PARIS: An Iranian reporter detained since September after she exposed the case of Mahsa Amini that sparked nationwide protests on Tuesday denied all charges against her as her trial on national security charges opened in Tehran, her husband said.

Niloufar Hamedi, 30, told the court “she had performed her work as a journalist within the framework of the law and did not take any action against Iran’s security,” her husband Mohammad Hossein Ajorlou wrote on Twitter.

Hamedi, a journalist with the Shargh newspaper, had reported from the Tehran hospital where Amini was rushed in September in a coma after she was arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s dress rules for women.

Amini subsequently died, with the news prompting nationwide protests. While the movement had abated in the last months in the face of a crackdown, sporadic actions continue.

The session opened a day after the trial began of her fellow journalist Elaheh Mohammadi, 36, of the Ham Miham newspaper, who faces the same charges.

Mohammadi was also jailed in September after was she travelled to Amini’s hometown of Saqez in Kurdistan province to report on her funeral ceremony which turned into a protest.

The two women were charged on November 8 with propaganda against the state and conspiring against national security, offences that potentially carry the death penalty.

Hamedi appeared at branch 15 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court before judge Abolghasem Salavati, notorious for handing out tough sentences in political cases.

Ajorlou said family members were banned from attending while defence lawyers “did not have a chance to present their case”. The trial was postponed to a later and unspecified date, he added.

Hamedi’s lawyer, Parto Borhanpour, told Shargh “there was no time for the oral defence of the lawyers,” adding however they were able to present the court with their objections and requests.

Published in Dawn, May 31st, 2023

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