Iran is Imprisoning University Students Accused of Attending Protests
JULY 13, 2018
The number of students being prosecuted for allegedly
joining Iran’s December 2017/January 2018 protests is
much higher than earlier estimates according to a well-known reformist
lawmaker.
“A list has been put together of the students detained in
the December 2017 incidents and they number more than 150,” said Member of
Parliament Parvaneh Salahshouri in an interview with the
state-funded Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) on July 10, 2018.
“So we’re not talking about just 55 or 90 students,” she
added. Unfortunately, the issue of student detentions is much more extensive.”
Salahshouri, who leads the pro-Rouhani women’s faction in
Parliament, also told ILNA that 17 students had so far been sentenced to prison
terms.
“The Intelligence Ministry is involved in some of the
cases against these students and therefore the government and the ministry
itself should explain what’s going on here,” Salahshouri said.
Iran’s Intelligence Ministry operates under President
Hassan Rouhani, who appointed Mahmoud Alavi as intelligence minister in August
2013.
The latest sentences were issued on July 10 as the
Appeals Court in Tabriz, East Azerbaijan Province, upheld a two-year sentence
against Roya Saghiri and a six-month prison term for Ali Ghadiri, according to
a student activist who spoke to the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) on
condition of anonymity.
A student in Tehran has also been sentenced to prison for
allegedly participating in a demonstration two years earlier in 2016.
“Fereshteh Tousi, a sociology graduate student at Allameh
Tabataba’i University [in Tehran], has been sentenced to a year-and-a-half in
prison and banned from political and civil activists for two years. She had
been charged with ‘propaganda against the state’ for being present at the
Student Day event at Allameh Tabataba’i University on December 17, 2016,”
according to the source.
The source noted that a preliminary court also sentenced
Sadegh Gheysari, a journalist and student at Shahid Beheshti University in
Tehran, to seven years in prison, 74 lashes and a two-year ban on media
activities and traveling abroad because he reported on a clash between
Muslim Sufis and the police in Tehran in February 2018.
In June 2018, Sina Darvish Omran and Ali Mozaffari
were convicted of
the charges of acting against “national security” and waging “propaganda
against the state” and sentenced to eight years in prison each for the charge
of “assembly and collusion against national security.”
Earlier in March 2018, University of Tehran anthropology
student Leila Hosseinzadeh was issued a
six-year prison sentence and banned from traveling abroad for two years while
theater set design student Mohsen Haghshenas got two years in prison and
sociology student Sina Rabiei received a one-year prison sentence and a
two-year travel ban.
More than 60 student organizations from universities
across Iran sharply criticized President
Rouhani for the crackdown on students led by his Intelligence Ministry.
“Dr. Rouhani’s ‘moderate’ government has not only failed
to defend the students but evidently his Intelligence Ministry is involved in
their arrest and prosecution,” said the student organizations in a joint
statement published in July 2018.
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