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Media crackdown continues with journalist’s arrest

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Another Iranian journalist, Ehsan Mazandarani, was arrested on Wednesday February 20, joining the wave of arrests that began in late January.

Hossein Yaghchi, one of journalists arrested during that time, was released yesterday after three weeks in jail.

Yaghchi, a reporter for the Asman weekly magazine, was arrested in late January when Iranian security forces raided the offices of a number of newspapers, including Bahar, Etemad and Shargh, and arrested some journalists at their homes.

The Intelligence Ministry has announced that it has discovered a network of anti-regime media activists connected to Persian BBC and it included the names of several reformist websites, such as Kaleme, Jaras and Saham News, in that network.

BBC has denied any connection with these detained journalists.

The Intelligence Ministry has said it is still investigating the matter and, in the meantime, while some of the journalists may be released after the conclusion of their interrogations, others may yet be arrested.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Blogger Detained for Four Months Without Trial in Shiraz

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A 30-year-old man has been detained for four months without trial on charges related to writing a blog in Shiraz, his sister told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. Kaveh Taheri was arrested on September 23, 2012, and charged with “acting against national security” and “creating public anxiety in the virtual space.” After his arrest, when security forces allegedly discovered his EuroNews reporter ID card, charges of “reporting for the news agency” and “collaborating in the production of a documentary film” were added to his initial charges. Taheri is currently imprisoned at Adelabad Prison in Shiraz.

“My brother has had no political activities whatsoever, and he has not been a member of any groups. He only has a blog, in which he wrote his opinions on the country’s issues; I don’t think writing personal opinions is a crime,” Laleh Taheri, who is a resident of Malaysia, told the Campaign.

“My parents saw him on Thursday, February 7. My brother was fine physically, but he was frustrated and stressed, and he insisted on dissemination of news of his arrest. However, since I am in contact with my family via telephone, and they are afraid that their phone line may be tapped, they do not speak openly of Kaveh’s conditions. They just say Kaveh is not doing badly,” Laleh Taheri said.

“Kaveh was born in 1982. He was working in a clothing shop in Shiraz, but alongside this job, which was his livelihood, he also had a blog. On September 23, 2012, two or three agents from the Intelligence Office went to his place of work and arrested him. Then, they went to his house and searched it, and confiscated any notes, notebooks, and computer hard drives—which belonged to our parents and to him—that they could find. Then, they kept him for 52 days in the Intelligence Office Detention Center known as Number 100. After that they transferred him to Adelabad Prison in Shiraz, in a prison ward that houses murderers and drug traffickers. However, after a week or ten days, when I spread the news, they changed his ward, and apparently took him somewhere else where his conditions are better now,” she added.

Referring to the charges related to his EuroNews press ID card, Laleh Taheri said, “The other point is that my brother did have a EuroNews reporter card, but he had not yet done anything with it. . . . Now one of his charges is that he was reporting for EuroNews, whereas my brother never engaged in such activities.”

Kaveh Taheri’s blog is no longer accessible online. “The name of his blog was Pouyesh, but two to three months after he was detained, I no longer could find it on the Internet. Now, I don’t know whether the Intelligence Office has blocked it, or whether there is another reason, but I can’t find it,” his sister said.

Asked about the evidence used in his case to support the charges, Laleh Taheri told the Campaign, “They have no evidence other than his blogs. Since they can’t accuse him of anything, they are trying to use every little thing to level charges against him. I was in the documentary film that an American director made about an American basketball player in the Shiraz Basketball Team [“The Iran Job”]. As friends of this basketball player, a few friends of mine and I spoke in this film, and now the film has been [licensed to] screen this year, and the teaser has been distributed everywhere. When the Intelligence Office became aware of this film, they pressured my brother about it because in the end credits of the film he was thanked for his help. They have tried to accuse him of espionage, but my brother has not buckled under pressure, and he has said that this film does not have anything to do with him.”

Regarding her request to the Iranian Judicial authorities, Laleh Taheri told the Campaign, “My parents and my request is that his judicial case be processed more quickly. It has been more than four months since his arrest without any clear charges or a court trial. Our question is, why they would arrest a thirty-year-old man and prevent him from living his natural life? If they needed to conduct investigations about him, those could have been done in the span of a month. Why have they kept him for over four months? On what account and evidence do they want to prove that my brother has acted against national security? He hasn’t done anything, and we want him released.”

