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Eleven years total prison time for 3 writers of Saryae Ahl-e Ghalam

The Tehran Revolutionary court presided by Judge Salavati informed 3 writers from Saraye Ahl-e Ghalam of their sentences per phone.

According to CHRR, Akbar Amini was handed a 5-year prison sentence; 4 years for “assembly and collusion against national security,” and one year for “propaganda against the regime,” along with a 5-year ban from membership in any political party or group, and activity in any Internet or media outlet.

Peyman Zafarmand was handed a 3-year prison sentence on the charge of “assembly and collusion against national security,” along with a 5-year ban from membership in any political party or group, and activity in any Internet or media outlet.

Mohammad Parsi was handed a 3-year prison sentence; 2 years on the charge of “assembly and collusion against national security via the Internet,” and one year on the charge of “propaganda against the regime,” along with a 5-year ban from membership in any political party or group, and activity in any Internet or media outlet.

On October 30, 2012, Security agents raided a gathering of the Saraye Ahle Ghalam (Association of Writers) and arrested around 70 members who were present at the meeting. Most of them were later released but security agents transferred 17 members in a police van to Evin prison. Agents detained Pejman Zafarmand and Mehdi Karimi later.

Mehdi Khazali remains behind bars in Ward 209 of Evin prison and continues his hunger strike in protest of his illegal detainment and the mistreatment of prisoners. Other members of Sarye Ahl-e Ghalam have recently been summoned to appear in court to face their charges.

Source: CHRR

Internet proxies no longer effective in Iran

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Reports from Iran indicate that proxies are no longer effective for Iranian internet users to circumvent web censorship.

ITIran reports that the Siphon proxy as well as Kerio and open VPN are no longer effective against the Iranian state’s efforts to block websites. The report also adds that internet speed has fallen sharply, restricting user access to most sites.

The spokesman for the Association of Computer Systems announced that Iran will soon cut itself off from the worldwide web.

Payam Karbasi has reportedly told the Roozegar daily: “The National Internet (Intranet) will soon be launched in Iran, which means Iran will cut itself off from the World Wide Web.”

Others have suggested that the internet interference may be connected to the lead up to the presidential elections in June.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Editor arrested after report claiming voter fraud

A journalist for an Iranian news website says its editor has been arrested after reporting that there is an audiotape of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad discussing vote rigging in his disputed 2009 re-election.

Ahmadinejad’s office strongly denied last month’s report on the Baztab website, and so far, no audiotape has surfaced.

The president’s supporters claim the purported tape was an attempt to undermine Ahmadinejad’s attempts to get his protege on the June 14 presidential ballot that will pick his successor.

The journalist, Ammar Kalantari, said Monday that editor Ali Ghazali was arrested on Sunday.

The Baztab report said that Ahmadinejad did not want authorities to boost his vote total in 2009, but that the vote-rigging was done anyway.

Two Iranians in Kenya found guilty of bomb plots

The men were found with enough RDX explosives to bring down a building, and more could be hidden. They scoped-out British and Israeli embassies, and a synagogue.

Two Iranians accused by Israel of planning to target its citizens in East Africa face 15 years in a Kenyan prison after they were found guilty of plotting a terror attack.

Ahmad Mohammed and Sayed Mousavi had 33 pounds of powerful explosives they intended either to use themselves or to give to others preparing bombings, a senior Kenyan judge ruled on Thursday.

The two men were arrested last June outside a five-star Libyan-owned hotel in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, after an eight-day surveillance operation.

Intelligence agents trailed the pair as they appeared to scout for targets including the British High Commission, the Israeli embassy, and a nearby synagogue.

They also allegedly made contact with a Kenyan man living in the port city of Mombasa who was known to have links to Al Qaeda in Somalia

Mr. Mohammed and Mr. Mousavi made several trips to Kenya’s coast during the week before they were arrested.

Within hours being taken into custody, they were flown from Nairobi to Mombasa where they led investigators to where they had hidden 33 pounds of RDX explosives in two grey rucksacks on the edge of a golf course.

RDX is more powerful than TNT and Kenyan police told the men’s trial that the amount found would have been enough to bring down a multi-story building.

