Saturday, May 26, 2012


Persian Letters

Iran Jails Veteran Opposition Figure

The head of the outlawed Iran Freedom Movement, Ebrahim Yazdi, holds a press conference in Tehran in 2005.
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Iranian opposition activist Ebrahim Yazdi, who served briefly as foreign minister following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has been sentenced to eight years in prison, his lawyer told RFE/RL's Radio Farda.

Mohammad Ali Dadkhah also said that the opposition figure was handed a five-year ban on civic activities.

The 80-year-old Yazdi, who heads the banned Freedom Movement, was put on trial on security charges, including acting against national security and spreading lies. Similar charges have often been brought against political activists in Iran.

Yazdi had refused to defend himself because he said he didn't recognize the Revolutionary Court's legitimacy to put him on trial and review the charges against him.

Yazdi has been in and out of prison in Iran over the past two decades. He was jailed in Iran last year and also following the 2009 postelection crackdown.

One of the main reasons for the sentence against him is reportedly his leadership of the Freedom Movement. Yazdi's open letter to Rachid Ghannouchi, the leader of the Tunisian Islamist party Ennahda, in which he warned about a repeat of the Iranian experience, is also said to have angered hard-liners.

In the October letter, Yazdi warned that Muslims don't have enough experience with democracy.

"We fight and overthrow dictators, but not dictatorship itself.  Despotism is not just a political structure. It has its corresponding social and cultural dimensions, which enable it to persist and which become ingrained in individuals and whole societies afflicted by despotism for a long time.

"The result is that we Muslims overthrow despots often to see a new ones replace it. This is what has indeed befallen us in Iran. We deposed the shah, but neglected to address the 'shah' personality within our own selves. Thus the vicious circle continues."

Yazdi's son in law, Mehdi Nourbakhsh, told RFE/RL the opposition activist was suffering from prostate cancer and other health problems and was in need of constant medical care.

"Last time he was in jail he had to be transferred to the hospital several times" because of his health problems, Nourbakhsh said. "At his age and under these conditions I think what the establishment is doing to [Yazdi] is extremely unjust , unfair, and cruel."
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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Eric from: Canada
December 28, 2011 21:18
Lock someone up because they disagree with your disgusting, pig headed views and values!?!?! I cannot wait for the day, the determined true Iranian people take this psychotic, moronic, religiously lunatic organization of crooked governemnt officials down!!!!! Good bye mr kamenei, u poor excuse for a human being!!!

by: Gigi Nikpour from: USA
December 31, 2011 02:30
DO NOT make this traitor look like a martyr for Iran. He was instrumental in bringing the mullah regime starting with Khomeini and his sick dogma. START talking about ALL the other poor prisoners. YAZDI has lived a good life as a traitor to Iran and for his masters. I am sure he is in prison to serve his masters--STILL. You fooled us once, but you CAN NOT FOOL us again ;-) He was living a good life here in the US, he had no reason to go back to Iran to be put in jail UNLESS he is part of a BIGGER plan--like he was in 1979.
NO MORE WAGGING THE DOG.
In Response

by: Jamal from: US
January 01, 2012 18:43
So, what is your bright idea? We overthrough the Shah and all that came with him. He was installed to suck the resourses out the our country. We started out with a strong voice and a good plan, however, there were countries who fought that way of life for eight years and disrupted our goals. Don't blame anyone else,its the greed and power that put us where we are. It's not Islam and Molah's, put the ignorant and self-centered people who think there is only one way to live, because they get what they want. You should study the culture and history a little more and stop defending the western life style. It's not the only way to live.

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Persian Letters is a blog that offers a window into Iranian politics and society. Written primarily by Golnaz Esfandiari, Persian Letters brings you under-reported stories, insight and analysis, as well as guest Iranian bloggers -- from clerics, anarchists, feminists, Basij members, to bus drivers.

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