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Billboards in Gaza thank Iran for help in conflict

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Vast billboards have appeared in Gaza expressing thanks to Iran for its help in the recent conflict between Hamas and Israel.

Written in English, Farsi, Arabic and Hebrew, the billboards carry the words “Thank You Iran” next to an image of the Iranian-made Fajr 5 rocket, which was fired at Israeli towns and cities, including Jerusalem Tel Aviv, during the eight-day war, which left 166 Palestinians and six Israelis dead.

The signs are certain to further fuel Israeli hostility to Iran’s Islamic regime, which denies Israel’s right to exist.

Their appearance at several major road junctions in Gaza follows boasts by senior Iranian officials that they had provided military assistance and “technology” to militant groups in the Palestinian territory.

Last week, the commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari, said Iran had provided the “know-how” for Fajr 5 weapons to be produced in Gaza while the parliamentary speaker, Ali Larijani, said Tehran had given financial help.

It is not clear if the billboards, which are unsigned, were put up with the approval of Hamas, the Islamist organisation that runs Gaza.

Iranian Government Denies Prisoner of Conscience Abdollah Momeni Family Visits

In an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, the wife of prisoner of conscience Abdollah Momeni said that she has been repeatedly denied visits to her husband who is imprisoned at Iran’s Evin Prison. “My children and I have not visited Abdollah for a year and a half, not even once,” said Momeni’s wife, Fatemeh Adinehvand. “During this time I have written 15 requests to the Prosecutor for an in-person visit but I have not received a single response yet,” she said.

Abdollah Momeni is a senior spokesperson for the student alumni group Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat. He was arrested on June 20, 2009, after the disputed presidential election in Iran. Momeni and the student alumni group had supported the opposition presidential candidate Mehdi Karroubi in the election. Momeni was sentenced to 11 years and 4 months and is now being held in Evin Prison, Ward 350. After he had been imprisoned for over a year, he wrote a letter to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei detailing his torture by interrogators in prison.

After writing the letter to Khamenei, Momeni was deprived of family visits and furlough. His wife Fatemeh Adinehvand said she told the judicial officials, “My children and I are only allowed to visit him from behind a window, and that’s hard for his teenage children. Is this fair or lawful?” Regarding concerns for Momeni’s health, his wife told the Campaign, “Fortunately, his teeth were treated but he has complained to me about kidney problems and I think it is common among Evin prisoners as most of them have it.”

Fatemeh Adinehvand said that she did not know why Momeni was denied family visits and leave. She stated, “I have spoken to the officials several times about his leave and I was indirectly told that there would be no leave, I don’t know the reason. I still hope that they will grant some days’ furlough for him to spend with his family. If they don’t approve of his leave, they should at least give us permission to visit in person. Once a month visits with family is every prisoner’s right.”

Source: Iran Human Rights

U.N. committee condemns Syria, Iran for rampant rights abuses

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A U.N. General Assembly committee on Tuesday condemned Syria and Iran for widespread human rights abuses, but both Damascus and Tehran dismissed the separate votes as politically motivated.

The draft resolution on Syria, which was co-sponsored by Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United States, Britain, France and other Arab and Western states, received 132 votes in favor – 10 more than a similar resolution last year received – along with 12 against and 35 abstentions.

The resolution on Iran, which was drafted by Canada and co-sponsored by other Western countries, received 83 votes in favor, 31 against and 68 abstentions.

The increased number of yes votes for both resolutions shows waning support for Tehran and Damascus in New York, envoys said.

Both resolutions were passed by the 193-nation assembly’s Third Committee, which focuses on human rights, and will be put to formal votes next month at plenary sessions of the General Assembly. They are both expected to pass with similar margins.

Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja’afari dismissed the resolution against his country as an attempt by “Western states to interfere, and we condemn this.”

He also accused Qatar, which has supported the rebels seeking to toppled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the 20-month-old insurgency, of aiding and abetting Israel against the Palestinians.

