Reports of the sentence against Marzieh Vafamehr, seen in a scene from the movie My Tehran for Sale and Persepolis appeared on the Iranian opposition website Kalameh.com (Cyan Films/Bonnie Elliott)
SYDNEY, Australian - The Australian producers of a film critical of Iran said Tuesday that they are appalled at reports that an Iranian actress has been sentenced to a year in prison and 90 lashes for appearing in the movie entitled, “My Tehran for Sale.”
My Tehran for Sale was shot in the Iranian capital and is critical of the Islamic republic's hard-line policies. The film tells the story of a young actress whose stage work is banned by authorities.
Lashing sentences are not uncommon in Iran, but many are not carried out. Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd also criticized the sentence.
Source: CBC
My Tehran for Sale was shot in the Iranian capital and is critical of the Islamic republic's hard-line policies. The film tells the story of a young actress whose stage work is banned by authorities.
- The film was produced by the South Australia-based company Cyan Films and directed by Iranian-Australian Granaz Moussavi. It premiered at the Adelaide Film Festival in 2009, but is banned in Iran.
- Reports of the sentence against Marzieh Vafamehr appeared on the Iranian opposition website Kalameh.com on Monday, though no official statement from the government has been issued. The website said that Vafamehr was arrested in July and that her attorney has appealed the sentence.
- On Tuesday, producers Julie Ryan and Kate Croser said they were "deeply shocked and appalled" by the reports of Vafamehr's sentence. Ryan and Croser said that they did not know the specifics of the charges against Vafamehr, but that they believe the accusations relate to scenes in which she appears without a hijab headscarf.
- The producers said that Marzieh's punishment appears to be unprecedented, and that actresses have appeared without a hijab in several other Iranian films.
- "We would like to express our deep shock and sadness at the sentence imposed by the Iranian government against actress Marzieh Vafamehr," Croser and Ryan said in a statement. "And we continue to offer our support to Marzieh and her family by respecting their wishes to let the case and the appeal follow the proper legal channels."
Lashing sentences are not uncommon in Iran, but many are not carried out. Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd also criticized the sentence.
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