Source: Iranhumanrights

Iran started installing new ‘advanced’ nuclear equipment: IAEA

Iran has begun installing next-generation equipment at one of its main nuclear plants, a new U.N. atomic agency report said Thursday, five days before talks with world powers.

“On 6 February 2013, the Agency observed that Iran had started the installation of IR-2m centrifuges” at the Natanz plant, the International Atomic Energy Agency report said.

“This is the first time that centrifuges more advanced than the IR-1 have been installed” at the plant, it said.

If operated successfully, such machines could enable Iran to significantly speed up its accumulation of material that the West fears could be used to devise a nuclear weapon.

Before IAEA’s report, France on Thursday confirmed that world powers will make a “substantial” new offer to Iran in a bid to resolve the dispute over its nuclear program at talks next week in Kazakhstan.

“We will make a new offer that will contain significant new elements,” the French foreign ministry’s deputy spokesman, Vincent Floreani, said.

The next round of talks with Iran under the “P5+1” format – U.N. Security Council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany — will be held on February 26 in Almaty after a long gap.

“We hope that Iran will attend this meeting with a constructive spirit and will be ready to discuss, in detail and with a renewed perspective, aspects of its nuclear program that remain to be clarified,” he said.

“We want a true exchange, leading to concrete results,” Floreani said.

A Western diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters in London on Wednesday of the plan to make the “serious and substantial” new offer to Iran.

These latest talks follow three rounds of negotiations in 2012, the last in Moscow in June, at which world powers pressed Iran to scale back key areas of its nuclear program.

Iran however walked away because the P5+1 stopped short of offering Tehran relief from U.N. Security Council and unilateral Western sanctions that are causing major economic problems for the country.

Iran envoy threatens west

On Wednesday, a top Iranian envoy warned that increased Western pressure over his country’s nuclear program could end hopes for a negotiated settlement.

Ahead of key new negotiations in Kazakhstan, Iran’s U.N. Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee said that his country wants talks, but hit out at Western tactics of sanctions along with engagement.

Khazaee, Iran’s senior diplomat in the United States in the absence of formal ties between the arch-rivals, warned that more sanctions could doom talks over Iran’s nuclear drive, which the West and Israel worry, is a cover to build an atomic bomb.

“More pressure can only beget more distrust, leading Iran, in turn, to lose hope in a negotiated settlement,” the envoy said at the Asia Society in New York.

“As long as pressure is on Iran, as long as there is a sword on our neck to come to negotiations, this is not negotiations, therefore Iranians cannot accept that,” added Khazaee, whose country denies that it seeks a bomb but has rejected U.N. Security Council demands to halt uranium enrichment.

Khazaee said President Barack Obama’s administration declared “economic war” against Iran.

He also stressed that Iranian leaders had welcomed recent U.S. calls for diplomatic talks.

Power struggle priority for Iran

With a presidential election looming in June, the latest round of negotiations may amount to little more than “holding talks” to at least keep the diplomatic door open.

“Iran is in listening mode. They’ll go back to Tehran and look at the offer,” said a Western diplomat based in Tehran. “But they’re unlikely to discuss issues in depth until the insecurity in the domestic power struggle has been clarified.”

A closer look may give Western governments some reason for optimism. Iran’s clerical leadership has recently offered signs of interest in closer engagement with them, helping lay the groundwork for Tehran’s presence in the former Kazakh capital.

Iran’s intelligence ministry published a report on its website last November touting the merits of diplomatic engagement to parry the threat of military action by enemies.

“It is clear that the outbreak of war and resorting to force is so serious and dreadful that the slightest neglect of it is an unforgivable sin,” said the report by the ministry, which is controlled by Heydar Moslehi, a close ally of Iran’s ultimate political authority, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

But much hinges on Iran’s forthcoming election, which could scuttle any chances of rapid progress in the near future.

Source: Alarabiya

Iranian human rights lawyer sentenced to 6 years in jail

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A court in Iran has sentenced human rights lawyer to six years in prison, sources report.

According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency, Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court sentenced Mohammad Seifzadeh to six years in prison.

Seifzadeh, who is currently being held in Rajaei Shahr prison, was recently hospitalised for kidney problems.

