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Thursday, May 07, 2009
Cliff May :: Townhall.com Columnist
Free Roxana Saberi!
by Cliff May
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In September 1988, the Indian-born British writer Salman Rushdie published "The Satanic Verses," a novel containing what some saw as an irreverent depiction of the prophet Mohamed. In February 1989 - exactly ten years after leading Iran's Islamic Revolution- the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa calling the book "blasphemous" and offering a bounty for Rushdie's murder.

One month later, Britain broke relations with Iran. But most other nations responded fecklessly, if at all. And in 1998, Britain restored relations with Iran after its rulers offered a meaningless promise: They would "neither support nor hinder assassination operations on Rushdie" undertaken in response to Khomeini's decree. Seven years later, the fatwa was reaffirmed by Khomeini's successor, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a message to Muslim pilgrims making the haj to Mecca. Since then, Iran's Revolutionary Guards also have declared the death sentence valid.

There has been no response of any consequence from Britain, the U.S., the European Union and the United Nations to these attacks not just on Rushdie but also on freedom of speech, a core Western value.

Nor have the world's literary communities stood up to Iran's rulers in any meaningful way. On the contrary, a remarkable number of Western writers have acted as apologists for the theocratic regime. New York Times columnist Roger Cohen is among the most recent -and egregious. Earlier this year, he reported that Iran's Jewish community is "living, working and worshipping in relative tranquility."

In fact, Iran's Jewish community has shrunk by more than 75% since the Islamic Revolution, from over 100,000 to an estimated 25,000. And anyone who believes that the Iranian Jews who remain are free to discuss their hardships and fears with foreign journalists like Cohen is a damned fool.

In January, Roxana Saberi, a 32-year-old American journalist - she has reported for National Public Radio, the BBC and other media -- was arrested in Tehran on patently bogus charges of espionage - the same charge, by the way, that was made against journalist Daniel Pearl by the militant Islamists who kidnapped and, eventually, slaughtered him in Pakistan.

Last month, Saberi was hastily tried - one day, behind closed doors -- and sentenced to 8 years in prison. On April 21st, she defiantly went on a hunger strike. She stayed on it for 15 days until this week when, according to her Iranian-born father, Reza Saberi, her health began to sharply deteriorate. Continued...

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About The Author

Clifford D. May is the President of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

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So What?

Before you get all hot-n-bothered about poor little Saberi you should do a little digging into her background. She has been another American-Iranian bent on showing, and writing about her American hatred, every chance she has had. Reporters W/O Borders, the BBC, and many, many other progressive anti-American organizations have all been the happy recipients of Saberi’s propaganda reporting. Saberi’s own father understands this and said, she "only used her position to promote this country [Iran].”
The fact that the Iranian government has chosen to use her as the pathetic and useful idiot she has certainly shown herself to be for the past decade or so, is really very poetic justice. I for one will not be raising a word of protest in her defense and hopefully many other Americans will choose the same. Saberi who? I say….

Lon
I think May is suggesting a one day fast -- because that's the only kinda thing that gets attention these days. Sad, but true.

We've become such a dumbed-down and childish society, that any normal adult solutions just fall on deaf ears. So yes, fasting or maybe taking to the streets in our underwear and chanting senseless rhymes or something similarly childish -- is about the only kind of thing that penetrates our American Idol mentality.
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