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Iran’s Revolutionary Guard denies previous report that it captured a foreign drone

 

TEHRAN, IRAN -Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard is denying that it captured a foreign unmanned aircraft during a military exercise in southern Iran.

IRGC: Rape, Sex, Drug, Terrorism, and Moral Decay

A spokesperson for the Guard, Yasin Hasanali, told The Associated Press that the drone was actually being used during the drill as a supposed enemy aircraft.

Iranian media on Saturday quoted a spokesperson for the Guard as saying that its electronic warfare unit had taken control of a foreign drone’s navigation system and forced it to land during the site of the military exercise.

Iran has claimed to have captured several U.S. drones, including an advanced RQ-170 Sentinel CIA spy drone in December 2011 and at least three ScanEagle aircraft.

The Guard’s military exercise, code-named Great Prophet-8, ends on Monday.

The Associated Press

23rd day of Yeni GAMOH party members hunger strike

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On the 23rd day of Yeni GAMOH party members hunger strike, another Azerbaijani inmate activists Aziz Pourvali joined hunger strike in Tabriz prison

Iran Briefing – One of the Azerbaijani inmate activists and member of Azerbaijan national-democratic movement, Aziz Pourvali joined the hunger strike in support of Yeni GAMOH party leaders who have entered on 23rd day of hunger strike. As a punitive measure because of his hunger strike, Aziz Pourvali has been moved to the special section of Tabriz prison in which drug addicted inmates and infected with contagious diseases such as AIDS and hepatitis prisoners are kept.

This prominent Azerbaijani activist, Aziz Pourvali was arrested on November 10, 2011 along with 28 other activists, in a meeting in behalf of saving Urmia Lake and after eighty-six days of detention, The Tabriz Enghelab Court sentenced Aziz pourvali to two years in prison on the charge of creating community and conspiracy to commit crimes against government.

However, there is no information about the five hunger strikers’ condition within past four days after their relatives visit them behind the glass in Rajaee Shar prison.

Thirty Minute Visitation Behind the Glass in Rajaee Shahr prison

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Latif Hassani (43), Mahmoud Fazli (45), Shahram Radmehr (38), Ayat Mehr Ali Bayglu (35) and Behboud Gholi Zade (48) started hunger strike on July 13, 2013 in Tabriz Centre Prison protesting their unfair trial and mistreatment. The Tabriz Enghelab Court sentenced the mentioned political activists for nine (9) years imprisonment on the charge of establishing a group, the New Southern Azerbaijan National Awakening Movement Party (Yeni GAMOH), and of distributing anti-government propaganda.  In fact, they were protesting discrimination against Azarbaijani Turks living in Iran and demanding their language and identity right.

According their relatives’ reports, they have already been suffering from serious illness because of being tortured during interrogation. The five prisoners confirmed that they will continue the hunger strike until the court revises the sentence. However, Tabriz Prosecutor’s Office and main Prosecuting Officer, Mr. Khaliolallahi exiled them from Tabriz to Tehran on the eighth day of hunger strike because their health situation had turned critical.

They were tortured several hours during transporting from Tabriz to Tehran in the metal shield in hot summer weather conditions.

However, the executives of Evin Prison in Tehran refused to admit them because of their severe conditions, and finally after one day solitary confinement in Evin Prison in Tehran, they were moved to Rajae Shahr Prison at the Karaj, one of the worst and nonstandard prisons in Iran.

 References:

Contact information of Sajad Radmehr (Shahram Radmehr’s brother)[email protected] and Cellphone: +46 73 948 88 69

http://iranhr.net/spip.php?article2838

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-321501-south-azerbaijani-hunger-strikers-continue-to-plead-case-globally.html

http://www.unpo.org/article/16208

http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2013/07/130716_nm_azerbaijan_activists_hunger_strike.shtml

http://www.tribun.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1447%3A-lr-&catid=78%3Adustaq-mobareze&Itemid=58

https://www.facebook.com/Azerbaijanirights

Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani asked the Azerbaijani prisoners to end hunger strike

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IRAN BREIFING:On the 21th days of hunger strike the prisoners’ relatves do not have permission to contact the strikers following this situation a group of civil right activist along with the prisoners’ relatives decided to meet the Shia clerics in the Ghom and ask their intervene. According the Yeni Gamoh web site reports, Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani and the relatives of late Ayatollah Montazri hosted them and accepted to hearing their plead.

Hojjatoleslam Ahamad Montazeri, the late Ayatollah Montazeri’s son accepted the injustice against the Azerbaijanies Turk population, and hopes that the new government provides a proper context for negotiation and meeting the prisoner’s right.

