Iran ranks fourth in the world in terms of active Web logs.

Jan 26, 2005
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[Internet use has proliferated in Iran in recent years. Official figures suggest there are more than 4 million users in the country of 68 million and the country ranks fourth in the world in terms of active Web logs.]

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=featuresNews&storyID=7660852

Technology: Iranian Cleric Blogs for Free Expression
Friday, February 18, 2005

[Technology News]: TEHRAN, Blogging might not sound an appropriate hobby for a senior Iranian government official, particularly one who is a Muslim cleric.

But presidential adviser Mohammad Ali Abthai has turned the practice of writing Internet journals, or blogging, into a powerful tool against the reformist government's hardline foes and a means to reach out to the country's disenchanted youth.

Abtahi, 45, a mid-ranking cleric who last year quit his post as vice-president, says he learns more chatting with young people on the Internet than he does in any government report.

"A lot of them criticize the (political) system and sometimes I tell them they are right. I talk to them very freely," he said in an interview at his spartan office in affluent north Tehran.

His popular web site www.webneveshteha.com (webneveshteha means "web writings" in Persian) receives dozens of messages a day, to which he replies scrupulously, often working until 3 a.m.

"What do you think about moving to a secular political system? Yes or No???" asked one visitor, who called himself Gomnam.

"Naturally the system of any country should be chosen by the majority of the people," was Abtahi's subtle reply.

INTERNET UNDER THREAT

While other Iranian clerics and officials also have Web sites, none are prepared to engage in debate on such sensitive issues with the public, Abtahi says.

"I am the only window of the government that people can openly freely. That kind of contact between society and a cleric is very important and very unusual," he said.


Internet use has proliferated in Iran in recent years. Official figures suggest there are more than 4 million users in the country of 68 million and the country ranks fourth in the world in terms of active Web logs.

But Internet use, like other forms of entertainment and expression in Iran, is under threat.

Late last year more than 20 young Internet journalists, web technicians and bloggers were arrested and held for several weeks on charges ranging from endangering national security to insulting senior officials of the clerical establishment.

Soon after their release Abtahi revealed details of their treatment in prison where they were kept in solitary confinement, subjected to physical and psychological torture and forced to write confessions admitting to their crimes.

Writing in his Web log Abtahi described how members of a constitutional commission wiped tears from their eyes as they listened to the bloggers describe the beatings they received.

It was a daring move but it worked. Abtahi's writings brought international attention to the case. Human rights groups and foreign governments called for an immediate inquiry.

Local newspapers, normally too scared of closure to publish anything critical of the judiciary, began writing their own accounts of the bloggers' ordeals.

THINK TWICE

Finally, judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi-Shahroudi met the bloggers and after hearing their claims promised to bring those responsible to justice.

"There's been a change in the atmosphere," Abtahi said. "Now instead of the webloggers being under pressure it's the judiciary which is feeling the heat.