Adnan Hassanpour, a Kurdish journalist whose death sentence was quashed in August 2008, was recently sentenced to 10 years in prison by the court in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj that retried his case, Reporters Without Borders has learned from his family. "This sentence is absurd and baseless," Reporters Without Borders said.

The revolutionary tribunal, which first handed down the death sentence on 16 July 2007, found Hassanpour guilty of subversive activities against national security, espionage and separatist propaganda. After first confirming the sentence on 22 October 2007, the supreme court in Tehran quashed it in August 2008 on procedural grounds. It said Hassanpour could not be regarded as "mohareb" (and enemy of God). The case was returned to an ordinary court in Sanandaj for retrial. After hearing the case on 6 September 2008 and 30 January 2009, the court issued its sentence on 2 July 2009. Hassanpour, who has staged two hunger strikes in protest against the conditions in which he is being held, is currently in the main Sanandaj prison. Aged 27, he was arrested outside his home on 25 January 2007, and was initially imprisoned in Mahabad, which is also in Iranian Kurdistan. He wrote about the very sensitive Kurdish issue for the magazine Asou, which has been banned by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance since August 2005. He also worked for foreign media such as Voice of America and Radio Farda, which broadcasts in Farsi to Iran.

The court also quashed the conviction of another journalist convicted in the same case, Abdolvahed "Hiva" Botimar, on the grounds of procedural irregularity. Botimar, an active member of the environmental NGO Sabzchia, was arrested on 25 December. Botimar had also been under sentence of death. "We have been waiting for than six months for the supreme court to decide whether to reopen the case against Iranian-Canadian journalist Zahra Kazemi´s alleged murderers, but it took the court only a few weeks to uphold Hassanpour´s death sentence, so the judicial system clearly continues to have a pro-government bias," Reporters Without Borders said. "We appeal to the international community to take every possible action to get this journalist released," the press freedom organisation added. "This sentence should be taken very seriously as Iran has already executed more than 300 people since the start of the year."

For the past several months, Hassanpour and Botimar have been held in Sanandaj prison, where their lawyers have not been allowed to meet with them in private in order to inform them of the supreme court´s decision.

Saleh Nikbakht, one of the lawyers representing the two journalists, told Reporters Without Borders: "This sentence is not only contrary to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the international conventions ratified by Iran, but it also contrary to Islamic law and the laws of the Islamic Republic."