The Azerbaijani group also met Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani and explained the prisoners’ situation as well as their unfair trial. They made urgent request for Shia clerics intervene and asked them not to see this situation indifferently. Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani saw the new government as chance for political prisoners deal. He insisted that “considering the facts of this case, it is necessary to apply N.18 Clause and revise the sentence “. Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani asked the prisoners’ relatives to give his message to prisoners to end hunger strike.

They mentioned group also delivered the letters to the office of Ayatollah Mousavi Ardabili, Ayatollah Sanee, and Ayatollah Khorasani.

The Revolutionary Guard & The Iranian “Reformer” – Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center

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As Rowhani is About to Assume the Presidency of Iran, The Spokesman for the Revolutionary Guards Talks About That Organization’s Interaction with the Government, reads the analysis by The Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center.*

[Last] week Revolutionary Guards Spokesman Ramazan Sharif gave an extensive, rare interview to the reformist daily Shargh. In the interview, the high-ranking officer discussed the Revolutionary Guards’ interaction with past governments, their involvement in politics and economy, the role they played in suppressing the 2009 riots, and their attitude towards president-elect Hassan Rowhani.

Sharif denied claims of Revolutionary Guards support for Ahmadinejad and said that the organization faced greater difficulties than before during his presidency, concerning their involvement in economic projects. The spokesman rejected criticism leveled at the Revolutionary Guards over their growing involvement in politics and economy, saying that the organization intends to help the new government within the framework of the law.

The timing of the interview-just as Rowhani is about to assume office-is not coincidental, and neither is the spokesman’s decision to give it to the reformist daily Shargh. The interview reflects what may be some of the Revolutionary Guards’ concerns over the consequences of Rowhani’s election for president on domestic and foreign policy. It may also be the Revolutionary Guards’ way of sending the incoming president a message to deter him from pursuing a policy that, as far as they are concerned, could jeopardize the regime’s vital interests and their own as well.

This week Revolutionary Guards Spokesman Ramazan Sharif gave an extensive, rare interview to the reformist dailyShargh. In the interview, the high-ranking officer discussed the Revolutionary Guards’ interaction with the governments of Iran since the Islamic revolution, the organization’s involvement in politics and economy, the role it played in suppressing the 2009 riots, and its attitude towards president-elect Hassan Rowhani.

The Revolutionary Guards’ interaction with past governments

Sharif discussed the relationship that developed over the years between the Revolutionary Guards and the governments of Iran during the presidency of Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (1989-1997), Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005), and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (2005-2013). Sharif spoke out against the often heard argument that, up until Ahmadinejad’s two presidential terms, and particularly during Khatami’s reformist administration, the relations between the Revolutionary Guards and the government were strained. While he did admit that the Revolutionary Guards disagreed with the domestic and foreign policy pursued by President Khatami, he argued that it was during President Ahmadinejad’s time that the Revolutionary Guards faced more difficulties, concerning their involvement in economic development projects.

He said that there was less interaction between the Revolutionary Guards and Khatami’s government, since the Revolutionary Guards support positions that reflect Iran’s strength and have a positive effect on its ability to deter its enemies. However, when it comes to their involvement in national development, the Revolutionary Guards faced greater difficulties during Ahmadinejad’s presidency, as was also attested by the former commander of Khatam-ol-Anbia’, the Revolutionary Guards’ construction headquarters. According to Sharif, it is impossible to say for certain which government enjoyed the best relations with the Revolutionary Guards. The organization’s relations were easier and more reasonable, he said, with governments that obeyed the law. He noted that, in their capacity as protectors of the revolution, the Revolutionary Guards helped all the governments deal with the outside challenges facing the revolution and deter the enemies of the country. Iran’s security is the Revolutionary Guards’ gift to the government, Sharif said, and a president who is not preoccupied with security problems can do a better job of fulfilling his promises to the public.

The spokesman denied claims of Revolutionary Guards support for Ahmadinejad in the 2005 and 2009 presidential elections and stressed that the organization had never attempted to bring any particular president to power. He noted that the Revolutionary Guards’ involvement in presidential elections is evident in two specific areas approved by the Supreme Leader: ensuring a safe environment during the elections and providing for maximum citizen participation.

Sharif said that, while it is true that members of the Revolutionary Guards’ Basij force were positively influenced by Ahmadinejad’s positions and conduct, as seen during his term as mayor of Tehran, it does not mean that the Basij worked in any organized fashion to have him elected. The Basij members did prefer the approach represented by Ahmadinejad and tended to vote for him in the two election campaigns in which he ran for president. However, the Revolutionary Guards don’t tell the Basij members how they should vote, even though the Basij is subordinate to the Revolutionary Guards in the military chain of command. Sharif noted that the Revolutionary Guards are religiously barred from becoming involved in elections and in sectarian political struggles, and that it is a lie for anyone to contend that the Revolutionary Guards work for the benefit of one candidate or another.

