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Sky-high bail keeps rights lawyer in jail

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Jailed human rights lawyer Abdolfattah Soltani has been practically prevented from getting a furlough after the judiciary set his bail at 12 billion rials.

The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran quoted Soltani’s daughter on Monday March 4 saying that Soltani’s bail should be commensurate with the number of years remaining in his sentence. She said the 11 years still outstanding in Soltani’s 13-year sentence would put his bail amount at around 1 billion rials, but the authorities are asking 12 times that amount.

Abdolfattah Soltani has announced that such an amount for bail violates the laws of the Islamic Republic.

Soltani is currently in section 350 of Evin Prison and is serving out a 13-year sentence for receiving the Nuremberg Human Rights Award, speaking with the foreign media about his clients and co-founding the Human Rights Defenders Centre in Iran.

Source: Radiozamaneh

UN: Iran steps up arrests, torture, executions

Iran has stepped up executions of prisoners including juveniles as well as arrests of dissidents who are often tortured in jail, sometimes to death, the United Nations reported on Thursday.

In twin reports issued in Geneva, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the U.N. special investigator on human rights in Iran, Ahmed Shaheed, voiced concern at what they called an apparent rise in the frequency and gravity of abuses in Iran.

“The Secretary-General remains deeply troubled by reports of increasing numbers of executions, including of juvenile offenders and in public; continuing amputations and flogging; arbitrary arrest and detention; unfair trials, torture and ill-treatment; and severe restrictions targeting media professionals, human rights defenders, lawyers and opposition activities, as well as religious minorities,” Ban reported.

The Islamic Republic, which is under economic sanctions for its disputed nuclear program, has failed to investigate “widespread, systemic and systematic violations of human rights”, Shaheed’s report said.

He called for the “immediate and unconditional release” of detained human rights advocates, journalists and lawyers.

Shaheed said opposition leaders Mehdi Karoubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi, who are under house arrest, are among hundreds of political prisoners held for exercising their right to freedom of expression during protests over alleged fraud in the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

The next presidential election is set for June.

Dozens of journalists, bloggers and activists have been arrested in the past few months, Shaheed said. Lawyers defending such figures had been targeted, including Abdolfatah Soltani who was arrested in 2011 and is now serving a 13-year sentence.

In a case that stirred international outrage, blogger Sattar Beheshti was arrested last October after receiving death threats and died some days later in prison.

Iranian authorities have arrested seven people suspected of involvement in his death and a judiciary official said a forensic examination had found bruises on the blogger’s body.

Shaheed said: “An informed source communicated that Mr. Beheshti was tortured for the purpose of retrieving his Facebook user name and password, that he was repeatedly threatened with death during his interrogation and that he was beaten in the face and torso with a baton.”

Torture by blunt instruments, including truncheons, and rapes and electric shocks have been reported in Iran, he added.

JUVENILE EXECUTIONS

Iranian authorities should stop imposing the death penalty on juveniles, banned under international law, both reports said.

Shaheed voiced alarm at the escalating rate of executions in Iran and the use of capital punishment for offences that do not meet international standards for the most serious crimes.
“This includes alcohol consumption, adultery and drug-trafficking,” he said.

Without referring to the two reports, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammad Mahdi Akhondzadeh told the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday: “Iran’s commitment to the protection and promotion of human rights remains steadfast … There are ample evidences which indicate my country’s commitment in civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.”

Shaheed, a former foreign minister of the Maldives, has not been allowed to visit Iran. His latest report is based on 169 interviews with people inside and outside the Islamic Republic.

Some 297 executions were announced by the Tehran government last year, but the true number was closer to 500, he said.

Drug-related crimes account for 80 percent of executions and smugglers are denied the right to appeal against the death penalty, Ban said.

“There has been a dramatic spike in public executions in Iran,” he said. Most took place at dawn in front of crowds.

Source: Irangreenvoice

Iran says it is building 3,000 uranium-enrichment centrifuges

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Iran is building about 3,000 advanced uranium-enrichment centrifuges, according to state media, in a development likely to add to Western concerns about the states nuclear programme.

The Islamic republic earlier this year said it would install the new-generation centrifuges at its Natanz uranium enrichment plant. The reports in Iranian agencies appear to be the first time a specific figure has been given.

