Judicial Official Refuses to Lift Iran’s Ban on Twitter Despite Growing Use by State Officialsبا وجود حضور رهبر، رییسجمهور، وزرا و مقامات کشوری در توییتر، دادستان کل کشور با رفعفیلتر آن مخالفت کرد
Iran’s hardline prosecutor general, Mohammad Jafar Montazeri. |
AUGUST
17, 2018
After several state officials
called on President Hassan Rouhani to make Twitter accessible in Iran, a
hardline judicial official has said doing so would be a “crime.”
In May 2018, Telecommunications
Minister Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi, Education Minister Mohammad
Bathaei, Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi, Justice Minister Alireza Avaie,
Science Minister Mansour Gholami, Culture and Islamic Guidance Minister Abbas
Salehi, as well as two Members of Parliament (MPs), Ramezanali Sobhanifar and
Mohammad Kazemi, signed a letter urging Rouhani to lift
the state’s ban.
In response, Prosecutor General
Mohammad Jafar Montazeri revealed that he had refused to participate in a
meeting with the six cabinet ministers and two MPs to discuss the issue.
“After we shut down these
networks via the Working Group for Determining Instances of Criminal Content
(WGDICC), suddenly these six ministers write to me and ask to meet to lift the
filter,” Montazeri said at a conference in Tehran
on August 15.
“But I didn’t go because if I
did, I would have been an accomplice to a crime,” he added.
A day earlier, Abdolsamad
Khorramabadi, the WGDICC secretary and deputy prosecutor general, had
reiterated his opposition to unblocking Twitter.
“The WGDICC has no authority to
nullify judicial rulings,” Khorramabadi said in an article published by the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) on
August 14. “Therefore, unblocking Twitter will not be on the WGDICC’s agenda.
Twitter will not be unblocked.”
Rejecting Telecommunications
Minister Jahromi’s criticism of the judiciary for upholding the ban,
Khorramabadi said, “The esteemed prosecutor general has formally written to the
minister to explicitly point out that his request to unblock Twitter is
illegal.”
“It’s worth contemplating why
this illegal request is repeatedly being made and constantly being raised by
the media,” he added. “If some think that by mentioning an illegal action over
and over again in the media they can remove legal the legal obstacles, they are
mistaken.”
Twitter was banned in Iran in
2009 during the mass protests that erupted against the disputed result of that
year’s presidential election.
In the past two years, many
Iranian officials and lawmakers have joined Twitter, including Supreme Leader
Ali Khamenei, President Rouhani, many members of the president’s cabinet, and
even senior officers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
The newest member of Iran’s
ruling establishment to join Twitter is Abbasali Kadkhodaei, the spokesmen for
the Guardian Council, a powerful state body of six clerics and six jurists that
vets laws and elections for conformity with Islamic principles.
“In the spirit of Journalism Day… from this day
on I will be at your side in providing faster information and raising more
awareness among journalists and the dear people by expressing existing points
of view,” he wrote in his first tweet on August 13.
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