Iran summons EU envoys for protesting reporter’s hanging
Iran on Sunday summoned the German envoy to Tehran
after the European Union condemned the execution of an Iranian journalist whose
work helped inspire nationwide economic protests in 2017, Iranian state media
has reported.
IRNA said that an Iranian foreign ministry official
summoned the German ambassador because of EU statements on the exiled reporter
Ruhollah Zam, 47, who was hanged on Saturday.
Zam was being held in jail in Iran after Iranian
authorities seized him while he was traveling in neighboring Iraq last year.
The German Foreign Ministry on Saturday expressed
its shock about the circumstances of Zam’s sentencing and what it described as
his “abduction from abroad” and forced return to Iran.
Iran will also summon today the French ambassador to
Tehran over European reactions to the journalist’s execution, IRNA added.
“This is a barbarous and unacceptable act,” the French
Foreign Ministry said in a statement, which also condemned the hanging as a
“grave blow” to freedom of speech in Iran.
Zam had been living in exile in France, before his
kidnapping and conviction in Iran.
Iranian state television referred to Zam as “the
leader of the riots” in announcing his execution by hanging early Saturday. In
June, a court sentenced Zam to death, saying he had been convicted of
“corruption on Earth,” a charge often used in cases involving espionage or
attempts to overthrow Iran’s government.
Zam’s website AmadNews and a channel he created on
the popular messaging app Telegram had spread the timings of the 2017 protests
and embarrassing information about officials that directly challenged Iran’s
Shiite theocracy.
Those demonstrations, which began at the end of
December 2017 and continued into 2018, represented the biggest challenge to
Iran’s rulers since the 2009 Green Movement protests and set the stage for
similar mass unrest in November of last year.
The initial spark for the 2017 protests was a sudden
jump in food prices. Many believe that hard-line opponents of Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani instigated the first demonstrations in the conservative city of
Mashhad in northeastern Iran, trying to direct public anger at the president.
But as protests spread from town to town, the backlash turned against the
entire ruling class.
Zam is one of three opposition figures apparently
detained in intelligence operations abroad. In late July, a California-based
member of an Iranian militant opposition group in exile was abducted by Iran
while staying in Dubai, his family has said.
Iran also is believed to have seized the former head
of the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahwaz, a militant
separatist group, while he was in Turkey. Iran has accused Farajollah Cha’ab of
being behind a 2018 attack on a military parade that killed at least 25 people
and wounded 70.



