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Detained aid workers moved to Evin Prison

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Five volunteers who were arrested at the independent relief camps set up in northwestern Iran to deliver aid to victims of last month’s deadly earthquake have been transferred to Evin Prison in Tehran.

An opposition website, the Society for the Fight against Education Discrimination, reported on Wednesday that Navid Khanjani, Homan Taheri, Sepehrdad Saheban, Esmail Salmanpour and Massoud Vafabakhsh were transferred from the Tabriz police detention centre to Evin Prison in Tehran.

Earlier, the authorities had announced that all the volunteers detained at the aid camps had been issued bail provisions, but the judge has apparently not accepted bail for some of the detainees.

Thirty-five people were arrested on August 20 at a camp set up by volunteers in Sarand village in Eastern Azerbaijan Province.

Two days later, all the women and three men were released on bail. The 21 volunteers who remained in custody issued a joint letter to the head of Iran’s judiciary to protest their arrest and to complain that security forces were misrepresenting their attempts to deliver aid in the disaster zone.

Iran’s Prosecutor confirmed the arrests on Monday, adding that the suspects are accused of sabotage.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Human rights activist summoned to Evin to serve five-and-a-half year sentence

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Human rights activist Mohammad Hassan Yousefi Fioryousefi was summoned to Evin to begin serving his five-and-a-half year sentence. He was charged with participation in an assembly to harm national security and membership in associations for human rights as well as assisting security prisoners to leave Iran. Other charges included unlawful collection of funds for families of political and security prisoners. Yousefi was also charged with harming the holy values of Islam in his personal blog.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Khamenei a ‘tyrannical ruler,’ ailing dissident tells Egypt’s Morsi

Imprisoned political activist Abolfazl Ghadyani has warned Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi of the country’s return to a totalitarian era.

According to opposition website Kaleme, Ghadyani, 67, expressed hope that the new president would follow the path of Nelson Mandela, who stepped down after serving one term as president of South Africa between 1994 and 1999.

In his letter to Morsi, who recently took part in the Non-aligned Movement’s 16th summit in Tehran, Ghadyani warned about a repeat of the mistakes made following the Iranian Revolution.

“I hope that you, the revolutionaries and the great Egyptian nation draw lessons from the Islamic Revolution in Iran and do not allow the hijacking of the Egyptian Revolution at the hands of the autocrats and the shattering of the hopes and aspirations of the freedom-seekers.”

During his visit to Tehran last week, Morsi embarrassed his hosts by denouncing the Syrian regime, an ally of Iran, by calling it “oppressive”.

Ghadyani, a senior member of the Mujahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organisation, a leading pro-reform group in Iran, said that it would have been even more preferable if Morsi had requested a meeting with the leaders of the opposition Green Movement who are currently under house arrest. “Even though such authorisation would certainly not have been granted, it would, at the very least, have brought about an opportunity for a resurfacing of the Iranian people’s suppressed demands.”

The ailing dissident said that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was a “tyrannical ruler” who had made a mockery of concepts such as democracy and justice.

“Alas, all the criticisms he directed towards the international system—including the veto power, injustices, presenting the truth as lies and lies as truth, enforcing the will of those in power on the people, etc—have been taking place in this country for years and under his leadership,” the letter continued.

After serving out his initial one-year jail term after the 2009 presidential elections, Ghadyani was sentenced to an additional three years in prison on charges of “propaganda against the regime, insulting the President,” and “insulting the Supreme Leader.”

In June 2012, Ghadyani released a statement from prison in which he scathingly compared Khamenei to Naser al-Din Shah, the 19th century Qajari tyrant who ruled Iran between 1848 and 1896.

“Ali Khamenei sees himself as the undisputed Sultan of Iran,” Ghadyani said, while holding the leader responsible for “all the blood that has been spilt” since the contested 2009 unrest.

In December 2011 he wrote from prison: “I, and those like me, did not sacrifice our lives, wealth and freedom for the victory of the revolution so that three decades later Mr Ali Khamenei could reign over the country like this.”

Prior to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Abolfazl Ghadyani was arrested by Savak—the Shah’s brutal secret police force—and spent four years in prison for opposing the western-backed dictator.

Nearly a month ago, Ghadyani was hospitalised after developing cardiac pain and other health complications as a result of his hunger strike.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Journalist begins jail term

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Prominent Iranian journalist Jila Bani-Yaghoub has begun her one-year jail term at Evin Prison.

The Kaleme opposition website reports that Ban-Yaghoub, a prominent Iranian journalist and women’s rights activist, returned to Evin Prison on Sunday September 2 to serve out a one-year sentence.

She was arrested in 2009 during the election protests against the controversial victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Ban-Yaghoub was arrested along with her husband, Bahman Ahmadi Amouyi, another journalist, who is currently in jail serving a five-year prison term.

In addition to her one-year jail term, Bani-Yaghoub has also been banned for 30 years from media activities for the charge of “propaganda against the Islamic Republic and insulting the president.”

The Islamic Republic government has arrested and jailed many journalists in reaction to the 2009 protests.

