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‘Iran agents planned to hit US and British targets in Kenya’

Two Iranian agents arrested with explosives planned to attack US, British, Israeli or Saudi Arabian targets in Kenya, officials have claimed.

Officials told the Associated Press news agency that the plot appears to fit into a global pattern of attacks or attempted attacks by Iranian agents, mostly against Israeli interests.

Ahmad Abolfathi Mohammad and Sayed Mansour Mousavi were arrested last week with 33 pounds of RDX, a powerful explosive, in the coastal city of Mombasa. Several hotels on the coast are Israeli-owned.

One official said the Iranians are members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force, an elite and secretive unit.

Mohammad last week said the two were interrogated by Israeli agents, a claim that, if true, would suggest security officials believe the Iranians might have been targeting an Israeli-owned property. Iranian agents are suspected in several attacks or thwarted attacks around the globe over the last year, including in Azerbaijan, Thailand and India. Most of the plots had connections to Israeli targets.

Several resorts on Kenya’s coast are Israeli-owned. Militants in 2002 bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people. The militants also tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time. An al-Qaeda operative was linked to those attacks.

Iranian journalists demand justice for jailed peer

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A letter signed by 141 Iranian journalists expresses their support for their jailed colleague, Bahman Ahmadi Amouyi, and urges the authorities to assure that laws and prison regulations are observed in dealing with prisoners.

The journalists express concern that Ahmadi Amoyi has been charged and sentenced for writing critical articles on the economy.

The signatories go on to add that the exile of Ahmadi Amouyi to Rejai Shahr Prison and his transfer to solitary confinement are of grave concern to them.

Bahman Ahmadi Amouyi, a prominent Iranian journalist as well as economic analyst and writer, has been jailed since June of 2009, when he was arrested in the widespread government crackdown on protesters following the last presidential election.

He was recently transferred to Rejai Shahr Prison in Karaj, when he and a number of other political prisoners organized observances for the anniversary of the controversial elections and for the death of another inmate, Hoda Saber, who died while on hunger strike in prison.

Source: Radio Zamaneh

U.N. publishes report on Iran arms trade with Syria

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A U.N. Security Council committee has published a report on Iranian sanctions violations, including shipments of weapons to Syria in breach of a U.N. ban on weapons exports by the Islamic Republic.

The Security Council has imposed four rounds of sanctions on Iran for refusing to halt its nuclear enrichment program, which the United States, European and their allies suspect is at the heart of a weapons program. Iran rejects the allegation and refuses to halt what it says is a peaceful energy program.

The report appeared on the committee website on Thursday, diplomats told Reuters on Friday. The report, which Reuters reported on last month, said that Syria remains the top destination for Iranian arms shipments.

Iran, like Russia, is one of Syria’s few allies as it presses ahead with a 16-month-old assault on opposition forces determined to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Western diplomats said they were pleased the report was made public. Initially they said they feared Russia would block it as it did last year’s report on Iran, which has yet to be made public due to Russian objections.

Publication of the report, the diplomats said, will likely add to the pressure on Iran to comply with U.N. demands about curbing sensitive nuclear activities as major powers press ahead with negotiations with the Islamic Republic aimed at convincing it that defiance of international sanctions will be too costly.

The new report, submitted by a panel of sanctions-monitoring experts to the Security Council’s Iran sanctions committee, said the group investigated three large illegal shipments of Iranian weapons over the past year.

“Iran has continued to defy the international community through illegal arms shipments,” it stated.

“Two of these cases involved (Syria), as were the majority of cases inspected by the Panel during its previous mandate, underscoring that Syria continues to be the central party to illicit Iranian arms transfers,” the report said.

The third shipment involved rockets that Britain said last year were headed for Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.

The kinds of arms that Iran was attempting to send to Syria before the shipments were seized by Turkish authorities included assault rifles, machineguns, explosives, detonators, 60mm and 120mm mortal shells and other items, the panel said.

The most recent incident described in the report was an arms shipment discovered in a truck that Turkey seized on its border with Syria in February. Turkey announced last year that it was imposing an arms embargo on Syria.

BLACKLIST

The expert panel recommended adding three firms to a U.N. blacklist of companies that have aided Iran’s nuclear or missile programs, or have helped it evade U.N. sanctions.

The three firms recommended for blacklisting are airline Yas Air, SAD Import Export Company, and Chemical Industries and Development of Materials group. The report said Yas Air has been involved in illicit arms shipments to Syria.

It was not clear when the Iran sanctions committee would make a decision on whether or not to add the three Iranian companies to the list of entities facing an international asset freeze and banishment from doing business worldwide.

Earlier this year the U.S. Treasury Department imposed U.S. sanctions on Yas Air, which is an Iranian cargo airline, along with three Iranian military officials and a Nigerian shipping agent for supporting illegal arms shipments to the Middle East and Africa.

The 67-page report also discusses Iran’s attempts to circumvent sanctions on its nuclear program but notes that the four rounds of punitive measures the 15-nation council imposed on Iran between 2006 and 2010 are having an impact.

“Sanctions are slowing Iran’s procurement of some critical items required for its prohibited nuclear program,” it said. “At the same time prohibited activities continue, including uranium enrichment.”

A similar U.N. report on North Korean sanctions violations was also made public on Friday.

Source: Reuters

Fariborz Raisdana Facing Health Problems in Prison

Prominent economic analyst Fariborz Raisdana, who has been in prison for over a month, is facing a deterioration of his health condition. His wife, Azadeh Forghani, told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that poor prison treatment and conditions threaten his physical state.

