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Iran government increasingly violating labour rights, says Human Rights Watch

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Human Rights Watch has accused the Iranian government of increasingly violating workers’ rights to peaceful assembly and association.

In a report published a day before International Workers’ Day (May Day), the human rights organisation said that dozens of Iranian labour and independent trade union activists had been put behind bars for promoting workers’ rights in the country..

The group called on Iranian officials to end the crackdown and free labour rights advocates in anticipation of May Day.

HRW claims that the rights of workers’ rights have suffered a significant degree of repression during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (2005-present).

“Security forces have harassed and arbitrarily arrested an increasing number of striking workers, who are then subjected to politically motivated prosecutions and unfair trials,” it continued.

“Iranian workers are on the front lines of the struggle to demand such basic rights as freedom of assembly and association,” argues Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW’s Middle East director. “They are often the first victims of government crackdowns that aim to silence criticism.”

HRW went on to add that the authorities’ heavy-handed approach towards unionisation and labour rights activists had left workers without a voice to influence policy and working conditions.

It argued that unfair working arrangements had “severely” restricted Iranian workers’ benefits and provided little protection from summary firings by business owners.

“The situation is particularly dire for the most vulnerable workers: women, children and Afghan migrants,” it added. “The number of child workers under age 15 has also increased”.

The report stated that the increasing international sanctions imposed on Iran by the European Union and the United States over the nuclear programme had worsened the plight of workers.

“Regardless of sanctions or other causes of economic hardship in Iran, workers should have the right to organize, strike, and hold sit-ins, and speak out against government policies they consider harmful,” Whitson said.“The worsening crackdown on workers who try to exercise their rights is a flagrant violation of the Iranian government’s obligations to its people.”

The group also criticised Iran’s refusal to sign International Labour Organisation articles that protect the freedom of association and the right to organise.

Source: CHRR

Iranian travelling on fake Israeli passport ‘arrested in Nepal’

An Iranian man travelling on a fake Israeli passport is in police custody suspected of plotting a terrorist attack after being arrested outside Israel’s embassy in Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu, it has been reported.

Israeli media – citing Nepalese sources – said security staff detained the man, later identified as Mohsin Khosravian, after spotting him behaving suspiciously outside the embassy grounds on April 13.

They then handed him over to the Nepalese police, who established that he had entered the Himalayan country 10 days earlier on a false Israeli passport while concealing his genuine Iranian documents in his luggage.

Nepal’s central bureau of investigation has begun an investigation to establish possible terrorist links due to Mr Khosravian’s “frequent and suspicious visits” to the area near the Israeli compound, the Himalayan Times reported.

Mr Khosravian, who was carrying a tourist map of the neighbourhood when he was detained, initially told police he had been looking for a computer shop to repair his laptop.

He later admitted travelling from Iran to the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, where he had been given the forged passport that named him as “Alexander”. Subsequently, he flew to Sri Lanka, and from there to Kathmandu. Mr Khosravian had been living in Thailand since 2004 and is married to a Thai woman, according to the Himalayan Times.

Israeli foreign ministry officials refused to comment, saying they never speak about security issues surrounding their embassies.

But the newspaper, Maariv, concluded that the arrest was evidence that Iran was planning a “terror attack” in Kathmandu, which is a favourite location of Israeli tourists.

“The assessment is that the Iranians, apparently by means of the Revolutionary Guard’s Al-Quds Force, had been planning to attack either the Israeli embassy, some of its staff members or groups of Israelis who gathered in the city,” the newspaper wrote.

Investigators have implicated Iran in plots to simultaneously attack Israeli interests in India, Thailand and Georgia in February last year.

While the alleged conspiracies in Thailand and Georgia failed, the wife of the Israeli military attaché in Delhi was injured when a car bomb exploded near Israel’s embassy.

Officials in Bulgaria have blamed the Lebanese Shia group Hizbollah, Iran’s close ally, for a suicide bomb attack on a bus in the town of Burgas last July that killed five Israelis and the Bulgarian driver, along with the bomber.

Source: Telegraph

Evin prisoners sent to solitary over complaints

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Ten Iranian political prisoners from ward 350 of Evin Prison have been transferred to solitary confinement.

The Kaleme website reports that Saeed Madani, Abdollah Momeni, Khosro Delirsani, Abolfazl Abedini, Siamak Ghaderi, Mohammd Hassan Yousefpour, Saeed Abedini, Kamran Ayazi, Mohammd Ebrahimi and Pourya Ebrahimi were transferred to solitary on Sunday April 28.

The reason for the transfer, according to Kaleme, is the prisoners’ refusal to dismiss Saeed Madani as their representative.

