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The number of arrested Kurdish students increased to five

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In continuation of arresting the Kurdish student activists, Khaled Mohammadi, geography postgraduate student has arrested.

According to a report from Daneshjoonews website report, Khaled Mohammadi,  geography postgraduate student has been arrested and transferred to an unknown place last week.

Formerly four Kurdish student activists have arrested in Marivan and with Khaled Mohammadi’s detention the number of the detainees increased to five people.

The names of four Kurdish student activists who have arrested by security forces before Khaled Mohammadi and transferred to unknown place, are: Saman Mohammadi the student of Oroomiyeh university, Soran Daneshvar the of housing and urban development faculty of Kurdistan university, Davoud Ghasimi the bachelor student in sociology faculty of Tehran private university and Mohammad Kohnehpoushi the student of Oroomiyeh university.

These students arrested, their homes searched and their personal belongings such as their computers are confiscated by the security forces. Also there is no news about their current whereabout and situation.

Currently about 30 Iranian students are in prison and most of them have
been sentenced to longterm imprisonment.

Source: HRANA

Understanding Iran’s political system

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The specter of Iranian belligerence behooves a closer examination of the country’s opaque political leadership. In a new paper, AEI Resident Fellow Michael Rubin investigates some of the most salient characteristics of Iran’s political system:

A unique dictatorship: Iranian officials enjoy a greater degree of autonomy than their North Korean or Syrian counterparts.

Export of Revolution: One of the few things that unites regime reformers, hardliners, and the IRGC is the concept of spreading the Islamic Revolution.

The growth of the IRGC: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) currently wields more influence than ever before in Iran, yet relatively little is known about the group.

Hezbollah: A semi-autonomous terrorist/political group, Hezbollah provides Iran with a powerful tool to influence the Middle East.

On the IRGC’s activities in the Syrian conflict, read AEI scholar Will Fulton’s commentary here.

Here’s a video of Fulton outlining the IRGC’s command structure:

The bottom line on Iran, according to Rubin:

The Islamic Republic is not a status quo power. Neither diplomatic agreements nor traditional containment will end the threat posed by Iran. For Tehran, the ideology of the regime is not negotiable. So long as it remains in existence, the Islamic Republic will continue to act on its ideological prerogatives to export revolution, dominate areas it considers its “near abroad,” and counter its enemies, first and foremost Israel and the United States.

Source: AEI

Uncertainty of a detained weblogger situation after 130 days

After 130 days detention of Kaveh Taheri, the weblogger who has arrested on September 23rd of 2012 still his situation is uncertain.

According to a report, Kaveh Taheri, the weblogger who is from Shiraz has been arrested by agents of revolutionary guards Etela’at on September 23rd of 2012 at his working place, transferred to Detention center of revolutionary guards and then after 52 days to Adel Abad prison in Shiraz.

The agents confiscated his personal laptop and then searched his home and took away his personal belongings such as hard drive of his computer, handwritings and … .

“Kaveh Taheri who is 31 years old, passed journalism courses and has the journalist ID but one of the charges on him is illegal reporter”, One of his relatives told HRANA reporter.

After 130 days of Kaveh Taheri’s detention and his family’s haunt, still no trial formed for him and even the court did not allow his lawyer to study the dossier.

It has to be mentioned that in general, the charges on this weblogger in his dossier are acting against national security and propaganda against regime through cyberspace.

Source: HRANA

Activists arrested in Marivan

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Six Iranian-Kurdish civil activists have been arrested by Islamic Republic security forces in Kurdistan Province.

The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran reports that the six activists were arrested on Tuesday January 29 in Marivan, while several others were also summoned for questioning by that city’s Intelligence department.

The detainees have been identified as Khaled Ahmadi, Zana Moini, Saman Mahmoudi, Davoud Ghasimi and Mohammad Kohnehposhi.

Local sources have informed the Campaign that the detainees have been taken to an unknown location and their families have not been informed of the charges against them.

The homes of the detainees have been raided and their personal items, including computers and documents, have been confiscated by the authorities.

