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IRGC: Iran’s military power a major deterrent against enemy aggression

Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari stressed Iran’s high level of military preparedness and said that ” trans-regional enemies would have definitely threatened and made a bold move (against Iran) if they had witnessed even the slightest weakness. But our might and security is at a level that the enemy does not even dare to pose a military threat (to Iran) in the Persian Gulf… We have made progress along with the growth and progress of the enemy and (change in) nature of threats… This rivalry exists and, as we move ahead, the significance of military and defense advancement grows in our country.”

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Activist Sattar Beheshti dies under torture in Iran’s Evin Prison

Exactly a week after his arrest by Iran’s cyber police, labour activist Sattar Beheshti has died as a result of torture at the hands of his captors, according to opposition reports.

Kaleme, a site close to Green Movement leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, said on Tuesday that Beheshti had died under torture.

The Beheshti family were reportedly contacted by the authorities on Tuesday morning and told that they were to refer to Evin Prison to receive the 35 year-old’s body.

The website said it could not confirm Beheshti’s death because prison authorities had not yet handed over his body to the family.

“According to eyewitnesses who had spoken to family members held at Evin Prison, Beheshti had been severely beaten and tortured while under interrogation. Bruises and torture marks were noticeable on the political prisoner’s body, face and head,” Kaleme added.

Beheshti’s sister told Kaleme that her husband was contacted by the authorities and told to “prepare” Beheshti’s mother for the news.

“They told him to buy a grave, and to collect the body tomorrow [7 November]. That’s it! We know nothing else. We don’t know why they killed him, or what exactly happened [to him]. We don’t know what happened. My brother was well when he left the house. He left on his own two feet. Everyone saw that he was healthy. My brother didn’t even take headache pills.”

“They told [us] not to give interviews to anyone,” she went on to add.

“They said he had heart problems!”

Sattar Beheshti was arrested by Iran’s cyber police on national security charges on 30 October. After raiding his home and violently arresting the young activist, the security forces confiscated his personal belongings, including his computer and handwritten notes.

Beheshti was a worker in the city of Robat Karim, 25 kilometers southwest of the nation’s capital Tehran. He was his family’s only breadwinner and was reportedly active on the social networking siteFacebook.

Launched in January 2011, Iran’s cyber police has been an important element in the state’s relentless crackdown on online activism.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Family of imprisoned student being subjected to emotional torture by regime

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Majid Dari, suspended student, sent an open letter from his prison cell partially directed to the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights, claiming that his family was being subjected to harsh emotional torture by the regime. Majid was arrested three years ago and has not been allowed even one day of furlough. This past weekend, Majid was supposed to have received a furlough to attend his brother’s wedding, but despite promises by the court and payment of bail, at the last moment the Prosecutor General refused to sign the furlough form. Majid Deri, who is imprisoned in exile in Behbehan Prison, wrote in his letter, “Mr. Ahmed Shaheed, I am a living example of violation of human rights, and anyone who claims that we are treated according to the rules is lying. Come and see Behbehan Prison, which has become my place of exile. My family is being severely harassed and emotionally tortured.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

IMPRISONED WOMEN JOURNALISTS AND NETIZENS RISKING DEATH

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Reporters Without Borders is very worried about the state of health of eight women prisoners of conscience who began a hunger strike five days ago in protest against inhuman and degrading jail conditions. They include three journalists and netizens – Mahssa Amrabadi, Jila Bani Yaghoob and Shiva Nazar Ahari.

The women are the victims of reprisals by the authorities in response to a joint statement on 31 October by Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi and six human rights organizations including Reporters Without Borders, which voiced concern about the situation of women prisoners of conscience in Tehran’s Evin prison.

A few hours after the statement’s release, female guards raided the women’s wing of Evin prison and spent hours inspecting the detainees’ personal effects. After finding no forbidden items, the guards began to search the detainees in a degrading manner and to mistreat them.

It was in response to this humiliating treatment that the eight women – who also include Nazanin DihamiBahareh HedayatNasim SoltanbighiHakimeh Shokriand and Jila Karam Zadeh Makvandi – began their human strike.

Nasrin Sotoudeh, a jailed human rights lawyer who defended several imprisoned journalists, was meanwhile transferred to Section 209, Evin prison’s security wing, on 31 October, five days after the European Parliament announced it was awarding her this year’s Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought.

