Italy Condemns Journalist Cecilia Sala's Arrest in Iran as \
Italy's "La Farnesina" Foreign Ministry building in Rome. ©Andreas Solaro / AFP

Italy denounced Friday the "unacceptable" arrest of an Italian journalist in Iran, who her employer said was being held in Tehran's notorious Evin prison.

Cecilia Sala was detained on December 19 by police in Tehran, the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement, adding that Italy's ambassador, Paola Amadei, had visited her earlier Friday.

Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani later told RAI News the diplomat had spent around 30 minutes with Sala and the journalist was in "good health" and being held alone in a cell.

Defence Minister Giudo Crosetto said on X that her arrest was "unacceptable," adding that Italy was using "high-level political and diplomatic action" to try to secure her release.

Chora Media, an Italian podcast publisher for which Sala worked, said she had travelled from Rome to Iran on December 12 on a journalist visa and was due to return on December 20.

But she went quiet on December 19 and then did not board her flight. Shortly afterwards, she called her mother to say she had been arrested, it said.

"She was taken to Evin prison, where dissidents are held, and the reason for her arrest has not yet been formalised," Chora said in a statement.

Sala also worked for Italian newspaper Il Foglio, which said she had been in Iran "to report on a country she knows and loves."

"Journalism is not a crime, even in countries that repress all freedoms, including those of the press. Bring her home," it said.

Sala, reported to be 29 years old, last posted on X on December 17, with a link to a podcast entitled "A conversation on patriarchy in Tehran."

Chora said it had not publicised her case until now in the hope that she would swiftly be returned home. It called for her immediate release.

Sala had previously reported from Ukraine.

With AFP

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