Issa Saharkhiz, a prominent journalist and former senior Culture Ministry
official, has told his family in a short phone call from prison that several of
his ribs were broken during his arrest in northern Iran on July 4 in the
postelection crackdown.
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Issa Saharkhiz |
The 56-year-old Saharkhiz has told his family the authorities traced him through
his Nokia cellular phone. Saharkhiz, who had campaigned for reformist candidate
Mehdi Karrubi, has been highly critical of Iran's supreme leader and of
President Mahmud Ahmadinejad.
RFE/RL correspondent Golnaz Esfandiari spoke to Saharkhiz's son, Mehdi Saharkhiz,
who is in New York conducting a hunger strike with other activists and
intellectuals to call for the release of political prisoners in Iran and express
solidarity with the Iranian people.
RFE/RL: Your father managed to make a phone call to your family in Tehran on
July 23. What did he say about his situation and the conditions he's facing in
prison?
Mehdi Saharkhiz: He made a short call and said that
unfortunately when he was being detained several of his ribs were broken, and
currently he's held in solitary confinement where he has received [medical
treatment].
RFE/RL: Does that mean he was beaten up while he was arrested?
Saharkhiz: Well, if they had treated him well, he wouldn't have
broken ribs. I don't know how they arrested him that his ribs were broken.
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Nokia Protest Graphics: "Nobody is alone" |
RFE/RL: What else did he say? You said he's being held in solitary
confinement. Is it clear where he's being held? Is it at Evin prison?
Saharkhiz: It's not clear where he is being held. He also said: "Don't
expect to see me anytime soon. I will stay here for a long time." He also said
that all the tracking was done through Nokia and, if possible, lawyers should
file a complaint against the Nokia company and take it to an international court
and argue that Nokia should pay for all the damages and things that have
happened in Iran.
RFE/RL: You mean your father's Nokia cell phone was being tapped, and
did he say or mean that he was being interrogated based on his telephone
conversations?
Saharkhiz: No. He didn't say anything about the interrogations, but
that's how he was arrested. We don't know what the charge against him is. He is
not even allowed to have a lawyer, so that we can found out about his charge.
But what was said is that he was traced through Nokia.
RFE/RL: Do you know whether your family will be allowed to meet your
father or whether he will be able to have access to a lawyer?
Saharkhiz: They haven't said anything.
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List Of The Prisoners At UN Hunger Strike:
strike4iran.com
Hundreds of people have been arrested after Iran's June presidential
elections.
photo by Parandeh, Iranian.com |
RFE/RL: You and a number of other rights activists, intellectuals, and
academics and artists have been on a hunger strike in front of the UN in New
York since July 22 to express solidarity with the people of Iran and call for
the release of your father and all the others arrested after the election. How
hopeful are you that these kinds of actions will really have an impact?
Saharkhiz: These events help people inside and outside Iran, citizens
of other countries, become aware of what is happening, and it also helps us get
more news and give more coverage. This creates hope for the people of Iran. They
see that Iranians outside the country are also with them. I think it has a very
positive effect. I've received e-mails from several groups inside Iran who have
said that they have launched hunger strikes to coincide with the hunger strike
here. It shows that they all know about this and are supporting it.
RFE/RL: Do you think the prisoners are informed of these events and know
about the international solidarity? We know that some of them have almost no
contact with the outside world.
Saharkhiz: I think the "Allah Akbar" chanting they hear at night is the
biggest news for them. They become informed more or less through the telephone
calls they have. I don't know if all of them do, because none of them have
access to lawyers.
Copyright (c) 2009 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
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