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Iran’s activists jailed and beaten for speaking out

The story of imprisoned student activist Arash Sadeghi and its radicalising effect on his family is becoming a familiar one in Iran.

When the Iranian student activist Arash Sadeghi was temporarily released from Tehran’s Evin prison in November 2010, he anticipated a little respite from a year of harsh beatings and agony in jail.

Instead, within a few days, security officials had raided his home in middle of the night. As they broke their way into the house, Sadeghi’s mother, who was alone with her daughter, suffered a heart attack.

The officials continued their search as she laid unconscious on the floor, ransacking the house and trying to find Sadeghi, who was at his grandfather’s house that night. When the officials left, Farahnaz Dargahi was taken to hospital. She died within a few days.

“My father, my sister and my entire family and relatives blame me for her death,” Sadeghi told the news website Roozonline at the time. “Our house has become hell … My father tells me that you killed your mother and I don’t want you at home … I prefer to go back to jail.”

In no time, Sadeghi, a 26-year-old student of philosophy at Tehran’s Allameh Tabatabai University, was indeed taken back to prison. Since then he has spent all but one month in jail. For the past 11 months, Sadeghi has been held in solitary confinement without access to a lawyer.

His father, Hossein Sadeghi, works for the Iranian army and lives in a house given to his family by the state. Having initially blamed his son for what happened to their family, now that he has witnessed the injustices he has suffered Hossein is ready to risk his job and even arrest to speak out for the first time.

“I regret what I said about him in the past,” he told the Guardian on the phone from Tehran. “I haven’t been able to see him and tell him myself … but I’m sorry.”

According to Sadeghi senior, his son went on hunger strike recently in support of a fellow inmate, Hossein Ronaghi-Maleki, a 25-year-old blogger who is serving a 15-year prison term.

“Arash is deprived of his very basic rights,” his father said. “He had no access to a lawyer in the past 11 months and was only allowed to meet his grandfather twice.” Sadeghi’s grandfather has previously been arrested for speaking out about him.

“His health deteriorated to a point that they transferred him to hospital,” he said. “One of the nurses managed to call us and tell us that his health was seriously bad … She said one of his ears was injured due to severe beatings.”

Sadeghi is accused of “gathering and colluding with intent to harm national security”, a vague charge used against many student activists.

Sadeghi’s father said: “Every month, the intelligence services summon me and threaten me that they would kick me out of my house and fire me should I choose to speak out … But I have no fear any more … They want to silence us.”

Drewery Dyke, of Amnesty International, said the journey of Arash Sadeghi’s father was one that was happening more and more often, especially in the second term of office of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

According to Dyke, the death in custody of the Iranian blogger Sattar Beheshti last month, which sparked international outrage, has inspired many, like Hossein Sadeghi, to speak out.

“What it shows us, as in the case of the family of blogger Sattar Beheshti, is that more and more Iranians have reached the conclusion that no one in the country is willing or able to help them, and so, now, despite all the pressures that the authorities can bring to bear, family members themselves are speaking out,” he said. “And these are not families of notable activists but normal families who simply demand want justice and for their dignity to be acknowledged.”

He added: “The authorities may have repressed much of the the human rights community in Iran, but the brave acts of speaking out – exemplified by Arash Sadeghi’s father and a handful of others – tells us that the authorities have not repressed the essential thirst for justice and human dignity sought be Iranians. That, they cannot quash.”

Dyke said the criminal justice system of Iran was in “something of a shambles” and the plight of Arash Sadeghi was typical. “He is held on a temporary order, with cases based on vaguely worded criminal charges before him. There are scores of such cases adrift in the criminal justice system in Iran today. Why? The basic humanity that underpins effective case management appears absent, so that it takes a case of a death in custody, like Sattar Beheshti, to jolt awake judicial officials.”

In his interview with Roozonline, Sadeghi revealed a glimpse of his torment in jail. “I endured a lot of pressure during my incarceration,” he said “I was beaten so severely that my shoulder was twice dislocated and my teeth were broken,” he said, according to the translation of the interview published on persian2english.com.

“The beatings, slapping around and kicking were bearable, what was most difficult to endure was when they removed the hair on my body. The worst thing they did to me was to remove the hair on my face, arms and chest. For this reason, my face was scarred. They used to blindfold us and punch and kick us severely in the face. As a result of these beatings my eye was bleeding once and I couldn’t see for a long time.”

Last week Sadeghi sent out a letter from inside Evin to Tehran’s prosecutor, Abbas Jafari Dowlatabad, telling him he would not apologise.

“You had said that I should write an apology … I haven’t done anything wrong to apologise and request clemency,” he wrote. “It’s you and your friends and colleagues who should apologise to the people of Iran for the physical elimination of some of your opposition in the past 33 years.”

