Marcus Hellwig
Marcus Hellwig (born 26 November 1965 in Wuppertal) is a German journalist working for the weekly BILD am Sonntag. In October 2010 he was arrested together with his partner Jens Koch in Iran,[1] after trying to interview Sakineh Ashtiani’s son and was held in prison for nearly five months.[2]
Iranian interview case
Arrest
One day prior to their arrest, Hellwig and Koch entered Iran on a tourist visa while planning to investigate on the case of Sakineh Ashtiani (who had been sentenced to death by stoning for adultery) without the permission of Iranian authorities, and in violation of Iranian media law. They arranged to meet Ashtiani's lawyer and her son, Sadjad Qaderzadeh, for an interview, which was to be held in Tabriz in the northwestern region of Iranian Azerbaijan. After only a few questions, Iranian authorities intervened and arrested Hellwig and Koch as well as Ashtiani's lawyer and her son.
According to a spokesman of the judiciary, authorities were warned by a person close to Ashtiani's family, who became suspicious about the foreigners' visit.[3]
Charges by Iranian judiciary
Hellwig and Koch were suspected of having planned the operation with Mina Ahadi who was engaged via a regular telephone connection in the interview and served as a translator for the two Germans.[4] In an interview with Iranian state television, Hellwig and Koch admitted that they were stinged by Mina Ahadi to travel to Iran.[5] Ahadi was convicted for terrorism in Iran for her past involvement with the Kurdish Komalah forces. Cooperation with Ahadi turned out to be considered an act against the national security of Iran by the judiciary.
On January 1, 2011, Sakineh Ashtiani announced in a press conference that she intends to sue the two German journalist for illegally interviewing her son about her case.[6]
The two were sentenced to 20 months in prison on charges on “acting against national security” by "committing unspecified acts".[2]
Release
The two journalists were freed February 20, 2011 and their sentences commuted to fines of $50,000 each.[7] after a visit by German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle to Tehran for a rare meeting with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Westerwelle returned to Germany with the pair on his government plane.[2]
A year after being released Hellwig told readers of his tabloid that he "was regularly beaten and constantly interrogated" during the first 10 “brutal” days in captivity until a German diplomat intervened on their behalf. Iranian interrogators sometimes "claimed that I was a spy, then allegedly a terrorist,” Hellwig is quoted as saying. According to Hellwig, he and Koch could hear torture victims throughout the day from their prison cell. “The cries were horrible.”[2]
Hellwig plans to write a book of his experience.[2]
References
- ^ "Family refused to meet two Germans". Press TV. 27 December 2010.
- ^ a b c d e German journalist says he was beaten during 5 months as a prisoner in Iran, Associated Press, 5 February 2012
- ^ "Iran arrests two fake foreign journalists". Press TV. 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Deutsche Reporter im Iran verhaftet". Spiegel Online. 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Deutsche Reporter gestehen im iranischen TV Fehler ein". Handelsblatt. 16 November 2010.
- ^ Die Zeit.de vom 2. January 2011 Sakineh Mohammadi Aschtiani kämpft um Gnade
- ^ The Price for Illicit Journalism 20 February 2012