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The Silent Execution: Iran Journalism and the Self-Censorship Syndrome

2 min readSource

Explore the 'Syndrome of Trembling Pens' in Iran, where legal ambiguity and economic fear drive journalists to extreme self-censorship and systemic distortion of reality.

Journalists in Iran are no longer narrators of reality; they've become their own most ruthless executioners. In the dimly lit corridors of newsrooms, a heavy silence resonates—not from a lack of events, but from the institutionalized process of self-censorship. Before a finger even touches the keyboard, a internal court convenes in the writer's mind. We call this the 'Syndrome of Trembling Pens,' a condition where the government uses a cocktail of strict laws and physical intimidation to make journalists kill their own words.

Iran Journalism and the Lethal Art of Self-Censorship

The foundation of control is built upon laws that are masterpieces of ambiguity. Article 6 of the Press Law draws red lines so fluid that any photograph or report can become a penal offense. Terms like 'acting against national interests' or 'spreading falsehoods' aren't precise legal concepts but administrative labels ready to be affixed to any critic. When the law functions as a generator of anxiety rather than a protector of liberty, journalists choose not to walk on the ground at all to avoid stepping on invisible mines.

Self-censorship is the primary factor for survival. We have mastered 'text sterilization'—using 'unrest' instead of 'protests' and 'deceased' instead of 'killed.' It's a systemic distortion of reality.

A veteran Iranian reporter

The Economic Leash: Poverty as Control

Fear has economic roots as deep as its legal ones. Most journalists work under precarious conditions, including one-month contracts and wages hovering near the poverty line. During the 2022 Metropol building collapse, where 41 people died, red lines shifted hourly. This unpredictability keeps the media in a state of perpetual suspension. When the primary concern is putting bread on the table, 'courage' is no longer a virtue—it's viewed as 'professional suicide.'

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