Speaking about the deterioration in the relationship between the Revolutionary Guards and Ahmadinejad halfway through his second presidential term due to his disagreements with the Supreme Leader, Sharif said that the Revolutionary Guards are committed to support the government as long as it works within the confines of the law, and admitted that in the past two to three years differences of opinion have emerged between the organization and the president. He stressed that the Revolutionary Guards have an obligation to carry out the instructions of Iran’s decision-making bodies, including the Supreme National Security Council, as well as the instructions implemented with the Supreme Leader’s approval.

The Revolutionary Guards’ Involvement in National Economic Projects

In the beginning of the interview, Sharif stressed that the Revolutionary Guards were established by the founder of the revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini, to protect the revolution and its achievements, and that Khomeini did not restrict the organization’s responsibility to specific threats or areas.

He noted that the Revolutionary Guards became involved in economic development projects in the aftermath of the Iran-Iraq War on orders from the Supreme Leader. This was owing to the organization’s engineering capabilities, the equipment it had available, and its manpower skills. Sharif said that the Revolutionary Guards, being in charge of protecting the revolution, could not remain indifferent to Iran’s ruined infrastructure and go back to their military bases once the war ended.

Sharif stressed that President Rafsanjani and his government gladly accepted the Revolutionary Guards’ involvement in the development of Iran, and that the organization was able to complete numerous large-scale projects during the Rafsanjani administration.

The organization continued using its technical know-how and development experience during Khatami’s presidency, when many projects were turned over to the Revolutionary Guards. He noted that, during the Rafsanjani and Khatami governments, not even one claim was brought up against the organization’s involvement in economic development projects. The involvement continued under President Ahmadinejad, but during that time, according to Sharif, the Revolutionary Guards encountered greater difficulties than before since there were some in Ahmadinejad’s government who were opposed to the organization’s involvement in the development programs. He noted, however, that the sanctions imposed on Iran in recent years have made it necessary for the Revolutionary Guards to increase their involvement in various economic projects-in the field of gas, for instance-since those projects could not be carried out through local contractors.

Sharif said that, contrary to claims brought up by some of the media, the Revolutionary Guards make no attempts to get new projects and jobs for themselves, and that it is the government that takes advantage of the organization’s abilities on its own initiative. He argued that Mohammad-Ali Ja’fari, commander of the Revolutionary Guards, has worked since the beginning of his term to restrict the organization’s involvement in projects that can be completed through local contractors. Ja’fari resolved that the Revolutionary Guards would only be involved in projects that could not be carried out by local contractors but only by foreign companies.

The Revolutionary Guards are not in charge of most of the national projects, Sharif said, which can be proven by statistical data. He noted that the Revolutionary Guards work in accordance with the law and that those who, during the recent presidential campaign, called for their exclusion from economic activity did so assuming that it would help them get more votes. The Revolutionary Guards have no wish to take on projects, but since they have sacrificed thousands of martyrs since the revolution, they are not willing to give away Iranian assets to the enemy. This is why, for example, they accepted the project to complete the development of the South Pars gas field.

The Revolutionary Guards’ Involvement in Suppressing the 2009 Riots

Sharif justified the involvement of the Revolutionary Guards in suppressing the riots that broke out after the 2009 election, saying, however, that their involvement didn’t begin until well into the crisis. He noted that, when protesters first took to the streets in the first days after the election, the Revolutionary Guards avoided becoming directly involved in the events and simply attempted to prevent damage to life and property. Only when the regime opponents, who weren’t among the millions who had voted for the defeated candidates, took advantage of the opportunity to escalate the situation and the first incidents of damage to life and property started taking place were the Revolutionary Guards forced to intervene-temporarily and on a limited scale-to make the streets safe again.

According to Sharif, an investigation into the conduct of the Revolutionary Guards in the 2009 riots showed that no mistakes were made by the Revolutionary Guards during the events. The only flaw pointed out by Sharif in the way the organization handled the riots was not using the Revolutionary Guards commanders, who were popular with Iran’s citizens, for PR purposes. This had to do with concerns that the very fact of their media presence would create the impression that the Revolutionary Guards were intervening in the election.

The Revolutionary Guards’ Involvement in the 2013 Election

Sharif stressed that the Revolutionary Guards were not involved in the 2013 election in any way, and said that even the media of Iran’s enemies admitted that there was no such involvement. He said that there is no substance to reports that top commanders in the Revolutionary Guards, particularly Qods Force commander Qasem Soleimani, allegedly supported one candidate or another. He said that even though some candidates’ election headquarters wanted to use the names of popular, well-liked Revolutionary Guards commanders to gain political support, all reports about top commanders supporting a particular candidate were denied as soon as they appeared.

