Iran: Reporters Without Borders Condemned
Judicial Harassment of Kurdish Journalists
June 13, 2007
Reporters Without Borders today condemned
judicial harassment of journalists who cover demonstrations. Four have been
tried by revolutionary tribunals in recent weeks, three of them receiving prison
sentences. Others are awaiting trial or the announcement of the court’s verdict.
“We are dismayed by these sentences,” the press freedom organisation said.
“These journalists just did their duty to report the news and have been
convicted for political reasons. If there is a political activity in Iran, the
media must cover it. But once again, brute force is the government’s only
response.”
A revolutionary tribunal in the city of Sanandaj, in Iran’s Kurdish northwestern
region, sentenced Ejlal Ghavami of Payam-e mardom-e Kurdistan (a weekly that has
been closed by the authorities since 2004) to three years in prison on 9 June
for “inciting revolt” and “undermining national security.” Freelance journalist
Said Saedi was sentenced to two and a half years in prison on the same charges.
The same tribunal sentenced Roya Toloui, the editor of the newspaper Resan, to
six months in prison on 22 May. Her newspapers has been closed since 2005.
All three journalists were arrested while covering a peaceful demonstration
outside the prefect’s office in Sanandaj on 30 July 2005 and were held for
several months before being freed on bail. Tolui is now abroad. Saedi and
Ghavami still live in Iran. They say that whenever they have tried to work for a
newspaper since 2005, its editors have been harassed by the intelligence
agencies.
Condemning their conviction and sentences, their lawyer, Nemat Ahamdi, told
Reporters Without Borders: “They are journalists, and it is normal for
journalists to be out on the streets doing their job and going to places where
there are demonstrations. This conviction is unacceptable and we are going to
appeal.”
Aso Salah of the weekly Disgah has meanwhile been summoned to appear before the
Sanandaj court on 16 June. He was arrested by intelligence operatives on 8 March
after covering an International Women’s Day demonstration, and was released on
18 March after paying 100 million toumen (85,000 euros) in bail.
In Tehran, Bahaman Ahmadi Amoee of the daily Sarmayeh was summoned and tried on
6 June by the revolutionary court’s 13th division on charges of “participating
in an illegal demonstration,” “undermining national security” and “publicity
against the Islamic Republic.” The verdict is pending. He was arrested along
with two other journalists while covering a feminist movement’s demonstration
against “sexual apartheid in Iran” on 22 June 2006.
Kia Jahani of Kurdistan TV, who was arrested for no clear reason in the city of
Marivan on 24 February, was freed on bail at the start of May.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei are both on the Reporters
Without Borders list of the world’s 34 worst press freedom predators.