PARIS: Jailed Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi faces a new trial over accusations she made against the security forces of sexually assaulting female prisoners, her family said on Saturday.
The trial, due to begin on Sunday, relates to an audio message she shared from prison in April shared by supporters and in which she decried a “full-scale war against women” in the Islamic republic.
She is charged in this latest case with making “propaganda against the regime”, it said. There has been no comment on the case by the Iranian judicial authorities.
Her family quoted Mohammadi as saying that the trial should be held in public so “witnesses and survivors can testify to the sexual assaults perpetrated by the Islamic republic regime against women”.
Mohammadi, who is held in Tehran’s Evin prison, urged Iranian women in her April message via her Instagram page to share their stories of arrest and sexual assault at the hands of the authorities.
She pointed to the case of journalist and student Dina Ghalibaf who, according to rights groups, was arrested after accusing security forces on social media of handcuffing and sexually assaulting her during a previous arrest at a metro station. Ghalibaf was later released.
According to her family, her sentences now amount to 12 years and three months of imprisonment, 154 lashes, two years of exile and various social and political restrictions.
The authorities in Iran have in recent weeks intensified a crackdown obliging women to obey the country’s Islamic dress code, notably making use of video surveillance.
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