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Iran confirms it has forces in Syria and will take military action if pushed

Army commander gives clear sign of Tehran’s continuing support for Assad’s regime but denies troops signify military presence.

Iran has confirmed for the first time that forces from its revolutionary guards corps (IRGC) are in Syria helping Bashar al-Assad’s government crush rebels, and warned that it would get involved militarily if its Arab ally came under attack.

In a clear public signal of Tehran’s continuing support for Assad, the commander of the Islamic republic’s elite military formation said that a number of members of the IRGC’s Qods force were in Syria, though General Mohammad Ali Jafari gave no further details and claimed this did not constitute “a military presence”.

It was a surprisingly candid response to persistent claims by western countries, the Syrian opposition and Israel that Iran is actively helping the regime in the 18th month of a bloody war. Lakhdar Brahimi, the veteran Algerian diplomat who replaced Kofi Annan as UN envoy to Syria earlier this month, met Assad in Damascus on Saturday but warned afterwards that any progress would be slow and halting given the yawning gap between government and opposition. “The crisis is dangerous and getting worse, and it is a threat to the Syrian people, the region and the world,” said Brahimi.

Reports from Syriaon Sunday described government forces fighting rebels amid shelling and sniper fire in Damascus and Aleppo, as well as in Homs and Deir ez-Zor. The Local Coordination Committees, an activist network, reported 103 dead. Opposition activists reported 115 people killed on Saturday. According to the UN around 20,000 people have been killed. Opposition sources say the figure is closer to 30,000.

Jafari’s admission underlines the way in which the Syrian uprising has become enmeshed in regional and international rivalries. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are arming Syrian rebel groups, while the US, Britain and France have called for Assad to go but are offering only limited and non-lethal backing to the armed opposition. Russia and China have repeatedly blocked action against Syria at the UN.

The Qods force includes elements of special forces, intelligence gathering and aid, and answers to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. It has been accused of planning attacks inside Iraq since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. Jafari said that the IRGC was providing “intellectual and advisory help” to Syria.

British officials say that the IRGC has provided riot control equipment and technical advice on how to crush dissent, for example on how to flood areas with security forces. Iran is also providing support to improve the Syrian regime’s intelligence gathering capabilities and help to monitor protesters’ use of the internet and mobile phone network, including text messaging.

Iran is said to have been dismayed at the heavy-handed way its long-standing Arab ally responded when the unrest began in March 2011, contrasting it with the more sophisticated response to protests that followed its own disputed presidential election in 2009.

“If Syria came under military attack, Iran would also give military support but it … totally depends on the circumstances,” AFP reported Jafari as saying at a rare press conference in Tehran.

The general also said that the Strait of Hormuz, the channel at the mouth of the Gulf through which a third of the world’s traded oil passes, would be a legitimate target for Iran should it be attacked. “If war occurs in the region and the Islamic republic is involved, it is natural that the Strait of Hormuz as well as the energy [market] will face difficulties. The US has many vulnerabilities around Iran, and its bases are within the range of the guards’ missiles. We have other capabilities as well, particularly when it comes to the support of Muslims for the Islamic republic,” he said.

In Damascus, Brahimi also met Syrian opposition figureswho are still tolerated by the regime. “We told Mr Brahimi … of our support for his efforts to resolve the crisis by ending the violence and killings, providing medical care and releasing political prisoners,” said Hassan Abdel Azim, spokesman for the National Coordination Committee for Democratic Change. But the head of the Free Syrian Army’s military council in Aleppo, Colonel Abdel Jabar al-Oqaidi, predicted that the envoy’s mission would fail, like Annan’s, because he had nothing to offer those fighting for their freedom, al-Arabiya TV reported.

Syria’s state news agency Sana quoted Assad as telling Brahimi that the success of his mission hinged on “pressuring countries which finance and train the terrorists, and which traffic weapons to Syria, to stop these actions.”

In Istanbul, Tariq al-Hashimi, the fugitive Iraqi vice-president, said in interview that the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki was failing to stop ammunitions and armaments reaching Syrian government forces. “My country is unfortunately becoming an Iranian corridor to support the autocratic regime of Bashar al-Assad,” he said. “There is no doubt about that.”

Source: Guardian

Student activists sent to jail

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The Iranian judiciary has confirmed the prison sentences of Iranian student activists Kouhyar Goudarzi and Amir Garshasbi.

