Email to editor
Email to Support
Thuglak Online Store
Cho's Collections


Kathadi Ramamurthi's


Tamil Telefilms
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Bharatanatyam
5 - VCD/DVD Collections


Yoga
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Vocal
25 - VCD/DVD Collections


Devotional
21 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Instrument
10 - VCD/DVD Collections


Mouli's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections


Crazy's
22 - VCD/DVD Collections


S.Ve.Shekher's
15 - VCD/DVD Collections


Kuchupudi
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Y.Gee.Mahendra's
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Dummies Drama's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections

Iranian blogger tells of escape from Tehran

Category :International Sub Category :Pakistan
2009-08-05 00:00:00
   Views : 238

Islamabad, Aug 5 (DPA) When Iran sought to hide its crackdown on people protesting the allegedly rigged presidential election of June 12, young Hamid Raza Khoshnya used his weblog to keep the world enlightened about the regime's brutality.

But the over-vigilant secret agents of the Islamic republic lost little time in tracing his 'internet mischief'. When they came knocking at his door, Khoshnya, 23, had little option but to flee.

Staying in Tehran while there was a complete lack of tolerance for dissent was too dangerous and would certainly have meant prison, or even death. But escaping was not easy for someone who wanted 'change' in his country.

'I remained in hiding in the cellar of a friend's house in a suburb of Tehran for 25 days until arrangements were made for my escape to Pakistan,' Khoshnya said in an interview in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

After paying $3,000 to people smugglers, Khoshnya travelled in a container to the south-eastern Iranian province of Balochistan-Sistan. From there a motorcycle rider took him across muddy, bumpy terrain to the Pakistani border village of Mandelo.

'Sitting on the pillion seat of a Honda 125 motorbike, I was trembling,' said Khoshnya, who is now staying with an Iranian refugee family in Islamabad.

'I hid myself behind the driver, praying to God that I would pass this area safely as quickly as possible. You know Iranian or Pakistani border guards could shoot us had they spotted us.'

Raised in an upper middle class, well-educated family, Khoshnya was early this year expelled from university for organising anti-government activities at the campus, making him even more determined to join dozens of reformist bloggers.

Amid a ban on foreign media from reporting, photographing or taking videos of the opposition's protests against what they call 'fraudulent' elections, he shared the details of the happenings on his Persian-language weblog 'The Wretched' -- named for the 19th century French novelist Victor Hugo.

He also sent texts, pictures and videos to CNN, BBC Persian Service and VOA through e-mails, including the one on 'Bloody Saturday' when Iranian law enforcers shot dead several demonstrators in Tehran.

It happened a day after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei warned the protesters June 19 to stop agitating and condemning the outcome of the poll that saw President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad returned to power.




Author :Nadeem Sarwar and Sajjad Malik



Bookmark and Share

Related News

  • Bal Thackeray tells Tendulkar to 'keep off political pitch'
  • Pakistan sets up special wing to protect schools from Islamists
  • Bal Thackeray tells Tendulkar to 'keep off political pitch'
  • Pakistan sets up special wing to protect schools from Islamists
  • Osama urges Europe to withdraw forces from Afghanistan
  • Fatigued Federer withdraws from October ATP Asian swing
  • Hong Kong teenager admits making bomb from internet
  • 'Capturing carbon from air only way to save earth'