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Jailed lawyer transferred to hospital

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Abdolfattah Soltani, a jailed Iranian human rights lawyer, has reportedly been transferred to Sinai Hospital in Tehran for treatment of complications in his digestive system.

The Kaleme Website reports that Soltani has been in Sinai Hospital since Tuesday December 18, and so far the cause of his problems has not been determined by the medical team.

Abdolfattah Soltani, a prominent human rights lawyer, was jailed for the charge of “propaganda against the regime, establishing the Defenders of Human Rights Centre in Iran, assembly and collusion against the regime and acquiring pelf.”

After the election protests of 2009, independent organizations such as the Defenders of Human Rights in Iran became targets of a severe crackdown, and many members of the outlawed NGO are currently serving stiff sentences in prison.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Efforts to Forcefully Extract Fake Confessions from Bahai Prisoners

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Human rights reports and Bahai activists in Iran told Rooz that security agents in the province of Semnan have been trying to extract fake and incriminating confessions from imprisoned Bahais in an effort to prepare a propaganda documentary. But after the prisoners refused to accept to be interviewed for the television program, the TV crew talked to family members of the imprisoned Bahais.

Shayan Vahdati, a Bahai Iranian from Isfahan and a pro-education activist told Rooz, “Recently four Bahais were put under pressure for four hours by individuals from the ministry of intelligence to give television interviews, which they resisted.”

According to prison officials, Afshin Ighani, Siamak Ighani, Behfar Khanjani and Erfan Ehsani were separated from other prisoners and transferred to the prayer room of Semnan’s prison. According to Vahdati, these prisoners all suffered from various physical and heart diseases and after they refused to meet the demands of the agents, they were transferred to the clinic of the prison.

In a lengthy report Human Rights Reporter wrote that agents of Iran’s security forces posing as film and documentary makers went to the prisoners’ courtyard area and attempted to talk to each Bahai prisoner individually, which the prisoners to engage. The website of Human Rights Reporter also wrote in this regard that after this try the film crew went to the visitation hall and interviewed the Bahai prisoners’ family members on tape. The report also said that film crews affiliated to security agencies of the Islamic republic had in the last few days gone to shops and workplaces belonging to Bahais in Semnan that had been sealed by the government and filmed and interviewed with them. The members of the crew claimed that they were there on behalf of the ministry of interior with the goal of investigating their problems.

Freezing Bank Loans, and Closing of Shops

In the last few months, members of the Bahai faith and Bahai prisoners in Semnan have been under unusual pressure by the government’s security forces. According to Human Rights Reporter, the pressures include arrests, court orders, pressures on prisoners and denial of citizen rights of Bahais in Semnan.

According to Shayan Vahdati, a Bahai activist living in Iran, the physical space where Bahais are kept in Semnan’s prison is very small. “The area is about 70 square meters with a very low ceiling but with many prisoners and a very small fresh-air courtyard. Prisoners have no beds and have to sleep on the ground. There are only three health/clinic facilities in the whole prison and because of the large number of prisoners various viral infections and diseases are easily transferred among prisoners.

He said there is only one bath facility for the 55 prisoners which is shut after 7pm every day because the water is cold and it is restricted to men. The allocated cleaning supplies are not provided to the prisoners as well.

Last week, German radio channel Deutsche Welle quoted members of German Bahais and reported on the desperate conditions facing the two Bahais and their babies in prison and warned that the infants were in need of medical attention and care.

The website HRIRAN, the news agency of Iranian human rights activists wrote in this regard, “Ms Taraneh Torabi (Ehsani) has a 30-month prison term who is serving her sentence with her 5-month son Barman Ehsani.”  According to the same report Barman is very week and is in need of medical care.

On December 4, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejhei, the spokesman of Iran’s judiciary responded with these words when asked about the arrest of Bahais in Semnan: “No one is arrested for simply being a Bahai.”

But Shayan Vahdati has a different view and says, “In Semnan officials are trying to prove that Bahai’s are in not in prison because of their beliefs or religion but because of crimes they have committed whereas in reality they are behind bars precisely because they are Bahais.”

