Nasrin Sotoudeh and Baha’i Political Prisoner Refuse Phone Calls in Solidarity with Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.
Two political prisoners held in the same ward as Nazanin
Zaghari-Ratcliffe in Iran’s Evin Prison have given up their right to phone
calls until the authorities lift newly imposed restrictions targeting the
Iranian UK dual national as well her fellow inmates in the Women’s Ward.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s weekly
phone calls with her husband were canceled and her food rations decreased after
she announced she would be going on hunger strike for access to medical
treatment for lumps in her breast. This prompted prominent human rights
lawyer Nasrin
Sotoudeh and Baha’i university educator Azita
Rafizadeh to give up their own phone calls in
solidarity with Zaghari-Ratcliffe.
Until recently, female inmates
held in the Women’s Ward of Evin Prison in Tehran were allowed to make three
20-minute phone calls per week. Now, female prisoners can only make 10-minute
phone calls according to a schedule set by the authorities, a knowledgeable
source told the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI).
In the wards where male
prisoners are held, inmates have phone access every day from eight in the
morning until nine in the evening, added the source who spoke on the condition
of anonymity.
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