In the meantime, student activists Shaho Mahmoudi and Dana Lenjabadi were summoned to the Intelligence office for questioning.

In recent months, a number of activists who belong to the Democratic Student Union have been arrested. The union was established seven years ago by a number of Kurdish student activists, and many students have been banned from continuing their education because of their membership in this group.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Outrage grows over Iranian regime’s arrest of journalists

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More than 200 Iranian journalists have voiced their outrage at the government’s clampdown on members of the press in recent days.

In a statement, the journalists said the security forces’ rounding up of journalists working for pro-reform publications was “politically motivated”.

“We … request that the authorities demonstrate their respect for the law and release our colleagues immediately,” they said.

The statement came days after some fourteen journalists from a number of reformist newspapers and the semi-official Ilna news agency were arrested.

On Thursday, opposition site Kaleme reported that another journalist, Reyhaneh Tabatabaei, had also been arrested by the Intelligence Ministry.

Tabatabaei, who had been working with the reformist Bahar newspaper, was also arrested in December 2010 and held in solitary confinement for 36 days. She was later sentenced to a year in prison for promoting the opposition Green Movement.

During a press conference on 21 January, Iran’s prosecutor general, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei said that based on “reliable sources,” a number of journalists had been collaborating with the country’s enemies.

On wednesday, the Intelligence Ministry released a statement saying that more journalists could be arrested or summoned and that the detained journalists had formed a “one of the biggest media networks” with ties to Western governments and media outlets.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, said she was “concerned” by the recent wave of arrests of journalists and news editors in the country.

“Such actions would constitute acts of politically motivated intimidation, particularly worrying in light of the approaching Presidential elections in Iran,” Ashton said in a statement on Thursday. She also called on Iranian authorities “to thoroughly investigate these cases and clarify the charges that have been brought against the journalists.”

The arrests have also drawn the “strong protest” of media-watchdog Reporters Without Borders. “The constant persecution of journalists keeps on intensifying by the day,” Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. “Iran has not yet emerged from the era of terror launched after the disputed June 2009 presidential election and now, five months before the next election in June 2013, a clear warning is being given – journalists and news media will be gagged.”

The organisation called for the immediate and unconditional release of all journalists currently behind bars in Iran and maintained that the sole aim of of the detentions was ensuring the regime’s stability and survival.

The Committee to Protect Journalists also condemned the arrests, saying it was an attempt “to pre-emptively silence independent news coverage ahead of the presidential election in June.” Sherif Mansour, CPJ’s Middle East and North Africa program coordinator called on the authorities to stop targeting journalists and release all those detained immediately.

The group had previously ranked Iran as the world’s second-worst jailer of journalists, with 45 behind bars in 2012.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Clinton Says Iran, Russia Continue To Supply Weapons, Money To Syria

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Hillary Clinton, who steps down as U.S. secretary of state on February 1, says Iran and Russia continue to provide military and financial assistance to the Syrian government.

Clinton told reporters on January 31 that keeping Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in power was one of Iran’s “highest priorities.”

She added that Iran had increased the number of advisers to Damascus and improved the quality of weapons it provides.

Clinton said there were reasons to believe Russia continued to supply Assad with money and “equipment.” She said that “the Russians are not bystanders in their support for Assad.”

The outgoing secretary of state said it was “within the realm of the possible now” that the Syrian conflict spread into the neighboring countries.

She made the remarks to reporters following her final speech as secretary at the Council of Foreign Relations in Washington.

Clinton told the audience that the United States was “stronger at home and more respected in the world” than when she first took the top diplomatic post.

“A lot has changed in the last four years. Under President [Barack] Obama’s leadership we’ve ended the war in Iraq, begun a transition in Afghanistan, and brought Osama bin Laden to justice,” Clinton said.

“We have also revitalized American diplomacy and strengthened out alliances. And while our economic recovery is not yet complete, we are heading in the right direction. In short, America today is stronger at home and more respected in the world, and our global leadership is on firmer footing than many predicted.”

