Iranian student gets 8 years over post-poll unrest

Author: 
Reuters
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2009-11-15 03:00

TEHRAN: An Iranian court on Saturday sentenced a student who took part in protests following Iran’s disputed presidential election this year to eight years in prison, a website reported.

The June 12 vote triggered big street demonstrations by opposition supporters accusing the authorities of rigging the result, which gave President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term in charge.

Abdullah Momeni’s wife told website Mowjcamp, which backs defeated candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, that Momeni was sentenced to six years for taking part in post-election protests and two years for previous activities concerning national security.

Several other post-election detainees have received jail terms and three people have been sentenced to death, according to Iranian media.

Last week a court sentenced a man to seven years in jail and 74 lashes for post-election activities, Mowjcamp reported.

Thousands of people were detained after the election five months ago.

Most of them have since been freed, but more than 100 have been charged with fomenting post-election street unrest, including senior reformist figures. The protests triggered the worst political crisis in the Islamic republic’s 30-year history.

Several local newspapers reported quoting a Tehran prosecutor that Shahpour Kazemi, the brother-in-law of Mousavi, would face trial. He did not elaborate.

Mousavi’s wife, Zahra Rahnavard, said on July 23 that her brother was among those rounded up during the unrest.

The authorities deny opposition charges that the poll was rigged to secure President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election and accuse foreign powers of stoking the unrest that erupted in the days after the vote.

Ahmadinejad has championed Iran’s nuclear energy program, which has led the country into confrontation with Washington and Western powers and brought UN sanctions.

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