Radio Zamaneh
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
Radio Zamaneh
No Result
View All Result

Jailed Iranian blogger allowed temporary leave

by Zamaneh Media
May 10, 2011
in Latest Articles
Reading Time: 1 min read
0
Jailed Iranian blogger allowed temporary leave
Hossein Derakhshan

Jailed Iranian blogger Hossein Derakhshan, who is sentenced to more than 19 years in prison, has been temporarily released.

The Mashregh website reported: “The furlough was given to Derakhshan during Fatemieh [a religious occasion of mourning], and he even attended a number of mourning ceremonies in a black shirt. This is despite the fact that one of the charges against him is insulting sanctities.”

Derakhshan was given a temporary leave last December on a $1.5-million bail following 26 months in jail. He had been arrested two years earlier upon returning to Iran.

“Collaboration with enemy governments, propaganda against the Islamic regime and for anti-Revolutionary groups, insulting sanctities, launching and managing obscene websites” were the charges brought against Derakhshan by the Revolutionary court. Along with his 19.5-year prison sentence, he was banned from media activities and joining social groups for five years and he is required to return funds he had received from various organizations.

Derakhshan’s lawyer has appealed the sentence, and so far the ruling of the appellate court has not been announced. Reporters Without Borders has condemned what it has called the harshest sentence for any Iranian blogger.

Derakhshan started as an anti-Islamic Republic blogger outside Iran but gradually became a supporter of the Ahmadinejad government and the establishment.

Previously, a member of Derakhshan’s family had informed the Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that he had been held in solitary confinement for about ten months and was under pressure to confess to being an agent for the CIA and Mossad.

Related Posts

A Diary from Iran: Fear, Waiting, and Uncertainty on the 23rd Day of War
Economy

A Diary from Iran: Fear, Waiting, and Uncertainty on the 23rd Day of War

June 18, 2026
About $3 for a Day’s Labor in Iran: Less Than 250 Grams of Meat
Human Rights

About $3 for a Day’s Labor in Iran: Less Than 250 Grams of Meat

June 18, 2026
A Field Report from Iran: The Housing Crisis After the War
Economy

A Field Report from Iran: The Housing Crisis After the War

June 18, 2026
Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War
Economy

Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War

June 11, 2026
Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets
Economy

Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets

June 11, 2026
A Field Report from Iran: Nurses Who Carry Life in the Heart of Death
Economy

A Field Report from Iran: Nurses Who Carry Life in the Heart of Death

June 11, 2026
Radio Zamaneh

© 2026 Zamaneh Media

More information

  • Sponsors
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Other ways to give
  • Legal

Follow Us

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air... Donate in:
USD EUR / All Currencies

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air...Donate in:
USD EUR / All
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines

© 2026 Zamaneh Media