• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Iran women's activist jailed for five years-lawyer

Sat Jun 21, 2008 10:37am EDT
TEHRAN, June 21 (Reuters) - An Iranian women's rights activist has been sentenced to five years in prison on security-related charges, her lawyer said on Saturday.

Hana Abdi, a 22-year-old woman from Iran's Kurdistan province, was accused of "illegal gathering with the intention of committing a crime against the nation's security", lawyer Mohammad Sharif told Reuters by telephone.

"The verdict was communicated to me on Wednesday," he said, adding it would be appealed.

Abdi is a member of a campaign to try to gather 1 million signatures in support of greater women's rights in the Islamic Republic, a fellow activist said. Rights groups accuse Iran of discriminating against women, a charge Tehran denies.

"We're all very shocked by this harsh sentence," the campaigner said, declining to be named.

There was no immediate comment from the judiciary.

An unidentified Iranian judge was in December quoted by an official news agency as saying Abdi and another woman arrested in a Kurdish region a few months earlier were accused of being members of a rebel group, PJAK, and of involvement in bombings.

The Party of Free Life of Kurdistan (PJAK) is an Iranian offshoot of the separatist Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) movement that is fighting neighbouring Turkey.

Several clashes between Iranian forces and Kurdish rebels have been reported over the past year in northwest Iran.

Iranian women's rights campaigners say dozens of activists have been detained since the countrywide One Million Signature Campaign was launched in 2006, most of them released after a few days or weeks.

But last month, a male activist in the campaign was sentenced to one year in prison, his lawyer said.

Judiciary spokesman Alireza Jamshidi earlier this year said collecting signatures was not a crime, but "making propaganda against the system and disturbing public opinion" was.

Western diplomats see the detention of women activists in Iran as part of a wider crackdown on dissent. (Writing by Fredrik Dahl; Editing by Alison Williams)



More from Reuters

Photo

Tech solutions to climate change

Experts say there is no single answer to solving global warming, but a handful of technologies could be promising. Check out some of the candidates and join the debate.  Full Article 

    Kenneth Feinberg, special master of executive compensation in the Troubled Asset Relief Program at the Treasury, speaks in Washington November 2, 2009. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

    Pay cuts, round two

    Pay czar Kenneth Feinberg cracked the whip in his latest round of compensation rulings, slimming the salaries of top-tier earners at bailed-out companies.  Full Article 

     The share price index DAX board is seen in front of an emergency exit sign at Frankfurt's stock exchange, October 8, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach

    "Deflation is with us"

    Fear of the market abyss has faded for investors, but another fear is lurking on the horizon, if not already here.  Full Article