Prison authorities had reportedly demanded that the prisoners assign a different representative, after Madani filed complaints regarding “the inappropriate treatment of prisoners and the situation in the prison store and the mishandling of accounts by its managers.” The report also indicates that Madani had called for the dismissal of an official who has repeatedly insulted prisoners’ family members during visitation hours.

The 10 prisoners are currently in solitary and deprived of any visiting rights. They have let it be known that if their current treatment persists, they will go on a hunger strike.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Eight Million Votes Were Fraudulently Added To Ahmadinejad’s Vote Count

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A website close the principlists and a former Revolutionary Guards commander revealed that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad intended to threaten to publish a document that would prevent the Guardians Council from disqualifying his presidential hopeful for the June elections. An hour later, the website was forced to take down the document.

Baztab, a site closely associated with former IRGC (Revolutionary Guards) commander Mohsen Rezai used the pretext that only ten days were left for the start of the official registration of presidential candidates for the June elections and the speculations about Ahmadinejad’s reaction to the disqualification of Esfandiar Rahim Mashai – the president’s  leading contender – wrote about Ahmadinejad’s possession of an audio recording about the disputed 2009 presidential elections which resulted in massive and bloody unrest in the country.

Baztab website is known to have access to the state’s classified bulletins and has on a number of occasions posted news reports that either subsequently materialized or were initially denied but were later proven to be true. On Friday morning the site posted a news report that claimed that Ahmadinejad was in the possession of a recording in which officials inform him that he only had 16 million votes (which means that he and Mir-Hossein Mousavi had to go into the second round of voting) but that they intended to increase the number to 24 million.

The recording shows that Ahmadinejad repeatedly protested about this and had asked that his real vote count be announced.

Political analysts view this document to be the magna expose that Ahmadinejad has been threatening his opponents with which has raised concerns among IRGC commanders and the supreme leader forcing them to issue a number of warnings. Ahmadinejad has been threatening to reveal documents in his possession that would expose senior regime elements of corruption and scandal as a way to prevent official organizations such as the Guardians Council from disqualifying his presidential choice.

According to Baztab, the exposes that Ahmadinejad has till now revealed against the family members of the head of the country’s judiciary and legislative branches of government, and also against the head of the state expediency council, have lost their impact, forcing him to engage in other exposes or acts involving even more senior personalities of the regime.

According to the report by Baztab the conversations between Ahmadinejad and various government and state officials are on the recording and indicate that he was not in favor of announcing the fake results of the voting and that he wanted that actual 16 million to be publicly and officially announced.

The website then presents three scenarios for the recording: It does not exist altogether; there is a recording but the government is exaggerating its contents with its interpretations to show that Ahmadinejad received the highest number of votes, and lastly, there in fact is such a recording directly implicating others.

The report reminds its readers that the issue of 8 million votes that were not accounted for was initially mentioned by a current presidential hopeful Alireza Zakami who quoted Mohsen Rezai on this, making it a primary source for the 2009 presidential controversy. Speaking at Imam Sadegh University after the 2009 presidential election, Zakami who was a Majlis representative from the principlist faction then quoted Rezai to have said that 8 million votes in the election were fabricated. According to Zakami, Rezai had said that until 5pm there were only 17 million votes cast and it was not possible to believe the 21 million votes that were suddenly announced after that.

Source: Roozonline

Reformist activist Abdolhamid Moafian detained in Fars Province

A reformist figure in Iran’s Fars Province has been detained, sources say.

According to opposition site emruznews, Abdolhamid Moafian, who heads the Coordinating Council of Reformists in Fars Province, was arrested on Wednesday April 24th.

It is still not clear where he is being held and his family have reportedly been under pressure not to divulge news of his arrest.

Moafian is said to have been a staunch supporter of former president Mohammad Khatami in Fars Province. A great number of political figures across the country, including in Fars Province, have in recent weeks been calling on Khatami to run in the upcoming presidential election on 14 June 2013.

Jamileh Karimi, a former advisor to the governor of Fars Province during the presidency of Mohammad Khatami, was also arrested recently. She has been solitary confinement ever since her detention, localsources say.

Another dissident figure in Fars, Masoud Sepehr, was arrested in November 2011 and held in solitary confinement for four months before being released.

Source: Irangreenvoice

Another Bahai mother went to prison with her baby

Elham Ruzbehi, the Bahai citizen living in Isfahan, who was sentence to 2 years of prison by a court in Semnan went to Semnan prison with her baby.

According to a report, Elham Ruzbehi was sentenced to 2 years of prison by the appeal court of Semnan, went to Semnan prison on April 27th with her 1 year old baby.

She is the fourth Bahai mother who is serving her prison sentence with her baby.

Elham Ruzbehi had been arrested in March 2010 in Semnan and after one month released on the bail. She was sentenced to 3 years of prison which was reduced to 2 years afterwards.

She has been living in Isfahan for more than 1 year now, but she has to go to Semnan prison.

Source: HRANA

2013 Elections: Former MP Arrested for a Political Meeting That Never Happened

Former Member of Parliament Hossein Loghmanian and four reformist activists from Hamadan Province were arrested while on their way to Tehran to meet former president Mohammad Khatami on March 16, 2013. These arrests may mark the first detentions of political figures in relation to the upcoming June 2013 presidential elections in Iran.

Hamadan Intelligence forces also arrested Loghmanian’s travel companions, identified as Mohammad Reza Afkhami, Hadi Ehtezazi, Amin Faridian, and Ms. Rahimi, and took them to the Hamadan Intelligence Office.

On March 17, Hossein Loghmanian’s four companions were indicted by Branch 7 of Hamadan Courts under Judge Tarkashvand and were released on bail, but Loghmanian refused the charges. In protest of his illegal detention, he prevented his family from posting his bail, and was transferred to Hamadan’s Alvand Prison the same day.

The former MP told the court he had not committed a crime that would necessitate posting a bail. He added that on principle, meeting with Khatami is not a crime, and that since he was stopped on the road, he had not even had the chance to meet with Khatami. Forty days after his illegal arrest, Hossein Loghmanian remains in prison and is not allowed to have visitors. His family is concerned about his health due to a history of high blood pressure and diabetes.

Hossein Loghmanian was head of the Hamadan branch of the Participation Front and a member of the Iranian Parliament from 2001 to 2005. In late 2001, Loghmanian was arrested following a speech he delivered at the Parliament in protest to the arrests of political activists, sentenced to 10 month in prison and transferred to Evin Prison. Mehdi Karroubi, then Speaker of the Parliament, vehemently objected to the arrest, stating that the Judiciary’s actions in the arrest of Loghmanian violated the parliamentary immunity of the members of parliament. After Karroubi threatened to resign, Loghmanian was eventually released. Loghmanian was head of Mehdi Karroubi’s presidential election campaign in Hamadan in 2009.

Source: Iranhumanrights

Iran warns broadcasters about coverage during campaign

Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence has summoned broadcasting managers from across the country to inform them of the red lines they must not cross in the lead-up to the presidential election.

Kaleme reports that the deputy minister of intelligence told the mangers that any form of “negative reflections” during this time will not be tolerated.

The report indicates the broadcasters were told to stay in line with the statement issued by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, with a reminder that the Revolutionary Guards and the Intelligence Ministry is monitoring broadcasts to prevent any violations.

Iran’s presidential election is set for June of this year. Outgoing president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is unable to run after two terms in office, is working hard to promote his choice in the race, but the establishment’s conservative factions, especially those close to Ayatollah Khamenei, have been very critical of his administration and allies.

Meanwhile, Ahmadinejad has been accusing his opponents of corruption and threatening to expose financial abuses committed by senior figures pursuing the presidency.

Source: Radiozamaneh

67-year-old Baha’i Prisoner’s Psychological and Physical Health Suffers

Riaz Sobhani, a 67-year-old Baha’i citizen imprisoned since June 2011 for financially assisting the Baha’i Institute of Higher Education (BIHE), is in dire physical and psychological conditions, especially considering his age, his son told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. The Baha’i prisoner was hospitalized in May 2012 for an acute heart condition.

“The Medical Examiner’s Office had prescribed two months of medical furlough for him for medical care and tests, but the officials only agreed to a total of 1.5 months of leave for my father, which was granted one week at a time after my family begged them to extend his leave each time. Fortunately, my father was able to stay home for 1.5 months and completed his tests during this time. He went on furlough last March and returned to prison in early April. But my family has observed during visits with him that his psychological conditions are unsuitable and he has become physically weaker. At age 67, it is very hard for him to return to prison and to endure the harsh prison conditions,” Naim Sobhani told the Campaign about his father’s situation.

“After one of his arteries was blocked last year, my father went to the hospital last July and received surgery, but he was transferred back to prison after two days and was unable to receive medical care. His condition deteriorated daily until the Medical Examiner prescribed two months of medical furlough for him,” Naim Sobhani added.

