The Columbus Dispatch

Video shows grim view in prison

Group claims to have ‘hundreds’ of gigabytes of Iran Evan jail data

- Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The guard in a control room at Iran’s notorious Evin prison springs to attention as one by one, monitors in front of him suddenly blink off and display something very different from the surveillan­ce footage he had been watching.

“Cyberattac­k,” the monitors flash. Other guards gather around, holding up their mobile phones and filming, or making urgent calls. ”General protest until the freedom of political prisoners” reads another line on the screens.

An online account, purportedl­y by an entity describing itself as a group of hackers, shared footage of the incident, as well as parts of other surveillan­ce video it seized, with The Associated Press. The alleged hackers said the release of the footage was an effort to show the grim conditions at the prison, known for holding political prisoners and those with ties abroad who are often used as bargaining chips in negotiatio­ns with the West.

In one part of the footage, a man smashes a bathroom mirror to try to cut open his arm. Prisoners – and even guards – beat each other in scenes captured by surveillan­ce cameras. Inmates sleeping in single rooms with bunk beds stacked three high against the walls, wrapping themselves in blankets to stay warm.

“We want the world to hear our voice for freedom of all political prisoners,” read a message from the online account to the AP in Dubai.

Iran, which has faced criticism from the United Nations special rapporteur over its prison conditions, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment sent to its U.N. mission in New York. Iranian state media in the country have not acknowledg­ed the incident at Evin.

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