Tehran Unleashes Fresh Wave of Repression Against Filmmakers, Opponents and Christians

Iranian authorities have unleashed a new clampdown on dissent and critical voices in the country, from opponents to activists and intellectuals who, in recent weeks, had joined a popular protest campaign. 

Newsroom (12/07/2022 11:45 AM Gaudium Press) Mostafa Tajzadeh, a prominent reformist politician and critical voice of the ayatollahs’ regime, was arrested on charges of conspiring against the state apparatus and security. He must also answer for the crime of ‘publishing false information aimed at distracting public opinion.’

A former deputy interior minister under former President Mohammad Khatami (who led the Islamic Republic from 1997 to 2005), he has already spent seven years in jail between 2009 and 2016. During his political activities, Tajzadeh has been unsparingly critical of the Supreme Leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, current President Ebrahim Raisi and the clerical establishment. At the same time, the leader has been a tireless advocate of the ongoing campaign for democratic change in Iran. A few hours before his arrest, he posted a message on Twitter in which he criticized the tightening of dress codes in compliance with the rules of the Islamic faith for women.

Two prominent directors were jailed for two different protests: Mohammad Rasoulof, whose works have won numerous awards at the Cannes and Berlin festivals, and Mostafa Alahmad. Both face charges of ‘fuelling unrest.’ Both are part of a group of film directors and actors who launched a protest after the collapse of a 10-storey building in the city of Abadan last May, in which more than 40 people died. In their open letter, they addressed the security forces, calling on them to lay down their arms and not to repress legitimate demonstrations of dissent triggered by the collapse of the Metropol office block.

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Meanwhile, the axe of repression continues to fall on the Christian community, particularly among the newly converted Protestants. Rahmat Rostamipour, a 49-year-old convert from Islam, has been “deprived of his civil rights” for the next five years for promoting “educational activities contrary to the holy religion of Islam, setting up house churches.” 

According to Article18 reports, he will also have to pay 6 million tomans (a little over 180 euros, equivalent to one month’s salary) now and another 18 million in the case of ‘reiteration’ of the offence over the next two years, during which time his activities will be supervised. The sentence was imposed under the infamous amended Article 500 of the Penal Code, which allows the indictment of actions or behaviour deemed ‘contrary’ to the Muslim faith.

 

(Via Asianews.it)

Compiled by Raju Hasmukh

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