The Revolutionary Guards’ Relations with the New Government

Sharif noted that the Revolutionary Guards consider the recent election and the new president a good opportunity to achieve revolutionary ideals, and that they intend to help the new government as instructed by the Supreme Leader. Contrary to claims made by Iran’s enemies, the Revolutionary Guards have an obligation to help the government within the confines of the law and consider its success to be a success for the whole nation. He noted that, immediately after Rowhani’s victory, the Revolutionary Guards released an official statement announcing their intention to assist the new government. The organization plans to assist the government so that the regime can continue on the path of prestige and development and become a source of inspiration.

The Revolutionary Guards’ strengths and weaknesses

At the end of the interview Sharif discussed the strong and weak points of the Revolutionary Guards. The organization’s greatest strength, he said, comes from faith, adherence to divine values, its populist features, and its definition based on law and on the “rule of the jurisprudent”.

The organization’s main weakness has to do with public relations. Despite making considerable efforts, the Revolutionary Guards have been unable to boost public awareness of the organization and its performance. This can be seen in arguments made by Iran’s enemies that the organization controls approximately 95 percent of the projects, when in fact less than five percent of Iran’s development projects are held by the Revolutionary Guards. This is an indication of the organization’s weak public relations and media presence.

The Revolutionary Guards and the Rowhani Challenge

The timing of the interview-given by Sharif just as president-elect Rowhani is about to assume office-is not coincidental, and neither is the spokesman’s decision to give it to the reformist daily Shargh. The interview reflects what may be some of the Revolutionary Guards’ concerns over the consequences of Rowhani’s election for president of Iran.

One aspect that clearly stood out in the interview was the attempt made by the Revolutionary Guards spokesman to obscure the organization’s affiliation with the conservative right and with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in particular-an affiliation that became all the stronger in the wake of the 2009 political crisis. Sharif tookadvantage of the interview to criticize Ahmadinejad’s conduct and lavish praise on the government of Rafsanjani, in whose footsteps Rowhani is seen as following. In addition, the spokesman used the interview to respond to criticism made in recent years by the political left and center in Iran, including former President Rafsanjani, over the Revolutionary Guards’ growing involvement in politics and the economy.

As far as the Revolutionary Guards are concerned, Rowhani’s election for president may lead to adopting a policy that could jeopardize the regime’s vital interests and their own as well. On the domestic scene, it is possible that Rowhani will take a conciliatory approach towards the reformist opposition, which supported him in the election campaign, and push for liberal political and cultural reforms that will include releasing political prisoners, increasing the freedom of the press, reducing censorship, promoting civil society institutions, and decreasing the involvement of the security apparatuses in citizens’ lives. During the election campaign, Rowhani criticized the “security atmosphere” that currently prevails in Iranian society, and, for instance, said he is opposed to security forces’ raids on the homes of those who use satellite dishes. Such reforms are considered by the conservative establishment and the Revolutionary Guards a potential threat to the stability of the regime and the values of the Islamic revolution.

The new president’s possible intention to reduce the involvement of the security apparatuses in society may lead to an attempt to diminish the involvement of the Revolutionary Guards on the political scene. Since the late 1990s-and particularly since the political crisis in 2009-senior figures in the Revolutionary Guards have clearly and unambiguously sided with the conservative right and spoken out firmly against the leaders of the reformist camp. For instance, in a press interview given in July 2011, Mohammad-Ali Ja’fari, chief of the Revolutionary Guards, lashed out against former President Mohammad Khatami for supporting the opposition leaders in the 2009 riots, and argued that he would not be able to come back to politics. During the recent presidential campaign top Revolutionary Guards officials stressed that they were not intervening in the election. However, reports that appeared in the Iranian media indicated that high-ranking members of the organization supported candidates affiliated with the conservative right. For instance, media reported on the close relationship that Qods Force commander Qasem Soleimani had with presidential candidate and Tehran’s mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf. During the presidential campaign, Soleimani was quoted by the Supreme Leader’s representative to Kerman Province as saying that he was going to vote for Qalibaf.

The economy is another arena where Rowhani may promote reforms that have the potential of hitting the economic interests of the Revolutionary Guards. Rowhani is known to have economic views that advocate reducing the government’s involvement in the economy. Neo-liberal reforms could hit some of the vital interests of the Revolutionary Guards, whose economic involvement has increased in recent years. The Revolutionary Guards’ deepening penetration into economic projects-which has gathered speed as a result of the economic sanctions, among other things-is increasingly criticized by the political establishment in recent years. Rafsanjani, head of the Expediency Discernment Council, argued in May 2010 that there was no justification for the Revolutionary Guards to remain intensively involved in the economy. Speaking at a meeting with governors, Rafsanjani said that while the organization’s involvement in the economy had been vital after the Iran-Iraq War to help revive the industry factories, that kind of involvement was no longer justified.