21st-Century Tools

Clinton said the State Department had begun to implement “21st-century tools” of diplomacy since she became its head in 2009, including new outreach to emerging powers and average citizens, such as through the use of new technologies and messaging.

China and Russia, she said, are fast implementing their own communication and outreach strategies suited to a more interconnected world.

While considering the last four years, Clinton also looked to the future.

She said the United States would remain the world’s “indispensable power,” but must “adapt to new realities of global power and influence.”

Clinton’s successor as secretary of state, U.S. Senator John Kerry, begins work on February 4.

Clinton said pressing foreign-policy goals for his tenure and beyond would include solidifying the U.S. position in Asia, finishing the war in Afghanistan, navigating the changes in the Middle East, and maintaining broad economic engagement.

She also called for U.S. leadership on climate change and for Washington to build on its legacy of defending human rights around the world.

Clinton described achieving equality for women around the world as “the unfinished business of the 21st century.”

Source: RFERL

Another Iranian journalist jailed amid outrage

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Ali Dehghan has become the latest journalist to be swept up in a wave of arrests by Iranian authorities, despite widespread outrage over the past few days both inside and outside Iran.

The Bulletin News website, a site linked to Islamic Republic security bodies, announced that Ali Dehghan, who edits the economy section of Bahar daily, was arrested on a judicial warrant for being “a media element close to a number seditious groups.”

Iranian authorities refer to the 2009 election protesters as “seditious”, and many who challenged the legitimacy of the last presidential elections are now serving stiff sentences in Iranian jails.

Dehghan has a background in working with several reformist newspapers such as Shargh, Etemad and Bahar, and he has also worked for the Iranian Labour News Agency (ILNA).

This is the first time Dehghan has been arrested by Iranian authorities.

He joins the list of more than a dozen other journalists who’ve been arrested since Saturday January 26.

Nearly 200 Iranian journalists from inside and outside Iran have issued a statement calling on the Iranian judiciary to immediately release their colleagues and prove their respect for the rule of law.

The announcement expressed concern about statements from Iran Prosecutor Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, who cited “reliable sources” when he said that a number of journalists are collaborating with “the West and Anti-Revolutionaries.” Such allegations could potentially lead to serious charges and sentencing.

Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi has also issued a statement condemning the arrests and maintaining that these state actions are aimed at promoting an atmosphere of intimidation to curb freedom of press.

The intelligence ministry also issued a statement today January 30 saying the detained journalists are “part of a network linked to arrogant powers” and that more arrests may be still in the picture.

Iranian authorities often refer to Western powers as “arrogant powers.”

Source: Radiozamaneh

Report: Iran, Hezbollah terror threat rising

Iran’s elite Quds Force and Hezbollah militants are learning from a series of botched terror attacks over the past two years and pose a growing threat to the U.S. and other Western targets as well as Israel, a prominent counterterrorism expert says.

Operating both independently and together, the militant groups are escalating their activities around the world, fueling worries in the U.S. that they increasingly have the ability and the willingness to attack the U.S., according to a report by Matthew Levitt of the Washington Institute for Near East Studies. His report points to two attacks last year – one successful and one foiled by U.S. authorities – as indications that the militants are adapting and are determined to take revenge on the West for efforts to disrupt Tehran’s nuclear program and other perceived offenses.

The report’s conclusions expand on comments late last year from U.S. terrorism officials who told Congress that the Quds Force and Hezbollah, which often coordinate efforts, have become “a significant source of concern” for the U.S. The Quds Force is an elite wing of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard, the defenders of Iran’s ruling clerics and their hold on power.

The report comes amid ongoing tensions between Iran and the West, including a persistent stalemate over scheduling six-party talks on Tehran’s nuclear program and anger over reports that the U.S. and Israel were behind the Stuxnet computer attack that forced the temporary shutdown of thousands of centrifuges at an Iranian nuclear facility in 2010.

More than 20 terror attacks by Hezbollah or Quds Force operatives were thwarted around the world between May 2011 and July 2012, with nine coming in the first nine months of 2012, Levitt said in the report.

