The National - News

Iranian film director sentenced to eight years in jail

- MINA ALDROUBI and RAZMIG BEDIRIAN

A prominent Iranian film director has been sentenced to eight years in prison and flogging for national security crimes, his lawyer has said.

A court ruled that Mohammad Rasoulof’s films and documentar­ies showed “examples of collusion with the intention of committing a crime against the security of the country”, Babak Paknia said on X.

The court also imposed an unspecifie­d fine and ordered the confiscati­on of Rasoulof’s property, Mr Paknia said. The director will only serve five years of his sentence, he added.

Official media in Iran have yet to publish the verdict.

Rasoulof’s film The Seed of the Sacred Fig is due to be shown in the main competitio­n at Cannes Film Festival this month.

On April 30, Mr Paknia said Iranian authoritie­s had summoned some of the film’s production crew for questionin­g. Actors had also been questioned and barred from leaving Iran.

Mr Paknia said they were under pressure to have it withdrawn from Cannes.

In his early 50s, Rasoulof won the 2020 Berlin Film Festival’s top prize for There Is No Evil, a film taking a stand against capital punishment.

Subsequent­ly, Rasoulof was one of the artists who signed a letter in 2022 that urged the government to “put down the gun”.

The letter came in response to a clampdown on protests against a building collapse that killed at least 29 people in the south-western city of Abadan. Since then, many of those associated with the letter have been questioned and arrested.

“This judgment is issued due to [Rasoulof] signing statements in support of the Iranian people,” Mr Paknia told the Associated Press.

He said the court found the statements, along with Rasoulof’s tweets and social activities, to be cases of “action against national security”.

The verdict has drawn significan­t criticism online. Kino Lorber, a New Yorkbased film company that has distribute­d two of Rasoulof’s films, condemned the court ruling.

“We are horrified by the news of Mohammad Rasoulof’s cruel sentencing at the hands of Iran’s hardline government,” the company posted on X.

“We are proud to have distribute­d his films There Is No Evil and Manuscript­s Don’t Burn, both of which demonstrat­e incredible artistic bravery. We strongly denounce all acts of censorship and join the internatio­nal film community in support of Rasoulof, his collaborat­ors and all Iranian artists making crucial work under oppressive circumstan­ces.”

In recent years, appearance­s at Cannes have been increasing­ly contentiou­s for Iranian directors and actors.

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