April 14, 2000
His Excellency Sayed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran
c/o Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United
Nations
622 3rd Ave, 34th Floor
New York, NY 10017
VIA FACSIMILE: 212.867.7086
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists is writing to protest the jailing
of Iranian journalist Mashallah Shamsolvaezin, editor of the daily Asr-e-Azadegan.
On Monday, April 10, an appellate court sentenced Shamsolvaezin to thirty
months in prison for allegedly insulting Islamic principles in a 1999
article that criticized capital punishment in Iran. Shamsolvaezin was
taken to Tehran's Evin Prison shortly after the verdict.
The article was published in the now-defunct daily Neshat, which
Shamsolvaezin edited until judicial authorities closed the paper in
September of last year. On November 27, 1999, a Tehran court sentenced
Shamsolvaezin to three years in prison (Monday's court ruling reduced
the sentence). Until Monday, he had remained free on bail pending the
outcome of his appeal.
Shamsolvaezin's jailing follows those of his colleagues Mohsen Kadivar
and Abdullah Nouri, who are both serving lengthy prison terms as a result
of their journalistic work. On April 21, 1999, Iran's Special Court
for Clergy sentenced Kadivar, a reformist cleric and academic, to 18
months in prison for "disseminating lies" and "misleading public opinion."
The charges stemmed from articles, interviews, and public lectures in
which Kadivar criticized Iran's clerical elite. In one article, published
in the now-defunct daily Khordad, he compared Iran's ruling clerics
to the authoritarian regime of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. Kadivar has
been in jail since February 27, 1999, when he was first arrested.
Nouri, the former publisher of Khordad and a former interior
minister and vice president, was convicted on November 27, 1999, of
defaming "the system," disseminating false information and propaganda
against the state, and insulting religious leaders. The charges were
based on news articles published in Khordad. Nouri was sentenced
to five years in prison and barred from practicing journalism for five
years. Khordad was ordered to close.
In the past week alone, at least four other journalists have been summoned
for investigation or charged in connection with their published work.
CPJ urges Your Excellency to ensure that all possible legal options
are examined so that Mashallah Shamsolvaezin, Mohsen Kadivar and Abdullah
Nouri are freed from prison immediately. We also urge you to take the
appropriate measures to guarantee that judicial authorities cease their
legal harassment of journalists in response to their professional activities.
Thank you for your attention to this urgent matter. We look forward
to your timely response.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director