Iranian regime continues to crack down on press

New York, April 17, 2012–Sustaining their years-long campaign against the press, Iranian authorities have sentenced one journalist to prison and summoned another to serve a jail term, according to news reports. The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on authorities to release imprisoned journalists who are being held away from their families and in deprivation.

A Tehran Revolutionary Court sentenced Reyhaneh Tabatabaie, a journalist for the reformist newspaper Shargh, to a one-year prison term on April 2 for alleged “propaganda against the state” and “weakening the pillars of the Islamic Republic,” according to a reformist news website. The court’s verdict said her offenses included reporting on the arrest of political prisoners after the 2009 presidential election, news reports said. Tabatabaie was arrested in December 2010 and released on bail a month later, the reports said. She has not been summoned to serve her sentence yet, the sources said.

On April 4, Mehran Faraji, a journalist who works for several reformist publications, was summoned to Evin Prison to serve a six-month prison sentence, according to news reports. He was arrested in December 2010 and released on bail two months later, news reports said. In July 2011, he was sentenced to a year in prison for “propagating against the regime,” but in November 2011, an appeals court reduced his sentence to six months and a five-year suspended prison term, news reports said.

“It’s bad enough that Iran imprisons any journalist who dares write down a critical thought,” said CPJ Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. “But it’s even worse that those in prison should be denied family visits and adequate medical attention. We call on the authorities to allow all imprisoned journalists family visitation rights and to release all those who are sick on humanitarian grounds.”

A number of other developments were reported in regards to journalists in prison.

Iran authorities have maintained a revolving-door policy for imprisoning journalists, freeing some detainees on furloughs even as they make new arrests. When CPJ conducted its annual prison census on December 1, 2011, Iran was holding 42 journalists in custody, the most in the world.

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