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He ran a website the Iranian regime didn’t like. He was executed for it

Paris-based journalist Ruhollah Zam was brought from exile into Iran against his will 

Borzou Daragahi
International correspondent
Saturday 12 December 2020 13:05 EST
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Ruhollah Zam had lived in exile in France and had been implicated in anti-government protests
Ruhollah Zam had lived in exile in France and had been implicated in anti-government protests (Mizan News Agency/AFP/Getty)

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For years, Ruhollah Zam ran one of Iran’s most popular online news outlets, AmadNews, a website and channel on the messaging app Telegram that amassed millions of followers inside the Islamic republic and in the diaspora.

Its content was an amalgam of wildly hyperbolic claims, genuine news and leaks of information, as well as video footage showing anti-government protests, including those that erupted in the final days of 2017, drawing the attention of regime officials.

On Saturday morning, after he was lured from France, brought before a secretive security court in Iran and sentenced to die, Zam was abruptly executed after being convicted of the Islamic crime of “spreading corruption on earth”.

He was 42.

The killing of the Paris-based journalist was the latest in a series of executions meant to inspire fear among those considering peacefully opposing the clerical regime in Tehran. It has unleashed outrage by human rights organisations as well as ordinary Iranians.

But the execution of Zam is all the more notable because he was allegedly kidnapped or detained by Iranian officials while visiting Iraq in October 2019, with the possible collaboration of Iraqi officials.

His father, the relatively well-known reformist cleric Mohammad Ali Zam, said in a post to Instagram that the family had been given no notice of the execution and no chance to say goodbye.

Zam fled Iran after being arrested in 2009 for taking part in widespread anti-government protests, launching AmadNews in 2015.

Occasionally, AmadNews reported details of disputes between top-ranking officials within the leadership, raising suspicions that it was being used by regime insiders as a conduit for their factional wars. In July 2017, it published a classified internal document suggesting the Revolutionary Guard was behind a 2015 cyberattack that led to power outages in Turkey.

Unanswered questions remain about Zam’s 2019 trip to Iraq, where he may have been lured by Iranian officials who managed to bring him to Tehran. He was sentenced to death in June, a ruling upheld by an Iranian high court on 8 December.  

Amnesty International described his trial as “unfair” and based on forced confessions.

“After being illegally kidnapped and arrested, Rouhollah Zam has been tried in a grossly unfair manner and then given an inhuman and unacceptable sentence,” Reza Moini, of Reporters Without Borders, said at the time of the sentencing.

Iranian state television has occasionally aired heavily edited snippets from his confessions on state television. On 9 December it aired a segment in which Zam purported to admit that he had been paid by the government of Saudi Arabia, a regional rival of Iran.

Zam’s father said his son had been convinced to make confessions to facilitate a prisoner swap.

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