Spy trial of Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian begins in Iran

Tehran correspondent is in court on Tuesday for hearing that newspaper and his family say will be ‘closed to the world’


The Washington Post's Jason Rezaian is shown in this photo taken in November 6, 2013. Rezaian, the Tehran correspondent for the Washington Post, goes on trial Tuesday for charges relating to espionage.
 Jason Rezaian in 2013. The Tehran correspondent for the Washington Post goes on trial on Tuesday accused of espionage. Photograph: Zoeann Murphy/Reuters

The trial of the Washington Post’s Tehran correspondent, Jason Rezaian, in custody for 10 months and accused of espionage, has opened in Iran.
“He has been charged with espionage for collecting confidential information … and handing it to hostile governments, writing a letter to Obama and acting against national security,” his lawyer, Leila Ahsan, told Iran’s Tasnim news agency.
The Washington Post said the trial would be “closed to the world” and slammed what it called injustices against its correspondent.
“The shameful acts of injustice continue without end in the treatment of … Rezaian,” the newspaper’s executive director, Martin Baron, said in a statement published in Monday’s paper.
“Now we learn his trial will be closed to the world. And so it will be closed to the scrutiny it fully deserves.”
Ali Rezaian, the journalist’s brother, told Reuters Television: “I think the only reason you could possibly imagine that the trial would be closed would be to prevent people from seeing the lack of evidence.
“It’s unlike the Iranian court system, Iranian government, to keep things private when they can go out and use propaganda up against people.” 
He said the family had hoped that Rezaian’s wife, journalist Yeganeh Salehi, and his mother would be allowed to attend the trial. He said his brother had lost 40lb (18kg) in prison.
Rezaian, who is from Marin county, California, was arrested at his home in Tehran alongside his wife and two Iranian-US friends, who have not been named.
The Iranian-American was detained in July last year in a politically sensitive case that has unfolded while Iran and world powers conduct nuclear talks. He is being held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison.