
Iranian lawyer Mohammad Ali Dadkhah. (Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images)
Blaze readers will likely recall the story of Iranian pastor, Youcef Nadarkhani, a former Muslim turned Christian convert who had been imprisoned since 2009 for refusing to renounce his Christian faith. Both the pastor and his supporters breathed a sigh of relief when he was released from prison in early September, however, the victory turned out to be bittersweet when the attorney responsible for Nadarkhani’s release was, in turn, imprisoned.
Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, the human rights attorney who represented Pastor Youcef is now slated to serve a hefty prison sentence in what reports indicate is one of Iran’s most dangerous prisons. Dadkhah had represented other religious and political prisoners and been convicted previously for such “crimes.”
In a previous article for TheBlaze, Billy Hallowell wrote:
Dadkhah, who has represented Nadarkhani and who is known as a prominent human rights advocate, has allegedly been sentenced to nine years in prison for “acting against national security.” [...]
As The Blaze has reported for months, Nadarkhani’s charges were waged over his conversion from Islam to Christianity. Dadkhah’s sentencing, it seems, has resulted from his defense of the pastor and others who were detained following Iran’s disputed 2009 elections. In addition to his alleged prison sentence, the lawyer has reportedly been banned from teaching in Iranian universities and from practicing law for the next 10 years.
The beleaguered attorney’s imprisonment has also sparked outrage within the human rights movements, particularly with Amnesty International. “Iranian human rights defender and lawyer Mohammad Ali Dadkhah must be immediately and unconditionally released,” Amnesty said in a statement.
Amnesty asserts that Dadkhah “is the fourth member of the CHRD to have been imprisoned in the last 18 months,” and that “he should never have been put on trial for his legitimate human rights activities — the Iranian authorities must overturn his conviction and sentence and release him immediately and unconditionally.” Amnesty is also calling on the authorities to “ensure he is protected from torture or other ill-treatment” as well as be provided with an attorney of his choosing. In Iranian prisons however, especially where those charged with apostasy are concerned, torture — particularly at Evin Prison, where Dadkhah is being held — seems par for the course.
Saeed Pourheydar, an Iranian journalist and blogger who worked for “reformist newspapers,” told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran (ICHRI) that he was arrested twice, once in 2010 and then again 2011, and that he was held as a political prisoner in Evin’s Ward 240. According to reports, Dadkah is being held in Ward 350. In a blogpost for ICHRI, Pourheydar wrote of the torture he endured during his time at Evin:
Sometimes I was physically tortured, which included beatings during interrogations, sleep deprivation, once throwing me inside a cold water barrel, or keeping me naked outside in the cold weather. Some of the mental and psychological torture included giving me false news and information, threatening me with flogging, forcing me to accept immoral charges, threatening me with arrests of my family members or giving me false news about the arrests of my wife and my father, playing my daughter’s voice during an interrogation session and telling me that my wife and my daughter were also arrested, threatening me with a long prison sentence, and banning my visitations and contacts with my family…
Pourheydar, who claims to have lost nine kilograms in one month and who suffered a heart attack following an interrogation session, also spoke of the torture fellow inmates endured. In the same ICHRI article, he wrote [caution, some of the content contains graphic descriptions]:
Many of my prisoner friends inside Evin’s Ward 350, who had prior experience in solitary cells inside Wards 209, 240, and IRGC’s Ward 2-A, had been exposed to some type of psychological, mental, or physical torture. During my time in Ward 350, I was able to talk to 19 friends who had been tortured. Most of the torture took place inside the ward affiliated with the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), and depending on what the security forces decided for the prisoner, the type and intensity of the torture differed. [...] During the talks I had with my friends, they gave me a complete description of what they went through in solitary cells. The stories I heard about the horrible psychological and physical torture provided me with new insight about how brutally the regime treats its political prisoners.
Beatings, urinating on the prisoner’s head and face, hanging the prisoner by his feet, flogging, using electric shockers, hitting sensitive spots on one’s body, and one case of horrible rape using glue, were parts of the physical torture my friends told me about. Fake executions, insults and degradation, arrests of family members, threats of arresting and raping the prisoner’s wife or daughter, threatening the prisoner with the death sentence, forcing the prisoner to take psychedelics, etc., were only a small part of the psychological and mental tortures used inside the Islamic Republic prisons that these 19 prisoners experienced. Though the number of prisoners who were tortured was far more than this number, when I was inside Ward 250, I was only able to talk to 19 individuals, some of whom were unfortunately executed later and some others who continue to serve their time there.
