With protestors on campuses supporting Iran's proxy war against Israel. Let's take a look at how Iran treats progressives and film makers. Let's remind the pro-Hamas protestors that they are actively supporting this suppression and brutality.
Iranian director sentenced to flogging, jail and fine for ‘collusion against national security’
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/iranian-director-sentenced-flogging-jail-095350590.html
A court in Iran has sentenced renowned director Mohammad Rasoulof to eight years in prison, flogging, a fine, and the confiscation of property for national security crimes, his lawyer confirmed on Wednesday.
In a statement on X, Rasoulof’s lawyer Babak Paknia wrote that the court found Rasoulof’s films and documentaries, along with his public statements, to be “examples of collusion with the intention of committing a crime against the security of the country”.
Paknia added that the judgment was confirmed in a court of appeal and has now been sent for enforcement.
Rasoulof is one of Iran’s most prominent directors, and his film The Seed of the Sacred Fig is scheduled to premiere at the Cannes film festival, which starts on 14 May.
The director and the festival reportedly were under a lot of pressure from Iranian authorities to pull the film from competition.
Producers of the film have also reported harassment and actors were summoned for questioning and have been banned from leaving the country.
Last week, Paknia wrote on X that it wasn’t clear whether Rasoulof would be able to travel to Cannes to attend his film’s screening.
In an email to The Guardian, Paknia confirmed the developments: “He is accused of making [The Seed of the Sacred Fig] without obtaining a license from the related authorities, alongside accusations that the actresses were not applying hijab properly and were filmed without hijab”.
“All key members of the film are banned from leaving the country and have been investigated by the security forces of the Ministry of Intelligence.”
Rasoulof has long faced legal persecution in his home country, but this is the harshest sentence among the series of punishments he has been given.
Rasolouf was sentenced to six years in prison in 2010, later reduced to one year, after he was accused of filming without correct permits.
In 2017, after Rasoulof’s film on corruption in Iran, A Man of Integrity, won the Un Certain Regard sidebar at Cannes, his passport was confiscated when he returned to Tehran from Colorado’s Telluride Film Festival.
He was then sentenced to a one-year prison term and a two-year ban on leaving the country. He was also prohibited from any participation in social or political activity two years later by the Islamic revolutionary court.
Rasoulof then went on to win the Golden Bear, the Berlin Film Festival’s top prize, in 2020 for his film about the death penalty in Iran, There Is No Evil. However, he was unable to attend the film festival because of the travel ban imposed on him and his daughter Baran received the award on his behalf.
He was then incarcerated again in July 2022, after he criticised the response of Iranian security forces to protests over a building collapse in Abadan. He was released in February 2023, but barred from attending the Cannes film festival, where he was to serve as a member of the Un Certain Regard jury.
Iran’s Independent Filmmaker Association has criticised the judgment in a statement, reported CNN.
“Once again, the judiciary’s verdict against Mohammad Rasoulof proved that the law is only a playground for stubbornness and revenge in the legal system contaminated by government jurisprudence,” it said.
“Independent and freedom-loving cinematographers condemn the invalid judgment of the judiciary against Mohammad Rasoulof and stand by him and all the artists who make fun of government censorship.”
Appearances at film festivals for Iranian directors and actors sees a lot of persecution from the government, despite the country’s thriving film industry.
Director Saeed Roustaee was sentenced to six months in prison for screening his film Leila’s Brothers at the Cannes film festival in 2022.
Actor Taraneh Alidoosti, who played the lead, spent almost three weeks in jail over her support for the protests that broke out in Iran in 2022 over the death of Mahsa Amini in custody.
Celebrated director Jafar Panahi has been subjected to several detentions and house arrests, with his most recent seven months-long imprisonment ending in February 2023.
(Article has Tweets and pictures.)
Some follow-up about renowned film director Mohammad Rasoulof. This is also a remind to pro-Hamas protestors that this type of suppression is what they support.
Acclaimed Iranian filmmaker flees to Europe after prison and flogging sentence
https://www.cnn.com/2024/05/13/midd...mad-rasoulof-flees-iran-intl-latam/index.html
Acclaimed Iranian filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof says he has fled his home country to an undisclosed location in Europe after a court in Iran sentenced him to prison on national security charges.
Rasoulof condemned the Iranian government in an Instagram post on Monday, calling it a tyrannical and oppressive regime, and posting a video that showed him crossing the country’s mountainous border.
“If geographical Iran suffers beneath the boots of your religious tyranny, cultural Iran is alive in the common minds of millions of Iranians who were forced to leave Iran due to your brutality and no power can impose its will on it. From today, I am a resident of cultural Iran,” he said.
In a separate statement dated May 12, Rasoulof said he had decided to escape Iran after his lawyers told him his prison sentence would be implemented on short notice.
“I had to choose between prison and leaving Iran. With a heavy heart, I chose exile,” he said in that statement, which was provided by a spokesperson.
CNN has reached out to Iranian authorities for comment. His lawyer Babak Paknia said last week that an Iranian court had sentenced Rasoulof to eight years in prison and flogging after it found his films and documentaries to be “examples of collusion with the intention of committing a crime against the security of the country.”
Rasoulof is among several high-profile artists to have been caught up in a widening crackdown on dissent by Iranian authorities since nationwide protests broke out over the 2022 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, who was arrested for allegedly not wearing her headscarf properly.
Rasoulof, whose recent films have been critical of the Iranian government, was among a group of artists and filmmakers who signed a letter criticizing the violent response of security forces to quell a 2022 protest over a building collapse in the southwestern city of Abadan that killed more than 40 people.
Rasoulof won a Golden Bear for best film at the Berlinale festival in 2020 for “There Is No Evil” and his film “A Man of Integrity” was recognized for a “Certain Regard” honor at the Cannes Film Festival in France in 2017.
The filmmaker’s latest work, “The Seed of the Sacred Fig,” is set to premiere at Cannes next week, but it’s unclear if he will be able to attend.
“We are very happy and much relieved that Mohammad has safely arrived in Europe after a dangerous journey,” said Jean-Christophe Simon, the distributor for Rasoulof’s latest film.
The Films Boutique and Parallel45 executive added that he hopes that Rasoulof will be able to attend the Cannes premiere for his film “in spite of all attempts to prevent him from being there in person.”
Rasoulof said on Instagram that he will now work to quickly finish the last technical steps of his film’s post-production.
“Many people helped to make this film. My thoughts are with all of them, and I fear for their safety and well-being,” he said, accusing the Iranian government of pressuring members of his production team with interrogations, court filings and travel restrictions.
Rasoulof didn’t specify how he escaped Iran, saying only that he did it secretly with the help of friends and acquaintances.
In 2022, an Iranian court sentenced Rasoulof to one year in prison and banned him from making films for two years on the charge of “propaganda against the system,” according to Human Rights Watch. Iranian authorities have previously arrested him multiple times and confiscated his passport because of his work, HRW said.
