The Committee to Protect Bloggers has declared February 22 to be "Free Mojtaba and Arash Day."
So, for one day, I will pause from narcissistic bloviation and focus on two really important things: freedom of speech and freedom of conscience.
I've blogged before about the plight of Iranian citizen-journalists.
This story, unfortunately, is more of the same: Arash Sigarchi and Mojtaba Saminejad are in prison in Iran for speaking their minds, in defiance of the authorities. In fact, Arash and Mojtaba apparently angered the mullahs by (among other things) protesting an earlier clampdown on prominent Iranian bloggers.
What can you do about it, halfway around the world from where these unfortunate men are being unjustly imprisoned? In addition to blogging about the situation, the Committee has some suggestions:
If you are in the United States, contact either the Representative at the Iranian Interest Section of the Pakistani Embassy or the Ambassador to Iran’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations. (Iran has no embassy in the United States.) Here is the contact information.
Dr. Mohammad Javad Zarif
Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran
622 Third Ave. New York, NY 10017
Tel: (212) 687-2020 / Fax: (212) 867-7086
E-mail: Email the ambassadorIranian Representative
Embassy of Pakistan
Interests Section of the Islamic Republic of Iran
2209 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.Washington, D.C. 20007
Email the Interests SectionIf you are outside the U.S., as many of you will be, you can contact either the Permanent Representative to the United Nations or the Iranian ambassador in your own country.
Read a little about Mojtaba and Arash's cases, then take five minutes and drop a line to let the Iranian diplomats know: the whole world is watching.
(Originally posted on enrevanche.)








Article comments
1 - Eric Olsen
thanks Barry, critical stuff - all bloggers should be able to see themselves in this predicament of these two, and never take for granted the freedoms that prevent us from suffering the same fate
2 - Thad Anderson
Here is Mojtaba's blog.
I know it is kind of redneck to say this, but it is really cool to see a blog that looks like any other blog, but is in a completely different alphabet.
I'm sure that some people might see this campaign and claim that it is some kind of pre-invasion PR attack dreamed up by Karl Rove. But I disagree with that line of thinking completely.
These guys are really in prison just for doing a blog like all the rest of us. It is time for those of us whose mantra during Iraq has been "there are better ways to solve our differences" to put our money where our mouth is.
3 - Jim Carruthers
Disclaimer: I am well aware I am a bad, bad, man.
But when I first saw these headlines on several group blog sites, I mis-read them as "Free Mojito Day" for bloggers (and I guess you get some sort of sandwich with your drink).
Not that the ruling powers in Iran give a damn about what I think, anymore than the ruling powers in Washington or Bejing, but sending an email and posting an article is the least I can do, and we all know how effective that is.
4 - Barry
Jim, free mojitos wouldn't be a bad thing, either. And sending an e-mail and posting an article may not sound like much...
But don't entirely discount the value of international pressure. It has arguably produced results in Iran already, with judges showing relative leniency in some earlier blogging cases, and as a veteran of past Amnesty International campaigns, I know that some of the toughest and most oppressive regimes in the world have been shamed into better behavior by international attention.
It doesn't always work--in fact, it doesn't work nearly as often as it should--but it works sometimes and is worth the effort.
Thanks for participating.
5 - Barry
Thad,
Thanks for posting the link to Mojtada's blog. Nothing remotely redneck about being fascinated by another alphabet, particularly one as beautiful as Farsi.
And there's nothing Rovian about this effort. Reporters Without Borders (http://rsf.org), hardly a friend of the Bush administration, has been covering the Iran blogger crackdown for months now, fearlessly and thoroughly.
6 - Jim Carruthers
You could also mention the case of Canadian citizen and journalist, Zahra Kazemi who was tortured and murdered in Iran. The government of Iran has so far refused to return her body to her family in Canada.
Apparently, you can contact them via the internet here.
7 - Barry
Yes, the Kazemi case is particularly disgusting--security forces beat her to death in custody, etc.
Reporters Without Borders has also been covering this pretty heavily, e.g. here:
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=12533
8 - Angela Chen Shui
Important issue... so easy to take it for granted. Thanks for highlighting here.