Mohammad Rasoulof’s Films Were Banned in Iran, Now He’s Been Sentenced to Prison
JULY 24,
2019
“We have to pay a price, and every person will
pay some price,” says acclaimed filmmaker
July 24, 2019 – The
sentencing of award-winning filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof to one year in prison for the
content of his films has highlighted the perilous political landscape
independent artists must navigate in Iran.
“Iranian cinema has won
international acclaim despite stifling censorship and the ongoing persecution
of artists,” said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the Center for Human
Rights in Iran (CHRI).
“Rasoulof’s only
crime was pursuing an artistic vision that didn’t support government narratives
about Iranian culture and society,” he added.
Rasoulof was also banned
from “membership in political and social parties and organizations” for two
years, he told CHRI on July 21, the day after he received the verdict.
Since September 2017,
Rasoulof has also been banned from leaving the country and making films.
“The absurd sentence
against Rasoulof reflects the high price independent filmmakers must pay for
refusing to abide by the government’s restrictive and arbitrary rules,” said
Ghaemi.
“My Job is to Tell Stories”
“Strangely, they’re
accusing me of ‘propaganda against the state’ for telling stories,” Rasoulof
told CHRI. “None of my films are political, they are social criticisms that
have political repercussions.”
“Instead of understanding
the films, they are interpreting them as slander against the state,” he added.
“I think intolerance and impatience toward criticism is reactionary.”
Independent filmmakers
face enormous pressure from the Iranian government to refrain from producing
work that is critical of state policies and officially sanctioned narratives on
politics, culture and society.
The government subjects
all artists in the country to restrictive and arbitrary censorship policies
administered by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, and has a documented history of
persecuting independent filmmakers who resist this pressure.
Several directors have
been sentenced to prison and had their films banned in Iran for failing to abide by these
rules.
In February 2016,
Iranian-Kurdish documentary filmmaker Keyvan Karimi was sentenced to 223 lashes and one
year in prison under the charge of “insulting the sacred.”
In October 2014, Iran’s
Parliamentary Committee for Cultural Affairs called on the Culture and Islamic Guidance
Ministry to ban eight Iranian films that were allegedly pro-Green Movement,
including “I’m Not Angry.”
In March 2010, Rasoulof
was prosecuted under the charges of “assembly and collusion against national
security” and “propaganda against the state” along with fellow prominent
filmmaker Jafar Panahi and sentenced to six years in prison.
Upon appeal, the sentence
was reduced to one year in prison but was not enforced.
Rasoulof was again
blacklisted by the Iranian government after receiving international praise for
his film, “A Man of Integrity,” including the top prize in
the Un Certain Regard section at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival.
After returning from the
Cannes Film Festival to Iran in September 2017, the authorities confiscated his
passport and informed him that he was no longer allowed to make films
The film, about a
small-town goldfish farmer struggling to make ends meet against systematic
corruption, was banned in the Islamic Republic.
Since 2017, he has been
summoned and questioned numerous times by the Culture and Media Court.
“In part of his ruling,
the judge wrote that the defendant, me, has not made any films about the
bravery of my nation,” Rasoulof told CHRI, noting that he was paraphrasing the
judge’s words.
“Then he mentioned that I
have been awarded by non-Iranian film festivals and that foreign audiences
clapped for me; they are the enemies of the state and therefore I’m an enemy of
the state.”
Rasoulof added that
most of the accusations made against him in court were
focused on “A Man of Integrity” and another film he had made, “Manuscripts Don’t Burn,” in which he examined the
Iranian government’s persecution of members of the Baha’i faith.
“When I was questioned by
investigators, I was asked about all my films,” he said. “Their main argument
was that I have blackened [the state] and that my criticisms are unhealthy and
there’s no hope in my films.”
Rasoulof continued: “I
asked the honorable judge, ‘Have you watched my films?’ He said, no… it was
sufficient to read the assessment by the security agencies about me and listen
to the answers I gave to his questions.”
Pessimism About Appeal Process
Speaking to CHRI,
Rasoulof’s lawyer, Nasser Zarafshan said his client’s actions do not amount to
“propaganda against the state,” and that he would be filing an appeal against
the recent verdict.
“This verdict was based on
Article 500 [of the Islamic Penal Code],” he added. “The law says
‘propaganda against the state’ are actions by an individual against the Islamic
Republic, but challenging the officials and institutions within the framework
of the Islamic Republic is not propaganda against the state. It’s criticism.”
Rasoulof told CHRI he was
“pessimistic” about the fairness of the appeal process and “about being heard.”
“I think the judicial
system of the Islamic Republic is concerned about protecting the state, rather
than enforcing the law,” he said. “I can’t do anything but watch this injustice
with sadness and resignation.”
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