- Washington, D.C. Iranian sentenced in absentia to 7 years - Thursday, August 25, 2005 - - Mohsen Sazegara, an Iranian reformer who is a visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, learned this week he had been sentenced in absentia to seven years in prison in his home country. The charges against him...
August 2005
Thursday 25 August 2005
Wednesday 24 August 2005
- Iranian Sentenced in Absentia Laments State of Judiciary (The Washington Post) Page A12, August 24, 2005 - Wednesday, August 24, 2005; Page A12 Mohsen Sazegara , an Iranian political reformer who is currently a visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, learned this week that he had been sentenced in absentia to seven years...
Tuesday 23 August 2005
- Iran Sentences Washington Institute Visiting - Fellow to Seven Years in Prison, August 23, 2005 - Release Date: August 23, 2005WASHINGTON—The authoritative Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) reported yesterday that Institute visiting fellow Mohsen Sazegara has been sentenced in absentia to seven years in prison. Revolutionary Court Branch 26 confirmed a previous one-year sentence, then added...
- Iran's activist, Sazegara sentenced in absentia Tuesday, August 23, 2005 - ©2005 IranMania.com - LONDON, August 23 (IranMania) - Islamic Revolution Court?s Branch 26 has sentenced political activist, Mohammad Mohsen Sazegara, to a prison term of seven years in absentia....
Monday 22 August 2005
Thursday 11 August 2005
- PolicyWatch #1022 Challenges Facing Iran’s New Government By Mehdi Khalaji and Mohsen Sazegara August 11, 2005 - Iran’s bold August 7 decision to resume uranium conversion—previously frozen under an agreement with Britain, France, and Germany—came only four days after new president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took office. This confrontational step suggests that the new administration may take strong actions...
Monday 8 August 2005
- From Revolutionary to Dissident BY ELI LAKE - Staff Reporter of the Sun August 8, 2005 - WASHINGTON - Inside a cramped room at Tehran's Milad Hospital, guarded 24 hours a day by special police, a starving writer has done something that Iran's powerful guardian council and supreme leader failed to accomplish in eight years. Akbar Ganji...