Rowhani’s views in the field of regional foreign policy could also pose a challenge for the Revolutionary Guards. The Supreme Leader may be the architect of Iran’s foreign policy, but it is not unlikely that Rowhani will push for a more pragmatic foreign policy, especially on the regional scene. Rowhani has announced his desire to improve the relations between Iran and its neighbors, mainly Saudi Arabia. In his efforts to improve Iran’s regional status, he will possibly strive to reduce the Iranian involvement in Syria. Recently Rowhani has time and again emphasized Iran’s support for the president of Syria and for Hezbollah, and Iran will most probably continue to consider the preservation of Bashar Asad’s regime as a top strategic interest. And yet, his stated pursuit of improved relations between Iran and its neighbors may also influence his stance on Iran’s involvement in Syria, where the Revolutionary Guards play a leading, major role.

The interview given by the Revolutionary Guards spokesman to Shargh might also be considered as a way of sending the incoming president a message to deter him from pursuing a policy that is not in line with the objectives of the regime. This message could be seen recently in a number of statements made by top Iranian officials affiliated with the conservative radical right.

For instance, several days after Rowhani became president, Majles member Esma’il Kowsari, a former top commander in the Revolutionary Guards, warned about the return of Rafsanjani and Khatami to positions of political influence. In an interview to Fars News Agency, Kowsari said that, even though Rowhani needs to fulfill his promises to the public that voted for him, it is more important to protect the revolutionary, Islamic, and national values, and that Rowhani needs to appoint ministers who can put those values into practice. In an interview given to the Tasnim News website several days later, Kowsari warned that, if Rowhani’s government engages in factional politics, the Majles will react accordingly.

*Editor: Dr. Raz Zimmt, first published on July 24, 2013 

– See more at: http://econwarfare.org/the-revolutionary-guard-the-iranian-reformer/#sthash.sZZ16h2x.dpuf

No information about Maryam Shafi Pour’s condition in prison

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Iran Briefing – There is no information about Maryam Shafi Pour’s condition after three days of being under arrest.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Maryam Shafi Pour, the former student of Qazvin international university who was arrested on Saturday July 27, has had no telephone contact with her family yet.

She has been arrested after being summoned to branch 2 of Shahid Moghaddas court in Evin and transferred to ward 209 afterwards.

The agents have gone to her father’s home to take some of her properties with themselves which has caused a nervous shock for her mother.

Maryam Shafi Pour had been sentenced to 1 year of suspended prison in 2010 by the revolutionary court of Qazvin.

Who controls Hezbollah – the Iranian Revolutionary Guards

 

Cross-Post, July 30th 2013, 5:33 pm

This is a guest post by Stephen Hoffman

In the mid 1980s, as part of its commitment to spread the Iranian Islamist Revolution abroad, the IRG (Iranian Revolutionary Guards) created Hezbollah through its external branch, the Quds Force. Since then it has funded Hezbollah to the hilt, as well as providing them with lethal weapons. Today Hezbollah takes its orders and training from the IRG. To put it simply, the IRG has made Hezbollah the force it is. Yet when the EU was debating Hezbollah and made an irrelevant distinction by banning only its military wing, not one EU official mentioned the IRG.

To understand why the IRG created Hezbollah, one needs to refer back to an IRG editorial in the 1980s. It says “In order to achieve ideological, political, security and economic self-reliance we have no other choice but to mobilize all forces loyal to the Islamic Revolution, and through this mobilization, plant such a terror in the hearts of the enemies that they abandon the thought of an offensive and annihilation of our revolution”. In other words Hezbollah, like other terror groups the IRG created, was created to spread terror into the West. Worryingly, this is something the EU and UK Government are either wilfully ignoring or haven’t picked up on.

Thankfully, Mark Dubowitz of the Foundation of Defence of Democracies, is on hand to remind people of the truth. He said that,:

“Washington and Jerusalem should also use the Hezbollah designation [as a terrorist organisation] to encourage Europe to take the next logical step and designate Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, including their terrorist arm the Quds Force, who are Hezbollah’s masters”.

I agree wholeheartedly with these sentiments. As Campaigns officer for the UK Zionist Federation (ZF) I have led calls for the Revolutionary Guards to be listed as a terrorist organisation by the UK and EU. I believe the EU and UK Government should proscribe the IRG because of its support for terrorist movements worldwide, including Hezbollah. This is brought home by a report by counter-terrorism expert, Matthew Levitt, who stated, in a 17 page report looking into the terrorist activities of the Quds Force and Hezbollah, that “the Hezbollah-Quds Force threat has sometimes eclipsed that of al-Qaeda”. Considering the threat the IRG poses to the world, particularly through its support of Hezbollah, a proper policy to deal with Hezbollah would not ignore the Iranian elephant in the room.

