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Iranian censors clamp down on bloggers


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Iranian bloggers first started proliferating about five years ago.  There even was a sense of official encouragement after then Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi went online. Soon, hundreds were blogging in both English, Farsi and a hybrid of Farsi spelled in Latin characters.

Most used pseudonyms, but no subject was taboo: sex, off-color jokes, personal confessions, and dumping on the ruling clerics.

One blogger's chat room included a rant about the likes and dislikes of the theocrats. Listed among "the mullahs' favorite statesmen" were Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, Pol Pot, Fidel Castro and Robert Mugabe.

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An Iranian bilingual blogger known as "scarecrew" grumbled in English: "Sometimes I feel like I'm living in an island.  What is it that they don't want us to know? ... No matter how, I just wanna get myself out of this place."

Another, "Iran Shadow," lashed Ahmadinejad for "pursuing polices that are reminiscent of some of the darkest days of the Islamic Republic."

Officials began fighting back last year.  Ahmadinejad's election, coupled with the conservative sweep of parliament in 2004, left liberals powerless.

Thousands of Web sites have been blocked, including anti-regime groups from Iranians abroad and news outlets such as the British Broadcasting Corp.'s Persian Service and the Voice of America.  But it remains a spotty assault.  Sites such as the Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post and California-based regimechangeiran.com remain accessible.  (The Associated Press site also was not blocked as of early August.)

Bloggers face more than being unplugged.  Those detained are charged under anti-subversion laws that carry a maximum sentence of five years. Convictions so far have been largely suspended sentences.

"Every day, we see violations of international rules and norms by this government," said Dadkhah, who has represented many of the bloggers along with fellow lawyers who formed the Center for Protecting Human Rights.

On Aug. 5, authorities banned the group, which included Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi.

One of Dadkhah's highest-profile clients, Tehran University student Abed Tavancheh, was arrested in late May and accused of fomenting student unrest with his political blog. Dadkhah claims Tavancheh, 23, was severely beaten in prison and suffered kidney damage before his release on bail in July. No trial date has been set.

The case has been publicized by free speech groups such as Reporters Without Borders. Tavancheh refused a request for an interview, but his friend, blogger Habibi, said he has returned to his family's home in Arak in central Iran and is undergoing medical treatment.

"He is frightened," said Habibi. "He is away from his friends and his studies.  The regime is trying to teach us a lesson: Be quiet and meek or we'll come after you.  We refused to be silent and looked what happened."

Habibi, Tavancheh and four others posted letters on their blogs in April calling for a national dialogue on Iran's nuclear energy program, which the West fears could be cover for atomic weapons development.  The letter raised questions about the diplomatic risks from Iran's standoff with the West and the ecological consequences of nuclear waste disposal.

"Then (Tavancheh) was arrested.  So was another of the students who signed the letter," said Habibi. "I think I will be next."

Habibi updates his site — http://www.daneshesorkh.blogfa.com — with news about Tavancheh's case and other bloggers facing trial.

"We will not go away quietly," said Habibi.

Hossein Derakhshan, a popular Iranian-born blogger now living in Toronto, said the authorities are making a "pre-emptive strike" against all forms of Web media.

"It shows their paranoia," said Derakhshan, who helped ignite the Iranian blog boom in 2001 by posting simple instructions to create sites in Farsi.  "They fear these sites and blogs could someday become a way for protesters to communicate and organize.  They are trying to control the Internet before it can control them."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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