Source: Guardian

Worker rights activist imprisoned at Evin taken to hospital to undergo surgery

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Reza Shahabi, a member of the executive committee of the Tehran Bus Drivers Union, who is serving a six-year prison sentence at Evin Prison, was taken to the hospital following severe pain in his head and inability to move the fingers on his left hand. Following a battery of tests, Shahabi was returned to Evin. A short time ago, he underwent six-hour surgery at the same hospital, but legal authorities regrettably did not allow him to recover outside of prison.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hints he is ready to continue supplying Hamas rockets

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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, offered a qualified welcome to the truce between Israel and Hamas but said he was ready to continue supplying rockets to Palestinian fighters in Gaza.

Iranian Fajr-5 missiles have been credited with adding a new dimension to the Hamas arsenal, their 50-mile range allowing them to threaten Tel Aviv and Jerusalem during intense exchanges with Israel.

“These are fireworks,” he said during a news conference in the Pakistani capital Islamabad. “These are good things but war is a bad thing.

“We should try to make sure there is no war. But defence is the right of every nation.”

A day earlier, Ali Larijani, speaker of the Iranian parliament, said Tehran was supplying military aid to Hamas, the Islamist group running Gaza, confirming long-standing Israeli and Western accusations.

At the same time, Khaled Meshaal, the head of Hamas, thanked Iran for its support during the conflict.

Mr Ahmadinejad was in Islamabad on Thursday to attend the D8 summit of mostly Muslim, developing nations. He used his visit to welcome Wednesday’s ceasefire.

“I agree that the truce is a good thing, but we will have to see the basis of this truce,” he said during an interview with a local TV station. But he also said that nations should unite to stand against Israel.

“Zionism is a serious threat for the world. They have a hand behind all subversive activities and terrorism, and Palestinians are being made victims of Zionist plans,” he said.

Source: Telegraph

IRGC:US forces are afraid of the IRGC mines floating in parts of the region

Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi, Commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN), underlined Iran’s powerful presence in the waters of the Persian Gulf as the main deterrent to potential enemy aggression. He said that the US forces are afraid of the IRGC mines floating in parts of the region.

After showing Iran’s power during the Iran-Iraq War, “Our mines have made such an impact on the Americans that they are still living in fear of them.” Fadavi added, “Today, with the powerful and mighty Iranian presence, the US is no more posing for aggression (in the region) and is now feeling rather paralyzed and helpless.” Fadavi called dominance over the Persian Gulf and destabilizing it a US tool for controlling the world. He noted that Washington aims to continue its presence in the region and by doing so threatens the energy security of the oil-dependent countries.

Fars News Agency added a short summary to its report, underlying that “Asymmetric warfare is especially appropriate for the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, which are too narrow for the huge US warships to maneuver. That means mines, anti-ship missiles and swarm attacks by small heavily armed boats. Fars News Agency also hailed Iran’s mine capability, “Iran is believed to have as many as 3,000 sea mines. Some estimates go as high as 5,000… It’s the fourth largest sea mine arsenal in the world after the United States, Russia and China (more details regarding the types of mines).

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iran supplied Hamas with Fajr-5 missile technology

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The commander of Iran‘s elite Revolutionary Guards has publicly admitted that his forces supplied the Islamic militant group Hamas with the knowhow to develop Fajr-5 missiles capable of reaching Tel Aviv.

“We haven’t sent any weapons to Gaza because it is under blockade,” Mohammad Ali Jafari was quoted as saying by Iran’s Young Journalists Club news agency on Wednesday. “But we are honoured to announce that we gave them the technology of how to make Fajr-5 missiles and now they have their hands on plenty of them.”

Jafar’s remarks are a rare admission by such a high profile regime official that Tehran has supported Hamas militarily.

On Saturday, Hamas claimed to have fired a Fajr-5 missile at Tel Aviv, Israel‘s second most populous city, but Israel said the rocket was shot down by an anti-missile battery. Iranian officials initially distanced themselves from accusations they were supplying Hamas but now appear to be boasting about their role in enabling Palestinians to build their own Fajr-5 missiles, which have a range of up to 46.6 miles (75km).

Alaeddin Boroujerdi, an influential MP who heads the parliamentary committee on national security and foreign policy, had said at the weekend that the accusations were unfounded.

But the Speaker of the Iranian parliament, Ali Larijani, echoed Jafari’s comments on Wednesday in saying that Tehran’s support for Palestinians had military dimensions.

“We are honoured that our help has material and military aspects, and these Arab countries that sit and hold meetings should know that the nation of Palestine does not need words or meetings,” he said, according to quotes carried by the semi-official Fars news agency.

“Our message is that if Arab countries want to help the nation of Palestine they should give military assistance.”

It was not clear from Larijani’s comment whether Iran had actually smuggled Fajr-5 missiles into the Gaza Strip or if he merely went as far as the commander’s remarks.

Meanwhile, Fars, which is affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards, published an article boasting about the capabilities of Fajr-5, which it said “changed the scene of the war between Israel and Palestinians”.

