Wednesday, February 15, 2012


Iran

Iranian Authorities Arrest Prominent Rights Lawyer

Soltani (left), pictured with colleague and Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi during the Kazemi trial in mid-2004

31 July 2005 -- Iranian authorities have detained a prominent human rights lawyer, Abdolfattah Soltani, and accused him of leaking classified details about nuclear spies.

TEXT SIZE - +
A spokesman for Iran's judiciary, Jamal Karimirad, alleged today that Soltani had revealed information on spies and suspected spies both inside and outside the country.

Last year, Iran said it detained several Iranian nationals whom it accused of transferring nuclear secrets to foreigners, namely the United States and Israel. The suspects have gone to trial, but Iran has kept the verdicts a secret.

Soltani is a lawyer representing the family of an Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi, who died in mid-2003 of injuries suffered in Iranian custody.

Soltani's attorney, Mohammad Dadkhah, said he suspects the true reason for Soltani's arrest was his work in investigating the case of Kazemi, who died in prison under suspicious circumstances.

An Iranian court in mid-2004 moved to end the trial of the key suspect in her death, prompting an outcry from Canada and Kazemi's legal team, which is led by Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi.

(Reuters/AP)

Also on Iran:

"EU Warns Iran Over 'Damaging' Nuclear Step"

You Might Also Like

Iranian Activists, Journalists Receive Threatening E-mails

A number of Iranian activists and journalists based inside and outside the country have told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda they have been threatened in anonymous e-mails. More

Video Love It (Or Hate It), It's Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day, the Western holiday celebrating love, has become a global phenomenon over the past two decades. The fall of communism and the emergence of the Internet have helped February 14 become something of an unofficial international day of romance. However, not all the passions the holiday stirs are related to love. While some countries have openly embraced the holiday, others are attempting to ban it or replace it with local customs. More

Iran Tightens Internet Control

Iranians are reporting that their access to Facebook and Internet-based e-mail sites like Gmail has been blocked, without any explanation from the government. Not even the strongest antifiltering programs have penetrated the firewall, they say. Some speculate the move is related to Iran's plan to launch a national internet, which might sever Iranians' ability to access the World Wide Web. More

Most Popular

               
 
 
 
 
Being Discussed Now

Iranian Bomber Wounded In Bangkok

Latest Comment (1 total)

arash: As I've said before this terrorist regime must be thrown out of the ... More

Kosovo Serbs To Vote In Referendum

Latest Comment (4 total)

Eugenio: Ah, Alija, your open-hearted admission of desire to cleanse the ethnic Serbs from ... More

U.S. Hearing On Balochistan Raises Hackles, Awareness In Pakistan

Latest Comment (11 total)

Mah: Really? You wanna divide Balochistan? That's the outrageous idea I've heard so far. ... More