On February 16, judiciary spokesperson Gholamhossein Mohseni-Eje’i confirmed that former President Mohammad Khatami’s name has been banned from mention in the media. Mohseni-Eje’i did not name Khatami, president from 1997 to 2005, by name, instead referring to him as “the leader of the reformist government.” The spokesperson did not say exactly when the order had gone into effect but emphasized that the judiciary has the ability to rule on issues regarding “the leaders of the sedition,” a term that refers to Khatami as well as opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi, his wife Zahra Rahnavard and Mehdi Karroubi.
The death of Khatami’s sister, Fatemeh, and the large turnout for her funeral on February 22 posed a challenge to the ban. She had served on the city council of the family's hometown of Ardakan. Several prominent leaders issued statements or sent condolences to Khatami, so newspapers did publish his name.
Shargh, a reformist-leaning daily, published a story (left) on President Hassan Rouhani offering condolences to Khatami.
Even under media ban, no denying Khatami's popularity given the turnout for his sister's funeral. pic.twitter.com/NA9txiaNRn
— Arash Karami (@thekarami) February 22, 2015
I learned from #Khatami that for democracy we first need to learn to communicate and tolerate the opposite opinion #رسانه_خاتمی_میشویم
— Elham Sharifikolouei (@elisharifi89) February 17, 2015
#رسانه_خاتمی_میشویم pic.twitter.com/0cW82lDoym
— Milad Fathi (@MiladFathi8) February 18, 2015
They said it's forbidden?! Let's share the photo of both Mohammad Khatami and Mirhussein Moussavi. pic.twitter.com/MnMFFUQtlB
— Mahdi Taghizadeh (@mahdi) February 17, 2015
ما به این سید و آن میر ارادت داریم... #خاتمی #میرحسین #موسوی #آقای_خاص #رسانه_خاتمی_میشویم pic.twitter.com/uRtixd3oSy
— Hossein (@Ho5Sein) February 19, 2015