The announcement, which comes after talks between Iran and world powers in Kazakhstan about its disputed nuclear programme, underline Tehran’s continued refusal to bow to Western pressure.

Iranian media on Sunday paraphrased Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, as saying Iran was producing 3,000 new-generation centrifuges.

“The final production line of these centrifuges has reached an end and soon the early generations of these centrifuges with low efficiency will be set aside,” Abbasi-Davani said, according to the Fars news agency.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said earlier this year that 180 so-called IR-2m centrifuges and empty centrifuge casings had been put in place at the facility near the town of Natanz in central Iran. They were not yet operating.

If launched successfully, such machines could enable Iran to speed up significantly its accumulation of material that the West fears could be used in a nuclear weapon. Iran says it is refining uranium only for peaceful purposes.

Source: Telegraph

Head Of Iran’s Qods Force Suggests Assad Is Vulnerable

The head of Iran’s Qods Force, which has been accused by U.S. officials of providing military aid to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, doesn’t seem to believe the Syrian dictator can win.
In comments published by Iran’s semiofficial Fars news agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Major General Qasem Soleimani said that if the Syrian regime had a few commanders like the IRGC and Basij leaders who lost their lives in the Iran-Iraq War, it would be “insured” against “incursions.”

Soleimani, who is believed to have had a significant role in Iran’s attempts to broaden its influence in the region, was reportedly speaking at a commemoration ceremony for the commanders of the 27th Mohammad Rasoul-Allah Division who lost their lives in the bloody eight-year conflict between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s.

Soleimani named some of the iconic “martyrs” of the war with Iraq and called them the “missing piece” in Syria. The Iranian commander also spoke at length about Iran’s war with Iraq, which Iran describes as the “Sacred Defense.”

He said the war with Iraq reflected a “religious truth.”

“If you look at mujahedins throughout the world, you will never find scenes similar to those of the Sacred Defense,” Soleimani said. “Even though they act for God, and are engaged in jihad, [and] they fight against the U.S and Israel, but they have major differences with the source.”

Soleimani is on the list of IRGC officials who have been sanctioned by the United States over their alleged roles in a reported assassination plot against the Saudi ambassador to Washington.

Iran has denied the charges.

Soleimani, who generally keeps a low public profile, earlier this month personally visited the home of an IRGC commander killed in Syria to notify his family of his death.

Iranian media announced on February 13 that General Hassan Shateri, said to be in charge of Iran’s reconstruction operations in southern Lebanon after the war with Israel, was killed while traveling from Damascus to Beirut.

Iranian media blamed agents of “the Zionist regime” without offering details about the unexplained circumstances of Shateri’s death. The news that he was coming from Damascus raised new speculation about Iran’s role in Syria.

Iranian officials have dismissed Western reports that the Islamic republic is sending financial and military aid, including weapons, to the Syrian regime, its only ally in the region.

Last year, Deputy Qods Force Commander Ismail Ghaani confirmed the “effective” presence of Iranian forces in Syria, saying Iran was involved in Syria to prevent the killings of civilians.

Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi was quoted as saying on February 28 that Western governments need to take a more realistic approach to the crisis in Syria.

“We all have to recognize the fact that there is a government in Syria that is not ready to step down, and nobody — no external power or any other country in the region — has the right to ask the government of Syria to step down,” Salehi said.

He also called for the resolution of the conflict through dialogue between the government and the opposition.

On March 2, news agencies quoted Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi as saying that Tehran expects Assad to stay in as president until elections next year. Salehi’s statement came at a joint news conference with his visiting Syrian counterpart, Walid al-Muallem, who was in Tehran for talks aimed at ending the nearly two-year-old conflict.

The UN says the death toll in Syria is some 70,000.

Source: Insideofiran

Semko Khelghati was transferred to unknown location

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Semko Khelghati, one of the political prisoners of Rajaie Shahr prison transferred to unknown location since 6 days ago.

Semko Khelghati who is 32 years old and is from Mahabad and imprisoning in hall 12 of Rajaie Shahr prison of Karaj, was transferred since February 18th of 2013 to unknown location.

His verdict is 15 years imprisonment on charge of acting against national security through spying for Kurdish Democratic Party.