Detectives fear that the original consignment that the men allegedly brought from Iran was 220 pounds and that most of it has yet to be found.

“I have no doubt in my mind that they were part of the group that placed explosives there,” Kiarie Wa Kiarie, the presiding magistrate, told the court in Nairobi. “I must appreciate our Kenyan security personnel for detecting and taking swift action to stop the catastrophe and ensure our country was safe.”

Kenya was hit by a spate of bombings and attacks last year, which the Nairobi government mostly blamed on Somalia’s Al Shebab army that Kenyan forces were fighting inside Somalia.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, claimed that Mohammed and Mousavi were members of the elite Al Quds division of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and were planning attacks on Israelis in East Africa.

“Iranian terrorism knows no borders,” he said at the time. “The international community must fight against this major player in the world of terrorism.”

Israel said Iranian agents were also behind an alleged conspiracy to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Washington, and other plots in Thailand, India, and Azerbaijan.

Analysts believe each mission was to be carried out by Al Quds agents as part of a retaliation program against Israel following the deaths in recent years of five Iranian scientists with links to Tehran’s nuclear program.

Mohamed and Mousavi will be sentenced on Monday. They face up to 15 years in jail.

Source: Inside of Iran

Ali Moezzi is sentenced to 1 year of prison in exile

Ali Moezzi, the political prisoner is sentenced to 1 year of prison in exile in Kachuyi prison of Karaj, he has 3 years of suspended prison so he will be in prison for 4 years.

According to a report, the political prisoner of section 350 of Evin prison who was refusing to go to the courts of judge Salavti, has been sentenced to 1 year of prison in exile in Kachuyi prison of Karaj.

Ali Moezzi is suffering from bladder cancer and has been deprived of meeting and medical treatment because of refusing to go the courts.

Ali Moezzi has been kept for 3 months in solitaries charged with taking part in Mohsen Dogmechi’s funerals.

He is under arrest since June 2011 and was kept for 7 months in sections 209 and 240 of Evin prison.

Source: HRANA

No medical vacation for Hassan Ark

Hassan Ark, the political prisoner in Tabriz prison is prevented from being transferred to the medical centers out of prison.

According to a report, Hassan Ark (Ali Hajabulu) is prevented for another time from being transferred to the medical centers out of prison for the treatment of his back disease on 31st April.

One of his relatives told “Since he is in a critical health condition, it seems that the authorities want to put more pressure on him.”

Hassan Ark, the journalist and Azerbaijani civil activist, was arrested with 28 other activists in a gathering for finding solutions to rescue the Urmiye Lake in Tabriz and was sentenced to 1 years of prison and 1 year of suspended prison charged with colluding and gathering to act against the national security.

He had been sentenced to 5o lashes charged with insulting the Leader and the Police, too.

Source: HRANA

Iran’s Pre-Election Crackdown on Journalists

With Iran’s presidential approaching in June 2013, Iranian security forces are engaging in a severe crackdown on journalists and publications, which began in January on a day now referred to as “Black Sunday.” At least 16 journalists have been arrested, without charges, in the months leading up to the presidential election. Due to the authorities’ intense intimidation of the press, three publications closed in March. Many fear the arrests and intimidation will only increase as the election approaches.

Source: Iranhumanrights

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Arrested – Source Update

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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was arrested and held for seven hours Monday and warned to keep his mouth shut about matters detrimental to the Islamic regime before he was released, according to a source within the Revolutionary Guard’s intelligence unit.

After his visit to Tehran’s 26th international book fair Monday, the source said the head of Ahmadinejad’s security team informed the Iranian president that he had been asked to appear at the supreme leader’s office for an urgent matter.

On the way to the meeting, contact between the security team within the president’s convoy was disconnected while three other cars joined the convoy, instructing the lead car to take a different direction. Ahmadinejad, instead of being taken to the supreme leader’s office, was taken to a secret location in one of the buildings belonging to the Foreign Ministry, which is under the control of the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence unit.
As soon as Ahmadinejad exited the car, he and his security team were involved in an altercation with Guards’ members in which his team was disarmed and communications equipment confiscated. Ahmadinejad was then forced to enter an office belonging to Hossein Taeb, the head of the Guards’ intelligence, located underneath the building.
As this was happening, the source said, hundreds of other Guards’ members from the intelligence unit sought out Ahmadinejad’s associates throughout Tehran and questioned them on the existence of documents detrimental to the regime.

