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          5/27/2011 World Report - Iran - Reporters Without...
          Helping journalists
          Safety of journalists
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          Iran
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          172 out of 178 in the latest worldwide index
          - - - - - ‘ I
          Area: 1,648,195 sq. km.
          Population: 71,208,000
          Language: Persian
          Head of state: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, since August2005 ; Supreme Leader: Ali Khamenei, since
          1989
          IRAN PRESS FREEDOM BAROMETER 2011
          0 Journalists killed
          0 media assistants killed
          25 iournalists imprisoned
          I media assistants imprisoned
          10 netizens imprisoned
          Iran is now on the threshold of joining the “infernal trio” (Eritrea, North Korea, Turkmenistan), the world's
          most repressive countries in the domain of freedom of the press. With almost 30 journalists and bloggers
          in custody, Iran has become the Middle East's biggest and among the five biggest prisons in the world for
          journalists.
          There was a considerable deterioration in the state of press freedom in 2009, with the clampdown on the
          protest movement that followed the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president on 12
          June. The year began badly with the death of blogger Omidreza Mirsayafi in Tehran's Evin prison
          followed by the arrest of Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi.
          More than 100 journalists were arrested and around 50 driven into exile following the June election. Twelve
          newspapers were suspended and thousands of web pages blocked.
          Many of the journalists were held in Evin jail and some were forced to make confessions, coming under
          psychological pressure and suffering maltreatment. A series of show trials opened in the capital in August,
          during which the defendants' basic rights were trampled on. Several journalists and bloggers faced
          charges of being “spies in the pay of foreigners”. Some were released on payment of extorlionate bail,
          after being sentenced to between five and nine years in prison. A total of 75 years in prison were handed
          down to journalists and nearly three billion tomans (2,500,000 euros) were paid in bail. Journalist Ahmad
          Zeydabadi, who was arrested on 14 June, was sentenced to five years in prison and a lifetime ban on
          writing. He was hospitalised on 20 August from the effects of a 17-day hunger strike and 40 days solitary
          confinement. He is still in custody, despite receiving the Golden Pen press freedom award in 2009.
          Fariba Pajooh, a journalist for reformist newspapers, including Etemad-e Melli, and contributor to foreign
          http://en.rsf.org/report-iran,153.btml 6/10
        
          
          5/27/2011 World Report - Iran - Reporters Without...
          media such as Radio France International, was released on 23 December 2009, after she had spent four
          months in prison, almost a month of it in solitary confinement.
          For the first time since the 1979, the security services have started checking on the content of publications
          before they come out. Several newspapers have been suspended after publishing articles contradicting
          the official version of events and more than a score of others — including national dailies — have been
          suspended.
          The list of journalists going into exile lengthens every day. Six months after the start of the crackdown,
          more than 50 journalists have left the country, the biggest exodus since the 1979 revolution.
          The regime has since 12 June begun a process of demonising the foreign and especially western, media
          and the Internet, accusing them of being the “mouthpiece of rioters”. The Ministry of Culture and Islamic
          Orientation on 16 June banned foreign media by decree from “taking part in or covering demonstrations
          organised without permission of the Ministry of the Interior”. Several foreign journalists have been forced to
          leave the country. Those who managed to stay come under constant pressure, as evidenced in the most
          recent demonstrations in December 2009.
          The authorities have also attacked new media which have been the engine of protest. Websites seen as
          likely to dispute the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, including a score of sites close to the opposition,
          were censored on the eve of the election. The Internet has been hit by draconian censorship ahead of
          every demonstration to prevent news from circulating and the mobilisation of the regime's opponents.
          Mohammed Davari, editor of the news website Etemad-e Me/li, was arrested on 8 September in a raid
          by the authorities on the Tehran offices of the opposition leader Mehdi Karoubi in which computers,
          documents and film were seized. The website had reported on cases of mistreatment and rape in prisons.
          Aided by service providers, the authorities have redirected the home page of some news sites to
          government propaganda sites. YouTube and Facebook are difficult to access and the use of proxies
          complicated by slow bandwidth. The mobile phone network has also been jammed. The authorities do
          their utmost to block the posting online of film recorded on mobile phones.
          A draft law on “Internet offences” that will pose a very serious risk to Internet users, was passed at the end
          of August 2009.
          Iran [ ‘U.]
          Iran- 19 May2011
          Press freedom violations recounted in real time (from 1st January 2011)
          BahrainlranLibyaOmanSyria - 18 May2011
          Iran frees Parvaz, Libya frees four other iournalists
          lranSwia -16 May2011
          Reporter with US, Canadian and Iranian nationality deported to Iran by Syria
          http://en.rsf.org/report-iran,153.html 7/10
        
          
          5/27/2011
          World Report - Iran - Reporters Without...
          Very serious Sltuation
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          8/10
        
          
          5/27/2011
          World Report - Iran- Reporters Without...
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          Check out the new list of the Enemies of the Internet, released every year on World Day Against
          Cybercensorship.
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          Lorenzo Natali Prize
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          5/27/2011 World Report - Iran - Reporters Without...
          http: 7wddleaks.rstorg
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