Ja’afari repeated Syria’s oft-stated accusation that Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Libya and Turkey have been arming and financially supporting the rebels, an allegation all have denied.

Western diplomats in New York, however, say privately that the Saudis and Qataris are almost certainly aiding the rebels, and possibly other countries as well.

Iranian Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee dismissed the resolution against Tehran as based on unconfirmed allegations and an attempt to meddle in the internal affairs of Iran.

The Syria resolution said the U.N. assembly “strongly condemns the continued widespread and systematic gross violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms by the Syrian authorities and the Government-controlled ‘shabiha’ militia.”

It blamed the Syrian government and allied forces for “the use of heavy weapons, aerial bombardments and force against civilians, massacres, arbitrary executions, extrajudicial killings, the killing and persecution of protesters, human rights defenders and journalists, (and) arbitrary detention.”

’Crimes against humanity’

It also condemned “any human rights abuses by armed opposition groups,” though the principal target of condemnation was clearly the government, not the rebels.

The resolution recalled U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay’s repeated suggestion that “crimes against humanity are likely to have been committed” in Syria. It called for “accountability” for those guilty of human rights abuses.

The resolution on Iran voiced “deep concern at serious ongoing and recurring human rights violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran relating to, inter alia, torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including flogging and amputations.”

It also criticized the “continuing alarming high frequency of the carrying-out of the death penalty (in Iran) in the absence of internationally recognized safeguards, including an increase in the number of public executions.”

The resolution also condemned the “increased persecution and human rights violations against persons belonging to unrecognized religious minorities, particularly members of the Baha’i faith and their defenders.”

The U.N. special rapporteur for Iran said last month that members of the Baha’i community were the most persecuted Iranian religious minority.

Such resolutions on Iran, North Korea and Myanmar – and, since last year, Syria – have become an annual ritual.

The resolution on Iran received more yes votes than a year ago, when a similar text was approved with 80 in favor, 44 against and 57 abstentions.

Last year’s Syria resolution received 122 votes in favor, 13 against and 41 abstentions.

Earlier on Tuesday the committee adopted a resolution that condemned human rights abuses in North Korea.

Source: Alarabiya

Seyed Hadi Daneshyar sentenced

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Seyed Hadi Danshyar, a worker rights activist who lives in Shiraz, was sentenced to three years in prison on charges of propaganda against the regime and participating in illegal demonstrations.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Basij Commander: “Gaza victory second wave of Islamic Awakening”

Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Naqdi said, “The victory of Palestinian resistance marks the second wave of Islamic Awaking in the region. Nations realize more than ever before that they need to come onto the stage and exhaust all their power and capacities… The heroic nation of Lebanon and the Gaza Strip gallantly stood up and the people of Syria have performed their obligation through their intelligence and maintaining the resistance front. Today it is the Egyptian people’s turn to complete the task, and they also have taken major steps.” Naqdi added that the ultimate defeat of the Israeli regime would depend on the alertness and further awakening in the West Bank and Jordan, urging the people there to play their “historical role” in the liberation of Palestine.
Naqdi criticized the Turkish government for arming the insurgents in Syria, but failing to provide practical support the Palestinian resistance against Israel.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Three Iranian missile experts in Gaza from Lebanon after ceasefire

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Israel will do all it can to prevent Iran from re-arming Hamas after its losses in our Gaza operation,” said Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz when he met new armored corps conscripts Sunday, Nov. 25.
But DEBKAfile intelligence sources have learned that Saturday, Nov. 24, just three days after the Gaza ceasefire halted Israel’s eight-day operation to stop the latest Palestinian missile blitz, three Iranian missile engineers managed to steal into the Gaza Strip. Another three are on the way.
They are the first Iranian military personnel to land in the Gaza Strip, arriving from their regular base n Lebanon and entering Egypt on false passports.