“What is particularly striking is how amateurish the actions of both organizations have been: Targets were poorly chosen and assaults carried out with gross incompetence,” Levitt said in the report. “But as the groups brush off the cobwebs and professionalize their operations, this sloppy tradecraft could quickly be replaced by operational success.”

Levitt is a senior fellow and director of the Washington Institute’s Stein Program on Counterterrorism and Intelligence. From 2005 to early 2007, he served as deputy assistant secretary for intelligence and analysis at the Treasury Department.

The two key attacks, the report said, include the plot by a Texas man to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States. Manssor Arbabsiar, a U.S. citizen with an Iranian passport, pleaded guilty to conspiracy and murder-for-hire last October and told the court that Iranian military officials were involved in the planning. Iran has denied that link.

His effort was foiled when he tried to hire what he thought was a drug dealer to carry out the attack in a Washington restaurant. The man was actually a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration confidential source.

While that plot highlighted a growing willingness to wage attacks in the U.S., a second, more successful plot in Bulgaria suggests that militants may be learning from their missteps.

Last July, a bomb killed a bus driver and five Israelis, and wounded 30 others, when it struck a tour bus in a caravan. Officials have blamed the attack on Hezbollah.

Other attacks over the past two years have also identified repeated links between Hezbollah and the Quds force – a long alliance that historically involved the Iranians arming, funding or training the Lebanon-based militants and using them as proxies.

In testimony before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee last September, Matthew Olsen, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, said “the Quds force, as well as the group that it coordinates with, Lebanese Hezbollah” posed a significant source of concern.

FBI associate deputy director Kevin Perkins added, “We look at it as a serious threat, and … we are focusing intelligence analysts and other resources on that on a daily basis to monitor that threat.”

According to Levitt, the efforts to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program have only made Tehran more eager to see a successful attack carried out. He said that both Hezbollah and the Quds Force have been hampered by the increased security triggered by the 9/11 attacks.

Source: Inside of Iran

Uranium stored in secret locations in Syria were transported to Iran through Iraq

A member of the Iraqi Parliament’s Security Committee said that he received “confirmed” information that “large quantities” of uranium stored in secret locations in Syria were transported to Iran through Iraq. The uranium was intended for use in the Syrian nuclear reactor bombed in 2007 in Dir al-Zur. According to the same source, the uranium was transported following Tehran’s serious concerns over the possibility of ousting Al-Assad’s regime.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

13 Journalist Still Held in “Black Sunday” Crackdown, Others Summoned

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Reporters Without Borders has learned that two other journalists were arrested yesterday after being summoned to Tehran’s Evin prison, bringing to 14 the total number of journalists arrested during the past three days on charges of collaborating with groups opposed to the “Islamic Revolution.”

But Motahareh Shafie, one of the ten arrested on “Black Sunday” (27 January), was released yesterday, so the number currently in detention now stands at 13. Other journalists in Tehran and various provinces have received summonses and are awaiting interrogation.

The two arrested yesterday were Kivan Mehregan, who writes for various reformist newspapers, and Hossein Yaghchi, who works for the weekly Aseman and the monthly Tajrobeh.

According to Agence France-Presse, the journalists were all arrested “under a warrant issued by the judicial authority.” AFP’s Tehran bureau put out several dispatches yesterday quoting Farsnews, an Iranian news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards, as describing them as “supporters of the anti-revolutionary movement.”

According to the information obtained by Reporters Without Borders, the journalists were arrested by the intelligence ministry “in order to verify whether or not they work for news media based abroad.” They are currently being held in isolation cells in Evin prison’s Section 209, which the intelligence ministry controls.

“Accusing journalists of collaborating with groups opposed to the ‘Islamic Revolution’ is not new,” Reporters Without Borders said. “This charge is often used against Iranian journalists and intellectuals in order to silence them.”

Culture and Islamic Guidance minister Mohammad Hosseini said on 27 January: “These journalists were not arrested because of their journalistic activities. It seems that they were arrested on charges linked to security, not for violating the regulations governing the media.”

Source: Reporters Without Borders