Describing the unhygienic conditions of Rajaee Shahr Prison in Karaj, Riaz Sobhani’s son told the Campaign, “In each cell, which is built for two prisoners, they hold four to five prisoners. In each of these cells, apparently, there is only one metal bed, and this bed is divided among the prisoners, or the person who is the oldest or who is sick sleeps on it. Each prisoner only has one blanket, and this makes the conditions very difficult for the prisoners in wintertime. The toilets and showers in the prison are filthy and unhygienic. The prison food lacks any quality, and there is no supervision, because they don’t consider prisoners human beings, to do something about their conditions. Naturally this is very difficult for a prisoner who is 67.”

Riaz Sobhani was a key member of the Baha’i Assembly in Tehran prior to its closure in 2008, when seven Baha’i community leaders were arrested and later sentenced to 10 years in prison each. “In June it will be two years since my father was imprisoned. We only hope that considering he will have already served half of his sentence, that he is released. We only hope that his lawyers and the authorities can make this happen, because prison is really very hard for a sick old man and each day of his continued stay in prison makes him weaker. I hope the judicial authorities hear our voices and release him,” Sobhani told the Campaign.

Sobhani was tried on October 1, 2011, at Branch 28 of Tehran Revolutionary Court under Judge Moghisseh, on charges of “providing financial assistance to the Bha’i Institute of Higher Education (BIHE),” and was sentenced to four years in prison. His sentence was upheld at the appeals level. Riaz Sobhani’s first lawyer, Abdolfattah Soltani, is currently in prison himself.

Iran told Hezbollah to join Syrian war, says ex-leader

Iran pressed Hezbollah fighters to join the civil war in Syria to bolster President Bashar al- Assad’s armed struggle, according to Sobhi al-Tofaili, a disaffected former leader of the militant group.

The allegation, made on Lebanon’s Future Television, echoes similar comments by George Sabra, interim leader of the Syrian National Coalition, at a press conference in Turkey on April 22.
Enlarge image Interim Leader of the Syrian National Coalition George Sabra

Interim leader of the Syrian National Coalition George Sabra said, “Imposters claiming to be Hezbollah resistance fighters are occupying Syrian villages, murdering civilians, preventing them from peacefully expressing their views.”

The former Hezbollah secretary said that at least 138 militiamen had died in Syria and scores had been wounded. The organization is split over its involvement, he said.

Lebanese Sunni Muslim clerics called on April 23 for a holy war to defend co-religionists in Syria from Hezbollah, amid concern that Lebanon is being sucked into its neighbor’s increasingly sectarian conflict. Lebanon’s President Michel Suleiman dismissed the calls. The uprising against Assad began with peaceful protests in March 2011 that turned violent when the government forces turned their guns on demonstrators.

“Hezbollah fighters have crossed the border and started to kill our people to support the murderer Bashar al-Assad,” Sabra said at a televised press conference. The group is “occupying Syrian villages, murdering civilians, preventing them from peacefully expressing their views.”

Extremist Merger

The Syrian government says the unrest is distinct from the so-called Arab Spring uprisings that have toppled the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen. It says it’s fighting an Islamist insurgency, citing as evidence the recent merger of al- Qaeda in Iraq and the al-Nusra Front in Syria.

Hezbollah has denied it is backing Assad in the fighting, saying it’s helping Lebanese Shiites living in Syrian border towns and villages to defend themselves against rebel assaults. It has remained largely silent amid a wave of recent accusations by Syrian opposition leaders and Lebanese groups about its involvement in Syria.

“Hezbollah has not denied the claims and does not appear very concerned about how its involvement will be interpreted,” said Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Middle East Center in Beirut.

After the protests evolved into armed conflict and the al- Nusra Front’s involvement was highlighted, both Iran and Hezbollah had a “convenient excuse — that they are fighting against militant jihadis and not an Arab Spring uprising,” he said.

Stability Threatened

They may have concluded that “Assad is not about to fall and that they’re not on the Titanic but on the side that’s going to be around for a long time,” he said.

The group is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S., U.K. and Israel.

Syria’s conflict is rapidly deteriorating and is threatening the stability of its neighbors, particularly Lebanon, Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told the Security Council yesterday.

“Hezbollah not only continues to undermine Lebanon from within by violating the government’s policy of disassociation, but actively enables Assad to wage war on the Syrian people by providing money, weapons, and expertise to the regime in close coordination with Iran,” she said.

In a letter to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah from Moaz al-Khatib, former SNC leader, he said: “Is it satisfying to you that the Syrian regime shells it citizens with fighter planes and Scud missiles?

‘‘I demand that you withdraw all Hezbollah troops from Syria,’’ al-Khatib said.

Source: Inside of Iran