Source:
Reporters Without Borders
Reporters
Without Borders is extremely worried about the health of journalist and human
rights activist Emadoldin Baghi, who was rushed to hospital after suffering a
double heart attack in Tehran's Evin prison on 26 December and was returned to a
general wing of the prison yesterday evening. He has been held in Evin for the
past 74 days.
"The conditions in
which Baghi is being held are unacceptable," the press freedom organisation
said. "He has been in solitary confinement ever since he was first taken to Evin,
as if imprisonment was not already enough punishment. As his state of health has
worsened steadily during the past two months, it is inconceivable that he should
be expected to convalesce in prison."
Baghi
was rushed to Tehran's Khamar Bani Hachem after his double heart attack. His
lawyer, Saleh Nikbakht, and his family were finally able to visit him yesterday
after spending 24 hours without any news of him. When he was taken back to Evin,
he was put in a new cell in section 350 of the prison.
Nikbakht told
Reporters Without Borders that the deterioration in Baghi's health was mainly
due to the appalling conditions in the prison and to the harassment to which he
has been subjected during interrogation sessions. "Emadoldin Baghi will not
survive another heart attack," he said.
An active campaigner
against Iran's death penalty, Baghi was awarded the French government's human
rights prize in 2005. He was sentenced in 2000 to three years in prison for
"violating to national security."
Meanwhile, Ejlal
Ghavami, a reporter for the weekly Payam-e Mardom-e Kurdestan who has been held
in the prison of Sanandaj since 9 July, was finally given 10 days leave from the
prison on 26 December for treatment to an eye infection that has worsened since
his arrest.
Iran's Supreme
Guide, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are both on the
Reporters Without Borders list of "press freedom predators." Twelve journalists
are currently detained in Iran.