“Due to his age and his different illnesses, the prison environment is deteriorating his health and I am very concerned for him. He has diabetes, high blood pressure, digestive track and prostate problems. He must take his medicine regularly and follow a strict diet. Prison nutrition and hygiene conditions are not suitable at all. Even the prison store does not offer fruits and vegetables for prisoners to buy themselves. Away from his family and his only child who is 4, Fariborz has a very hard time,” Azadeh Forghani told the Campaign.

On May 21, 2012, security forces arrested Fariborz Raisdana, economic analyst, former university professor and member of the Iranian Writers’ Association, and transferred him to Evin Prison’s General Ward 350 to start serving his one-year prison term.

“When I visited with him on Monday, June 25, I realized he has not been given some of his pills, nor his glasses. But he had received his books and clothes. How can he read without his glasses?” said Forghani.

Raisdana was first arrested on December 19, 2010 at his home after he gave an interview to BBC Persian television about President Ahmadinejad’s “Targeted Subsidies Plan,” calling it “a neo-liberal policy.” He was released a month later, but at his trial on May 28, 2011, Judge Moghisseh of Branch 28 of Tehran’s Revolutionary Court sentenced Raisdana to one year in prison on charges of “propagating against the regime through membership in the Iranian Writers’ Association, signing certain political statements, and giving foreign media interviews that were critical of the Islamic Republic government’s performance.”

Fariborz Raisdana, a prominent economic analyst, had been banned from his permanent university teaching job due to his critical lectures and writings, and was only teaching as a visiting professor in universities. Prior to his May 21 arrest, security forces had threatened Raisdana to keep silent.

Raisdana’s wife told the Campaign that the Iranian Judiciary has not returned the bail posted for his 2010 release yet, and that no reasons have been given for the refusal.

“When Fariboz sees a man like Abdolfattah Soltani, his cellmate, who has been sentenced to 18 years in prison, or Saeed Madani, or the young people who are in prison for ambiguous reasons, his mental state is affected; all this could lead to a prisoner’s depression,” added Azadeh Forghani. “Thank God Fariborz knows how to keep up his spirits. Now he teaches a class in prison yard, analyzing Iran’s economy, and it no longer matters to him whether they would shut down his class or not!  He is already in prison.”

Source: Iran Human Rights

Minority rights under attack

Another Baha’i arrested – Taher Askandrian, a member of the Baha’i community who lives in Semnan, was arrested by internal security forces in his home. The forces conducted a search of Taher’s home and confiscated religious books. No information about his whereabouts or condition has been made available. Taher had served a year and a half in Semnan Prison.

New wave of clashes between security forces and members of the Gonabad Dervish community – Three members of the sect were arrested in the cities of Kavara and Saghad. Security forces and plainclothes police broke into the home of Amin Abulahasani, a Dervish member in Saghad, and took him to unknown location, without presenting any valid warrant. Amin is the son-in-law of Ali Shafiai, who was arrested the previous day. In addition, Manocher Zara from Kavara was also arrested and taken to an unknown location.

Prisoner from Dervish sect punished for praying in keeping with Dervish tradition – A ban on visits has been imposed for over a week on Kasra Nouri, a member of the Gonabadi Dervish order, imprisoned in Adelabad Prison in Shiraz. He has been in detention in Shiraz for three months, and last week was transferred to the criminal wing by prison clergy as a punitive measure, after praying in the Dervish style.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Saeed Madani returned to Wing 209 in Evin Prison

Just two days after being transferred to the general wing, Madini was returned to Wing 209 after having stayed there for 5 months. No explanation was given for Madini’s return to the infamous Wing 209.

Source:  Iran Daily Brief

Attorney imprisoned in Evin continues to refuse to leave for hospital in handcuffs

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Abdulfatah Soltani’s anemia is worsening and prison authorities are insisting that he be transported to the hospital in handcuffs, something he is adamantly refusing. According to his daughter, security forces are applying heavy pressure on him and his family to publicly refute human rights activists or Mrs. Shirin Abadi. Soltanti was sentenced to 18 years in prison, exile and a 20-year ban on practicing law due to his activities on behalf of human rights and the rights of political prisoners.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Political prisoner returned to prison against doctors’ advice

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Political prisoner, Seed Mustafa Tajazada, was taken to the hospital from his solitary confinement cell in Evin Prison with a hemorrhage in his eye.  Doctors injected medication into his eye to stop the hemorrhaging and, against their strict recommendation that he remain in hospital for continued treatment, he was returned to solitary confinement in prison.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Political prisoner to be exiled

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Reza Joshan, the political prisoner arrested in the post-election events and sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison and three years exile to Damaan, was released from Rajai-Shahr Prison in Karaj several days ago, to be exiled to Damaan. According to reports, however, he is still being held in confinement at Gohardasht police station, where he is being held in harsh and degrading conditions, and his transfer to Damaan is being prevented.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Father of Iranian student living in Netherlands arrested

Internal security forces arrested Abbas Khameneh, father of Iranian student Yassar Kahmeneh who lives in the Netherlands due to his involvement in a Facebook campaign to fight extrinsic religious and messianic beliefs in Iranian society. According to Yasser, security forces contacted his father after having tapped on their phone conversations and demanded that he provide the forces with information, including the password to his son’s Facebook and e-mail accounts or face arrest. The police accused the father of financially supporting his son’s cyber activities.

Source: Iran Daily Brief