Reporters Without Borders has been consistently speaking out against the treatment of journalists in Iran, and in its latest statement, the press-rights group reports that with 26 journalists and 18 netizens in jail, Iran only trails China as the biggest prison for journalists.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Released political prisoner arrested again

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Political prisoner Hadi Amini, who was released after five years in Rajaï Shahr Prison, has been arrested again just five days after being released. He was arrested by agents of the Intelligence Ministry in the city of Mahabad. Hadi Amini was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of membership in the Kurdish PJAK party, tortured and as a result became disabled in one arm.  About a year after his arrest, he was exiled to Evin Prison from Mahabad Prison, and a year ago moved to Rajaï Shahr Prison. ”

Source: Iran Daily Brief

9/11 Lawsuit Reveals Iran’s Direct Involvement in 9/11 Plot

NEW YORK, May 19, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Attorneys representing families of 9/11 victims today are informing a federal court in Manhattan that they are filing comprehensive evidence that Iran played a key role in planning and facilitating the 9/11 attacks and called on the U.S. Government to declassify documents detailing what the U.S. intelligence community knew about Iran’s relationship to al Qaeda prior to

September 11, 2001.  “Today, nearly a decade after the attacks that took so many of our loved ones away, we believe the 9/11 families and the American people deserve to know the full truth about Iran’s complicity,” said Thomas E. Mellon, Jr. of Doylestown, Pennsylvania, law firm of Mellon Webster & Shelly, the lead attorney in Havlish, et al. v. bin Laden, et al., now pending in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

“We simply want to make sure that those who are responsible for assisting the September 11 terrorists in their attack on the United States are found accountable for the harm they caused,” said Fiona Havlishwhose husband, Donald, perished on the 101st floor of the North Tower.

Representing eight law firms from across the United States, the attorneys and their team of investigators have turned up convincing evidence that Imad Mughniyah was the main liaison between Iran’s leadership and al Qaeda and that Mughniyah played an active role in planning the 9/11 attacks.  Mughniyah, a Lebanese Shiite, was a top commander in Hezbollah, the terrorist organization created and supported byIran since the early 1980s.  Mughniyah was assassinated on February 14, 2008, in Damascus, Syria.

“Our experts, including three former 9/11 Commission staff members, have stated that the evidence is ‘clear and convincing’ that the Islamic Republic of Iran was involved in the 9/11 attacks,” said Timothy B. Fleming, the lead investigative attorney in the case, of the D.C. office of the firm Wiggins Childs Quinn & Pantazis.

“The 9/11 Commission called for further investigation by the U.S. Government into the al Qaeda-Iran-Hezbollah relationship, but until now there’s been no indication that any government agency has taken any action to pursue this matter,” said Mellon.  “Through interviews with former U.S. Government and intelligence officials, members of the 9/11 Commission staff, former Iranian intelligence officers, and a wide variety of non-governmental experts and fact witnesses, we have undertaken this ‘further investigation,'” Mellon added.

Before 9/11, the FBI considered Mughniyah to be the world’s most wanted terrorist.

The United States Government has accused Mughniyah of masterminding the April 1983 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, that killed 63 people; the October 1983 simultaneous attacks on the U.S. and French military barracks in Beirut that killed 241 U.S. Marines and 58 French soldiers; and the kidnapping and murder of numerous U.S. hostages in Lebanon, including the CIA’s Beirut station chief William Buckley and U.S. Marine Lt. Colonel Richard Higgins.

Mughniyah was also wanted by the FBI for his involvement in the 1985 hijacking of TWA flight 847 and the murder of U.S. Navy diver Robert Dean Stethem, and by INTERPOL for his role in the 1992 attack on the Israeli Embassy, and the July 1994 attack on the AMIA Jewish community center, both in Buenos Aires.

Today, the Havlish attorneys disclosed that they have taken sworn testimony, which will be filed under seal, from former Iranian intelligence operatives describing the direct participation of Imad Mughniyah and top government officials of Iran in the planning of, and preparation for, the 9/11 attacks.  These witnesses also describe the roles of Mughniyah and top Iranian officials in assisting al Qaeda leadership and operatives to escape from Afghanistan after the U.S.-led invasion in the wake of 9/11.  Iran then provided safe haven and support for these al Qaeda members inside Iran.

“The 9/11 Commission discovered, just days before publication of its report, important U.S. intelligence documents that detailed Iran’s involvement in aiding and abetting the 9/11 plot,” Mellon pointed out.

On page 240 of its final report, the 9/11 Commission stated that “a senior Hezbollah operative visitedSaudi Arabia to coordinate activities there,” and that this “senior Hezbollah operative” and his associate were on the same air flights as several of the future hijackers who were traveling to and from Iran betweenOctober 2000 and February 2001.

“We have compelling evidence that the ‘senior Hezbollah operative’ was Imad Mughniyah,” added Dennis G. Pantazis, of the Birmingham, Alabama law firm of Wiggins Childs Quinn & Pantazis.

