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Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 22:10:18 +0800 (PHT)
From: "Alan G. Alegre" <alalegre@fma.ph>
Subject: [communication 1246] [Fwd: Iran: Journalists Receive Death Threats After Testifying]
To: commrights-asia@fma.ph, communication@wsisasia.org
Message-Id: <4435.192.168.1.249.1105366218.squirrel@mail.fma.ph>
X-Mail-Count: 01246

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: [FMASpam 4.09] [CS Bureau] Iran: Journalists Receive Death
Threats After Testifying From:    "west" <westasiaregion@hotmail.com>
Date:    Mon, January 10, 2005 8:49 pm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Iran: Journalists Receive Death Threats After Testifying

Presidential Commission Heard Their Testimony of Torture During

Detention

(New York, January 6, 2005) -- After testifying to a presidential

commission about their torture during detention, a group of Iranian

journalists have received death threats from judicial officials under

Tehran chief prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi, Human Rights Watch said today.

Human Rights Watch is extremely concerned about the safety of the

journalists, whose testimony to a presidential commission, tasked with

investigating mistreatment of detainees, provided detailed information on

their torture and mistreatment while they were detained, without being

charged, by secret squads operating under the authority of the judiciary.

"We want the Iranian government to know that the world is watching what

happens to these young journalists. The Iranian government is responsible

for their safety," said Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of Middle

East and North Africa Division at Human Rights Watch. "The Iranian

authorities should be protecting citizens who testify before presidential

commissions instead of sending them death threats."

On December 25, Hanif Mazroi, Massoud Ghoreishi, Fereshteh Ghazi,

Arash Naderpour and Mahbobeh Abasgholizadeh$BMB(Bll of whom are journalists

detained by the government$BMU(Bestified about their detention before the

presidential commission. Fereshteh Ghazi provided details of her

treatment by interrogators, including severe beatings that resulted

in a broken nose during one interrogation session. The detainees were

kept under lengthy solitary confinement in a secret detention center

and were repeatedly subjected to psychological and physical torture.

On January 1 two other former detainees, Omid Memarian and Ruzbeh

Mir Ebrahimi, also appeared in front of the commission. In their

testimonies, as made public by commission member Mohammad Ali

Abtahi, they confirmed details of their torture.

Since their appearances before the commission, Saeed Mortazavi, chief

prosecutor of Tehran, has threatened each of these former detainees with

lengthy prison sentences and harm to their family members, as punishment

for their testimony. Mortazavi continues to issue numerous subpoenas for

the journalists without specifying charges. His operatives also harass the

journalists by phone on a daily basis.

On January 3, Mortazavi held a press conference denying any mistreatment

of detainees and threatening to prosecute the former detainees for

"allegations against security forces and prison officials that

are politically motivated."

The journalists’ testimonies exposed Mortazavi$BCT(B role in authorizing

their torture to extract confessions and in compelling them to appear on

television to deny their mistreatment while under detention.

"The brave testimony of these young journalists has reaffirmed evidence

of Mortazavi$BCT(B leading role in the torture of detainees," said Whitson.

"It$BCT(B high time for the Iranian government to investigate Mortazavi$BCT(B abuses

and bring him to justice."

Saeed Mortazavi has spearheaded the judiciary$BCT(B attack on press freedoms

since the current crackdown began in 2000. He is responsible for the

closure of numerous newspapers, as well as the arrests and prosecution of

journalists, which is detailed in the recent Human Right Watch report on

Iran, "Like the Dead in their Coffins." The report can be found at:

http://www.hrw.org/reports/2004/iran0604/

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