Mehdi Khalaji

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Mehdi Khalaji (Persian: مهدی خلجی, (b.1973) is an Iranian journalist and political analyst.

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[edit] Brief Biography

A native from Qom ,the largest center for Shi'a scholarship in the world, he studied the Islamic theology in Qom seminary, Philosophy in Tarbiat Modarres University and at the Sorbonne in Paris.

Later on he became a senior editor at Entekhab [1], a daily newspaper published in Tehran by Taha Hashemi, a close advisor to Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, and a board member on The Islamic Propagation Office of the Islamic Seminary of Qom and the monthly Kiyan. As translator, he has translated numerous philosophical works by Nasr Abu Zayd, Burhan Ghalioun, the humanist Islamic scholar Mohammed Arkoun, and others into Persian.

He is currently a visiting scholar at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Khalaji wrote pieces for Daily Star and BBC Persian service. For thee years, he also wrote in his Persian weblog, Ketabcheh.

[edit] Recent activities

In November 2006, he appeared on a panel run by American Foreign Policy Council, titled "Understanding the Iranian Threat", along with James Woolsey, Ilan Berman, and Patrick Clawson. The video of his presentation is available: Part one, Part two.

[edit] Khalaji vs. Derakhshan defamation lawsuit

In November 2007, Mr. Khalaji, being a fellow at a neo-conservative think-tank called the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), filed a $2 million libel and defamation lawsuit [2] against Mr. Hossein Derakhshan, over one of his blog posts[3] in his Persian blog, in which he criticizes Khalaji for his alleged "service to the enemies of his people and humanity".

Earlier in August 2007, Derakhshan's Florida-base hosting company, Hosting Matters, had terminated his hosting account as a result of alleged intimidation by Khalaji. [4]

A public figure has a very high standard to meet in proving that a libel has occurred, including:

  • that the allegedly libelous statement was a statement of fact, as opposed to an expression of opinion;
  • that the allegedly libelous statement was untrue; truth is an absolute defense to libel;
  • that the defendant acted with actual malice in publishing the allegedly false statement.

Failure to meet any of the above tests results in automatic dismissal of the libel claim. (See New York Times v. Sullivan.) It should also be noted that, in much of the United States, the filing of libel lawsuits so as to intimidate, suppress, or prevent the free expression of opinion is unlawful under both civil and criminal anti-SLAPP statutes, as it is a violation of rights retained by the people under the First Amendment. Such SLAPPs are routinely and severely punished.

[edit] Publications

[edit] Booklets

[edit] Books

  • Natani (novel in Persian, published in Berlin by Nashr-e Gardoon)

[edit] Articles

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Languages