The EU has the opportunity to show it truly wants to deal with terrorism by tackling Hezbollah’s master, the IRG. If it continues to ignore the problem the IRG will be able to spread terrorism worldwide, including on the streets of Europe unhindered. This doesn’t have to be the case. If you agree with me that it is time that the EU and UK Government speak up for the humanity that terrorist groups like the IRG try to destroy then sign the ZF’s petition calling for the EU to designate the IRG as a terrorist group. and find more details about the campaign here: . For more definitive proof of the IRG’s links with Hezbollah please read this.

With your support the EU and UK will be able to hear our voices loud and clear calling for comprehensive and clear policies to stand up to terror.

İRAN PRESS NEWS

South Azerbaijani hunger strikers continue to plead case globally

 

Five South Azerbaijani politicians from northwestern Iran, imprisoned for establishing a political party advocating their identity rights, are continuing a hunger strike — which has already turned critical for their health — that they started in an effort to have their voices heard on the international scene due to the failure of Iran’s state-controlled media to report on their situation.

The Tabriz Islamic Revolutionary Court sentenced five South Azerbaijani activists — Latif Hassani (43), Mahmoud Fazli (45), Shahram Radmehr (38), Ayat Mehr Ali Bayglu (35) and Behboud Gholi Zade (48) — to nine years in prison in May on the charge of forming an illegal group, the New Southern Azerbaijan National Awakening Movement Party (Yeni GAMOH), and distributing anti-government propaganda.

The political activists have been on a hunger strike in the central prison in Tabriz since July 13 in protest of the sentence handed down against them. Relatives of the victims have confirmed that some of the activists have already been hospitalized because of the strike. According to the latest update from the prisoners’ families on Sunday, visitations have been banned and the prisoners were transported on the eighth day of their hunger strike to a prison in Tehran without informing their families.

The imprisoned activists confirm that they will continue to strike until their prison sentence is canceled, which they say the court decided under the pressure of the Iranian intelligence community.

“Because of the Iranian media boycott on publishing news on Azeri nationalists, this [hunger strike] is an opportunity for us to make our voices heard internationally. This is just a stage in our struggle,” stated Duman Radmehr, brother of prisoner Shahram Radmehr.

Tabriz intelligence and the Tabriz prosecutor’s office had demanded the most severe punishment for the prisoners, and it was given by the court. The prisoners were detained during a series of arrests that began in December last year in Iran, and they were sent to the central prison in Tabriz.

Yeni GAMOH has been active in abroad for years. The five imprisoned activists were on the administrative board of the party, under the chairmanship of Hassani.

Amnesty International issued a report on June 12 expressing worry for the situation of imprisoned activists in Iran, including those five from Yeni GAMOH.

Families of the prisoners have confirmed that the five activists were in solitary confinement and that they were tortured physically and mentally by Iranian intelligence officers before being sent to prison in March. Included in the unlawful treatment of the detainees were long periods of interrogation, severe beatings and days of solitary confinement. They were only permitted to get a lawyer almost five months after their detention and just one week before the court hearing, the families also said.

All of Iran’s Azeri political groups had to organize outside the country because the Azerbaijani population is not a “recognized minority” in the country. Article 26 of the Iranian constitution only allows “[the] formation of parties, societies, political or professional associations, as well as religious societies, whether Islamic or pertaining to one of the recognized religious minorities.”

Karim Asghari, an active South Azerbaijani activist, told Today’s Zaman: “Iran could not accept that an Azeri political party, which it accused of having foreign/external origins, was found to be operating inside the country. [Yeni GAMOH] has declared that it wants transparent politics, which has been lacking in Iran for many years.”

‘New presidency won’t decrease pressure on South Azerbaijanis

South Azerbaijanis think that the changing presidency in Iran due to the June elections will not improve their situation, although the president-elect, Hasan Rohani, is a moderate conservative supported by Iranian democrats. His election has been read as a signal of a more moderate Iranian policy, both vis-à-vis domestic actors and foreign relations.

South Azerbaijanis are not so optimistic about Rohani abiding by his promise to them before the elections on allowing education in their mother tongue. “After the elections, he [Rohani] has returned to the state’s old discourse, saying ‘all of us are Persians, so no need for any other language,’” Asghari stated.

Shahin Helali Khyavi, a friend of the prisoners who is based outside Iran, however, estimated that such a harsh punishment would not have been made if the arrests and trials had not occurred during the last period of the outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, indicating his hope for Rohani.

