New York, November 11, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the latest arrest in the Iranian government's weeks-long crackdown
on the press, which has focused heavily on Internet journalists and led
to numerous imprisonments without formal charge.
At least eight journalists have been detained since the crackdown began
in early September, Mashallah Shamsolvaezin, spokesman for the Iranian
Committee for the Defense of Freedom of the Press, said in an interview
with CPJ.
Mahboubeh Abasghalizadeh, editor of the quarterly women's publication
Farzaneh, was the most recent to be arrested when she was taken
into custody on November 2. Abasghalizadeh also wrote for online publications.
Detained in October were Fereshteh Qadi, a journalist with the daily,
Etemad, and a contributor to online journals; Reza Mir Ebrahimi,
an online journalist; and Omid Memarian, an online journalist and human
rights activist. Amir Mojiri, an online journalist, and Shahram Rafizadeh,
an editor at Etemad, have been detained since early September.
Two journalists were released today after weeks behind bars: Javad Gholam
Tamimi, a journalist with the daily Mardomsalari who had been detained
since October; and Hanif Mazrui, an online journalist detained in early
September.
Shamsolvaezin said the government has announced no formal charges against
any of the journalists. A judiciary spokesman, he said, made vague accusations
that the detained journalists had acted against national interests and
were guilty of violating public morals.
Since April 2000, Iranian authorities have shuttered dozens of mostly
pro-reformist newspapers, causing many journalists and readers to turn
to the Internet as the last venue for independent reporting. But this
fall, the government turned its repressive gaze toward the Web.
"We call on Iranian authorities to immediately release all journalists
who remain in detention," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "With
many newspapers already silenced, it is alarming that Iranian authorities
have set their sights on quashing critical reporting and commentary on
the Internet."

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