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Opposition leader kept from sister’s funeral

Iranian opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi was prevented from attending his sister’s funeral.

Saham News reports Karroubi, who’s been living under house arrest for close to 18 months, was unable to attend the ceremony held on Thursday.

Karroubi together with MirHosein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard were put under house arrest following the 2009 election protests, and they have been denied every sort of right and privilege during their detention.

Several senior Iranian clergy members, including Ayatollah Dastgheib, have spoken out against their incarceration. Ayatollah Dastgheib has said that without a proper indictment and fair trial, it is a violation of the constitution to hold these people.

Iranian authorities accuse Karroubi and Mousavi of sedition, which the two leaders dismiss, saying their protests against the 2009 elections were within the framework of the constitution.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Political activist begins serving four-month sentence

Political activist Asal Esmailzadeh was summoned by the court to begin serving the four month sentence hand down for distributing propaganda against the regime.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Reporter imprisoned

Journalist and human rights activist Nasour Naghipour was arrested to begin serving the seven year sentence imposed on him. He w as transferred to Evin prison.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iran can always destroy the US bases in Iraq, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia

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Bakhshayesh Ardestani, a member of the Majlis’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, referred to the Great Prophet 7 three-day missile drills and said, “Iran is always able to use its defensive power to destroy US bases… The message of the war games demonstrated Iran’s might and power to the US and the West… Iran can always use all its defensive might and power to destroy the US bases in Iraq, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.”

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Letters to Iran’s supreme leader: journalist sends protest mail to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Mohammad Nourizad’s letter sparks campaign calling on Khamenei to apologise over crackdown on Iranian protesters.

In the age of emails and tweets, writing old-fashioned letters has become the new way of expressing dissent in Iran. The veteran journalist Mohammad Nourizad wrote his first open letter to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in the aftermath of the disputed 2009 election. It went unanswered, as have Nourizad’s 21 other missives, but dozens more prominent Iranians have followed his example in a campaign to break the taboo on criticising the man who purports to be God’s representative on earth.

Nourizad, an influential columnist and film-maker, was originally an ally of Khamenei who wrote for the ultra-conservative state-run newspaper Keyhan, whose director is directly appointed by the supreme leader.

But that changed amid the bloody crackdown on opposition protesters after the election. In his first letter Nourizad called Khamenei “father” – but criticised him for his handling of the unrest and called on him to apologise to his people.

“As commander in chief of the armed forces, you didn’t treat people well after the election. Your agents opened fire, killed the people, beat them and destroyed and burnt their property. Your role in this can’t be ignored … Your apology can cool down the wrath of the people,” he wrote.

The letter – and those which followed – infuriated the authorities, and although Nourizad, now 60, was for a while protected by his prominence, in April 2010 he was arrested on charges of insulting the officials and propaganda against the regime.

In jail, he spent almost 70 days in solitary confinement and was subject to lengthy interrogations without the presence of his lawyer, during which he says he was physically abused. Nourizad staged a hunger strike in protest, but was sentenced to three and a half years. He was released after 170 days.

Once outside prison, Nourizad continued to voice his criticism in open letters and later asked other activists to join his campaign.

The letters have offered a form of samizdat criticism, copied and shared among regime insiders. The former general whose letter Nourizad recently published said he was dismissed from the Revolutionary Guards for duplicating and distributing the journalist’s letters.

Nourizad received death threats for his letter campaign. “I’m not afraid of being arrested, nor dying for what I am doing now,” he told the Guardian in a phone call from Tehran. “In fact, I’ve put my life in the palm of my hand. The authorities can’t do much with a person like me who is not even afraid of dying.”

Nourizad is not the only one resorting to letter-writing to air his grievances. Many imprisoned activists followed suit, describing their time in custody to their family members in letters smuggled out of prison. Nasrin Sotoudeh, a human rights lawyer who has been jailed for six years, recently wrote an emotional letter to his young son on a piece of toilet paper.

Source: Guardian

Teachers summoned for questioning

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Iran Daily Brief: The nine members of Teachers Union in Kurdistan Province who were released on bail last year were summoned for further questioning in court.

 

U.S. expands sanctions on Iran, blacklists firms and individuals

The United States ratcheted up its sanctions against Iran on Thursday, blacklisting a number of firms and individuals for contributing to what it says is an effort to acquire nuclear weapons.