Iranian-Azeri people living in northern Iran define themselves as southern Azerbaijani Turks and are struggling with the Iranian regime as they have been denied their ethnic rights granted in Articles 15 and 19 of the Iranian constitution, which provides for the equal treatment of all ethnic groups and freedom to use their mother tongue in media and education. However, these Azeri Turks in Iran have been arbitrarily deprived of such rights, while other ethnic groups, such as Armenians, enjoy their freedoms. Iran has an Armenian population of 200,000, while the number of ethnic Azerbaijanis in Iran amounts to 35 million.

Today’s Zaman

Hassan Rohani’s Cabinet – No Changes in Iranian Regime’s Nuclear and Abroad Terrorist Activities

ruhani-sepah

Iran Briefing(Exclusive)-Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi, former Commander of the Revolutionary Guards – Quds Force, foreign branch of IRGC, was appointed by Khamenei’s new President, Hassan Rohani, for the Minister of Defense, having held the post since September 3, 2009 in Ahmadi Nejad’s Cabinet.

It means there will be no changes in the terrorist activities of the Iranian regime abroad, especially in Syria. There will also be no changes in Iranian regime’s nuclear developments for A-bomb which are dominated and controlled by IRGC in many secret and underground nuclear sites across Iran.

Hassan Rohani is Khamenei’s new mask to deceive the West for nuclear negotiations and for killing time until they achieve the nuclear bomb.

Vahidi was born in 1958 in Shiraz. In 1980, he joined the Quds Force, a unit of the Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution, which is responsible for operations outside of Iran. His real name is Ahmad Shah Cheraghi (his nickname is Vahid). He received a PhD in Strategic Studies from Imam Sadegh University.

Vahidi was appointed Deputy Minister of Defense in 2005 after Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar became Minister of Defense. He was in office until 2009. In August 2009, he was appointed Minister of Defense by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to take effect from September 3, 2009.

Vahidi is wanted by Interpol for his alleged participation in the bombing of the Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on July 18, 1994; in which 85 people died. Vahidi was serving as the Commander of a special unit of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard known as the Quds Force when the attack occurred. He is one of five Iranians sought in the bombing. Iran denies that it was involved.

In June 2010, Vahidi was blacklisted by the U.S. Government; a measure which is aimed at freezing the assets of proliferators of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) and their supporters, thereby isolating them from the U.S. financial and commercial systems.

In June 2011, Bolivia apologized to Argentina for Ahmad Vahidi visiting the country, and announced that he would be leaving Bolivia immediately.

Mustafa Rahmani

 

Mr. Timmerman, Bring Your Site Down!

Mr. Kenneth R. Timmerman, on your website http://www.kentimmerman.com you have published an exclusive photo of Imad Mughnieh with the Iranian leader Khamenei. However, this photo is a fake one and it turned out to be adulterated by Ali Reza Soleiman Pak also known as Hamid Reza Zakeri. Pak/Zakeri is a former Iranian agent; a “fabricator of a monumental proportion”, a term used by a CIA official and quoted in your own book “Countdown to Crisis”. You were notified about this fabrication along with an explanation through email and yet you have decided to keep it on your site for some reason. As an investigative reporter do you find it compatible with ethical journalism and do you consider it to be legal?
Timmerman Site

We hope you uphold the genuine and honest fight for democracy for Iran based on truth, facts, and working with those who have values and character; and not based on fabrications. We hope in the fight for democracy in Iran, you work and associate with people of great character and not with people of questionable character and with serious fraudulent records in their life as well as in the court of law and by prominent news sites and officials. We can’t fight dictatorship and a totalitarian regime with falsehood, deceit, fabrications, and lies.

On the left Photo Mohammad Salimi the former commander-in-chief of the Iranian Army, right photo fabricated photo of Imad Mughnie by Hamid Reza Zakeri
On the left Photo Mohammad Salimi the former commander-in-chief of the Iranian Army, right photo fabricated photo of Imad Mughnie by Hamid Reza Zakeri
Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 12.23.41 AM
Ali Reza Soleiman Pak, pseudo name Hamid Reza Zakeri, former Iranian agent and prison guard.

Photo obtained or adulterated by Hamid Reza Zakeri (Alireza Soleiman Pak) of Imad Mughnie (FBI’s top most wanted man for decades) with Khamenei and exclusively presented to you, has several serious flaws. Hamid Reza Zakeri does not know the alphabets of IRGC. He has a proven record of fabrications, adulteration, forgery, lies, and creating fake documents.
First of all, it seems Zakeri does not know the difference between some details of Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Iran’s regular Army and their ranks. By looking at the adulterated photo of supposedly Imad Mughnieh, you notice that the rank on his uninform is the Army rank, and not IRGC rank. Almost everyone in Iran and throughout the world, who claim to know a little bit about Iran and Hezbollah and IRGC’s Quods Force, know that Imad Mughniae belonged to Iran’s IRGC and its Quds Force and not the Army.

