Iran: Record Breaking 20 Year Jail Sentence For Blogger
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Balochistan: No End To Military Atrocities
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Peace linked to missing persons' recovery: Malik, by Bari Baloch
2013,06,15 -
US House passes amendment tying human rights with aid to Pak
2013,06,15 -
Former Pakistan president General Pervez Musharraf arrested in murder case
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Towards an egalitarian federation By Tahir Ali
2013,06,13 -
US & UK thwart China and Cuba's attempt to cover up Pakistan's crimes against Baloch people
2013,06,12 -
Mother of abducted Baloch student threatens Self-immolation in front of UN office
2013,06,12 -
Two BNP-Mengal activists killed
2013,06,12
His blog was called Balouchestan Sarfaraz [3] (Pride Baluchistan) [fa]. Rigi was arrested on 18 June, 2009, and is being held in appalling conditions in Karon prison, in Ahvaz. Torture was used to extract a confession. Adding to his bad luck, is that he has the same surname as Abdolmalek Rigi [4], the late head of the Balochi armed opposition group Jundallah, which in the eyes of the authorities implicates him.
Writing about Iranian bloggers offers few moments of respite. The sad stories are endless, and the threats don't seem to subside. As though repression and censorship [1] were not enough, bad luck seems to play in too. What follows are the stories of three bloggers, who are each serving very long sentences in Iran.
Sakhi Rigi
Sakhi Rigi is a blogger who was sentenced to 20 years prison in Zahedan [2], in Sistan and Baluchistan province, on charges of publishing false infomation and "acts against national security." This is the longest sentence ever passed on a blogger in Iran.
Sakhi Rigi
His blog was called Balouchestan Sarfaraz [3] (Pride Baluchistan) [fa]. Rigi was arrested on 18 June, 2009, and is being held in appalling conditions in Karon prison, in Ahvaz. Torture was used to extract a confession. Adding to his bad luck, is that he has the same surname as Abdolmalek Rigi [4], the late head of the Balochi armed opposition group Jundallah, which in the eyes of the authorities implicates him.
Human Rights Activists Agency reports [5] [fa] that:
... the blogger is 31 years old and was arrested six days after presidential election in 2009 and was jailed in solitary cell for seven months... he was studying in university and had just few months to end his studies... it seems his posts played a role in his jail sentence.
On the blog there are a few posts about the controversial presidential election in 2009 and a comment on a statement by opposition leader, Mir Hussein Mousavi. He also posted about ancient history in Balochestan and about a Sunni Muslim high-ranked cleric in Iran.
Posted By Hamid Tehrani On 10 June 2011 @ 12:12 pm In Advocacy,Arrest and Harassment,Feature,Iran,Middle East & North Africa,activism | No Comments














