a 180,000 barrels per day...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version