Ahmadinejad was questioned for hours in a meeting with Taeb; Asghar Hejazi, the head of intelligence at the supreme leader’s office; Mojtaba Khamenei, the supreme leader’s son; and Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, the attorney general. He was warned to back down from his claims against regime officials and given an ultimatum. The source added that Ahmadinejad was released back to his security team at 11:45 p.m. Monday, Tehran time.

Earlier, the regime’s media outlet Baztab reported that with just days remaining for the registration of presidential candidates, Ahmadinejad warned associates that if his hand-picked candidate to succeed him, a close confidant and a top adviser, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, was rejected as a candidate, then he would reveal tapes that will show the regime defrauded the voters in the 2009 presidential election.

One tape reportedly quotes officials as telling Ahmadinejad in 2009 that they will announce his total winning tally as 24 million votes where the real number was 16 million. In the same tape, Ahmadinejad insisted that the officials not do that. The Baztab site was immediately taken down by the regime’s security forces and is still offline.

Millions of Iranians took to the streets after the 2009 election results were reported, calling Ahmadinejad’s 62 percent tally of voters a fraud and demanding a free election. Thousands were arrested, with many tortured and executed. Ahmadinejad’s opponents, Mir Hossein Moysavi and Mehdi Karoubi, have been under house arrest ever since.

Under the constitution of the Islamic Republic, the 12-member Guardian Council decides the eligibility of who can run for office in the country, and anyone with any history of opposing the regime is barred from participation. The council is made up of six Islamic faqihs (experts in Islamic law) appointed by the supreme leader and six jurists nominated by the head of the Judiciary (who is himself appointed by the supreme leader), and then approved by the parliament.

Ahmadinejad had previously warned that he would release documents not only on high-ranking Guards officers but also on leading members of parliament and the Justice Department that prove financial fraud.

The source added that it will be interesting to see if Ahmadinejad takes the warning or if he creates more problems with the regime, but one thing is sure: He could end up dead if he does not.

Source: Inside of Iran

No Furlough, Phone Calls, or Visitations for Imprisoned Journalist

Three years into his detention, imprisoned journalist Siamak Ghaderi has not been granted a single day of furlough, and he does not have permission to visit with his family, his wife told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. As a prisoner of conscience, he is also denied access to a telephone, she added.

“Since his arrest, he has not had even one day off. The last time I followed up on his furlough was for the [Iranian] New Year [March 21, 2013], which was fruitless. Our last in-person visitation was in 2011. During these entire three years, we were perhaps able to see him in person two or three times. Anyhow, I don’t wish to pursue this anymore, because it basically appears as though the follow-ups don’t have any impact. They made the decisions themselves and they carry them out themselves. Simak insists that I no longer get myself tied up in trips to the Prosecutor’s Office. Siamak tells me, ‘Live your life; most of [my sentence] has passed and only some of it is left, which I will endure,’” said Farzaneh Mirzavand, Ghaderi’s wife.

Siamak Ghaderi was a reporter for the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) and a blogger. After the 2009 presidential election events, he began criticizing the conditions and the policies of the IRNA officials at that time in his blogs, “IRNA-ye Maa.” After his blogs were blocked several times, he was expelled from his job at IRNA, after 18 years of service. Security forces arrested him at his home in July 2010. He was later sentenced to four years in prison and 60 lashes on charges of “propaganda against the regime,” “creating public anxiety,” and “publishing falsehoods.”

“Siamak’s parents live in another town. His mother had knee surgery and she is not able to climb steps. She has only been able to visit with her son two or three times during these past three years, and this is so damaging. Some prisoners have their entire families in other towns and so are not able to visit them weekly. If prisoners of conscience were allowed to use a telephone, at least there would not be such an information void and families would not be harmed so,” said the imprisoned blogger and journalist’s wife.

