http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/09/23/rafsanjani-daughter-taken-to-prison/

Rafsanjani daughter taken to prison 
 
Faezeh Hashemi

DUBAI: The daughter of influential former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi 
Rafsanjani was taken to prison late on Saturday to serve a sixmonth sentence 
for “spreading anti-state propaganda,” Iranian media reported. Faezeh 
Rafsanjani, a former member of parliament, was convicted in January and 
sentenced to jail. The conviction is believed to be over an interview she gave 
to an opposition news site in which she criticised human rights violations and 
economic policy in Iran. Gholamhossein Esmaili, Iran’s prisons chief, was 
quoted by the Mehr news agency as saying she was taken to Tehran’s Evin Prison.

She was detained briefly in 2009 after street protests against the election 
that returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power. Protesters said it was 
rigged in favour of the incumbent. Faezeh had addressed supporters of defeated 
candidate Mirhossein Mousavi, who had gathered in defiance of a ban on 
opposition protests. Her latest detention comes as her brother Mehdi Rafsanjani 
is expected to return to Iran after living and studying in the United Kingdom. 
Officials have said Mehdi should be arrested upon arrival in Iran, accusing him 
of fomenting unrest after the 2009 vote.

An independent source told Reuters Mehdi was in Dubai and expected to return to 
Iran yesterday. The wealthy Rafsanjani family has faced heightened pressure 
from hardliners since the 2009 vote, which set off the deepest political crisis 
and worst unrest in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The centrist Akbar 
Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of the founding figures of the Islamic Republic and a 
close aide to the revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, expressed 
sympathy for opposition demonstrators and saw his own power and influence wane 
as a result. In March 2011, he lost his post as head of the state clerical 
body, the Assembly of Experts, consolidating the ascendancy of the hardline 
Ahmadinejad. —Reuters


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