The journalists are expected to be among 20 unnamed
defendants tried on an array of charges, according to a government statement posted
by the semi-official Fars News agency. All were arrested in the
aftermath of the disputed June 12 presidential elections.
The official Iranian News Agency (IRNA) reported on Wednesday
that photographers Majid
Saeedi and Satyar Emami confessed to taking pictures and sending them to "enemy
[news] agencies." Few details are available about Emami, who was arrested on
July 9. Security forces arrested Saeedi, a
photographer for several local newspapers and the global photo agency Getty
Images, on July 10. Getty has more than 300 photographers working around the
world and has offices in
"Majid Saeedi is a well-regarded photojournalist
who was simply recording the reality he observed and distributing his photos
through a global news agency recognized for its nonpartisan coverage of world
events," said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. "We are gravely concerned that
Saeedi, Satyar Emami, and the many other journalists in jail could be put on
trial merely for doing their jobs."
A slideshow of Saeedi's images from
On June 30, Fars News agency posted an 11-page
"confession" from detained Newsweek reporter Maziar Bahari in which he
allegedly said he participated in "promoting a color revolution." Bahari was
arrested on June 21 in
In another development, police arrested at least
three documentary filmmakers today when thousands of people gathered at Behesht-e-Zahra
cemetery to commemorate the killing of Neda Agha-Soltan, a protester shot in
the aftermath of the disputed June 12 election, according to international news
reports. Police detained filmmakers Jafar Panahi, Mahnaz Mohammadi, and
Rookhsare Ghaem Ghami, according to multiple
news reports. The BBC
Persian service reported
that police also arrested Panahi's wife and child, whose age was not mentioned.
Earlier this week, Korosh Javan, a freelance
photographer, was released, CPJ has learned today. Javan was arrested on July
9. On Tuesday, authorities released on bail Shadi Sadr, a journalist, lawyer,
and activist, who was arrested on July 17. Sadr is an editor for the Women in Iran, the Web site for a
local women's rights group.

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