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The Iranian government is on the verge of stamping out a whole generation of young activists with its ruthless and repressive tactics.” Background “We are urging the authorities to immediately quash Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee’s conviction and that of her husband Aresh Sadeghi, who has been behind bars since June for peacefully exercising his rights to freedom of expression and association. This is just the latest example of the Iranian authorities’ utter contempt for justice and human rights,” said Philip Luther. She was denied the right to a defence and her sentence was a foregone conclusion.
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“Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee’s ‘trial’ was farcical.
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She provided the court with her medical records, but her request to adjourn the hearing was rejected. She was not given the chance to speak in her own defence, because the first session was focused on her husband’s activism, and at the second she was in hospital recovering from major surgery and could not be present. The first lawyer she appointed was put under pressure to withdraw from the case, and the second was barred from reading her court case and representing her. Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee was tried in two brief sessions by a Revolutionary Court in Tehran, and had no legal representation at the trial. Arash Sadeghi has since said that he was tortured while in custody – his interrogators kicked him, punched him in the head, slapped him and choked him. She could also clearly hear interrogators threatening and verbally abusing her husband in the next cell, adding to her distress. Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee has said that during her periods of detention she was subjected to long hours of interrogations while blindfolded and facing a wall, and that interrogators repeatedly told her that she could face execution for “insulting Islam”. She was in solitary confinement for the first three days. She was held there for 20 days, without access to her family, a lawyer or a court. She was kept there for the night and then transferred to a section of Evin Prison that is under the control of the Revolutionary Guards. They then transferred Arash Sadeghi, a human rights activist, to Tehran’s Evin Prison and Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee to a secret detention place. The men showed no arrest warrant but took the couple to their house where they searched their possessions and seized items, including their laptops, notebooks and some CDs. The story was discovered by authorities on 6 September 2014 when Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee was arrested together with her husband Arash Sadeghi at his workplace in Tehran by men believed to be Revolutionary Guards. The story describes the emotional reaction of a young woman who watches the film The Stoning of Soraya M – which tells the true story of a young woman stoned to death for adultery – and becomes so enraged that she burns a copy of the Qur’an.
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The first charge, for which Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee has received five years in prison, was imposed primarily in response to an unpublished fictional story that she had written. On 4 October Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee received a threatening phone call from the Centre for the Implementation of Sentences ordering her to present herself to Evin Prison to begin serving her six-year prison sentence for “insulting Islamic sanctities” and “spreading propaganda against the system”. It is appalling that Iran continues to allow the use of stoning, and justifies it in the name of protecting morality.” “Instead of imprisoning a young woman for peacefully exercising her human rights by expressing her opposition to stoning, the Iranian authorities should focus on abolishing this punishment, which amounts to torture. She is facing years behind bars simply for writing a story, and one which was not even published – she is effectively being punished for using her imagination,” said Philip Luther, Research and Advocacy Director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International. “The charges against Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee are ludicrous.
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