“The world class Fajr-5 is a solid fuel, non-fixed wing, 333mm rocket designed and optimised for artillery missions to hit enemy’s command and control, logistic, radar, communication, economic and political centres,” Fars said. “It is a rocket with 75km range, a payload of 178kg and speed of 1,009 metres per second.”

Earlier this year, the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final word on all state matters, said Iran would help any group that fights against the “cancer” of Israel.

“We have intervened in anti-Israel matters, and it brought victory in the 33-day war by Hezbollah against Israel in 2006, and in the 22-day war [between Hamas and Israel in the Gaza Strip],” he said in February.

“From now on, in any place, if any nation or any group confronts the Zionist regime, we will endorse and we will help. We have no fear expressing this,” he said at the time.

On Wednesday, Khamenei also called on the Arab world to help “the oppressed people of Gaza” and intervene for an end to its blockade by Israel.

Source: Guardian

Kurdish student activist sentenced

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Iran Daily Brief: Kurdish student activist from Mahabad, Jamal Qader Nezad, was sentenced to five years in prison after having been charged with collaboration with opposition party.

“We will turn Gaza into the graveyard of soldiers and Tel Aviv into a fireball”

IRGC-affiliated Mashregh Newswebsite reported that the intelligence division of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s Al Quds Brigade (PIJ) (organization identified with and completely supported by Iran) managed to carry out a complicated operation to hack into the most confidential personal information systems in the Israeli army. As a result of this action, they obtained the personal information of senor military officers of the Zionist regime, including the names, telephone numbers and personal e-mails, and sent text messages to 5,000 officers and senior military personnel in the Israeli army in Hebrew that said, “We will turn Gaza into the graveyard of your soldiers and Tel Aviv into a fireball.” It should be noted that the report was taken from the PIJ website.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Dead blogger’s mother says he was killed in prison

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The mother of the Iranian blogger who died in the custody of cyber police a week after his arrest has told opposition media that she does not believe statements by the authorities regarding her son’s death and she is convinced he was killed in prison.

Sattar Beheshti, an Iranian blogger who criticized the government on his blog and in his Facebook entries, died while in custody less than a week after his arrest.

His mother told Saham News, an opposition website, that she saw blood on her son’s shroud during the burial and stressed that Sattar Beheshti was suffering from no illnesses and did not take any medication.

The coroner’s report has so far indicated that Sattar Beheshti died from natural causes and has hinted at heart complications. The coroner’s office also said that Beheshti was previously taking heart medication.

Beheshti’s mother said her family is under pressure by the security forces and has been threatened against giving media interviews.

Opposition media were the first to report on the death of Sattar Beheshti in prison, and 41 political prisoners who saw Beheshti before he taken for his final interrogation have written a letter saying they saw evidence of torture on his body.

Beheshti’s death generated an outcry in the media that led to a government probe into his death. The spokesman for the judiciary, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, has confirmed that bruises were seen on the body of the deceased but the coroner’s report claimed that the bruises were not cause of his death.

The report read at Parliament has indicated however that there is need for further judicial investigation.

Sattar Beheshti’s mother insists that her son was killed and has called on judiciary officials to pursue his case.

She also claimed that officials have offered her blood money for her son but that she has rejected it.

She told Saham News that the authorities have put her family under surveillance and they even had shown her an arrest warrant for her daughter.

The report indicates that in Robat Karim during Sattar Beheshti’s burial, when the victim’s sister was seen talking with Saham News, she was temporarily arrested and warned against speaking to the media.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Hossein Falah arrested

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Hossein Falah, former Secretary of the Non-Government Organizations in Qazvin, was arrested after having been summoned for interrogation at the Intelligence Ministry headquarters in the city. The organization was shut down several years ago by the regime.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Hospital treatments raise concerns about opposition leaders

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Iranian opposition media are expressing concern regarding the health of Mehdi Karroubi and MirHosein Mosuavi, the Iranian opposition leaders who have been held under house arrest by Islamic Republic authorities for more than 600 days.

Saham News reports that Mehdi Karroubi, one of reformist candidates in the last presidential election, was taken temporarily this week to a hospital linked to Tehran’s security forces.

The report indicates that he has lost weight and is suffering from nausea, dizziness and loss of appetite.

MirHosein Mousavi, the other opposition leader under house arrest, was also taken to hospital for a few hours today, Tuesday November 20, according to the Kaleme opposition website.

Two months ago, Mousavi was taken to hospital to undergo heart procedures.

The two opposition leaders were put under house arrest in February of 2010 together with their wives. Fatemeh Karroubi was later released but Zahra Rahanvard is still under house arrest with MirHosein Mousavi after nearly 650 days.

The Karroubi family has called on the authorities to allow Mehdi Karroubi, who is now being held alone, to be kept in his own home where he can be together with his wife.

Source: RadioZamaneh