CAIRO, Egypt, Oct. 24, 2008

U.S. Student Jailed In Iran

California Woman In Tehran For Research, Family Visit Arrested, Amnesty International Says

  • Esha Momeni's arrest comes about a year after several Iranian-Americans accused of stirring up a revolution were released from Evin prison after spending months in detention. All four denied the accusations.

    Esha Momeni's arrest comes about a year after several Iranian-Americans accused of stirring up a revolution were released from Evin prison after spending months in detention. All four denied the accusations.  (AP)

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(AP)  An American university student and women's rights activist has been arrested in Iran while visiting her family and conducting research for her graduate degree thesis, a human rights group has said.

Esha Momeni, a graduate student at California State University, Northridge, was arrested while driving on a highway in Tehran by officials who said they were traffic police, Amnesty International said in a statement.

The officials said the Oct. 15 arrest was for a traffic offense, but after arresting her, they took her to her family's home and confiscated her computer and other materials related to her research on the Iranian women's movement, the London-based rights group said in a statement posted on its Web site earlier this week.

Momeni, who is a member of the California branch of Change for Equality - an Iranian women's rights group - was later taken to Evin prison, Amnesty said. The Tehran facility is notorious for holding political prisoners.

Her family was told by an Iranian court on Monday that her case was still being investigated, and no details would be released until after the probe was completed, the group said.

Iranian judicial officials have not commented on the case, and no other details were immediately available in Iran.

The university is calling for her release.

"Anyone who values knowledge and the role of academic inquiry in shedding light on the human condition should be concerned," said the university's president Jolene Koester.

In Washington, the State Department said it was aware of reports of Momeni's arrest and was seeking more information.

Momeni was aware of the risks of her work, said Melissa Wall, her thesis adviser and director of the university's mass communications graduate program.

"We talked about the dangers," Wall said. "But in the end, it was her decision to go. She was interested in communicating to Americans a broader image of Iranian women. She has a lovely presence, she smiled a lot."

Momeni was nearing the scheduled end of her stay when she was arrested, Wall said.

Amnesty said dozens of other activists and supporters have been arrested in Iran in connection with their activities with the Change for Equality campaign, launched by Iranian women activists in September 2006.

The campaign is seeking to collect a million signatures in support of changing laws that deny women in Iran equal rights in matters such as divorce and court testimonies.

Momeni's arrest comes about a year after several Iranian-Americans accused of stirring up a revolution were released from Evin prison after spending months in detention. All four denied the accusations.

The jailings elevated tensions between the U.S. and Iran, which are already at odds over U.S. accusations that Iran is seeking to develop nuclear weapons and is fueling violence in Iraq. Iran denies both claims.

Born in Los Angeles, Momeni enrolled at Cal State, Northridge in 2006, according to the university. Momeni's father came to Los Angeles in 1977 to pursue a civil engineering degree at Cal State. He later returned to Iran with his family.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by dooney8 October 27, 2008 4:19 PM EDT
srz25, is that your inmate number. This is an article about a woman arrested in Iraq and you''re talking about an unrelated, personal court case. Let me guess, someone was trying to kill you by suffocation and you defended yourself.
Reply to this comment
by prelgovisk October 26, 2008 10:25 AM EDT
Don''t worry, ...Obama will talk to them and they will suddenly become our friends.
Reply to this comment
by cheris13-2009 October 24, 2008 9:53 PM EDT
she is a winner
Reply to this comment
by cheris13-2009 October 24, 2008 9:51 PM EDT
waffles,lol,lol,lol,she is very brave,she is smart,she weighed the cost and found the need ,to be more important than her safety.
Reply to this comment
by zietzke-2009 October 24, 2008 9:25 PM EDT
More feudelism from the terrorist regime / government of Iran...I hope this young lady is released very soon and unharmed.

The U.S. Government should be DEMANDING her release immediately ! This is an outrage !
Reply to this comment
by wwudiver October 24, 2008 6:08 PM EDT
Click, click pull. Bomb those *** into next week. We need to be responsible with our nuclear power, let''s let some of those *** know that we can and will use it. If you injure an American anywhere in the world, you should know that we will kill you, your children and your grandmother. Then we will go eat some waffles. Discussion on conventional warfare is obsolete. Never, under any condition touch an American, not a suggestion, we can and we should send unmitigated destruction to their neck of the woods. It is not hawkish to defend your people, that is what a nation does.

Deep fried Umah anyone?
Reply to this comment
by mjm117 October 24, 2008 5:18 PM EDT
But, you do have to fault her for not being too smart. By doing what she has she has taken herself out of the fight. Would it not be better for her to not be in prison and fighting for women''''s rights from the outside. She has proven that she isn''''t the sharpest tool in the shed.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by redbds at 12:44 PM : Oct 24, 2008


I disagree. Unfortunately, we wouldn''t be reading an article about her most likey if she hadn''t been put in jail in Iran. This may actually bring more light to her cause.
Reply to this comment
by good4always October 24, 2008 5:05 PM EDT
She is Beautiful. She is turning me ON big time. I want her to have platonic sexual relationship with no string attached.
Reply to this comment
by talkingham October 24, 2008 4:37 PM EDT
And we should arrest her when she gets back tot he USA for going back to iran.
Reply to this comment
by missingamerica October 24, 2008 4:14 PM EDT
But, you do have to fault her for not being too smart. By doing what she has she has taken herself out of the fight. Would it not be better for her to not be in prison and fighting for women''s rights from the outside. She has proven that she isn''t the sharpest tool in the shed.

