Law Student Begins Six-Month Prison Term for Social Media Posts Critical of State Policyدانشجوی حقوق قانونی شروع به شش ماه زندان برای پست های رسانه های اجتماعی انتقاد از سیاست های دولت
DECEMBER
21, 2018
Amir Chamani Taken to Tabriz Prison, Lawyer
Not Notified
In a continuing assault on
freedom of speech—particularly the peaceful expression of views critical of
state policy—the law student and civil rights activist Amir Chamani was taken
from his place of work and transferred to Tabriz Central Prison
in northwest Iran on December 17, 2018, after the Appeals Court upheld his
six-month prison sentence for posts on social media about political and
economic issues, his lawyer told the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI).
“Yes, it’s true he has been
taken into custody,” attorney Abbas Jamali said on December 19. “My client was
detained without my knowledge and taken to Tabriz prison in connection with the
six-month sentence he received following his arrest in late May 2018. He was
also charged with ‘insulting the Supreme Leader,’ for which he was fortunately
not found guilty, but the Appeals Court upheld the sentence [for ‘propaganda
against the state’] despite our objection.”
A law student at Payame Noor
University in Tabriz, Chamani specializes in social and political issues.
He had an active presence on social media through his Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts and regularly commented on current affairs with a
critical eye, particularly about labor and human rights issues.
The preliminary sentence
against him was issued on September 1, 2018 by Branch 1 of the Revolutionary
Court in Tabriz presided by Judge Rahim Hamlbar, whose name is on a UK sanctions list for issuing harsh
sentences against numerous peaceful activists in Iran’s East Azerbaijan
Province.
The same judge had previously
sentenced Chamani to nine months in prison for “propaganda against the state”
and “insulting the Supreme Leader,” which the activist served in Tabriz Central
Prison until his release on October 3, 2013.
The law student was also
flogged 40 times on June 5, 2013 when Branch 104 of the Criminal Court in
Tabriz convicted him of “insulting the President.” The UN has determined “sentences of flogging …
violate the absolute prohibition of torture and other cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment.”
Chamani’s latest arrest was
carried out by Intelligence Ministry agents on May 26, 2018. The
Intelligence Ministry, which is under the direct authority of President
Rouhani, has become one of the leading human rights violators in Iran,
responsible for the arrest of a significant number of activists, students,
minority community leaders and human rights defenders over the past few years.
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