Sotoudeh, who has been on hunger strike since 17 October, was also forbidden to receive visits for three weeks.

“The Iranian authorities, especially the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, are responsible for the health and safety of all their detainees and we will hold them responsible for anything that happens to these women prisoners of conscience,” Reporters Without Borders said.

“These women are not just serving long jail terms but are now also being subjected to humiliating and degrading treatment in flagrant violation of national and international laws. The international community must not remain silent in the face of the Islamic Republic’s many atrocities in its prisons.”

While supporting their fight for the right to information and freedom of expression, Reporters Without Borders urges these women prisoners to abandon their hunger strike for fear that they could die.

Source: Reporters Without Borders

Worker rights activist sentenced to 19 months in prison

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Pedram Nasrollahi, a member of the Coordinating Committee to Help Form Workers’ Organizations, has been sentenced to 19 months in prison by an Appeals Court. He was originally sentenced to three years in prison for his membership in the Coordinating Committee and contacts “with the opposition.” The Iranian Independent Workers’ Union issued a statement calling for Nasrollahi’s release, while declaring “that no worker should be detained or prosecuted on the basis of ridiculous accusations of participating in protests, strikes, gatherings, forming organizations and working to secure his or her human rights.”

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iran’s cyber police brutally arrest worker, netizen Sattar Beheshti

An Iranian labour activist and netizen has been arrested by Iran’s cyber police.

According to Iranian opposition reports, Sattar Beheshti was arrested by the cyber police on national security charges on 30 October.

Beheshti, 35, is a worker from the city of Robat Karim, 25 kilometers southwest of the nation’s capital Tehran. He is his family’s only breadwinner,

He was reportedly active on the social networking site Facebook.

After raiding his home and violently arresting Beheshti, the security forces confiscated his personal belongings, including his computer and handwritten notes.

Opposition site Kaleme reports that Beheshti has been physically tortured at the hands of his captors.

“During the time [since his arrest], I’ve been to every [government] office, but they don’t have any answers [about my son]. Despite my illness, I have to travel all the way to Tehran in order to obtain information about him and to confirm that he’s well, but to no avail,” Beheshti’s ailing mother told the Saham news website.

Launched in January 2011, Iran’s cyber police has been an important element in the state’s relentless crackdown on online activism.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Political prisoners decry treatment of women at Evin

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Twenty-six political prisoners at Iran’s Rejaishahr Prison have issued a statement that condemns the recent attack at Evin Prison’s women’s ward and calls for an end to the mistreatment of prisoners.

The Kaleme opposition website reports that the statement speaks out against the “inhumane and illegal treatment” of prisoners and expresses grave concern for the health of the female prisoners who have begun a hunger strike after they were forcefully subjected to unprecedented inspections and body searches last week.

The statement calls on the public to join their protest against such treatment and calls on government officials to prevent such events from happening again.

Last Tuesday, the prison guard personnel protection unit raided the women’s political prisoners ward and searched and inspected their cells, reportedly subjecting them to insults and harassment.

Following the episode, 9 prisoners in the women’s section began a hunger strike to protest such mistreatments, demanding an official apology and assurances that such actions will not be repeated.

Source: Radiozamaneh

We can penetrate Iron Dome; Israeli attack against Iran will lead to its annihilation

Deputy Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces for Cultural Affairs and Defense Publicity, Brigadier General Massoud Jazayeri, said that “There is no Iron Dome (Israel’s short-medium range missile defense system) in the world that we cannot penetrate. What is said about this dome is mostly psychological warfare and propaganda.” Jazayeri downplayed Israeli threats to launch an attack against Iran as psychological warfare, and said that the Tel Aviv regime lacks the military capability to attack Iran. He continued to say that Israel had serious vulnerabilities, adding that  any miscalculations by the Tel Aviv regime in the event of an attack on Iran could lead to the annihilation of that regime.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

UN Says Iran Not Cooperating In Nuclear Probe

The head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog has said Iran is refusing to provide details of its nuclear activities.

Yukio Amano, director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), issued his warning at the UN General Assembly on November 5.

He said talks with Iran have intensified this year after an IAEA report in November 2011 said it had “credible information that Iran had carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device.”

But Amano said efforts to persuade Iran to give more information on its nuclear program had produced “no concrete results.”