Posted by redbds at 12:44 PM : Oct 24, 2008

Gee...somebody who constantly talks the evils of Democrats and the wisdom of Republicans - and particularly this President - criticizing someone who takes the fight right smack into the middle of Iran without the support of a massive army.

What - is it her failure to know her place as a woman that gets under your skin?
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 October 24, 2008 3:49 PM EDT
He needs to be investigated by FBI. I wont be surprised if he does horrible violent stuff with babies in his basement
Posted by Good4Always at 11:23 AM : Oct 24, 2008



Thats right! who knows, He/she/it might be a serial killer tempting us with clues and laughing behind our backs.
Reply to this comment
by excoachken October 24, 2008 3:49 PM EDT
Sounds like the other side has their own Guantanamo.
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by toolmangler-2009 October 24, 2008 3:47 PM EDT
Posted by gangesdak at 11:42 AM : Oct 24, 2008



A company I work for uses the excuse "We''ve done it this way for a hundred years" to cover engineering mistakes. My answer without fail is "And for a hundred years you have been wrong". Muslims are so afraid of women learning anything that they have ''beheaded, stoned, imprisoned and treated them with contemp for over 1400 years. This tells me that Muslims are more thick heaaded than their western brothers. Even the people I work for change their minds when I am proved right, (which is often).
Reply to this comment
by redbds October 24, 2008 3:44 PM EDT
She may have gone well knowing what could possibly happen, but I do find it funny that so many people on this site are basing her?? Are these comments coming from the same people that blast middle eastern beliefs? Are these comments coming from the same people that want us to maintain a military presence in the middle east?

I commend her for standing up and doing something that most of the world would NEVER do. Can''''t fault her for trying to fight for womens rights. I guess all you loonies would have gotten up and moved to the back of bus huh?

Posted by mjm117 at 11:59 AM : Oct 24, 2008

But, you do have to fault her for not being too smart. By doing what she has she has taken herself out of the fight. Would it not be better for her to not be in prison and fighting for women''s rights from the outside. She has proven that she isn''t the sharpest tool in the shed.
Reply to this comment
by guatom October 24, 2008 3:19 PM EDT
I am amazed as I read these comments. The news story tells about a young, beautiful, educated Iranian-American''s dilemma of being imprisoned while in the country of her ancestors. As her motives seem to have been to investigate woman''s rights in Iran, it would seem rather unlikely that she was part of some clandestine plot to overthrow the government. Then I read hate-blogs. Never the less, for all the blogging "protectors of Iran", you would probably be surprised to learn that most Americans could care less about the country of Iran. We grieve to think of fellow human beings suffering and dying under the rule of tyrants, not because they are from a specific country but because they are like us, human beings.
Reply to this comment
by mjm117 October 24, 2008 2:59 PM EDT
She may have gone well knowing what could possibly happen, but I do find it funny that so many people on this site are basing her?? Are these comments coming from the same people that blast middle eastern beliefs? Are these comments coming from the same people that want us to maintain a military presence in the middle east?

I commend her for standing up and doing something that most of the world would NEVER do. Can''t fault her for trying to fight for womens rights. I guess all you loonies would have gotten up and moved to the back of bus huh?
Reply to this comment
by helenahandb October 24, 2008 2:43 PM EDT
I know folks like her are trying to make a difference and maybe one day their changes will come. But there are consequences to their actions and she got what she had to have known was possible. She chose to go there and do what she did. She gambled and lost. Too bad it happened but it was her choice. No sympathy here.
Reply to this comment
by gangesdak October 24, 2008 2:42 PM EDT
Sorry, no sympathy for this student. Such people, in the guise of a student, usually go to countries like Iran just to whip up something. Also, the subject of her reserach is of minor importance; people with minimal talent get interested in such subjects. Find something worthwhile to do, gal.
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by credibility2 October 24, 2008 2:28 PM EDT
Another ignoramus over-indulged kid who thinks he can do whatever he so pleases in any country he feels he has a right to enter unconditionally, regardless of whether or not his intentions and motivations seemed reasonable to himself and others. Perhaps he''ll learn his lesson while in an Iranian jail.
Reply to this comment
by good4always October 24, 2008 2:27 PM EDT
WHY PEOPLE HAVE FACINATION OF SHOVING FINGER IN SOMEBODY''S ELSE A SS. ..... the finger not only WILL smell very very bad but also the guy being fingered will not like it either.

And this is what happened in this woman case.
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