“Semko left hall 12 without his personal stuff and perhaps he was transferred to ward 209 of Evin prison or ward 2-A of islamic revolutionary guards to be interrogated again”, One of his cellmates who wanted to b anonymous said to HRANA reporter.

“This happens while his final verdict is issued already and it is not clear why he was summoned for interrogation session one more time”, his cellmate continued.

Semko Khelghati was arrested in 2009 in Arak and after a while was transferred to ward 209 of Evin prison and forced to do televised interview.

Source: HRANA

Ahmad Daneshpour Being Rejected for Furlough

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Ahmad Daneshpour Moghadam, political prisoner sentenced to death is being rejected for medical leave by prison’s authorities, in spite of deteriorating health condition.

Ahmad Daneshpour Moghadam, political prisoner sentenced to death who is imprisoned at Ward 350 of Evin Prison is suffering from Colon bleeding, his health condition is critical and prison authorities deny his furlough request.

Ahmad Daneshpour and his father Mohsen  Daneshpour have had their death sentences upheld by the Appeal Court on 15th May 2010. This was done after an unfair trial, where weak evidence was presented.

Mohsen and Ahmad were arrested with Ahmad’s mother after the Ashura protests. They did not receive independent legal representation, nor were their family members allowed to visit them during their prosecution. Their family did not even receive notification of the Court Hearing OR death sentence.

They are charged with “deliberate cooperation with MKO,” “gathering and colluding against national security,” and “propaganda against the regime and in the interest of enemies.” The evidence supporting these charges included a trip by the parents to Iraq to visit another son, who is a member of MKO, sending videos and pictures to MKO, and participating in demonstrations. None of these charges are either reasonable or punishable by death.

Renowned Human Rights Lawyer Mohammad Sharif, who has been able to successfully defend others sentenced to death under such circumstances, was not able to defend Mohsen’s and Ahmad’s cases as they were sent to the Appeals Court before he was allowed to prepare them.

Human Rights sources such as International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran strongly condemns the issuance of disproportiate sentences like Mohsen’s and Ahmad’s which are based on unfounded charges and result in executions.

The barbaric violations of human rights by the Iranian regime have resulted in the devastation of another whole family with these death sentences.

Source: HRANA

Mohsen Ghashghaizadeh summoned to the Tehran Revolutionary Court

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Mohsen Ghashghaizadeh was among a group from Saray-e Ahl-e Ghalam (Pen Society) who were detained in October 2012 when security agents violently raided their meeting. He has been summoned to appear at the Tehran Revolutionary court on April 9, 2013.

According to Committee of Human Rights Reporters, this Green movement activist who has faced several arrests and was banned from making phone contact while in detention, has been instructed to appear at the Tehran Revolutionary court at 9am on Tuesday April 9th to face the charges against him.

During the raid of the gathering of writers at Saray Ahl-e Ghalam, security agents detained close to 70 individuals. Most of them were later released and 17 writers including Mehdi Khazali were transferred by van to Evin prison. Two others named Pejman Zafarmand and Mehdi Karimi were detained in separate encounters and were also transferred to Evin prison by security agents.

Mehdi Khazali, writer, blogger, director at Hayan publishing, and government critic was among the participants at the Pen Society meeting who was detained when government forces raided their offices on October 30, 2012. According to his family Khazali immediately launched a hunger strike (58 days today) in protest of his arrest and illegal detainment.

Source: CHRR

Iran moves a step closer to getting the Bomb

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Recent negotiations with Iran have rightly focused on the most immediately alarming aspects of its nuclear programme.

The spotlight has been on its uranium enrichment to 20 per cent purity – right on the cusp of being weapons grade – and the deeply buried facility at Fordow, which happens to be too small for commercial purposes but the right size for a weapons programme.

Placing exclusive emphasis on these dangers, however, obscures other worrying installations inside Iran. Frequently forgotten is the Arak research reactor, which appears to be on track for completion next year. The United Nations Security Council ordered Iran to stop building this plant because it could provide the ability to produce weapons-grade plutonium.

There are two paths to a nuclear weapon. Like all other nations that have pursued the ability to make a bomb, Iran is following both. Arak is a classic dual-use facility. It will be used for medical isotope production and other civilian purposes. But its size and character make it ideal for producing a bomb’s worth of plutonium a year. India, Israel and North Korea all used similar reactors for their first nuclear weapons.

