Six-Year Prison Sentence Upheld Against Journalist Who Was Denied Right to Fair Trial
AUGUST 16, 2019
An Appeals
Court in Tehran has upheld a six-year prison sentence against political
journalist Hamed Aynehvand without holding a hearing, his
lawyer, Hossein Bayat, informed the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) on
August 13, 2019.
“Before the
preliminary court’s decision, there were people who told me not to bother
because for sure Hamed was going to get six years in prison and the Appeals
Court would go along with it,” he told CHRI. “And that’s what happened.”
Charged with
“propaganda against the state” and “assembly and collusion against national
security,” Aynehband will be eligible for parole in five years.
“Hamed’s
appeal hearing was supposed to take place on July 9,” Bayat said. “On that day,
Hamed was brought from prison and I was there, too, but the staff at Branch 36
of the Appeals Court said that based on the authority given to the judiciary
chief by the supreme leader, there was no need to convene an appeal hearing.”
“Nevertheless,
I insisted on going inside,” he added. We were allowed into the courtroom for
about four or five minutes but there was no reading of the charges and no
opportunity to present a defense.”
The attorney
said a court official had promised to try to reduce Aynehvand’s sentence to
three years in prison so that he could be released on parole after two years
but “that didn’t materialize and the sentence was upheld without change.”
“When
someone is accused of national security crimes, he is pitted against the entire
state, but then, in addition to that, you take away his right to defend himself
in the Appeals Court,” Bayat said. “Meanwhile his preliminary trial, held
behind closed doors and the without a jury, was in violation of the
Constitution and judicial procedures.”
A freelance
journalist focusing on political and judicial affairs in the country, Bayat has
been behind bars since agents of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ intelligence
organization arrested him on June 28, 2018, as he was leaving the National
Library in Tehran.
Aynehvand
wrote for several media outlets, including the government newspaper, Iran, and
news sites based abroad including Iran Global and Zeitoon.
“My client
has been denied a fair judicial process,” his lawyer told CHRI. “He was
unlawfully incarcerated for about a year and a half and now that his sentence
has been upheld, nothing can be done.”
Bayat added:
“In his preliminary trial, I was not allowed in the courtroom with the excuse
that my client and I didn’t have a financial arrangement. So Hamed had to
present a defense by himself and was denied the only legal support afforded
under the law.”
“I explained
that because of my friendship and family ties with Hamed, there was no
financial contract between us and I was not going to charge him for my legal
services but the judge didn’t accept that,” he said.
The attorney continued: “The judicial procedures
completely sidelined me as a lawyer and I didn’t have any meaningful impact on
my client’s case. Whether I had presented a defense or not, it wouldn’t have
made any difference. Hamed’s sentence was issued in advance and it was destined
to be upheld as is.”
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