The human rights lawyer had already begun serving out a previous two-year sentence. The latest court ruling means that he will be facing eight years behind bars.

Source: Irangreenvoice

Nava Na’imi, the Baha’i citizen arrested

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A Baha’i citizen from Esfahan has been arrested and transferred to unknown location.

On February 12th of 2013 Etela’at agents invaded a Nava Na’imis’ house and inspected all her house which is located in Baharestan of Esfahan and took away her computer, books, religious and personal photos, arrested her and transferred to an unknown location.

There is no news from her nor about the reason of detention.

Source: HRANA

Mohammad Reza Pourshajari suffered heart attack in Karaj Central prison

Blogger and political activist Mohammad Reza Pourshajari suffered a heart attack on February 17 and was transferred to the infirmary at Karaj Central prison.

According to news provided to CHRR, three physicians at the prison facility by the names of Amjadi, Nejadbahram and Gholizadeh made requests for this political prisoner to be transferred to a medical facility outside the prison. They revealed that the prisoner has blocked arteries, which could result in cardiac arrest and his sudden death.

The head of Karaj Central prison has sent a correspondence regarding this matter to the prosecutor’s office and the prison judge but so far there has been no response. CHRR has previously released internal documents from Karaj Central prison revealing that the judiciary has undermined efforts for Pourshajari’s medical leave from the facility.

Mohammad Reza Pourshajari, political prisoner and blogger who wrote under the pen name Siamak Mehr is behind bars in Ward 7 of Karaj Central prison and has been taken to court 11 times. He endured 7 months in solitary confinement during his “temporary detention” and was subjected to brutal psychological and physical torture. He was beaten with electric rods, and tortured with mock executions prompting him to attempt suicide by cutting his wrists with his glasses, leaving scars as a reminder.

Mohammad Reza Pourshajari has provided CHRR with a letter from prison requesting lawmakers and attorneys to on his behalf file a complaint at an international tribunal against the government and judiciary of the Islamic Republic for his imprisonment and torture.

The letter along with another unpublished document is below.

I am lodging a complaint!

I Mohammad Reza Pourshajari, aka Siyamak Mehr, blogger for the blog “Gozareshe Khake Iran,” hereby request from honorable lawmakers and attorneys, to accept my gratitude for their efforts if circumstances permit to represent me in court. I give them my power of attorney to lodge a lawsuit on my behalf against the Islamic Republic of Iran and the judiciary of this regime in any suitable court of law in the United States, for my illegal arrest and severe torture, my 4-year prison sentence on baseless and ridiculous charges such as “propaganda against the regime,” and “insult” to an absurd concept called “Supreme Leader.”

The lawsuit is to condemn the opinions issued in the Islamic courts and to demand compensation from Iranian officials for my emotional duress and physical complications along with the losses endured during my prison term. In hopes that this action will condemn the oppressive regime of Iran and encourage other Iranians sentenced in the courts of the oppressive Islamic regime and victims of clergy crimes to also step forward and in this manner of lodging complaints in the courts of the United States of America, make a loud case that can be heard in the rest of the world.

Source: CHRR

Five years imprisonment confirmed for a Kurdish student activist

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Western Azerbayejan provincial appealed, confirmed the 5 years imprisonment verdict for Jamal Ghader Nezhad who has been sentenced by Mahabad court.

“The final verdict of 5 years imprisonment for Jamal Ghader Nezhad confirmed by branch 10 of western Azerbayejan provincial appealed”, Ghader Nezhad’s lawyer said to Moukrian news agency.

Jamal Ghader Nezhad is student of sociology in Payame Noor university of Miando’ab.

Abbas Jamali, the lawyer of the dossier declared that the main accusation to his client is membership in one of Kurdish subversive parties, but he also mentioned collusion against national security and propaganda against regime as the other accusations in his client’s dossier.

“My client was been arrested by Etela’at according to the mentioned accusations and the surprising point is that Etela’at demanded very clearly for the highest punishment citing to articles 499, 500 and 610 of criminal law which is totally illegal and this department is not allowed to demand the punishment range for anyone; And it is the job of prosecutors and courts”, Mr. Jamali added.

According to Mr. Jamali his client claimed that he is not a member of any subversive parties but the judge sentenced him.

