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New York, July 17, 2000--A leading Iranian reporter detained
since late May was sentenced today by Tehran's Press Court to five
and a half years in prison, Iran's official Islamic Republic News
Agency (IRNA) reported. Emadeddin Baghi's incarceration is the result
of a multitude of charges stemming from his critical writings.
Baghi, a prominent reformist reporter whose investigative writings
implicated Iranian officials in the mysterious murders in recent years
of intellectuals and dissidents, wrote for the now-banned daily Neshat
and was a member of the editorial board of another outlawed daily,
Fatth.
According to IRNA, Baghi had been charged with publishing articles
that "questioned the validity of...Islamic law," with "threatening
national security, and...for spreading unsubstantiated news stories"
about the role of "agents of the Intelligence Ministry in the serial
murder of intellectuals and dissidents in 1998." The charges were
based on complaints lodged by a number of government agencies, including
the Intelligence Ministry, the conservative controlled Islamic Republic
of Iran Broadcasting, and former security officials.
Baghi has remained in Tehran's Evin Prison since he was ordered detained
by the court on May 29. His closed-door trial began on May 1.
Baghi's conviction coincides with the release on Sunday of Mohsen
Kadivar, a reformist cleric, philosopher, and contributor to the now-defunct
daily Khordad. Kadivar was arrested in February 1999 and sentenced
to 18 months in prison by Iran's Special Court for Clergy. He was
charged with "disseminating lies" and "misleading public opinion."
Kadivar was freed upon completing his sentence, although, IRNA reported
that other unspecified charges may be pending against him.
The charges that led to Kadivar's imprisonment had stemmed from articles,
interviews, and public lectures critical of the Islamic Republic.
In an article published on February 14, 1999 in Khordad, Kadivar,
compared the authoritarian rule of Iran's ruling clerics to that of
the Shah.
At least five Iranian journalists remain in prison on charges related
to their professional work. In addition to Emadeddin Baghi, they include
publisher Abdullah Nouri; editor Mashallah Shamsolvaezin; investigative
reporter Akbar Ganji and managing editor Latif Safari.
"The conviction of Emadeddin Baghi represents yet another blatant
violation of basic press freedom norms in Iran," said CPJ Executive
Director, Ann Cooper. "We call for the immediate and unconditional
release of Emadeddin Baghi and all other Iranian journalists who have
been unjustly imprisoned for practicing their profession."
END