Iran began the closed-door trial of a Washington Post journalist it's been holding for 10 months on allegations he spied for the U.S. government.
The session was held at the Revolutionary Court in Tehran, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported. The court presides over political and security cases.
Jason Rezaian, a Tehran-based reporter who holds dual American and Iranian citizenship, faces four charges including espionage and collaboration with a hostile government, the Post said last month. The 39-year-old reporter is also accused of carrying out propaganda activities against Iran’s political establishment, IRNA said, citing a spokesman for the judiciary.
The White House has dismissed any espionage charges against Rezaian as "absurd" and called for his release. His family has also repeatedly rejected the charges.
In a statement Monday, Washington Post Executive Editor Martin Baron said neither Rezaian’s mother nor his Iranian journalist wife, Yeganeh Salehi, who faces related charges, were permitted to attend the trial. The Post received no reply to its request to send a senior editor to Tehran for the trial, he said.
Rezaian was arrested in July along with Salehi, who was later released on bail, and two others, including a freelance photographer. He began reporting and writing from Tehran as a freelancer, and has been with the Post since 2012.
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