For Iran’s Activists, Prison’s Just the
Start
Jailed Activist to Get Medical Care, Lawyer
برای فعالان ایرانی زندان تازه اول ماجرا است
دسترسی فعال زندانی به مراقبت پزشکی
October 22,
2018
Iranian officials, under international
pressure and facing domestic unrest, have reacted by increasing their
pressures on activists. It is unclear how many are behind
bars, but Human Rights Watch has documented
dozens of cases of people who have been sentenced or detained
for merely exercising their freedom of expression by criticizing the
government and engaging in peaceful activism.
But sending activists to prison is just
the start of their suffering in Iran, experience shows. Arash Sadeghi, 38, whom
authorities have imprisoned repeatedly and harassed his family since 2009 is
just the latest example of scores of activists who are being denied adequate
medical care. In August 2015, branch 15 of Tehran’s revolutionary court
sentenced Sadeghi to 15 years in prison on charges of "propaganda against
the government," "defamation of the supreme leader," and
"threatening national security." His wife, Gulrokh Iraei, was
sentenced to six years for “insulting the sacred” and “propaganda against the
state.”
Sadeghi has suffered repeated medical
problems in prison in Karaj, a city near Tehran. The authorities have
transferred him to a hospital for checkups but never allowed him to receive
full treatment.
On June 13, after he suffered
severe pain in his arm for months, prison doctors raised the possibility he was
suffering from cancer and transferred him to a medical center. Doctors there
diagnosed him with a cancerous tumor in his shoulder and recommended an
immediate transfer for specialized medical treatment. He hasn’t received it and
reports from his family indicate that Sadeghi’s arm is infected for lack of the medical
care he required to avoid infection.