More than 70 Iranian missionaries launched a campaign
calling for the release of another friend, a student photographer Hammed saber,
Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty reported last month. Saber was arrested on June
21 and that there was no communication about it.
He thought his was irrigated in earlier photographs taken in protests following the disputed presidential year. His photos, posted on photo-sharing websites Flicker and Picasa under his name, he says in the journal Foreign media, including the Cover of the German magazine Deer Spiegel.
Saber prolific photographer, and was designed software to help Internet to bypass filters that countries such as Iran, the United Arab Emirates, China and others were put on Flicker.
He thought his was irrigated in earlier photographs taken in protests following the disputed presidential year. His photos, posted on photo-sharing websites Flicker and Picasa under his name, he says in the journal Foreign media, including the Cover of the German magazine Deer Spiegel.
Saber prolific photographer, and was designed software to help Internet to bypass filters that countries such as Iran, the United Arab Emirates, China and others were put on Flicker.
He put online photos of the current prison Oxford student Mohammed Jalaeipour, as well as several hundred Iranian protestors.
In a statement posted on www.freehamedsaber.blogspot.com, organization university classes and women's saber teachers chose to move even a chance because he wanted to work towards Iran's rights.
They called on the authorities to "respect the feelings and create situations where people, especially experts freely is an important part of the world to visit." They called saber given a fair trial.
Iran: Prominent scholar's arrest
Emadeddin Bagri prominent Iranian scholar, journalist and rights activist, has been imprisoned for a year in prison and banned from political activity for five years, following two years of trials to establish an organization to protect prisoners freedom, Reporters without Borders reported 26 July.
Bagri was arrested at his home in December 2009, the great day of protests in Tehran and other cities in the Shiite religious festival. He is detained without charge, held alone in containers Even Prison, and refused access to medical care, legal representation and family. He was out on bail last month after 180 days in prison.
Bagri is awaiting a second trial brought wisdom about service charges surrounding his appearance in an interview carried by the BBC Persian now-dead state against the high priest.
He was giving the French Republic Human Rights Prize in 2005 for his campaign to abolish death in Iran, and was the recipient of the 2009 Martin Annals provided free of encouragement.

No comments:
Post a Comment