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Iran activist ends 71-day prison hunger strike as wife freed

By AP - Jan 03,2017 - Last updated at Jan 03,2017

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — An imprisoned Iranian human rights activist ended a 71-day hunger strike Tuesday as his detained wife won a temporary release from prison, a day after his case sparked a rare unauthorised protest in Tehran.

Arash Sadeghi was to be taken to a hospital, his lawyer Amir Raisian said, while Amnesty International said he would be fed intravenously. His wife, Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee, was temporarily freed for several days in a decision that can be extended, the semi-official ISNA news agency reported.

The sudden decision comes after a dayslong social media campaign and the march Monday towards Evin prison by dozens of Iranians. Such protests have been rare in Iran after violence that followed the country's disputed 2009 presidential election.

Reformist lawmaker Bahram Parsai said earlier that he and other legislators met with court officials to discuss Sadeghi's case, signaling the growing concern officials had over the campaign.

"It was supposed to solve the case resorting to prudence, in a way that would not be misused by enemies," Parsai said, according to the semi-official ILNA news agency. "We do not want such cases to turn into a problem for the system," he said, apparently referring to Western criticism of Iran's human rights record.

Sadeghi is serving a 15-year sentence over charges including "spreading propaganda against the system" and "insulting the founder of the Islamic Republic", according to Amnesty. The London-based advocacy group has said Sadeghi's charges stem in part from his communication with them.

Sadeghi's hunger strike began October 24 after authorities arrested his wife to make her serve a six-year sentence over an unpublished fictional story found in her home about a woman burning a Koran in anger over another woman being stoned to death for adultery.

 

"The release of Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee today comes as a welcome relief but is long overdue," Amnesty researcher Nassim Papayianni said in a statement. "Neither she nor her husband, Arash Sadeghi, should have ever been forced to spend a single minute behind bars."

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