| Afghan journalist, Iranian students face prison and death | |
| Monday, 04 February 2008 | |
| Though thearticle was actually written by an online journalist – an Iranian-born studentwho lives in This is notthe first time that claims of the Afghan government and clerics using religiouspretexts to arrest and imprison journalists have surfaced. In October, 2005 Ali Mohaqeq Nasab, Afghan journalist and the editor of the"Hoqoq-e-Zan" (Women's Rights) monthly, was arrested andsentenced to two years in prison on charges of blasphemy. Nasab had publishedarticles that argued that giving up Islam, apostacy, was not a crime andquestioned Shari’a law and its harsh punishments, such as stoning a woman whois found guilty of adultery. Though clerics had originally demanded the deathpenalty for Nasab, he was released in December 2005 after he apologized for thearticles and an appeals court succumbed to international pressure and gave hima six month suspended sentence. In an interview with Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty after his release,Nasab claimed that the clerics and the courts arrested and charged him onorders “from oneof Afghanistan’s neighbors” and that the charge of “insulting Islam was only anexcuse” that served at once as a reason to attack him personally, as an ethnicHazara, so that no Hazaras “should grow and reach success” and also to attack “issuessuch as freedom of expression, democracy, and civilization.” His concerns echothe eerily similar Kambakhsh’s case, as Nasab said that “those who are incharge of enforcing democracy and freedom of expression are people who do notbelieve these [principles]. They are even the enemies of these principles [and]that if it goes on like this, freedom of expression may be no more.” Thepractice of detaining, and even killing, journalists is a tactic shared byseveral of Afghanistan’s neighbors, including Khazakstan, Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Iran, each of which has been cited, bythe Committee to Protect Journalist, as being among the most censored or mostdangerous places to be a journalist. This common characteristic is not so muchan issue of simply obstructing free press, but is rather the visible byproductof governments which are eager and willing to oppress their citizens to stay inpower. While thegovernments in former Soviet Republics of Central Asia fight any reporting that mayencourage either democracy or Shari’a-based government, as they try to hold onto communist dictatorship in the 21st century, their neighbor, Iran,is mainly fighting movements that challenge the entrenched Islamicfundamentalism. In Iran thesituation is much more straight-forward, and the systematic dismemberment offree press and dissident movements is apparent in the hard-line conservative policiesof President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Tehran Mayor Mohammad-Baqer Qalibaf, aone-time Brigadier General in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard, which arespurring arrests of dissidents to a new level. Though conservatives won controlof the Iranian Parliament in 2004, reformists and others who oppose Ahmadinejadhave since won the majority of seats in As aresult, the pressure on dissidents, reformist, and journalists has increased.One recent crackdown involved about 60 university students across the country,four of whom were expelled, for what they claim are false accusations takingpart in unauthorized demonstrations. But many students have actually beendetained for similar activities. In a public statement released by AmnestyInternational, the organization claims that between 20 and 30 studentsassociated with Students for Freedom and Equality (Daneshjouyan-e Azadi Khahva Beraber Talab), were detained for participating in demonstrations forNational University Students’ Day on The fearsare not unfounded. On Jan. 18 Radio Farda reported that a student activist detainedin 2008 thecampusword.com |

1 comment:
thorough and includes information not available at other sites. Disturbing, but not a justification for invasion or bombing campaigns. There have to be better tactics - like open doors and communication, cultural exchanges, state visits, face to face discussions.
In Germany we watched a secretly videoed stoning of three men. It was insanely tragic to see so many participating in the throwing of rocks not stones, evil, I would say.. It took place in Iran.
And to think that in Old Testament and even New Testament Days, stoning was also a Jewish tradition.
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