According to the Human Rights Reporter, “The increase in pressure on Bahais in Semnan in recent years is directly the result of guidance from the province of Semnan’s security council which is currently made up of the government of Semnan, the governor general of the province, Mr. Shahcheraghi who is the Friday Imam of Semnan, Mr. Siavoshpoor the head of the judiciary, Mr. Heidar Asiabi, the attorney general, and colonel Soleiman the head of the law enforcement forces of the province.”

The report on their site also lists bank loans being suspended, shops and workshops being closed, cancellation of business permits and driver’s licenses, fires in Bahai houses and shops in 2009 among the most flagrant violations of human rights of Bahais in Semnan.

Source: Roozonline

Yemeni security seizes arms shipment coming from Iran

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Yemen’s security authorities seized a large shipment of mortar shells in the port of Mukalla. Approximately 180,000 mortar shells, several boxes of pistols and automatic rifles were discovered inside the container. “Initial reports show that the shipment loaded with various kinds of weapons and mortar shells came from Iran.” Other sources maintained that the shipment was on its way to Iraq.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iran is producing explosive mini-submarines

Iranian production lines are turning out a new type of speed mini-submarine customized for combat against the US and other Western navies present in Persian Gulf waters. On the principle of asymmetric warfare, the new pint-sized Iranian submarines are light in weight and able to dart nimbly around large vessels to explode on contact with their floating target. Their pilots are bent on suicide. These mini-subs are designed to complement the app. 2,000 Revolutionary Guards’ explosive speedboats.

Source: Debka

Behavior of prison guards towards political prisoners significantly worsens

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Behavior of prison guards towards political prisoners who are ill and are being transferred to hospitals outside the prison significantly worsens.

Following the transfer of Mohammad Sif Zadeh, one of the founders of the human rights organizations, to hospital to undergo kidney surgery, and Reza Shahabi to undergo spinal surgery, prison guard behavior against the prisons has seriously declined. An injunction was issued  that requires  political prisoners to wear prison clothes and hand and foot shackles while also prohibiting telephone contact and family visits. Prison guards have also tightened their supervision of prisoners to comply with the new orders and to punish them if they violate them. All contact with family has been prohibited while the prisoners’ basic personal needs such as spoons, forks, cups, toothbrushes, toothpaste, etc. is the responsibility of the sick prisoners, who are prohibited from possessing any cash.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Tabriz prison authorities launch another round of pressures against political prisoners

Prisoner Masoud Hosein Zadeh was summoned by the attorney for the division and viciously beaten. In protest, the other prisoners gathered at the entrance hall to the prison and declared that until their complaints were resolved, they would not return to their cells. At 2:00 AM, the director of the prison guards promised to review the situation and asked the prisoners to return to their cells. The pressures and threats continued and even expanded despite promises by the prison guard director. The Tabriz prison is in poor condition in terms of sanitation and health, with serious diseases such as AIDS and jaundice being extremely widespread.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Labour activist Reza Shahabi goes on hunger strike following mistreatment

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Imprisoned labour activist Reza Shahabi has once again gone on hunger strike to protest his maltreatment in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison, opposition reports suggest.

According to Kaleme, a site close to imprisoned opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, Reza Shahabi, a labour activist and board member of the Syndicate of Workers of Tehran Bus Company, has begun a “wet” hunger strike and is refusing to accept medication despite the poor state of his health.

Shahabi was reportedly taken to Tehran’s Imam Khomeini hospital for a medical examination on 15 December when he was confronted with the abusive behaviour of prison authorities. Following the incident, Shahabi returned to prison and embarked on yet another strike.

The activist was arrested on 12 June 2010 and has since gone on several hunger strikes to protest the vague circumstances surrounding his continued detention.

After many months of uncertainty, Shahabi was finally tried in February 2012 and was subsequently sentenced to six years in prison under charges of “propaganda against the regime” (one-year) and “conspiracy against the national security” (five-year). He also received a ban on union activities for five years. In addition, he was condemned to a fine of 70 million Rials.

