Satirist Keyomars Marzban to Be Tried in Iran Under Hardline Judge Salavati
JANUARY
18, 2019
Iranian satirist Keyomars Marzban, who has been detained in Iran
since August 2018, is due to face trial for the charges of “propaganda against
the state” and “insulting the sacred” at Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court
in Tehran presided by Judge Abolqasem Salavati.
Salavati is notorious in Iran
for issuing harsh sentences in politically sensitive cases in Iran. In
interviews with the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI), several Iranian
human rights lawyers criticized Salavati for ignoring arguments by the defense
in court and bowing to the demands of the prosecution, especially in cases in
which the arresting authority was the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’
(IRGC’s) Intelligence Organization.
Since being detained, Marzban
has also been smeared by state-run and right wing media outlets in Iran that
have attempted to portray him as an agent of a foreign country who came to Iran
to bring down the Islamic Republic.
Salavati has presided over many
cases against dual nationals who have been imprisoned
in Iran, including Amir Hekmati, Saeed Abedini, and Jason Rezaian, all of whom
were released in January 2016 in a
prisoner swap deal with the US.
Salavati is also the presiding
judge in current cases against dual nationals including against
Iranian-American Siamak Namazi, his father Baquer Namazi and
British-Iranian dual citizen Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.
In all these cases, the victims
have been held without due process and under unclear or unannounced charges, as
well as denied full and proper legal representation.
Marzban’s lawyer, Mohammad
Hossein Aghasi, told CHRI on January 15, 2019, that a trial date had not been
set yet and that he was concerned because he had not been allowed to meet with
his client in Tehran’s Evin Prison or read the full indictment.
Iran’s state-run Islamic
Republic News Agency (IRNA) claimed on January 15 that Marzban was a foreign-based writer who
allegedly worked for the US-funded news site, Radio Farda, in Prague, as well
as the London-based Manoto broadcasting company.
The 26-year-old satirist was arrested
by the IRGC’s Intelligence Organization on August 26, 2018, about a year after
returning to Iran to visit his ailing grandmother. He had been living in
Malaysia after leaving his birth country of Iran following mass street protests
against the contested 2009 presidential election.
On September 12, 2018, a
website affiliated with the IRGC, Edalatkhahan (Justice Seekers), claimed in the most recent smear
campaign that Marzban had traveled to the US to launch an anti-Islamic Republic
media outlet “aimed at inflaming the people and creating social divisions.”
Edalatkhahan also accused
Marzban of working with Freedom House, a human rights organization based in Washington, DC, to get
Iranian artists and celebrities to oppose state policies in Iran.
Marzban began his artistic
career making short films. While living in Malaysia, he hosted a comedy podcast
called “Sangetab
Radio” (Twisted Stone Radio) and in 2014 he published a book of
short stories titled Kham Bodam Pokhteh Shodam Balkeh Pasandideh Shodam (I was Raw, I Became Ripe and Pleasant).
On April 17, Marzban had given
an interview to the state-funded Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA)
about his experiences living abroad.
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