Regardless of what ward Dadkhah is in currently, it is clear that his life and well-being are in grave jeopardy. While human rights activists and people of goodwill around the world are speaking out and navigating diplomatic channels to advocate for his release, the record of success in such instances may not favor the embattled attorney.
Ironically, the one Islamic country that is actually seeing a decline in Islam and a push among its people — particularly within its dissident movement — towards Western values, is Iran. But while a hardline Islamic regime led by the Ayatollah Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad still exists, the odds are stacked decidedly against political prisoners in the country.
(h/t: Deseret News)
























































































































judyaz
Oct. 9, 2012 at 1:44amDear Father of us all, please bless, protect and set free this ethical lawyer. Thank you.
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lildeb56
Oct. 8, 2012 at 2:04pmLooks like Jay Sekulow and the ACLJ need to get involved in this one too. The ACLJ had much to do with the petitioning and money raised to get this pastor released.
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RDavis49
Oct. 7, 2012 at 3:09pmNow isn’t this supposed to be the most fair and balanced law in the world? Actually, if that was applied to some of the lawyers in this country, it wouldn’t be all too bad. Especailly those who help murders, child molesters and rapist beat a rap by way of a loophole or technicality in the law. And people wonder why so many Americans dislike the Islamic faith….. Duuuuuuuuuuuh??????
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thibx
Oct. 7, 2012 at 9:25amislam is an evil religon. none of these people belong to God. created as humans by God but belong to the devil.
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blackyb
Oct. 6, 2012 at 2:12pmThere are some lawyers who belong in jail, but this man would not seem to. I despise those less than human, below animal Iranians. They are not fit to be on the planet with humans.
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ASonOfLiberty1776
Oct. 6, 2012 at 5:12pmAnd with an attitude like that, you’re somehow better than they are? Let’s just take a stroll back to Dachau while we’re at it, or praise the Hutu’s for wiping out the horrid Tutsis…..
So much for “all men are created equal.” Sometimes I wonder if people can read what they write…..
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Eblaze44
Oct. 6, 2012 at 5:32pmdo you have a clue about what goes on in OUR prisons that are called “correctional institutions or facilities”? the gangs that are loose, the fights, stabbings, forced sodomy, forced tattooing – and there is then the stigma for the rest of ones life – perhaps deserved – for being an “ex-con” – never trusted, many jobs closed to you though you have “paid for your crime”.
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blackyb
Oct. 6, 2012 at 2:09pmThey just had to hurt, harm, maime or kill someone. Those peope are so evil, I do not know how they live without killing their own selves.
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OniKaze
Oct. 8, 2012 at 12:18pmIts easy actually….
If you are too busy killing or torturing someone else, you don’t have the time to do it to yourself….
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ZeitgeistBuster
Oct. 6, 2012 at 1:08amI had to slow down and tune out all of the noise and re-read the descriptions of torture.
I am thankful for the peace and tranquility of our system of a government with limited authority and power. I think it is time to INCREASE the checks and balances on the federal government. I realize now what will become of us if it finally busts the chains imposed on it by our founders and is allowed free reign.
My pathetically inadequate sympathies go out to a world in bondage.
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truelife
Oct. 6, 2012 at 10:15amI`ve been out there (the World in Bondage)…. outside of North America… The first thing I did when I got back is buy an acreage in the country side among other things. I learned in my travels, there is a severe lack of empathy towards human life, forced prostitution of children, and murder are common place when Muslims become the political force.. more often then not then violence takes place at the hands of Military and Police who basically run everything through strong arm tactics… I was in a 90% Muslim country, I witnessed girls as young as 16 being forced into prostitution because someone attempted to “rape“ them while they were on their way home from working in the common market. The whole thing always stunk of conspiracy to me… Because after being raped they would work for the Police in prostitution compounds, in turn they would recieve `protection` from being honor killed.