Photoshop was used (albeit not skillfully) to cut the head of Mughniaheh from another photo and transpose it over a different person with an Army uniform and rank! Then he has tried to blur the whole photo to make it difficult to recognize and clearly pinpoint the fabrication. Zakeri is a master of fabrication, lies, and deceit and people who have been working with him should now realize that it is time to dump this guy for good and not use him as a source of information, news, or facts. Zakeri is a former interrogator (according to his own words and writings) and not a former Intelligence officer.
We believe these types of unethical behavior, forgeries and fabrications in fact , hurt the struggle for democracy for Iran. These fabrications indeed make fun of those of us who genuinely are fighting for democracy in Iran. These types of behavior are exactly what the Iranian regime does to frame people and the opposition. The Iranian regime has more than enough negative and evil records that there is no need for fabrications to make up stories that later could easily turn out to be a joke; such as exactly what you have on your website; given to you by a prominent fabricator.
On this video clip, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XY43rJoDjh4 you have talked highly about him, his heroism, and his service to the United States and that he should be rewarded for his service. Would you please elaborate on this (if you still believe he has done such a great service to the United States) and what these acts of heroism and service are? Do you still believe that his testimony about the 9/11 attack was accurate and he was an honest witness?

Here are some facts about Ali Reza Soleiman Pak (Hamid Reza Zakeri) and his testimony from various sources:
1- Regarding Zakeri’s meeting in US Embassy in Baku, Azerbaijan, “We have no record that he made any such claim. And he is a fabricator of monumental proportions.”
http://thediplomat.com/flashpoints-blog/2013/01/30/irans-fordow-nuclear-site-explosion/2/
2- According to Spiegel Online, the witness is an extremely dubious figure. The Iranian “Hamid Reza Zakeri” who is thought to have worked as a double agent for the Iranian secret service and the CIA. He is well known to Western secret services and is considered to be a gossip and windbag who cannot tell truth from fiction.
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2004/02/mazo-f05.html
3- German Law Journal: The witness turned out to be an Iranian, Hamid Reza Zakeri, whose evidence contributed little to clarify the facts. He apparently acted as a double agent for the Iranian secret service and the CIA and is regarded to be a rather dubious person.
http://www.germanlawjournal.com/pdfs/Vol05No07/PDF_Vol_05_No_07_791-828_Public_Wolf.pdf
4- New York Times: “after questioning by the judges and defense lawyers, a prosecutor acknowledged contradictions in the man’s testimony.”
http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/t/terrorism/index.html?query=ZAKERI,%20HAMID%20REZA&field=per&match=exact
5- Focus Online labels Zakeri as “Stupid and Storyteller”
In German: Der politisch unbequeme Zeuge Zakeri, von Berliner Regierungsstellen kürzlich schnell als Idiot und Märchenerzähler eingestuft, gewinnt mittlerweile an Profil. „Seine Glaubwürdigkeit steigt von Stunde zu Stunde“, urteilt ein Ermittler. In einem Vermerk des BKA-Staatsschutzreferats 36 vom 26. Januar 2004 liest sich das so: „Bis zum heutigen Tag sind keine Angaben des Zeugen bekannt, die sich als falsch herausgestellt und daher Zweifel an der Glaubwürdigkeit begründet hätten.“
http://www.focus.de/politik/deutschland/iran-affaere-fuenfmal-in-den-kopf_aid_199642.html
6- His report on Ferdo nuclear explosion was even ridiculed by the Israeli media.
We are wondering whether you still believe Zakeri is a hero for the United States. Wouldn’t this be an insult to the real heroes and heroines of the United States? Those with character and honesty as their most important values? We were wondering, has anyone benefited financially from these fabrications? How could someone who claims to have character still believe in this person and continue working with him? The organization “Foundation for Democracy for Iran www.iran.org” registered under your name seems to contain more fabrications, distortions, and lies of Zakeri than any facts about democracy for Iran. We also invite you to spend a few minutes on Zakeri’s Facebook and see some of the misinformation he is using to blackmail, threat, deceive, and commit extortions. For example he writes that he lives in Washington D.C., has a U.S. phone number, has been to NASA with Reza Kahlili (a former CIA agent), has a university degree, is in contact with various Intelligence agencies and so on.
We hope those with ethics and character and those who are fighting for Human Rights and Freedom and Democracy, by no means resort to fabrications or working with former interrogators who infamously are known to be liars; and publicly condemn these types of fabrications and lies. We will be notifying various media and sites about this fabrication.

*Some information is obtained from www.zakerinews.com.
Updates February 10, 2018:
“Alireza Soleiman Pak” known as “Hamid Reza Zakeri” & “Pouria Javaherian” is charged with murder& fraud, arrested and sent to jail in Georgia.
https://www.facebook.com/IranEnglishNews/videos/1766853926957058/