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

Two prisoners on hunger strike receive treatment

by Zamaneh Media
June 22, 2011
in Latest Articles
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Two prisoners on hunger strike receive treatment
Abolfazl Ghadiani – Abdollah Momeni

Two of the 12 Iranian political prisoners on a hunger strike in Evin Prison were taken to the infirmary, an opposition website reports

Kaleme reports that on the fifth day of their hunger strike, Abdollah Momeni and Abolfazl Ghadiani were sent to the infirmary after a sharp decline in their health.

The 12 political prisoners began a hunger strike to protest the recent deaths of two other political prisoners, Haleh Sahabi and Reza Hoda Saber, and the authorities’ alleged role in their demise.

Haleh Sahabi died during a furlough from prison when security forces overran her father’s funeral.

Reza Hoda Saber began a hunger strike to protest Sahabi’s death and died 10 days later. His fellow inmates say he was badly beaten on the eighth day of his strike, and the prison authorities are also accused of delaying his transfer to hospital after the onset of his symptoms.

The authorities deny any wrongdoing and claim both prisoners died naturally from heart attacks.

Abdollah Momeni was arrested in the protests that sprang up following the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009. He is a prominent student activist and active in the “Free Citizens Election Headquarters” supporting opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi.

In the aftermath of the 2009 election protests many political activists were arrested. Momeni was sentence to almost five years in prison. Karroubi, one of the chief challengers of Ahmadinejad’s victory, is currently under house arrest with his wife.

Abolfazl Ghadiani, at 65, is reportedly the oldest political prisoner in Evin Prison and he suffers from heart complications.

Ghadiani is also a prominent reformist and was arrested during the Ashura Day protests against the 2009 presidential election.

The other 10 political prisoners on hunger strike at Evin are also prominent political activists and journalists, and in the past week several Iranian political figures and human rights advocates have urged them to end their strike over concern for their health.
 

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