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Iran article on social freedom

Hi folks

While waiting for the rain to clear I checked out my favourite newspaper.

I will occasionally post articles like this to fill in the gaps I or the people I talk to are unaware of or have no knowledge of. I like to bring you as complete s story of what life is like in the countries I run through but at the end of the day I am a runner, not a journalist!

 

COURTESY OF THE NEW YORK TIMES

 

‘Happy in Tehran’ Video Spurs Harsher Censorship
By RICK GLADSTONE
May 23, 2014

 

 
The judicial authorities in Iran appeared to harden their clampdown on expression Friday, moving to block Instagram, imprisoning the director who made the now-famous Iranian version of the Pharrell Williams “Happy” video and warning women to comply with a police campaign on the proper wearing of mandatory headscarves.

Taken together, the developments suggested that the country’s Islamic bureaucracy was alarmed over any perception of permissiveness that may have been partly inspired by the YouTube video in which six young Iranians, including bareheaded women, created a rendition of Mr. Williams’ globally popular dance hit. Their version was viewed hundreds of thousands of times after it was posted last month.

All six were arrested last weekend, forced to apologize on national television and freed on bail for unspecified crimes after three days, treatment that incited an international outpouring of sympathy, including from Mr. Williams. One of the women, Reihane Taravati, used her Instagram account to publicize their entanglement and release, which may have been seen by the judiciary and police as another impudent act.

“Hi I’m back,” Ms. Taravati wrote, thanking Mr. Williams and “everyone who cared about us.”

The semiofficial Mehr News Agency reported on Friday that an Iranian court had ordered Instagram blocked over privacy issues, and that Iran’s Ministry of Telecommunications was taking steps to ban the site, although it appeared that by late Friday, Instagram use had not been stopped. Instagram, which has its headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., declined to comment.

Other forms of social media are already heavily regulated or restricted in Iran, including Facebook and Twitter, although some top Iranian officials, including President Hassan Rouhani and Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have Twitter accounts. The ayatollah even has an account on Instagram, which he joined a few years ago.

Mr. Rouhani, who has publicly called for Iran to embrace Internet freedoms, was widely perceived to favor leniency toward the “Happy in Tehran” dancers, having shared a message on Twitter on the right of Iranians to happiness, which he had first posted after his 2013 election victory. Yet Mr. Rouhani’s apparent unwillingness, or inability, to take a more assertive position reflected what rights advocates called part of a broader cultural struggle in Iran and the entrenched power of conservative ideologues. Many of them see social media as a path to Western decadence and moral decay.

“Every day the hard-liners are coming up with new ways to go after social networking sites,” said Hadi Ghaemi, the executive director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, a New York-based advocacy group.

Rights activists who have been in contact with the families of the six dancers reported on Friday that the video’s director, Sassan Soleimani, had been moved from police detention to a prison outside Tehran and placed in solitary confinement, a strong indication that he would be prosecuted.

They also reported that five of the families were under pressure by prosecutors to file a lawsuit against Mr. Soleimani and Ms. Taravati, apparently to portray them as ringleaders who had deceived the others into making the video.

In another sign of harsher censorship, the Mehr News Agency quoted the deputy commander of the Iranian National Police, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Radan, as saying there would be no suspension of an enforcement policy aimed at ensuring women correctly follow the Islamic dress code, with their hair covered by a hijab, or headscarf.

“The moral security scheme will be implemented as before, and no one can suspend it with an order or instruction,” General Radan was quoted as saying. “The scheme will continue to be implemented so long as this condition has not reached the state that we expect.”

Reverberations over the video came as the United States Treasury, which enforces the American government’s financial sanctions against Iran, announced that it had added a top Iranian security official to its blacklist for “censorship and other activities that limit the freedom of expression and freedom of assembly of Iran’s citizens.”

A Treasury announcement said the official, Morteza Tamaddon, now the head of the Tehran Provincial Public Security Council, was the former governor general of Tehran Province, who was responsible for repressions of the political protests that followed the disputed 2009 presidential election, including the cutoff of mobile telephone communications. Sanctioned individuals cannot have any dealings with Americans, and any assets they may have under United States jurisdiction are frozen.

Mr. Tamaddon is the third Iranian official to be sanctioned by the Treasury for censorship and other violations of free expression in the past few years. In February of last year, the Treasury blacklisted Ezzatollah Zarghami, the director of Iran’s state broadcast service, and in November 2012 it blacklisted Reza Taghipour, the minister of communications and information technology.

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About Tony

I have always considered myself to be an average runner. In school, I was even bullied for I was a sports wimp. Through hard work, dedication, perseverance, self-belief and a strong mind I succeeded in not only running around the world but breaking four ultra running world records during my competitive career. Having previously cycled around the world I didn't start running until I was almost 30. Then I had a dream of running around the world. For many reasons, I waited for over 20 years. One reason was to establish my pedigree as an endurance athlete. I started and finished my world run as the current World Record-Holder for 48 Hours Indoor Track 426 kilometres (265 miles), a record I have held since 2007. I also broke and still hold the World Record for 48 hours on a Treadmill 405 kilometres (251 miles) in 2008. When I retired from competition, more pleasing than any of my world, European or Irish records I had the respect of my fellow athletes from all over the world - in my opinion, sports greatest reward - an achievement I am most proud of. Then I finally put myself out to pasture, to live my ultimate dream to run around the world! This blog was written on the road while I struggled to find places to sleep and to recover from running an average of 43.3 kilometres or 27 miles per day for 1,165 road days. There were many nights I typed this blog on a smart phone, so fatigued my eyes closed. Many journalists and endurance athletes have referred to my world run as the most difficult endurance challenge ever attempted. During my expedition I rarely had any support vehicles, running mostly with a backpack. In the more desolate areas I pushed my gear, food and water in a cart which I called Nirvana, then I sent her on ahead to run with my backpack once again over altitudes of almost 5,000 metres in the Andes. I stayed in remote villages where many people had never seen a white person before. I literally met the most wonderful people of this world in their own backyard and share many of those amazing experiences in this blog. My run around the world took 4 years. There were no short cuts, I ran every single metre on the road while seeking out the most comprehensive route across 41 countries, 5 continents, I used 50 pair of running shoes and my final footstep of the run was exactly 50,000 kilometres, (almost 31,000 miles) I eventually finished this tongue in cheek named world jog where I started, at the finish line of my city marathon. I started my global run with the Dublin Marathon on October 25th 2010 and finished with the Dublin Marathon on October 27th 2014 at 3 05pm! Thank you for your support, I hope you can share my unique way of seeing the world, the ultimate endurance challenge! Read more...

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