“The judge declared that the other accusations as collusion against national security and propaganda against regime are not apart and sentenced Ghader Nezhad to 5 years imprisonment only in accusation of membership in subversive party”, Mr. Jamali continued.

During the report, Mr. Jamali said that Etela’at claimed about 500 pages evidence to prove everything, but when Mr. Jamali asked judge to sow the evidence, the judge said that “I have seen, it is enough. You do not need to see it”.

“I objected all these stuff during the appealed session but the verdict confirmed and the realities neglected by appealed”, Abbas Jamali said.

Jamal Ghader Nezhad’s lawyer confirmed that his client is suffering of intervertebral disc herniation, also that he asked medical furlough for his client by bail which refused by the court.

Ghader Nezhad has serious intervertebral disc herniation and it might affect his condition and his health.

Abbas Jamali declared his point of view about his client’s verdict that it is totally unfair because there is no evidence to prove the accusation and the verdict has been issued just according to the Etela’at report.

Source: HRANA

Banning the bail of Saied Abedini and threatening it’s provider

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The illegal Evin prosecutor banned the bail for Saied Abedini the Iranian-American pastor.

According to a report also the islamic revolutionary guards interrogators threatened the person who tried to put bail to prevent this prisoner’s furlough.

Saied Abedini is the Iranian-American who is accused to establishing home-church in 2009 and after his arrival to Iran in 2012 has been arrested by islamic revolutionary guards Etela’at and transferred to ward 2A.

More than eighty US senators from both Democrat and Republican parties on Thursday February 14th wrote a letter to John Kerry the United States Secretary of States and asked him to try to do all what is needed for freedom of Saied Abedini the Iranian-American pastor.

Source: HRANA

Iran is taking same path to nuclear weapons as North Korea, says Ban Ki-Moon

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Iran is using the same methods as North Korea to develop its nuclear capabilities, requiring “firm, decisive and effective” action by the Security Council, the United Nations secretary general has warned.

Two days after North Korea carried out its third nuclear test, Ban Ki-Moon said Iran was on the same path towards the covert development of a nuclear weapon.

The Security Council is considering whether to tighten sanctions on North Korea after its latest nuclear test. The country’s diplomats are understood to have told China, their only ally, that they will press on and conduct two more controlled explosions of nuclear weapons later this year.

China, exasperated by Pyongyang’s behaviour, is understood to be prepared to support tougher sanctions against its neighbour.

In addition, EU foreign ministers meeting on Monday will agree new sanctions against North Korea ranging from financial measures to travel bans and asset freezes against individuals.

Mr Ban said that North Korea’s example held lessons for how to deal with Iran’s nuclear ambitions. “We should not give much more time to the Iranians, and we should not waste time,” he told the Washington Post. “We have seen what happened with the DPRK [North Korea]. It ended up that they [were] secretly, quietly, without any obligations, without any pressure, making progress.”

Mr Ban disclosed that when he visited Tehran last year, he told Iranian leaders directly that he disbelieved their assurances about the peaceful nature of their nuclear ambitions.

On Feb 26, Iran will hold direct talks with the world’s six leading powers, including America, at a summit in Kazakhstan. It follows three rounds of negotiations last year. None made any progress.

Iran has defied six UN resolutions and continues to enrich uranium, a highly sensitive process that could be used to make fuel for power stations – which Tehran says is the only goal – or the fissile core of a nuclear weapon.

Source: Telegraph

Iranian president proposes new minister

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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has proposed that the Deputy Head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Iranian Republic Army be appointed as the new Minister of Communications and Technology.

Iranian media reported on Monday February 18 that Mohammad Hassan Nami was proposed by the administration to take the helm of the ministry.

In December, Ahmadinejad removed Reza Taghipour from the head of the ministry and left the department under the care of the Ministry of Transportation and Urban Development.

Ahmadinejad claimed the move was an attempt to combine the two ministries and reduce government costs. However, Parliament did not approve the elimination of the Communications Ministry, and the president was forced to appoint a new minister for the department.

Nami is Deputy Head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Islamic Republic Army and head of the Geographic Organization of the armed forces as well as an executive member of the Geopolitics Association of Iran.

He is a veteran of the Iran-Iraq War and was wounded on the three occasions during that time.

His credentials include graduate degrees in geopolitics as well as strategic management and public administration from Iranian and North Korean universities.

Source: Radiozamaneh