According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency, his six-year sentence was later commuted down to four years.

Shahabi suffers from neck and back problems and has been taken to hospital for treatment several times since his imprisonment.

The activist has also been denied furlough repeatedly. Even after the death of his mother in March 2012, authorities refused to allow him to participate in the funeral proceedings.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Mahdi Khazali’s hunger strike

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One week into his second hunger strike and after remaining in solitary confinement for over 40 days, Mahdi Khazali’s family has still not been given permission to visit him. According to the report, the family of this political prisoner, on this Thursday, which is visiting day for prisoners, contacted Evin Prison in the hope to visit him, but as was the case before, failed. Khazali was arrested six weeks ago along with 10 other people, making this his sixth arrest. The last arrest resulted in a 70-day hunger strike that led to his release. In light of his hunger strike and the harsh conditions of solitary confinement, his family is concerned for his health and is subject to heavy pressure to agree to interview in the media. Three of his family members were even summoned for questioning. Mahdi Khazali, a doctor and blogger as well as son of a religious leader, was initially sentenced to 14 years in prison.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Religious Persecution Continues In Iran

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More than 300 Christians throughout the country have been arbitrarily arrested since 2010.

During the time of the year when millions around the world hope for “peace on earth, good will toward men,” the Iranian government continues to repress the right to religious freedom for the country’s religious minorities.

Ahmad Shaheed, United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Iran, recently reported that more than 300 Christians throughout the country have been arbitrarily arrested since 2010, and that at least 41 individuals were detained for periods ranging from one month to over a year. “Scores of other Christians appear to remain in detention for freely practicing their religion,” Mr. Shaheed said.

In September, Iranian authorities released from prison Pastor Yousef Nadarkhani, whose death sentence on the charge of apostasy had caused an international outcry. But other Christian pastors remain behind bars for their religious activity on spurious security-related charges.

There are reports that Pastor Behnam Irani, who is serving a five-year sentence in Ghezel Hesar prison in Karaj, is in very poor health and has been denied adequate medical care. Pastor Farshid Fathi, who was arrested by authorities in the December 2010 crackdown against Christian house churches, is serving a five-year prison term in Evin, where he has spent months in solitary confinement.

Other religious minorities are also persecuted. Baha’is are banned from university education if they identify with their faith; their property is confiscated; their leaders sentenced to long prison terms. Sufi Muslims have been attacked and shot; journalists for their websites imprisoned. Sunni Muslims also face harassment and discrimination.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has called religious freedom and the rights of religious minorities, “the first front-line” of human rights, and has noted the increasing pressure religious minorities are under and the harm such pressure causes:

“Societies are strongest when they deliver justice not just for the powerful, but also for the vulnerable. And while religious freedom is a human right unto itself, this issue is about other rights too – the right of people to think what they want, say what they think, associate with others, and assemble peacefully without the state looking over their shoulders or prohibiting them from doing so.”

The United States has repeatedly called on the government of Iran to live up to its obligations under the international rights instruments it has ratified to respect the rights of its citizens regardless of their religious beliefs. The U.S. stands in solidarity with all Iranians seeking to practice their religion without fear of persecution.

Source: Inside of Iran

Father of labour activist arrested in Shiraz

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Iranian security forces have arrested the father of labour activist Seyed Hadi Daneshyar.

According to the Committee of Human Rights Reporters, the forces entered the home of Daneshyar in the southern city of Shiraz last week. Unable to find the 38-year-old, they detained his father and confiscated a number of personal items and books from their home.

Daneshyar’s father was reportedly allowed to contact the family a day after his arrest to inform them of his transfer to Shiraz’s Adel-Abad Prison.

Seyed Hadi Daneshyar had previously been sentenced to three years in prison for charges of propaganda and collusion against the political system and in favour of anti-regime groups, and taking part in “illegal” labour demonstrations in Shiraz four years ago.

Source: Iran Green Voice