Zaman Fadaei
Zaman Fadaei (Saheb Fadaei) was arrested and condemned to prison for believing in Christianity.
- <coverage-outsourcing id='18334'> Yousef Nadarkhani, Fatemeh Pasandideh, Mohammad Reza Omidi, Mohammad Ali Mosayebzadeh and Zaman Fadaei, were arrested in their home-chapel, during the performance of a religious rite. A few hours later, Yousef Nadarkhani and Fatemeh Pasandideh were released. In late May, 2016, Mohammad Ali Mosayebzadeh and Zaman Fadaei were released with the posting of a 100 million toman bail. According to the reports Jalili, the prosecutor, at branch 14 of the court of Rasht, Mohammad Reza Omidi was refused bail for reasons that remain unknown. </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='18337'> According to Mohabat News, Mohammad Reza Omidi, Mohammad Ali Mosayebzadeh, Zaman Fadaei and Yousef Nadarkhani were tried in branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court of Tehran headed by judge Ahmadzadeh. The next meeting of the court took place a few days later. </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='26472'> Fatemeh Bakhtiari and Zaman Fadaei were arrested. They were released on bail later. </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='18340'> The head of branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court of Tehran, Judge Ahmadzadeh, sentenced nine Iranian citizens and three Azerbaijani citizens to a total of 85 year. Mr. Ahmadzadeh sentenced, to 10 years prison each, Mohammad Reza Omidi, Mohammad Ali Mosayebzadeh, Zaman Fadaei, Yousef Nadarkhani, Amin Afshar Naderi, Victor Bet Tamars, Hadi Asgari, Keyvan Fallah Mohammadi, Nasser Navard Goltapeh, Aldar Ghorbanof, Bahram Nasif, and Yousef Farhad, for the “forming illegal groups in the form of creating home-churches” and added another five years of incarceration for the “insulting the sacred” to Amin Afshar Naderi’s sentence. Several of these individuals were banned from leaving the country for two years. </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='26473'> Judge Ahmadzadeh sentenced Fatemeh Bakhtiari to one year in prison and a two-year ban on political and civil activities and Zaman Fadaei to 18 months in prison and two years Exile to Nehbandan on the charge of "propaganda against the system." </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='26475'> The 54th branch of the Tehran Appeals Court confirmed his sentence. </coverage-outsourcing>
- <coverage-outsourcing id='47332'> <reference source='https://articleeighteen.com/fa/news/13469/'> He was released from prison. On February 5th, 2023, the Islamic Republic's Judiciary issued a memo that announced the beginning of the process of releasing some of the protesters arrested during the 2022 national uprising. According to the judiciary's Mizan website, and latest comments made by the spokesperson for the judiciary, this "pardon" is in honor of the anniversary of the Islamic Revolution and contingent on the prisoners expressing regret; The pardon is not extended to cases with charges such as "connection to dissident groups", and "destruction of public property". However, many of the released prisoners have posted videos and notes saying they never requested a pardon and never expressed regret. There are even videos of female activists taking off their hijab and chanting against the Islamic Republic in front of the prison moments after their release. The release of prisoners being called a pardon has caused massive reaction online and some activists on social media and human rights organizations consider it a PR stunt to repair some of the damage to Ali Khamenei's image. </reference> </coverage-outsourcing>