Bedouin guides led the Iranians through secret smuggling trails in Sinai up to the Gaza Strip undetected by Egyptian surveillance. They entered Palestinian territory through one of the tunnels for smuggling arms and people which Israel bombers had blasted 72 hours before the ceasefire. Hamas carried out a rush job to make it fit for use.
The Iranian missile experts came to assess the performance of the Fajr-3 and Fajr-5 supplied by Tehran which Hamas fired against the Israeli population up to and during the Israeli operation. It is important for the Iranian arms industry to learn the accuracy of their products’ aim and trajectory in battle conditions and how efficiently they functioned against the defensive wall set up by Israel’s Iron Dome anti-rocket system.
The Iranian engineers had an important finding to work with: On Tuesday, Nov. 20, the day before the ceasefire, Hamas rocket teams carried out an experiment against Israel’s wonder weapon: They fired a 16-rocket Grad salvo at Beersheba. Iron Dome blew up 8 in mid-air, 4 landed outside built-up areas but 4 made it into the heart of the town. A few minutes later Hamas started shooting 14 Grades in volley after volley just a few minutes apart – altogether 30 rockets at the same target in the space of two hours.
The score was 8 to 22 in favor of the Hamas tactic. The experiment was designed to assess the Iron Dome teams’ post-operation reloading speed – information which is a close IDF secret.

What the Palestinians learned from the Beersheba experiment was that their strength against the Israeli defense system lies in numbers: the bigger the multiple missile barrage, the greater its chances of penetrating Iron Dome cover and reaching urban targets. They accordingly put together large batteries of 6 to 8 rockets each side by side and fired them all at the same time from underground silos.
The launchers were then folded back underground for concealment.
DEBKAfile’s military sources confirm that, like the Palestinians and Iranian missile engineers, the team which developed Iron Dome likewise used the Gaza operation as a testing ground. Certain improvements were introduced on the spot in the course of the hostilities. This process continues apace.

The Iranian missile experts arrived in Gaza from their regular duties with Hizballah rocket units in Lebanon, which are to see to the proper maintenance of Lebanese militia’s store of Iran-made weaponry and train its men in their use.
While there, the Iranians learned Arabic and so have no difficulty in communicating with Tehran’s Palestinian protégés, Hamas an Jihad Islami in Gaza.

Source: Debka

Family forced to sign release in the case of prison interrogation death

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A source close to the family of Sattar Beheshti told theInternational Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that despite promises by Iranian authorities to pursue and introduce individuals responsible for the blogger’s death during interrogations, a few days after her son’s burial Sattar Beheshti’s mother was taken to a notary office to sign a form, releasing them from responsibility. “They want to get the interrogators off with this [release] and the Medical Examiner’s announcement,” the source told the Campaign.
Gohar Eshghi, Sattar Beheshti’s mother, told the Campaign that she is requesting an in-person meeting with Sadeq Larijani, Head of the Iranian Judiciary, so that she may talk to him about the investigations into her son’s death. “I would like to ask Mr. Larijani and the Tehran Prosecutor to give me an appointment so that I can directly talk to them about my son’s death. I am a mourning mother, I implore them to give me an appointment. I don’t want another Sattar to happen; I beg all authorities to pursue my child’s death and not to let his spilled blood be in vein…I want nothing other than for those responsible for my son’s murder to be punished,” Gohar Eshghi told the Campaign.

Reacting to statements made by authorities about Sattar Beheshti’s death due to natural causes or illness, Gohar Eshghi said, “I don’t believe this for a moment. Sattar was 35 and healthy. He did not have a heart condition to have a heart attack as they say, nor did he have any other problems. They took my son on a Tuesday and on the next Tuesday they said to come and take his body. How can I believe that his was a natural death?”

“If he died a natural death, why didn’t they allow us to wash [his dead body] ourselves, so that we ourselves could carry out his entire burial ceremony? Why did they threaten my daughter, telling her, ‘If you have no mercy on yourself, you should at least have mercy on your 6-month-old baby?’ Why didn’t they let me see my son’s face for the last time? Only one of our kin was able to see Sattar and said that his shroud was bloody in the lower area of his legs and that his body was bruised,” said Gohar Eshghi.