The Human Rights Reporters Committee website quotes Goudarzi’s lawyer, who said on Saturday that his client’s five-year prison sentence in exile in Zabol has been approved by the appellate court.

Mahmoud Alizadeh Tabatabyi stated that the final verdict was “unfair”, and despite his efforts to point out the irregularities in the proceedings, the Ministry of Intelligence had been extremely senstitive about this case.

Goudarzi, a former aeronautics student at Sharif University in Tehran and a member of the Human Rights Reporters Committee and the student Organizations Danesh Amoukhtegan, was arrested in December of 2009 while on his way to the funeral of dissident cleric Ayatollah Montazeri in Qom.

He was sentenced to one year in jail and released after he served his sentence.

He was arrested again, however, in August 2011 in Tehran, and within a few hours his mother, Parvin Mokhtareh, was arrested in Kerman.

While Mokhtareh was given a suspended sentence of 23 months in jail and was released on bail of 5.4 million toumans, Goudarzi was held in jail for eight months and finally released on bail of 100 million toumans.

Meanwhile, the Kaleme website reports that Amir Garshasbi, an electronics student at Shiraz Sanati University, was handed a three-year sentence and has been transferred to Evin Prison to serve it out.

He was charged with “assembly and collusion with the aim of disturbing national security.”

Garshasbi was also arrested in December of 2009 in the mass protests against the controversial presidential elections that were marred by allegations of vote rigging.

Reports also indicate that Mansour Naghipour, a member of Human Rights Activists Organization who was sentenced to seven years in jail, together with Abtin Jahanian and Ashkan Alahyari, who were given jail sentences of three years and one year respectively for participating in demonstrations, have been sent to Evin to serve out their sentences.

Source: Radiozamaneh

After 19 Years in Prison, Political Prisoner Sews Lips and Starts Hunger Strike

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An informed source told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that Mohammad Nazari, a Kurdish political prisoner at Rajaee Shahr Prison in Karaj, has sewn his lips shut and embarked on a hunger strike since August 28, 2012, to protest the judicial authorities’ disregard for his request for release.

“On Monday, August 27, Mohammad Nazari sent a letter to judicial authorities objecting to his conditions and stating that over the past several years, his family has pursued his case in the Revolutionary Courts in Mahabad and Orumiyeh and with the Supreme Leader’s Office, and each time they have been told that he would be released. But recently, after his family’s latest follow-up efforts with the Judiciary, authorities stated that he should have been executed when he was first convicted of ‘membership in the Kurdistan Democratic Party,’ and that he is only alive because of the Islamic Republic’s kindness and forgiveness. In his letter, Nazari refers to the prison deaths of two of his Kurdish cellmates, political prisoners Mohammad Mehdi Zalieh and Zaher Mostafaee, who faced slow deaths due to officials’ lack of attention to their illnesses after enduring about 20 years inside Orumiyeh and Rajaee Shahr prisons. Considering Mohammad Nazari’s more than 19 years inside Mahabad, Orumiyeh, and Rajaee Shahr Prisons, he stated to judicial authorities that he is no longer able to endure this slow death, asking them to either release or execute him,” the source told the Campaign.

Boukan security forces arrested then-23-year-old Mohammad Nazari, a resident of the town of Shahindej in Western Azerbaijan Province, on May 29, 1994, on charges of membership in the Kurdistan Democratic Party. After three months’ detention in the Boukan Intelligence Office Detention Center, he was transferred to Mahabad Prison, where he was put on trial by Branch One of Mahabad Revolutionary Court on charges of “membership in the Kurdistan Democratic Party.” Six months later his case was forwarded to Branch One of Orumiyeh Revolutionary Court under Judge Jalilzadeh, and the court sentenced him to death. Despite appealing the decision, his death sentence was upheld. In 1999, Mohammad Nazari received one degree of forgiveness, reducing his sentence to life in prison. The source told the Campaign that after serving about 13.5 years at the Orumiyeh Central Prison, he and several other political prisoners were transferred to Rajaee Shahr Prison in November 2009.

“Two of this political prisoner’s cellmates who were transferred from Orumiyeh Prison to Rajaee Shahr Prison with him, Zaher Mostafaee [who died after 17 years in prison in March 2010], and Mohammad Mehdi Zali [who died after 21 years in prison in June 2012], became sick and died in prison due to a lack of attention to their treatment by authorities,” claimed the source.

