Home > English > Freedom of Speech > Afghan journalist freed after being held for 86 days in Iran

Afghan journalist freed after being held for 86 days in Iran

From Reporters Without Borders
Reporters Without Borders
Friday 30 May 2008

Reading time: (Number of words: )

All the versions of this article: [English] [فارسى]

Share:

IRAN

Reporters Without Borders announced the release yesterday of Afghan journalist Ali Mohaqiq Nasab, the editor of the monthly Haqoq-e-Zan (Women’s Rights), after being held for 86 days in an intelligence ministry prison in the holy city of Qom (150 km southwest of Tehran).

"Nazab was held arbitrarily for three months," the press freedom organisation said. "The conditions were difficult and he was in solitary confinement for most of the time. He has been released conditionally and is not allowed to leave the country. We urge the authorities to drop the charges against him."

A refugee in Iran for the past 24 years, Nazab was arrested on 4 March in Qom, where he lives. The arrest was carried out by intelligence ministry personnel, who had an order issued by a special court for the clergy.

"According to the arrest warrant I was shown, I was accused of having suspicious relations with foreign embassies but the interrogation to which I was submitted was mainly about my journalistic activities and the articles published in Haqoq-e-Zan," Nasab told Reporters Without Borders.

Copies of the resettlement requests he had sent to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which were found during a search of his home, were also used to accuse him of "publicity against the government" and "publication of false information."

Nasab spent 81 of the 86 days in solitary confinement, and suffered kidney and chest pains that were not treated.

آنتولوژی شعر شاعران جهان برای هزاره
Poems for the Hazara

The Anthology of 125 Internationally Recognized Poets From 68 Countries Dedicated to the Hazara

Order Now
Kamran Mir Hazar Youtube Channel
Human Rights, Native People, Stateless Nations, Literature, Book Review, History, Philosophy, Paradigm, and Well-being
Subscribe

Latest

Protest

So-Called Afghanistan Comprises Diverse Stateless Nations, Including the Hazara, Uzbek, Tajik, Turkmen, Pashtun/Afghan, and Nuristani With No Majority or National Identity.

Search Kabul Press