She was supposed to be in Minnesota this weekend giving the commencement address at her alma mater, but instead journalist Roxana Saberi was hospitalized in Tehran after two weeks on a hunger strike, according to an AP report. An American journalist of Iranian and Japanese parents, the Fargo native went on a liquid-only fast on April 21 in protest of an eight-year sentence for allegedly spying, but began refusing water after Iranian officials told the press accounts of her hunger strike were false. The 32-year-old was taken to a clinic on Friday and released after a day.
As World Press Freedom Day passed Sunday, a hunger strike in solidarity with Saberi extended into its sixth day by Reporters without Borders activists in Paris, while hundreds of supporters and friends held a vigil for Saberi on the bridge linking Saberi’s hometown with the neighboring city of Moorhead, Minn. Saberi was scheduled to give the commencement speech at her alma mater, Moorhead’s Concordia College this weekend.
According to the World Association of Newspapers, 125 journalists were imprisoned last year, including 12 in the region where Saberi is now detained.













6 Comments »
Comment posted May 4, 2009 @ 9:29 am
“She was supposed to be in Minnesota this weekend” — how can this be correct? Is she not still in Iranian custody, on charges of spying? Surely they wouldn’t release her to come to Minnesota ‘on bail’ or the like. Am I totally missing something? Has she been freed?
Comment posted May 4, 2009 @ 9:35 am
She was scheduled to be the commencement speaker, but obviously that was set up before she was jailed. See Star Tribune and In-Forum links.
Comment posted May 4, 2009 @ 10:27 am
Sorry, If she were a true American she would be here going to this meeting. But she is really an Iranian using the shield of Naturalization to violate the laws of her home country.
Comment posted May 4, 2009 @ 12:13 pm
This whole story seems a little sketchy to me, primarily because of the involvement of Reporters Without Borders. The similarly-named Doctors Without Borders is respected, but Reporters Without Borders has been accused of being a tool of American and European governmental policy. They hung out with Otto Reich, who is a super creepy right-wing thug from the Central American days of Reagan (contras) to Bush 2 (Venezuelan coup). There’s worse – look at SourceWatch’s story on them. .
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Reporters_Without_Borders
Comment posted May 4, 2009 @ 12:22 pm
What whole story? That Saberi is imprisoned, that she’s on a hunger strike, that she was hospitalized?
Comment posted May 5, 2009 @ 10:19 am
Frankly, the involvement of Reporters Without Borders makes me think that Saberi could be guilty as charged.
I know I have a reflexive distrust of certain things. (Like just about everything the last administration said, ever.) When I first saw the stories in the Star Tribune, I thought – hmm, ok, there’s a local connection, but why is it that this activist journalist is getting front page coverage on this increasingly right-wing corporate newspaper’s website? In Manufacturing Consent, Chomsky and Hermann lay out the case that our enemies’ sins are awful, but our friends sins are forgivable in the mainstream corporate press. Reporters Without Borders follows that line, with great criticism for Cuba and Venezuela but much less for US ally states. Nothing too new there.
Then there’s the Pentagon propaganda campaigns, that we caught glimpses of during the Bush administration. We would hear about some crazy thing – like Total Information Awareness – and then it would get bad press, the Pentagon would announce that they’ve stopped doing that, not that they were doing that before, but they had a right to if they had been doing it, and then Rumsfeld would say in a speech that they’re doing the same thing under a different name anyway.
And one of those revelations was that the Pentagon, which is theoretically supposed to refrain from advocating anything to the public (no propagandizing the American people), but which has been doing just that for, well, forever (and certainly domestically regarding defense spending) (see Eisenhower, military-industrial complex) – anyway, the Pentagon had a program relating to the Iraq situation that would make up stories, bald faced lies, but they would place them in the foreign media, and that was ok. And then Fox would pick it up and the lie would jump into the US media.
I don’t know Saberi; I’ve only tangetially followed the story. The above are the things that smell funny to me.
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