The source also told the Campaign that on Monday, September 3, the head of Rajaee Shahr Prison, Mr. Moradi, and his deputy, Mr. Khadem, visited Nazari in his cell and talked to him about the reasons for his hunger strike, stating that his sentence is final and that they have no authority for a review of his judicial case. He was also briefly transferred to the prison infirmary for an examination on orders from the head of the Rajaee Shahr Prison that same day, and was returned to his cell, according to the source.

Source: Iran Human Rights

Student activist arrested in Isfahan

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Rashid Esmaili was arrested by security forces in Isfahan. Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reports that Esmaili, an executive member of the student group, Tahkim-e Vahdat, was arrested on September 8th without an arrest warrant. Esmaili was first arrested in December of 2009 while he was undergoing cancer treatment. He was banned from graduate studies in human rights at Allameh University and, in recent months, was involved in journalistic activities with various websites. Esmaili will be held by the Revolutionary Guards Security branch until his interrogation is complete.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

No information about condition of imprisoned social activists

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Although two months have passed since the arrest of Makhsus Bokharaei and Mahmmoud Zakar, two social activists, there is still no accurate information about the condition of the two. The two were arrested on charges of helping families of political prisoners and death row prisoners. According to the confession of one family member, the two men were being held in solitary confinement in Evin Prison, where they were subjected to interrogation under harsh conditions in order to confess to the charges.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iran: Hezbollah will defend us “easily” against Israeli attack

An aide to Iran’s supreme leader said Israel’s military threats had “put Israeli citizens one step away from the cemetery” and that Lebanese militant group Hezbollah was ready to hit back.

Yahya Rahim-Safavi, military adviser to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the increasing threats from Israel to strike Iranian nuclear facilities were “foolish”, the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) reported on Friday.

“The boldness and foolishness of Israeli officials in threatening the Islamic Republic, have put Israeli citizens one step away from the cemetery,” he said.

“If, one day, the Israeli regime takes action against us, resistance groups, especially Hezbollah … will respond more easily,” said Safavi, a former commander in chief of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made increasing hints in recent weeks that Israel could strike Iran and has criticized U.S. President Barack Obama’s position that sanctions and diplomacy should be given more time.

The heightened rhetoric has stoked speculation that Israel may attack before U.S. elections in November.

Hezbollah has said any attack on Iran would be met by strikes against Israeli and U.S. targets in the region, even if American forces played no role in the attack.

“A decision has been taken to respond and the response will be very great,” Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said in a TV interview this month.

Shi’ite Muslim Hezbollah, founded with Iranian help during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, has grown from a militia into a powerful political and military force. It fought a 34-day war with Israel six years ago in which 1,200 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and 160 people in Israel, mostly soldiers, were killed.

Source: Reuters

Kurdish television reporter arrested by Iranian security forces in Maryuan

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Kurdish television reporter working for Iraqi Kurdish satellite networks arrested by Iranian security forces in Maryuan.

The reporter, Kihan Juhani, was arrested while preparing a filmed report on a road accident on the Maryuan road.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

U.S. accuses Iran of ‘demolishing’ facility at Parchin site

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A U.S. envoy accused Iran on Thursday of “systematically demolishing” a facility at the Parchin military site that United Nations nuclear inspectors want to visit as part of their investigation into suspected weapons research.

“Iran has been taking measures that appear consistent with an effort to remove evidence of its past activities at Parchin,” senior U.S. diplomat Robert Wood told the 35-nation governing board of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

He said it was “troubling that Iran is blatantly hampering the (IAEA’s) ability to carry out its mandate by systematically demolishing the facility that has been identified by the IAEA as meriting inspection at the Parchin site.”

The IAEA suspects Iran has conducted explosives tests in a steel chamber at Parchin, possibly a decade ago, and has repeatedly asked Iran to grant it access to the facility.

Iran says Parchin is a conventional military site and has dismissed allegations about it as “ridiculous.”

Citing satellite imagery, Western diplomats have for several months said they suspect Iran is cleaning the site of any evidence of illicit nuclear activity, by tearing down buildings and removing soil.

Wood called on Iran to grant the U.N. immediate access to Parchin. “If Iran has nothing to hide there, why did it begin altering the site as soon as the IAEA asked to visit?” he asked, according to a copy of his statement to the closed-door board session.