“I want to tell those doctors that wrote Sattar died of natural causes that they must remember the Day of Judgement. They are lying and I do not accept what they are saying at all,” said Gohar Eshghi. “They tell me not to interview. I tell them that I am no longer fear anything. I will not let my son’s blood be spilled in vein. I tell them I will keep giving interviews until I get my answer,” she added.

Asked whether she agreed to the summary funeral of her son without objecting to being kept from seeing him for the last time, Gohar Eshghi said, “Everything happened so fast. The forces did everything. The forces even carried the body and my daughter and I only chanted La Ilaha Illa Allah [There is no God but Allah]. They didn’t allow us to do anything. I begged them to allow me to see my son for the last time, but they didn’t accept it. They said that the shroud could only be opened inside the grave. I never saw my son for the last time. The entire prayer and burial took half an hour.”

“I thank all the authorities who have so far followed my son’s case and ask them to endeavor until this case is clarified,” said Gohar Eshghi.

On Thursday, November 22, the Tehran Prosecutor published a statement about the Medical Examiner’s report, emphasizing that the most likely cause of Sattar Beheshti’s death could be “shock,” but did not offer further information. “On November 11, 2012, we received the opinion from the Medical Examiner’s Toxicology and Pathology Department, in which the existence of any medicine or poison in the body of the deceased was refuted. In the November 14 opinion it was announced that during the physical examination, few bruises on their way to absorption on the torso and lower extremities, and abrasions in the anterior left calf were observed. Announcement of the cause of death is pending judicial investigations.” In the latest opinion from the seven-member Medical Commission (the Medical Examiner’s specialist physicians) which was issued on November 20, 2012, it is stated that, “At this time, in view of the performed examinations and with the available information, determination of the definitive cause of death is not medically possible, but as no reason or evidence of illness leading to death was observed during the examination of the corpse and the supplementary investigations, the most likely cause of death can be the phenomenon of shock, which if verified, could be caused by a blow or blows on sensitive areas of the body or through severe psychological pressure.”

Source: Iran Green Voice

‘Satellites show Iran moving quickly to rearm Hamas’

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‘Sunday Times’ cites Israeli official claiming Tehran shipping Fajr-5 rockets through Sudan to the Gaza Strip.

Israeli intelligence satellites have spied the loading of rockets and other material in Iran believed to be destined for the Gaza Strip, the UK-based Sunday Times reported, citing Israeli officials.

According to the report, Iran began preparing the weapons shipment around the same time Israel and Hamas negotiated a cease-fire late last week. 

Arrest by cyber police raises concerns

Iranian cyber police have arrested another political activist, opposition media report.

The Kaleme website reports that Omid Dehdarzadeh was arrested on Sunday afternoon by the cyber police in Ahvaz.

Dehdarzadeh was previously arrested by security forces and put on trial for “acting against national security.” He was handed a six-month suspended sentence on that charge and was also given 75 lashes for “insulting government officials” and was fined at least 10 million rials for “resisting arrest.”

Dehdarzadeh’s arrest by the cyber police has raised immediate concerns because of the arrest of Sattar Beheshti, a dissident blogger, who died while under cyber police custody.

There are serious allegations that Beheshti died under torture. The judiciary and Parliament have launched probes into Beheshti’s death.

While the judiciary has confirmed that Beheshti’s body bore signs of torture and that he did not suffer from any prior ailments, it has not yet confirmed that his interrogators were responsible for his death.

Beheshti’s death has triggered widespread outrage in both the domestic and international media and among human rights groups.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Two Baha’i brothers arrested

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Two brothers from the Baha’i community in Karaj, Saman Badii Arani and Ashkan Hadii Arani, were arrested two weeks ago. One week into his arrest, Ashkan managed to contact his family, but no information has yet been received about the state of his brother, for whom this was the second arrest.

Source: Iran Daily Brief