I do not wish to sound alarmist. To render the plutonium useable in a bomb, it would have to be reprocessed using technology that Iran does not have and that it has offered to forgo. Arak is monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which would blow the whistle if Iran were to extract any spent fuel rods for reprocessing – even if Tehran could build the plant.

But what if Iran were to expel the inspectors, as North Korea did, and acquire the reprocessing technology from Pyongyang? By then, the option of a military strike on an operating reactor would present enormous complications because of the radiation that would be spread. Some think that Israel has drawn its red line for military action before Arak comes on line, which Iran says will be next year.

Arrest of Hamid Sadr Ghabadi, an employee at Evin prison

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According to news sources, on February 23rd, agents from the Intelligence Ministry detained Seyed Hamid Sadr Ghabadi who is an employee at Evin prison. Per the reports, Ghabadi was arrested without warning on Saturday as he was leaving his place of work. He was transferred to an undisclosed location.

Agents from the Ministry of Intelligence raided Ghabadi’s residence after detaining him and conducted a massive search of his home while being aggressive and rude towards his family. The agents confiscated his personal items including his computer, camera, books and pamphlets.

There has been no information provided yet regarding the reason for the arrest or the whereabouts of Hamid Sadr Ghabadi. According to the news sources, Ghabadi was in charge of record keeping and was working on registering profiles for new incoming prisoners at Tehran’s Evin prison.

Source: CHRR

Iranian, Hizballah terror cells rolled up in time in Nigeria and Cyprus

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Nigerian secret police spokeswoman Marilyn Ogar reported breaking up a terrorist group “backed by Iranian handlers” for assassination and gathering intelligence on locations frequented by Americans and Israelis as targets for attack. She spoke to journalists in Lagos Wednesday, Feb. 20.

Three members were arrested before they could launch attacks.

The leader identified as Abdullahi Mustaphah Berende, a 50-year old Shiite leader from the northern town of Ilorin, took photos of the Israeli culture center in Lagos which he sent to his handlers, she said. A fourth member remains at large.

Berende confessed to planning to kill people and expand a new terrorist network from the Muslim north to the predominantly Christian south with the aid of a group from Iran. He also confessed to spying on American, Israeli and other Western countries’ interests in the oil-rich African country for the purpose of attacking their facilities.  He received some $30,000 incash to fund the group’s planned operations.
According to Ogar, “Berende… was observed to have made several suspicious trips to Iran from 2006 where he interacted with some Iranian elements known to operate high profile international terrorist network.”

In 2011, he was trained in the use of AK-47 assault rifles and the production of improvised explosive devices. Berende also conducted surveillance on USAID and the US Peace Corps. Nigeria’s former military ruler, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, was targeted for assassination.
In Cyprus, Hossam Taleb Yaacoub, 24, admitted at his trial to being a member of Hizballah. He was arrested last July, and found with a notebook recording the license plates of buses ferrying Israelis, just two weeks before Hizballah blew up a bus in Burgas, Bulgaria, killing five Israelis and a Bulgarian.  Yaacoub denied being part of a terrorist cell, admitting only to acting as a courier for Hizballah in European Union countries. After staking out locations frequented by Israelis in Limassol, he said he would be picked up in a van to meet his handler, whom he knew only as “Ayman” and whom he claimed always wore a mask.
Yaacoub, who has both Swedish and Lebanese passports, said that he had been a member of Hizballah since 2007, and worked for the group for four years. He owned a trading company in Lebanon and visited Cyprus in 2008 and 2011.

He said that he had been on “previous missions for Hizballah,” in Antalya, on Turkey’s southwest coast; Lyon, France; and Amsterdam.

On June 26, 2012, Yaacoub traveled to Sweden to renew his passport there. He returned to Cyprus via Heathrow Airport. Ayman asked him to stake out two locations, a parking lot behind a Limassol hospital and a hotel called the Golden Arches. He was also supposed to acquire two SIM cards for cellphones and locate Internet cafes in Limassol and the Cypriot capital, Nicosia. Ayman also asked him to locate restaurants that served kosher food, but Yaacoub said he could not find any.

The court found enough evidence to proceed on all eight counts against him. The verdict is due in March.

Source: DEBKA