The
leader of the unregistered Democratic Party of Iran, Abbas Khorsandi, is among
the latest targets of the Iranian security services. Khorsandi was sentenced
last week to eight years in prison after being found guilty of threatening
Iranian state security by setting up "an illegal political group."
A 50-year-old economics professor in the northern
town of Firuzkuh, Khorsandi was arrested about seven months ago and has spent
more than two months in solitary confinement in Tehran's notorious Evin prison.
Khorsandi's wife, Forozandeh Seylespur, tells RFE/RL
that her husband has become a prisoner of conscience because of his stated
opposition to the Iranian government.
"He got this sentence only for holding opposing
views," Seylespour says. "He hasn't done anything to justify getting such a
sentence. He was only involved in writing. He has acted -- in a totally peaceful
manner -- as a writer and human rights activist. He has voiced his views only
through the pen and in speeches."
The news of Khorsandi's lengthy prison sentence
followed reports about the arrest of another peaceful campaigner, Khadija
Moghaddam.
The women's rights activist and member of the One
Million Signatures Campaign was arrested by security officers, who Moghaddam
said "forcibly entered her home" and treated her in a "despicable manner."
Moghaddam has reportedly been charged with
spreading propaganda against the state, disrupting public opinion, and acting
against national security.
The court has set a bail of some $110,000 for her
release.
The
One Million Signatures
Campaign was launched in 2006 as a nonpolitical movement that calls
on parliament to change what it calls "discriminatory laws in Iran," including
laws on inheritance, divorce, and child custody, which the campaign says treat
women unfairly.
In an interview with RFE/RL earlier this year,
Moghaddam said it is time to abolish such laws, which were set up many centuries
ago.
"What I say now is the opinion of all Iranian
women," Moghaddam said. "We live in a century when women take an active part in
political, economic, social, and cultural affairs alongside men. We work, we
study, and we should not be considered as half of a man. Sixty-four percent of
[Iranian] university students are women. They cannot accept a 1,400-year-old
rule that considers a woman as half of a man."
Some 600 Iranian activists have signed an open
letter condemning Moghaddam's arrest and calling for her release. "Moghaddam has
been active for years in creating jobs for women and forming women's
cooperatives," the letter says. "Who would believe that she has harmed national
security or caused public offense?"
Arrests 'Routine'
Right activists say that the arrests of peaceful
campaigners, independent journalists, and anyone who is critical of the
government has become routine under President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's government.
International organizations including Amnesty International and Reporters
Without Borders (RSF) have harshly criticized Tehran for cracking down on all
voices of dissent in the country.
RSF has called Iran "the biggest prison in the
Middle East" for journalists and authors whose views differ from the
government's. According to the media rights group, dozens of Iranian journalists
and rights campaigners have been imprisoned and accused of undermining national
security for "simply being outspoken."
On April 5, 30-year-old Elham Yaqubi was arrested
and accused of threatening national security for taking part in a peaceful
demonstration.
On the same day, Parvin Ardalan, an award-winning
rights activist, was charged with spreading propaganda against the state, a
month after she was banned from traveling to Sweden to collect her Olof Palme
Award.
Ardalan has been summoned to court at least three
times this year. She received a summons two days after the Olof Palme Foundation
announced that she had won the prestigious award for human rights activists.