Human Rights Watch reports. Now the group is calling on Iran’s judiciary to free him, with Eric Goldstein, deputy Middle East and North Africa director saying in a statement that they were penalising “free expression” with death.
Mr Arabi was arrested along with his wife in November 2013 by agents from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). An informed source told theInternational Campaign for Human Rights in Iran he had kept eight Facebook pages under different names and admitted to posting material insulting to the Prophet Mohammad on these pages.
His lawyer, Vahid Moshkhani, said the Supreme Court did not accept the defence that he was sharing the view of others’ on Facebook, rather than writing his own posts. He was sentenced to death in August 2014 and Iran’s supreme Court upheld the decision last month.
Article 262 of the Islamic Penal Code states insulting the Prophet Mohammad carries a punishment of death.
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