The actions impose additional sanctions on Iran’s “nuclear and ballistic missile proliferation networks” and identifies more than 50 Iranian “front companies and banks,” the Treasury Department said.

“These actions are part of the United States government’s dual-track approach of increasing pressure to convince Iran to engage seriously and address the international community’s concerns about its nuclear program.”

David Cohen, the Treasury’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said the moves take “direct aim at disrupting Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs as well as its deceptive efforts to use front companies to sell and move its oil.”

“We will continue to ratchet up the pressure,” he said.

The United States and European Union have implemented an oil embargo against Iran, leading to a substantial decline in exports of crude from which the Islamic republic draws two-thirds of its foreign exchange earnings.

Iran been subject to severe international economic sanctions over its controversial nuclear program, which Western powers believe masks an atomic weapons drive despite repeated denials by Tehran.

In Thursday’s actions, the U.S. Treasury and State departments targeted 11 entities and four people, alleging that many of them are part of a network of proliferators headed by Iran’s Ministry of Defense for Armed Forces Logistics and its subsidiary, Aerospace Industries Organization.

A number of sanctions were added against Iran’s national maritime carrier, Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Both the IRISL and the IRGC have been the target of a numerous sanctions actions by the United States and its partners, the department noted.

Source: Alarabiya

Ministry of Intelligence not allowing meeting between arrested journalist and wife

The Ministry of Intelligence is preventing a couple, in which both partners are jailed, from meeting. Journalist Massoud Bastani was arrested in the post-election events and sentenced to six years in prison for propaganda against the regime, participating in a demonstration and disturbing the public order. Several months after beginning to serve his sentence, Bastani was illegally exiled from Evin Prison to Rajai-Shahr prison. His wife, journalist Mahsa Amrabadi, is serving a one-year sentence for distributing propaganda against the regime by giving interviews to the media and began serving her sentence last month.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Baha’i student arrested

Miad Afshar, a student at Baha‘i University and brother of Misagh Afshar, a member of the Committee against Discrimination in Higher Education, was arrested at his home in Tehran. According to eye witnesses, a very large security force arrived at his home, conducted searches and confiscated personal possessions. There is no information about his whereabouts.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Ms. Mansoureh Behkish sentenced to imprisonment on appeal

On July 5, 2012, Ms. Mansoureh Behkish, a supporter of the “Mothers of Park Laleh” (the “Mourning Mothers” of Iran)[1], also known for fighting against the death penalty, received the text of the Appeals Court’s ruling regarding her appeal against the first instance sentence.

Ms. Behkish had been sentenced on December 25, 2011 to four years and six months of imprisonment by Branch 15 of the Islamic Revolution Court: four years on charges of “assembly and collusion against national security through the establishment of the Mourning Mothers” and six months on charges of “spreading propaganda against the system”.

The appeals court has now combined the two parts of her sentence. As a result, her 6-month imprisonment term has been included in the four-year imprisonment sentence. The appeals court has also suspended three years and six months of the sentence for a period of 5 years, which means she will have to serve those 3.5 years in addition to any new sentence, if convicted on similar charges over the next 5 years.

Consequently, Ms. Behkish is now facing a six-month custodial imprisonment sentence and is at risk of being arrested any time.

The Observatory recalls that on June 12, 2011, Ms. Mansoureh Behkish was arrested by a group of security agents in a street of Tehran. She was released on bail on July 9, 2011. Ms. Behkish has been subjected to interrogations and arbitrary detentions in the past as a result of her human rights activities. She had previously been arrested on August 29, 2008, December 5, 2009 and then on January 9, 2010 together with more than 30 women supporters of the “Mothers of Park Laleh”. On March 17, 2010, she was prevented from travelling to Italy to visit her children and her passport was confiscated. She was then banned from travelling abroad. Ms. Behkish lost six members of her family during the executions and prison massacres that took place in the 1980s and has consistently come under great pressure not to visit their graves or otherwise commemorate them.

The Observatory believes that the sentence against Ms. Ms. Mansoureh Behkish merely aims at intimidating her and impeding her from carrying out her human rights activities. More generally, it also aims at intimidating all human rights defenders in Iran.

The Observatory therefore urges the Iranian authorities to immediately and unconditionally put an end to the judicial harassment of and drop all the charges against Ms. Ms. Mansoureh Behkish and release all human rights defenders arbitrarily detained, and more generally to conform to the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international human rights instruments ratified by Iran.

Source: Fidh