Seven
Iranian Writers Receive Hellman/Hammett Grants
(New York,
February 6, 2007) – Human Rights Watch announced today that seven Iranians are
among the 45 writers from 22 countries who are receiving the prestigious
Hellman/Hammett prize, an award that recognizes writers globally who have been
victims of political persecution.
The Iranian recipients
of this year’s award are writers and activists whose work and activities have
been variously suppressed. Beyond what they themselves have experienced, they
represent numerous other writers and journalists whose personal and professional
lives have been hampered as a result of repressive government policies governing
speech and publications.
“The past year was a
particularly difficult one for Iranian writers who had to work in an ever more
restrictive atmosphere of new publishing rules and policies,” said Sarah Leah
Whitson, Middle East director at
Human Rights Watch. “It is important to draw international attention to their
achievements under the current repressive policies.”
Human Rights Watch
administers the Hellman/Hammett grant program in recognition of the hardships
faced by writers all around the world who have been victims of political
persecution. The program is financed by the estate of the American playwright
Lillian Hellman, with funds set
up in her name and that of her long-time companion, the novelist Dashiell
Hammett, both of whom suffered professionally during the anti-communist “witch hunts” of the 1950s.
Since the election of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the situation for Iranian writers has worsened.
Authorities systematically suppress freedom of expression and opinion by closing
newspapers and imprisoning journalists and editors. The few independent dailies
that remain heavily self-censored. Many writers and intellectuals have left the country, are in
prison, or have ceased to criticize the government in their writings. Recently
imposed rules of publication have further narrowed the field of acceptable
speech.
This year’s recipients
of the Hellman-Hammett grant from Iran are:
Ali Ashraf
Darvishian, 65, one of Iran’s most prominent and
prolific post-revolutionary writers, has published more than 20 books, including fiction, children’s stories and a 20-volume
collection of Iranian folk tales. For the past four
years, government censors have
banned the publication of his
works.
Shahram
Rafizadeh, 34, investigative
journalist and blogger, also writes poetry
and literary criticism. During
the reform era, Rafizadeh was well known for writing about the role
of Iranian intelligence agents in the murder of several
writers and intellectuals in 1998. He was detained in September 2004 and was held in solitary confinement
for 86 days.
Roozbeh Mir
Ebrahimi, 27, worked as an editor and reporter for a
number of reformist dailies that have since been shut down by the government. He
investigated several high profile human rights cases, including the murder of a
Canadian-Iranian photojournalist in 2003. He was detained in September 2004 and
held in solitary confinement for 60 days. He has written two books on
contemporary Iranian political history that have not received government
permission for publication.
Arash
Sigarchi, 28, journalist and
blogger, started his career in
journalism at the age of 15. He
was arrested in January 2005 after he reported on human
rights violations on his blog. Originally sentenced to 14 years
in prison, an appeals court reduced the sentence to three years. He was recently
diagnosed with cancer and is receiving treatment outside of prison.
Ali
Afshari, 33, political analyst and human rights
advocate, was imprisoned in 2000 and held in solitary confinement for 328 days
for his role in the student movement. He has
written
numerous articles and co-translated a book on political theory. When he left
Iran in 2005, the Judiciary sentenced him to six years in prison.
Ensaf Ali
Hedayat, 41, journalist, has reported extensively on
human rights violations in the Iranian province of Azerbaijan. He was arrested in June 2003, spent 74 days
in solitary confinement and 18 months in prison. He currently lives in exile and
is writing his prison memoirs.
Hassan Zarezadeh
Ardeshir, 29, journalist,
has written extensively on the political environment and human rights issues in Iran.
He has been arrested several times and spent nearly eight months in Evin prison
in 2003. In 2005, he was forced into
exile, but continues to report on human rights violations in Iran from abroad.
To read more about
this year’s Hellman/Hammett recipients, please visit: http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/02/06/global15273.htm
... Payvand News - 2/6/07 ... --