In an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights  in Iran, Mehdi Lalipour, husband of imprisoned student activist and  member of the Right to Education Council, Mahdieh Golroo, said that  starting this week, both Golroo and Bahareh Hedayat have been barred  from having visitors in Evin Prison. After a whole month of being  deprived the right to have visitors Golroo and Hedayat were allowed to  visit with their families through booths last week, but were once again  barred from visits through a new order from the Prosecutor.  Lalipour told the Campaign that he is not aware of the reasons for  the visitation ban. “To tell you the truth, we don’t know the reason  ourselves, either. Up until last week, we thought the reason for the  visitation ban was because they were informing Mahdieh of new charges.  We thought the issue has been solved when we were given visitation last  week. But this week we went to Evin on visiting day. They even read our  names and like the other prisoner families, we went up and waited for  Mahdieh to be brought in, but she didn’t come. All the other prisoners  came, but Mahdieh didn’t come. We asked and they said that maybe she was  left behind. But five minutes later, they came and said that she has a  visitation ban,” Lalipour said.  “We asked the prison guard to call the Women’s Ward and find out the  reason. He said the prison has no problems with Mahdieh’s visitation,  but that according to a letter the Prosecutor’s Office sent to them, she  and Bahareh Hedayat are barred from having visitors. I tried to get  some news through the families of other prisoners going up to see their  relatives, whether any interrogation or any particular entanglement had  happened the prior week leading to the two of them being barred from  visitation again. But they all said that nothing had happened and  everything was as before, meaning that they continue to remain in the  Methadone Ward, without telephone or fresh air privileges. It seemed  that they had just received the letter from the Prosecutor’s Office,  because they called her name for her visitors and we went up, but at the  last minute they said that she couldn’t come. We could see the lack of  coordination,” added Lalipour.  Lalipour told the Campaign that no one is accountable in Golroo’s  case. “When we went to visit her two weeks ago and they told us that  Mahdieh is barred from having visitors, I tried to get some information  from wherever I could to find out the reason, but no one was accountable  except  the Prosecutor’s Office. There was a man there who did not seem  to be terribly in the know. He heard what I had to say and said that he  would follow up the issue. When they allowed me to go visit her, I was  so grateful to him for having solved the issue. Now I don’t know the  reason the visitations have been barred again,” he said.  “I believe they want to break these two and hurt them. If any living  creature is this isolated, to the point where they have no contact with  the outside world or even with other prisoners, they are being abused.  They are re-experiencing the same conditions as they had in Ward 209,  meaning they have no fresh air breaks, contact, or booth visitation.  They have not allowed us to have in-person visitations for the past six  months, and we are not even asking for them anymore,” Lalipour said  about the pressure and abuse the Golroo and Hedayat have endured.  “Over the past month, we only had one visit. I don’t know what they  are trying to achieve with these actions. Do they think that all the  country’s problems would be solved if the female prisoners, particularly  these two, are isolated? I believe the pressure on female political  prisoners is more than on male political prisoners, as they don’t even  have fresh air breaks, and Mahdieh and Bahareh are deprived of even  booth visits. I really don’t know the reason for it. I have been  thinking about this all morning and I can’t seem to come to any  conclusions, except that they want to break them with these actions,”  said Lalipour.  Mahdieh Golroo was arrested on 2 December 2009 at her home and was  sentenced to two years and four months in prison on charges of  interviewing with foreign media, acting against national security, and  relations with the Mojahedin-e Khalgh Organization (MEK).  Source: http://www.iranhumanrights.org/2011/01/golroo-hedayat-denied-visits/  
			