Iranian journalist Arash Shoa-Shargh is serving a 10-year sentence on anti-state charges in Lakan Prison, in the northern city of Rasht. He was arrested in Turkey in 2018 and extradited to Iran, where he was sentenced to death; his sentence was later changed.
Shoa-Shargh, who was registered as a refugee with the United Nations in Turkey, worked as a reporter for Amad News, a popular anti-Iranian-government news channel on the messaging app Telegram, where he covered Iranian politics, according to Journalism Is Not A Crime, an exile-run website that covers news of Iranian journalists, and a friend of the journalist, who asked not to be identified for fear of their safety.
Shoa-Shargh had left Iran for Turkey on August 18, 2017, after a court ordered that the journalist be lashed for “spreading lies” and “publishing without permission,” in relation to an article that alleged a member of parliament was involved in environmental corruption, according to news reports and the journalist’s friend. The lashing verdict, which was upheld by Tehran’s appeals court, was never implemented.
On January 5, 2018, Turkish intelligence agents arrested Shoa-Shargh in Van, a city near the Iranian border, and detained him for 25 days before extraditing him to Iran at the request of the Iranian government, according to Journalism Is Not A Crime and a report by the exile-run website IranWire. After arriving in Iran, he was held in solitary confinement for 94 days, according to those reports.
In the summer of 2018, Iranian authorities charged Shoa-Shargh with “insulting the Supreme Leader,” “acting against national security,” “encouraging the public to misconduct,” and “spreading corruption on the land of God,” in connection with his work for Amad News, and sentenced him to death, according to Journalism Is Not A Crime and the friend who spoke to CPJ.
In September 2018, a court commuted Shoa-Shargh’s sentence to 10 years in prison, according to the friend and that report. The friend told CPJ that authorities have pressured the journalist’s family not to publicize his case.
Around the time of Shoa-Shargh’s arrest, Amad News had been sharing footage and news about anti-government protests and demonstrations against poor economic conditions in Iran, according to CPJ’s review of the Telegram channel.
In September 2021, the journalist’s friend said he had not been granted any furloughs during the coronavirus crisis. The friend said that as of late 2022 Shoa-Shargh was in good health and still serving his 10-year sentence. According to the friend, authorities are still very sensitive about any cases connected to Amad News even after executing its founder, Shoa-Shargh’s friend Roohollah Zam, on December 12, 2020.
CPJ was unable to determine whether there were any updates on Shoa-Shargh’s court case or the state of his health in 2024.
CPJ did not receive a response to its late 2024 email to Iran’s mission to the United Nations asking for comment on Shoa-Shargh and other imprisoned Iranian journalists.