One of Iran's most prominent human rights activists, Narges Mohammadi, has been arrested by state security forces and detained in Tehran's Evin Prison, her husband said today.
Mohammadi is close to Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi. Her activism includes promoting women's rights and campaigning to end the death penalty.
Her husband, Taghi Rahmani, told The Associated Press that about 10 people showed up at Mohammadi's house early yesterday morning to detain her a show of force he called "very provocative."
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Rahmani said his wife suffers from a health condition, made worse by confinement in small spaces, that causes temporary muscular paralysis.
Mohammadi previously was imprisoned in April 2012 to begin serving a six-year sentence following a 2010 conviction related to anti-government crimes. She was released on medical grounds in July 2012.
Last week, she told the New York-based International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that an Iranian court had charged her with a number of national security crimes related to her activism.
The group said she is accused of propaganda against the state, assembly and collusion against national security, and establishing an illegal group, the "Step by Step to Stop Death Penalty" campaign.
It is unclear if Mohammadi faces new charges or is being held based on her earlier sentence. Rahmani said no court date has been set.
Iranian officials in Tehran had no comment.
Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam of the Norway-based group Iran Human Rights condemned Mohammadi's detention.
"Her arrest shows the low tolerance of the Iranian authorities for peaceful civil activism," he said.