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outofthemire93
Oct. 6, 2012 at 8:50pmI recently read the book “Tortured for Christ” and also “God’s Underground” by Pastor Richard Wurmbrand, a Romanian pastor imprisoned by the Communists for 14 years. It opened my eyes and my heart to the reality of the evil that is rampant in our world. His faith in Christ gave him the courage and strength to endure and he writes bluntly about it. He repeatedly said how the prayers of the underground Christians and his wife and son carried him, strengthened him and enabled him to minister and convert countless other prisoners. These are the true Christian martyrs and we must support their families and never stop praying for the saints around the world. I thank God also daily that I live in this great country where I am free and very blessed. Everyone lift up Dadkah to the Lord, every day and God will work on his behalf. As well as everyone around the world who is oppressed and or/imprisoned, human traffickers, and torturers alike, Christian and non-Christian. God can and will work. Why else then did He tell us to pray???
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ALL4FREEDOM
Oct. 5, 2012 at 10:19pmGo ahead, Amnesty International, and write a really, REALLY nasty memo about this and send it to the UN. Let me know how you make out. Here’s a better idea. If Iran is so hot about getting some nukes, let’s give them some of ours. Pointy end down. Voila! Problem solved.
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JUSTANOTHEROPINION
Oct. 5, 2012 at 8:50pmHere goes our Country but for the grace of God.
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StrongWesternbabeluvinherWesternMAN
Oct. 5, 2012 at 9:17pmYou are so right Justanotherop……We try so hard to wake up those in America who have known nothing but freedom…..Youcef’s pic was my home computer’s screen image to remind me every time I looked @ him to pray for him….Now we must ask for Iran to be revealed to the world and that those in those hell holes be given relief and hope! God have mercy on all our souls.
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mbean
Oct. 5, 2012 at 7:56pmIt’s here : http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/09/sharia-demo-muslims-in-michigan-to-rally-against-free-speech-.html
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mbean
Oct. 5, 2012 at 7:50pmIslamofascists. Obama’s friends.
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PIGSWILLNEVERFLY
Oct. 5, 2012 at 7:37pmSadistic cult of thugs. Who is trying to get the Dr. held in Pakistan out. No world of him. The leaders of these countries are like a bunch of hit lers and his hench men
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1956
Oct. 5, 2012 at 6:31pmI really wish the Blaze would stick to the same story… unless I missed something, Nadarkhani was never a Muslim, and that was why he was freed. Correct me if I’m wrong. Now his lawyer needs our prayers, as well.
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bornagaincowgirl
Oct. 5, 2012 at 6:10pmI pray for this lawyer, that God would watch over him and protect him and keep him. I pray for the people of Iran! They are a brave people and their desire for freedom is palpable. My heart breaks for them. Remember the protests several years ago? They want freedom and not one freedom-loving country came to their rescue. May God help them and may God help us.
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Exrepublisheep
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:41pmTrue Christians.
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Chuck Stein
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:07pmAs Shakespeare had a would-be tyrant say to an accomplice: “First thing we do is to kill all of the lawyers.” The second thing for tyrants to do is to take away the people’s guns.
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Anonymous T. Irrelevant
Oct. 5, 2012 at 4:51pmMr. Nadarkhani and his family should flee the country, ASAP. If it weren’t for our spine-less leader, Iran might be on it’s way to democracy right now, instead of the opposite.
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Exrepublisheep
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:39pmObamas’ fault? rrriiiiggghhhhttttttttt…
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TexasHunter
Oct. 5, 2012 at 6:28pm@ EX Even if it is Obama will just blame it “on the previous administration” Christians have never been so attacked in different ways then when Obama took office. So Yes I say it is his fault!!
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jaylew
Oct. 6, 2012 at 2:18pmMost of us understood your point complete Anonymous……but did you see the comment about you “blaming” Obama by ExRepublisheep? Gosh….and to think of every time that George Bush was blamed for every single thing under the sun and some things found elsewhere….the shrill little liberals would just get giddy with pleasure. You merely mentioned Obama and the left gets medieval on you.
Utterly hilarious…..these liberal’s skin is so thin these days that just brushing up against a conservative might cause the current liberal lot to literally bleed to death.
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rgdaguanno
Oct. 5, 2012 at 4:36pmMakes one wonder if this could ever happen here
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just his servant
Oct. 5, 2012 at 4:41pmNo doubt in my mind.
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BIGWUN
Oct. 5, 2012 at 4:43pmO in 12 = Us in Muslim “paradise”. You bring up a great point and O is one of those hoping to bring it to pass.
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Ivehadenoughtofthisgovenmentcrap
Oct. 5, 2012 at 4:57pmAny day now….
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sbenard
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:02pmIt very likely would under a lame duck Kim Jong Obama!
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RJJinGadsden
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:20pmAlmost sounds like an episode of Star Trek Enterprise in a Klingon court room.
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biohazard23
Oct. 5, 2012 at 5:20pmIt’s coming…..
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