New
York, October 12, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists strongly
protests a travel ban imposed on Iranian journalist and human rights activist
Emadeddin Baghi, who was due to be honored here today with an award recognizing
his courage in fighting injustice.
Iranian officials confiscated Baghi's passport at Tehran's airport on
October 4, and prevented him from leaving Iran. Without giving an explanation,
a state security agent informed the journalist that a court order barred
him from traveling out of the country, according to news reports
The ban blocked Baghi from traveling to the United States and Europe where
he was to take part in several meetings on human rights, according to
press reports. An independent journalist and author of 20 books, Baghi
heads the Committee for Defense of Prisoners Rights, an organization that
helps defend intellectuals imprisoned for espousing pro-democracy ideas
and opinions. He was scheduled to meet European Union officials working
on human rights, and to attend meetings on the subject in the Netherlands,
the United States, and Canada, according to Agence France-Presse.
Baghi was also scheduled to receive the Civil Courage Prize from the Northcote
Parkinson Fund, which honors "steadfast resistance to evil at great personal
risk," at a ceremony in New York today, according to the prize Web site.
Baghi was jailed by Iranian authorities in 2000 and held for nearly three
years for publishing articles about the role of Intelligence Ministry
agents in the 1998 murders of several Iranian intellectuals and dissidents.
Since his release from prison in February 2003, Baghi has been subjected
to ongoing surveillance and harassing court summonses related to his published
work.
"Iranian authorities continue to persecute Emadeddin Baghi, even now that
he is out of prison, " CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "Although
it is too late for Emadeddin Baghi to receive his well-deserved Civil
Courage Prize, we urge Iranian authorities to lift this travel ban immediately.
The harassment must stop and authorities must allow him to travel and
work freely."

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