PRESS RELEASE February 7, 2007
M I T C E N T E R F O R I N T E R N A T I O N A L S T U D I E S
Contact:
Michelle Nhuch
617.253.1965
nhuch@MIT.EDU
MIT CENTER REGRETS ACTIONS OF IRANIAN AUTHORITIES
CAMBRIDGE, MA February 7, 2007— The MIT Center for International Studies expressed regret and
disappointment at the actions of Iranian authorities who barred two prominent
Iranian intellectuals from traveling to a conference at MIT. Hashem Aghajari
and Abdollah Momeni were stopped from boarding an airplane in Tehran on Sunday,
even though they had obtained all required documents.
The conference, on the past and future of reform in Iran, brought together a
dozen prominent Iranian scholars and activists to discuss democratic
development, on February 6 and 7 at MIT.
"The action by Iranian authorities is an affront to intellectual discourse and
academic freedom," said John Tirman, executive director of the Center and the
co-organizer of the conference. Fatemeh Haghighatjoo, a reform parlimentarian
in Iran (2000-2004) and a fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School, invited Aghajari
and Momeni.
"In a period of time when useful discussions about Iran are beneficial for
everyone, it is deeply regretable and disappointing that these two
distinguished Iranians are denied their place at the table," said Tirman.
Aghajari is a well-known critic of Islamic rule, a former revolutionary guard,
who was sentenced to death in 2002, a sentence that was later commuted. Momeni
is a prominent student organization leader.
More information about the MIT Center for International Studies:
http://web.mit.edu/cis/