CAIRO—U.S. human rights groups are condemning the sentences imposed by an Iranian court on four journalists who were arrested late last year. The four were accused of “paving the way for U.S. infiltration of the country.”
The Iranian judiciary has handed down sentences of five to 10 years in prison
to the journalists who were arrested last November in the period leading up to
parliamentary elections.
They were convicted Tuesday of harming national security and spreading
propaganda against the Islamic Republic.
Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) denounced the sentences,
saying they were part of a “tale of repression [being carried out] in Iran
since the first of January.” RSF indicated that a fifth journalist, was also
sentenced, but the term was not revealed.
Judiciary spokesman Mehdi Mohseni told Iranian state TV that the judicial
system was just doing its job, and that the sentences were “not final.”
Iran analyst Alex Vatanka of the Middle East Institute said that the
journalists were arrested due to the ongoing power struggle inside Iran.
“It doesn’t make sense in any other way, but to look at what’s happening in
the context of a power struggle that’s happening as we speak, and it’s a power
struggle that’s going to get nastier and nastier as weeks and months go by,
because there’s a succession crisis unfolding in Iran, because everyone is
preparing for the day [Supreme Leader Ali] Khamenei leaves this world,” said
Vatanka.
Vatanka adds that Khamenei has “given a blank check to the hardliners,
including the Revolutionary Guards, to single out and punish those who damage
the regime.”
Reporters Without Borders says 32 journalists are being detained in Iran and
that Tehran is one of five major persecutors of the press in the world.
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