Zam death sentence exposes mullah regime’s terrorism against opponents
The Iranian regime has always devoted efforts to hunting
down opponents at home and abroad, especially those who had previously worked
with it and learned its secrets. Prominent journalist Ruhollah Zam was a
chronic headache for the regime, as his talks were supported by documents and
evidence, which made him one of the most wanted individuals by the mullahs.
The Iranian security services kidnapped Zam from France in
October 2019 and an Iranian court sentenced him to death on Tuesday, June 30
for supporting the anti-government protests.
Judiciary spokesman Gholam Hossein Ismaili said that the
court issued its verdict on 13 charges, with a prison sentence for the rest of
the charges, although he noted that this ruling is subject to appeal in the
Supreme Court and is not final.
Zam said in an interview three years ago that he had
received information from Iranian security and military sources that there was
a joint plan by the Ministry of Intelligence, Quds Force, and the Revolutionary
Guard intelligence service to kidnap him.
He had stated that they had even planned to assassinate him
in a fabricated street dispute at some point, adding that the Ministry of
Intelligence had a large file on him and that the person responsible for him
had traveled to Germany several times under a fake name.
His prediction came true, as Zam was arrested in 2009 during
the protests in Iran against the results of the presidential elections at that time.
Following his release, he left the country and was able to leak documents
revealing the depth of corruption of regime leaders and Revolutionary Guard
generals.
Zam then ran the Amad News channel on Telegram from Paris,
through which he supported the anti-government protests that started in 2017
and continued throughout the following year.
His first trial session began in June 2020, as he was
accused of spying for the intelligence services of the United States, Israel
and France at the same time. The authorities published a video clip of Zam
confessing to the charges and declaring his remorse, but the regime was accused
of taking false confessions under torture.
On the other hand, a spokesman for the Iranian judiciary
confirmed a five-year prison sentence against French researcher Fariba Adelkhah
calculated from the day of her arrest.
Adelkhah, an anthropologist at the Paris Institute of
Political Science (Sciences Po), was arrested along with her husband on
national security charges. After her espionage charge was dropped, her husband
was released in a prisoner exchange with France, but she remained in detention.