“I won’t go back to demanding to know why my husband was illegally arrested, why his human rights were violated at the time of his interrogations, and why he had to endure such a long solitary confinement. I won’t go back to the past, but these days my question is, why don’t prisoners of conscience have access to telephone calls? Why are they arbitrarily granted in-person visitation and furlough? And why isn’t the law carried out equally and fully for all prisoners? My question is, considering Siamak has endured more than half of his sentence, and that he did not have a prior criminal record, why isn’t he released based on the current laws?” Mirzavand told the Campaign.

“The families always come to the Monday visitation days with a lot of hope to have a peaceful visit for a half an hour. But each time we are faced with new rules and new abuse by prison forces. This process has been going on for three years every Monday, wearing us out. Now I know of families who have decided to come to visitation once every few weeks because they were really frustrated. The abuse takes different shapes. Many of the prison forces don’t have a good attitude. For example, during the New Year visitation, I went with my 15-year-old son, but the officers would not allow my son to visit with his father, because he did not have a photograph in his birth certificate. I was begging them, saying, ‘This kid wants to visit with his father for 30 minutes; do you really think that I would bring the neighbor’s son to prison?!’ My son’s birth certificate does not have a photograph because he is not 16 yet [when by law he can add a photograph to his birth certificate],” Siamak Ghaderi’s wife told the Campaign, describing the problems prisoners’ families face during visitation days.

Source: Iranhumanrights

Bagher Asadi, a High Ranking Diplomat, And Two Political Activists Arrested

Bagher Asadi, a high-ranking Iranian diplomat was detained in Tehran in March as a part of the crackdown on dissidents in the weeks leading to the Iranian presidential elections, Reuters reported on Tuesday. Asadi, who had previously worked in the Iranian UN Mission in New York, was a director of the Istanbul-based D8 Group of Developing Countries. The Reuters source stated that he did not know the reason for the arrest.

During the same period, two prominent figures close to reformists in the Fars Province were arrested in Shiraz. On April 10, Jamileh Karimi, a former advisor to Fars Province Governor during the Mohammad Khatami era and a member of the Central Coalition Council of Fars Province Reformists was arrested. Security forces arrested Abdolhamid Moafian, Chairman of the Fars Province Reformists Coordinating Council and head of Ehsan Cultural Center on April 24.

In a January 2004 New York Times Op-Ed, Bagher Asadi warned of the negative consequences of the conservatives’ coming into power. The next year Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power. Asadi had also warned that the conservatives would disregard human rights and the republican aspects of the Islamic Republic, leading to a deterioration of conditions in these areas.

“Bagher Asadi was an unbiased diplomat, but because of his criticism to the Islamic Republic’s foreign policy, he had become isolated inside the Foreign Ministry. Even so, he was a professional and never entered into any political discussions publicly, nor would he take sides with any groups,” a source familiar with Bagher Asadi during his UN tenure told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. “He was respected at the UN and despite job offers from international organizations for his qualifications, he preferred to continue working at the Iranian Foreign Ministry.”

Bagher Asadi’s family has not yet reacted to his arrest. The offices of the Iran Mission at the UN did not respond to Reuters’ request for comment. Bagheri was appointed by former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to a panel of distinguished individuals in 2003 to address UN relations with civil society.

A source close to the family of Jamileh Karimi told JARAS website about her arrest. “A group of plainclothes individuals who introduced themselves as Intelligence Office forces, arrested her at her home on Wednesday morning [April 10] . Her home was searched and several of her personal items were confiscated. They then went to her place of work at the school and searched her office there as well and confiscate some of her items. It has been said that she was transferred to Numbre 100 [the Shiraz Intelligence Office Detention Center]. The others who were arrested before were also transferred to that notorious Number 100,” the source said. After 15 days without permission to have visitors, Jamileh Karimi was finally able to visit with one of her brothers on April 23.

While there is no news about the arrest location of Abdolhamid Moafian, there is speculation that he, too, has been transferred to the Number 100 Detention Center. Security forces have placed immense pressure on his family not to talk about his arrest with the media. Abdolhamid Moafian is considered a Mohammad Khatami supporter in Fars Province.

Source: Iranhumanrights