An Iranian court has sentenced eight
people to a combined 123 years in prison for various charges including
insulting the country’s supreme leader on Facebook. The sentencing is the
latest in a recent crackdown on Internet freedom in the country.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3rZVWDlsJnJJIwew6g-I_XGmT92Pjd_kZJBv86TKhIpnjydAk9BRo8_LVPAFX5jM8P6eMBsunK0sbYqOSz1QO2aUTfAPn71WdCTMr_xvIRvCCdGA9I5ESU0PnB8tw9sz8Ckry92INsbE/s1600/Facebook-Logo.jpg)
For Iranian human rights experts,
the sentences are unusually harsh and could signal an intention to warn other
Iranian netizens.
“The ruling [...] is clearly
intended to spread fear among Internet users in Iran, and dissuade Iranians
from stepping outside strict state controls on cyberspace,” wrote the
International Campaign for Human Rights in
Iran in a statement .
“One of the eight, a British woman
named Roya Saberinejad Nobakht, received a sentence of 20 years in prison. Her
husband said in April that she had been detained in Iran over comments she had
made to friends
on Facebook and in online chat, calling Iran’s government too controlling and “too Islamic,” as reported at the time by the Manchester Evening News.
on Facebook and in online chat, calling Iran’s government too controlling and “too Islamic,” as reported at the time by the Manchester Evening News.
Gissou Nia, the executive director
of the The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC), noted that the Judge
mistakenly applied “a new and controversial provision” of the nation’s penal
code and gave harsher sentences than would have otherwise been allowed.
“20 years for posting on Facebook?
For goodness’ sake. This is an extraordinarily harsh and disproportionate
punishment,” she told Mashable in an email.
“Unfortunately for her, the case was
reviewed by Judge Moghiseh, a notorious Revolutionary Court judge who has had a
long history of handing down extremely harsh sentences to activists, lawyers
and journalists.”
The British government acknowledged
the arrest in a statement to Mashable, but declined to answer more specific
questions.
“We are aware that a British
national has received a custodial sentence in Iran,” a spokesperson for the
U.K. Foreign and Commonwealth Office said. “We are seeking to establish the
full facts and are following up the case with the Iranian authorities.”
Little is known about the others
arrested, aside from their names and respective sentences: Amir Golestani, 20
years; Masoud Ghasemkhani, 19 years and 91 days; Fariborz Kardarfar, 18 years
and 91 days; Seyed Masoud
Seyed Talebi, 15 years and one day; Amin Akramipour, 13 years; Mehdi Reyshahri, 11 years; and Naghmeh Shahisavandi Shirazi, 7 years and 91 days.
Seyed Talebi, 15 years and one day; Amin Akramipour, 13 years; Mehdi Reyshahri, 11 years; and Naghmeh Shahisavandi Shirazi, 7 years and 91 days.
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