Iran jails more journalists than any other country,
rights group says
PARIS, France (CNN) -- Iran once again has more
journalists in jail than any other country, the press
freedom group Reporters Without Borders announced Wednesday.
"The Islamic Republic of Iran has recovered its
status as the world's biggest prison for the media," the
Paris-based group said, adding that two sentences handed
down in the past week brought the total number of jailed
journalists to 42.
The plight of journalists in Iran comes against the
backdrop of continuing tensions between the government of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad following the disputed
presidential elections in June.
Hundreds of thousands of Iranians took to the
streets to demonstrate against the official result -- the
re-election of Ahmadinejad's hardline government --
prompting a forceful and sometimes deadly government
crackdown.
Press freedom groups expressed concern about the
crackdown on the media which marked a spike in the arrests
of journalists.
One journalist, Bahman Ahamadi Amouee, was
sentenced Monday to 34 lashes and more than seven years in
jail, the group said.
A second reporter, Ahmad Zeydabadi, had his appeal
against a six-year prison sentence rejected, they said.
Iranian media also reported on the confirmation of
Zeydabadi's sentence.
The Tehran Court of Appeals upheld a five-year
sentence for illegal gathering and conspiracy, plus one year
for propaganda against the Islamic government, as well as
five years internal exile and a lifetime ban on political
activity, the Web site Tabnak said, citing the semi-official
Iranian Students News Agency.
There was less information available about Amouee.
A Web site linked with the reform movement said in
late November that Amouee and his wife, political activist
Jila Bani Yaqoub, were arrested at their home on Saturday,
June 20, a week after the presidential elections. Yaqoub was
released two months later but Amouee is still in jail,
according to the November 29 report on Norouz, the reformist
Web site.
"It was not clear what charges had been brought
against Amouee, a regular contributor, for years, to
reformist media outlets," the International Press Institute
said Tuesday.
"It is unacceptable that the Iranian authorities
are responding to criticism in the media by arresting
journalists and handing down prison sentences," IPI press
freedom manager Anthony Mills said in a statement. "The
crackdown on the media must end immediately and the
journalists imprisoned simply for doing their job must be
freed."
Iranian officials did not immediately respond to
CNN requests for comment on the criticism.
There are conflicting figures about the number of
journalists behind bars in Iran. Since anti-government
demonstrators took to the streets over the summer, Iran has
tightly clamped down on international news organizations'
freedom to report from inside the country.
The Committee to Protect Journalists said last week
Iran had more than 30 journalists in jail, including at
least 11 arrested over the course of three days late in
December.
The CPJ said it was particularly upset by the
arrest of Mashallah Shamsolvaezin, a winner of its
International Press Freedom Award.
"We have honored him and stood by him as he has
defended press freedom against all odds. We are deeply
concerned about his welfare and call for his immediate
release," CPJ executive director Joel Simon said in a
statement December 29.
Also on Monday, a group of lawmakers allied with
Ahmadinejad proposed a law classifying opponents of the
government as "enemies of God" who should be executed within
five days of their arrest, Reporters Without Borders said.
"We are very disturbed by the calls repeatedly made
by the most senior officials for Iran to impose the 'supreme
punishment' on detainees, including journalists," Reporters
Without Borders said in a statement.
"The regime hardliners are capable of having the
crackdown's witnesses executed. There is an urgent need for
international bodies to take action before a tragedy takes
place, before political prisoners begin being executed," the
group warned.
The Philippines was the most dangerous place in the
world to be a journalist in 2009, the Committee to Protect
Journalists said last month in an annual report. More than
30 journalists were killed in single massacre there in
November, "the deadliest incident for the press in CPJ
history," the group said December 17.
At least 68 journalists were killed around the
world in 2009, CPJ said.
Reporters Without Borders rated Eritrea, in the
Horn of Africa, as the worst place in the world to be a
journalist in its annual report on press freedom, in
October. Its rating was based on a 40-question survey
distributed to journalists in 175 countries.