Tehran has said its nuclear development program is for civilian purposes.

Western governments, who have placed financial sanctions on Tehran, accuse it of pursuing a nuclear-weapons program.

Fresh reports from Israel suggest that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak were rebuffed by Israel’s military in 2010 when they ordered it to prepare for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Observers are said to be following closely the amount of 20-percent-enriched uranium that Iran is accumulating, since such material lends itself to the 90-percent level required for a nuclear bomb.

Barak claimed last week in an interview with Britain’s “The Daily Telegraph” that Iran had used one-third of its enriched uranium to make fuel rods for a medical research reactor — possibly delaying progress toward a nuclear “red line” that Israel insists Iran must not cross.

But he insisted that Israel still believed Iranian authorities were seeking nuclear weapons and must be prevented from developing them.

The United States has warned that it is “unacceptable” for Iran to become a nuclear-armed state.

The UN Security Council has passed four rounds of sanctions in an effort to dissuade Iran from sensitive nuclear and missile work.

Source: RFERL

Khomeini regime committed gross human rights abuses, finds tribunal

Iran tribunal in The Hague urges UN to investigate ‘systematic and widespread’ murder of political prisoners in 1980s.

An independent inquiry has called on the United Nations to investigate the “systematic and widespread” murder of political opponents by Ayatollah Khomeini’s regime in Iran during the 1980s.

In its judgment at the end of a three-day session in The Hague, the Iran tribunal found that the Islamic regime had committed “gross human rights abuses” including torture, sexual violence, extra-judicial executions and unjust imprisonment.

The ruling is the culmination of a five-year co-operation between international human rights lawyers, exiled Iranians and relatives of the victims. As many as 20,000 people, mainly youths, are believed to have been killed in the state’s prisons during that decade.

The first stage of hearings took place in London this summer at Amnesty International’s premises. About 75 witnesses, many surviving detainees, gave evidence – some in person, others via videolink.

The final stage was held in the Peace Palace, home to the UN’s international court of justice in The Hague. Proceedings were broadcast live online. The Iranian government was invited to participate but declined to reply or attend.

The tribunal was based on the model developed by a private international war crimes tribunal established in 1966 by Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sartre to investigate the US war record in Vietnam.

In his closing speech, the British international lawyer Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, the tribunal’s prosecutor, said the graves of the executed stretched “as far as the eye can see; the gravedigger of Shiraz reported the delivery of 60 bodies on a single occasion, of victims at most 20 years old.

“Men were arrested at 10 in the morning and were dead by 11; entire families were eliminated and whole wards purged; rows of prisoners were shot by firing squad, still breathing until they were finished off by coup de grâce.”

One of the most chilling accounts was given by a man who admitted that as a child he was forced to shoot any survivors in the head. Nice added: “Truckloads of bodies were tipped into mass graves … In no case was an execution ordered in accordance with due process.

“There has been not one witness who was not tortured in prison, both physically and mentally. Prisoners were hanged from the ceiling by their arms, flogged on the soles of their feet, beaten, deprived of sleep, kept in solitary confinement, subjected to mock executions and forced to watch other prisoners being tortured – or were tortured in the presence of their children.

“Shokufeh Sakhi told the tribunal how she was subjected to sensory deprivation in a dark box (the ‘coffin’) for hours on end, month after month. The general effect was to turn prisoners into zombies by destroying their senses of self and dignity.

“Another witness told the tribunal of the psychological rape that turned him into a puppet, who would shoot his fellow prisoners as member of a firing squad of tavabeen (repenters).”

Prisoners’ families were forced to pay for the bullets used to shoot their loved ones and assaulted when they tried to hold mourning services, the tribunal heard. Gravestones were smashed; mothers were refused the right to recover their children’s bodies.

In its judgment, the Iran tribunal found that the Islamic Republic of Iran bears absolute responsibility for gross violations of human rights against its citizens and “crimes against humanity under customary international law as applicable to Iran in the 1980s”.

Among its recommendations, the tribunal called on the human rights council of the United Nations to establish a commission of inquiry to investigate “these atrocities”.

The tribunal was composed of six judges including the UK barrister Michael Mansfield QC, John Dugard, a South African professor of international law, and Professor Patricia Sellers, a former UN adviser on human rights.

Source: Guardian