Saturday, February 2, 2013

postheadericon Iran creates fake blogs in smear campaign against journalists in exile

BBC Persian officials victims of identity theft online to discredit, family, harassed in Iran

Iran was conducting a smear campaign designed to intimidate Iranians living in exile, including death threats apparent. Cyber ??activists associated with the Islamic Republic have made new, duplicate Facebook accounts and spreading false accusations of sexual misconduct by journalists in exile, while the harassment of family members in Iran has increased by agents safety.

service personnel Persian BBC London are among dozens of Iranian journalists who have been subjected to what appears to be an operation sponsored and directed the authorities to discredit journalists in the eyes of public Iran.

not the first time that the Iranian authorities have resorted to such tactics, but Sadeq Saba, head of BBC Persian, told the Guardian that the number of incidents and the level of harassment increased in weeks.

"Compared to the previous campaign of harassment, this time the language used in Iran [against members of the family] was more threatening," he said. According to Saba, the family members of journalists were summoned to the headquarters of the intelligence services for interrogation. Journalist whose parents were interviewed repeatedly said they were told they had to stop working for the BBC or risk being killed.

recent weeks, pro-regime activists have created a series of fake Facebook accounts and blogs, supposedly belonging to BBC journalists or Iranian colleagues. Users who want to access BBCPersian. Actual com might accidentally visit your persianbbc.ir wrong. Mirror site fake BBC website in the layout and fonts, but a totally different content. "The death of bin Laden, Saddam Hussein tales to Washington," reads the title of a recent article in persianbbc.ir

Nafiseh Kouhnavard, talk show presenter of BBC Persian's your turn, is one of the victims. In a fake Facebook account that bears his name and photo, allegedly confessed to a culture of extramarital relations between journalists working for the BBC Persian service. The comments attributed to false Kouhnavard were reproduced widely in Iran.

"You wrote about my relationship with my colleagues," she is falsely quoted by the national newspaper as saying. "Swinging ... not just limited to me, in fact, is common and normal here. "

first performed Vatan-e-Emrooz daily, the fake stuff since been reissued by the state news agency affiliates. The content is usually chosen carefully developed to address sensitive issues in Iran, especially among conservatives wary of Western lifestyles.

In another article with your developer, Vatan-e-Emrooz devotes a full page to Kouhnavard life and his work for the BBC based on the false account information. In the article, titled "Network against Corruption", the paper presents him as a spy for the British secret service, who fled Iran illegally through the mountains with an agent named Ghazanfar. Indeed , Ghazanfar is the name of wrist cock journalists, often called the real Facebook page. The fake account was reported and closed.

Google the name always brings new Kouhnavard done for her, which led to confusion among friends, family and fans of authentic journalism.

After interviewing the family members, Saba told the BBC became extremely worried that "Iran uses these tactics to intimidate innocent people in Iran who are parents and have no control over us. "

He said that the allegations made in the media of Iran is based on content developed or fake accounts and are not true. "It's really identity theft," he said. "They write what they want and give the impression that they are actually written by the staff of the BBC."

Saba said he did not think most people in Iran believe what they read on the BBC in the Iranian media, but insisted the fake content created much confusion.
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