“Imad Mughniyah was known to be an agent of Iran, running terrorist operations for Iran and Hezbollah.  Mughniyah’s participation in the hijackers’ preparations for the 9/11 attacks leaves no doubt that Iran was directly involved in, and had foreknowledge of, a planned terrorist attack on the U.S.,” Mellon said.  “Discoveries about Mughniyah’s role are very important because, as found by the 9/11 Commission, ‘after 9/11, Iran and Hezbollah wished to conceal any past evidence of cooperation with Sunni terrorists associated with al Qaeda,'” Fleming added.

The Clerk of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York has already entered a default against the Iranian government defendants, and the Havlish Plaintiffs now ask the Court, based on all the evidence, to enter judgment against Iran.

The case appears as In Re Terrorist Attacks on September 11, 2001, Civil Action No. 03 MDL 1570 (GBD):Havlish, et al. v. bin Laden, et al., Civil Action No. 03-CV-9848 (GBD).  Over the past nine years, the eight law firms of the Havlish consortium have invested thousands of hours of time to investigate Iran’s involvement in the 9/11 attacks.

“When Tim Fleming and I joined this coalition of attorneys representing the 9/11 families, our immediate and ultimate goal was to provide the families with a full accounting of what happened, how it happened, and who was responsible for that terrible day in September 2001,” said Pantazis.

“Developing evidence of Iran’s involvement with al Qaeda regarding the events of 9/11 is like putting together a large jigsaw puzzle where many of the pieces are missing and will never be found.  Still, the picture is clear that Iran’s and Hezbollah’s complicity cannot be seriously challenged,” said Mellon.  “Over the last nine years, after interviewing dozens of people, reviewing hundreds of documents, and consulting with many experts in the field, we have developed a strong evidentiary case of Iran’s involvement in the 9/11 attacks,” Mellon added.

“These families have waited nearly ten years to hear the truth.  Under the scrutiny of a federal Judge, hopefully this will be accomplished in the next few months,” Pantazis said.

Ellen Saracini, the widow of Victor Saracini, Captain of United Flight 175, which was the second aircraft to hit the World Trade Center, stated, “The September 11 attacks were an attack on the American way of life and on the American belief in a civil society where we respect others and resolve our differences in an orderly and peaceful way.  It is only appropriate that those who are attacking our way of life are found accountable in our American system.”

Source: Reuters

Syria and Iran ‘backing Kurdish terrorist group’, says Turkey

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Turkey has accused Syria and Iran of backing Kurdish terrorist attacks on military outposts in the south-east of the country that left 30 dead.

Kurdish-dominated provinces in Turkey have been swept by an upsurge in attacks by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in recent weeks.

Fighting has spiked since the group gained control of dozens of villages across northern Syria this summer, when the regime concentrated its forces on Aleppo.

Ten soldiers and twenty PKK fighters were reported killed yesterday in overnight clashes in the town of Beytussebap in the Sirnak province of Turkey. It was the largest of four separate PKK attacks near the Syrian border.

In a separate incident, a suspected suicide bomber was shot dead by the security forces near Sanliurfa city.

The PKK has been at war with Ankara for thirty years and the conflict has claimed 45,000 lives. But recent fighting has been the worst for more than a decade and Turkish leaders have pointed the finger directly at President Bashar al-Assad.

Iran to install new missile system to protect its nuclear sites

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Iran has claimed it is on the path to installing a sophisticated domestically-produced air defence system that will shield the country’s nuclear facilities.

Amid intensifying speculation over an imminent Israeli attack, a senior Revolutionary Guard commander announced that a system which would replace high-precision Russian missiles whose delivery was cancelled due to international sanctions was almost one-third complete and would be ready for deployment next March.

Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya air defence base, claimed the Iranian system, the Bavar (Belief) 373 would be an improvement on the Russian model, which Iran wanted to buy as protection against a potential US or Israeli bombardment.

“The new system has higher and more developed capabilities than the S300 for discovering, identifying and destroying the targets while tracking them,” Brig Gen Esmaili told a conference in Tehran held to mark the Islamic republic’s Air Defence Day.

He said its name had been coined by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had told its inventor that if he had belief, it would come true.

If Brig Gen Esmaili’s boasts of the Bavar 373’s capabilities are justified, the system would bolster Iran’s air defences significantly.

Mousavi supporter reports to serve four-year sentence

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Amin Chalaki, the operations ‎director of Mir Hossein Mousavi’‎s election headquarters in Saveh during the previous ‎presidential elections, reported to Evin prison to serve his four-year sentence. During the ‎post-election events, Chalaki, his wife and four-year old daughter were  arrested, and ‎released on bail 40 days later. According to reports, agents from the Ministry of Intelligence ‎even questioned his daughter about her father’‎s activities, despite her young age.‎

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Political prisoner begins hunger strike

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Mohammad Nazari, who has been imprisoned for ‎more than 20 years in Rajaï Shahr Prison in Karaj on charges of contact with the Kurdish ‎Democratic Party, began a hunger strike to protest his legal situation. Nazari was sentenced to ‎life imprisonment. As an act of protest against the judicial authorities’ lack of attention to ‎his request for release, he sewed his lips and began a hunger strike. At the time of his arrest he was ‎‎22 and, according to his family, his only activity in the party was informative.‎

Source: Iran Daily Brief