 South Africa proposal

In a related story, U.N. nuclear watchdog governors looked set on Thursday to rebuke Iran over its expanded uranium enrichment and failure to address suspicions of atom bomb research after a draft resolution was amended to reflect a last-minute South African proposal.

Pretoria earlier threw the IAEA meeting into confusion by putting forward an amendment which some Western diplomats said might have weakened the language towards Iran somewhat.

But a compromise was hammered out during a three-hour adjournment of the closed-door session, the diplomats said. “I think we will be ok,” one Western envoy told Reuters.

It was unclear whether the Vienna-based governors’ debate on Iran would be concluded in time for a vote to take place later on Thursday or whether it would happen on Friday instead.

Six world powers tabled a resolution text on Wednesday, aiming to raise pressure on Iran, a day after Israel ramped up threats to attack its arch-foe in frustration over the inability of diplomacy and sanctions to rein in the Islamic Republic and ally fears it is covertly seeking nuclear weapons capability.

The resolution censures Iran for defying international demands to suspend uranium enrichment – a conduit to producing fuel for nuclear power stations or bombs – and failing to clarify concerns that it may be after nuclear arms know-how.

Intended to signal big power unity and censure Iran for defying U.N. calls to curb its nuclear activity, the text was supposed to have been approved and voted on by the IAEA Board of Governors on Thursday morning.

But South Africa, like Iran a member of the Non-Aligned Movement of mainly developing nations (NAM), some of whom do not regard Iran as a risk, proposed an amendment later agreed by the United States, Russia, France, China, Britain and Germany.

The amendment concerned a section of the text demanding that Iran immediately implement a yet-to-be agreed framework accord with the IAEA on how the agency should conduct its investigation into suspected nuclear explosives research in the Islamic state.

The compromise changed the original text but not as far as the South African proposal, easing Western fears that it could lower the heat on Tehran to cooperate with IAEA sleuths. It was unclear how Egypt, also in NAM, would vote, diplomats said.

Source: Alarabiya

Iran ‘trying to evade sanctions on oil exports’ with night transfers near Malaysia

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Iran is trying evade US sanctions by secretly storing oil bound for Asia at a little-known port in Malaysia.

The night transfers near the port of Labuan reveal Tehran’s desperation to protect its oil revenues after the imposition of an embargo by the European Union, which previously bought almost a quarter of the country’s crude exports.

In the last month, two Iranian-owned tankers, the Lantana and Motion, have off-loaded three million barrels of oil near Labuan, an island port close to the coast of Borneo, according to Reuters Freight Fundamentals, which tracks global shipping.

Another tanker was expected in Labuan this month, but is currently moored off the coast of south-west Malaysia.

These vessels are operated by the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC), a state-owned enterprise blacklisted by Washington. The oil from the Lantana and Motion has been transferred to two storage vessels under cover of darkness without the knowledge of the Malaysian authorities, according to a Malaysian-based shipping source. “That operation took place literally in the dark of night. They didn’t even use a proper operator with experience to carry out the STS (ship-to-ship transfer),” said the source.

Both the storage vessels, which received the oil from the Iranian tankers, are owned and leased by a complex network of companies based in the Far East.

Egyptian minister denies oil negotiations with Iran

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Egypt’s Minister of Oil has rejected statements made yesterday by his Iranian counterpart that Iran and Egypt are entering oil negotiations.

Reuters reports that Egyptian Oil Minister Osama Kamal said: “All that has been published on negotiations being held for Egypt to buy Iranian oil is completely devoid of truth.”

Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Ghassemi announced yesterday that Iran is involved in oil negotiations with Egypt but he gave no further details.

Earlier this month, Kamal had told the state-owned Al-Ahram daily that Cairo had “no objection” to buying Iranian oil and processing it in its refineries.

U.S. and EU sanctions on the Iranian petroleum sector have led to a significant fall in Iran’s oil exports.

Iran has announced on several occasions that it is negotiating with potential new customers for its crude exports.

The International Energy Agency has announced that it observed a slight rise in Iran’s oil exports in August, despite the general fall in recent months.

The IEA reports that there has been a slight increase in oil exports to Turkey and Malaysia, adding that China, South Korea and India will also increase their oil import from Iran in September.

The report indicates, however, that in view of new EU and U.S. sanctions on Iran, the rising trend will only be temporary.

The Islamic Republic says the international sanctions will not have their intended effect of forcing Iran to halt its nuclear program, which it insists is entirely peaceful.

Source: Radiozamaneh