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Iran judiciary chief Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani listens to a speech in the Assembly of Experts in February.
Iran judiciary chief Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani listens to a speech in the Assembly of Experts in February.
More than 100 Iranian journalists and bloggers have written an open letter to Iran's judiciary chief to demand the immediate release of their jailed colleagues, RFE/RL's Radio Farda reports.

The letter to Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani, published on April 10 and supported by a number of lawyers, described the crackdown on the media by the government in the wake of Iran's controversial presidential election last summer.

The letter says a significant number of newspapers have been closed, websites filtered or blocked, and journalists arrested for criticizing the government.

It added that some of those arrested "have been tried and convicted by revolutionary courts without a jury or even a lawyer. Many have been in temporary detention for months with an uncertain fate and some have been temporarily released after posting extremely expensive bail."

The letter adds that Iranian authorities claim writing newspaper articles or granting interviews to foreign media outlets "distort the image of the regime."

The letter then asks: "Doesn't jailing journalists and bloggers without a fair trial distort the image of the regime?"

The letter says journalists have a responsibility to inform and to criticize. It implores Larijani to "Free our friends and colleagues so that they can fulfill their duties."
Photojournalist Gagik Shamshian
Photojournalist Gagik Shamshian
A prominent Armenian photojournalist says police have refused to press charges against a police officer he claims assaulted him, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.

The photojournalist, Gagik Shamshian, suggested that police might prosecute him instead.

The attack on Shamshian occurred outside the Prosecutor-General's Office in Yerevan on February 24 and was filmed by security cameras.

Shamshian can be seen being confronted by a man and repeatedly hit in the face in footage publicized by prosecutors last month. Shamshian says he was attacked after he refused to stop photographing the man.

The attacker was identified as Gagik Markarian, an officer at Yerevan's Erebuni district police department. The Armenian police launched a criminal investigation after Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian publicly told Shamshian to lodge a formal complaint.

Shamshian, who works for several pro-opposition newspapers, told RFE/RL a police investigator told him on April 13 that the criminal case has been closed. He said the police have also launched an inquiry into possible "false denunciation" on his part, a crime punishable by up to three years in prison.

Shamshian, who has been assaulted before by security officers, claims police are trying to stop him from seeking punishment for his attacker.

"I complained about their colleague," he says. "That's why the police investigators are now trying to silence and intimidate me."

National police chief Alik Sarkisian has confirmed the closure of the criminal case, but insists the decision is "not final."

Sarkisian assured journalists that the police are not keen to prosecute Shamshian. "I think Gagik Shamshian will not [suffer] from this case," he says.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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