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Iran has enough uranium for five bombs: expert

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Iran has significantly stepped up its output of low-enriched uranium and total production in the last five years would be enough for at least five nuclear weapons if refined much further, a U.S. security institute said.

The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), a think-tank which closely tracks Iran’s nuclear program, made the analysis on the basis of data in the latest quarterly U.N. watchdog report which was issued on Friday.

Progress in Iran’s nuclear activities is closely watched by the West and Israel as it could determine how long it could take Tehran to build atomic bombs, if it decided to do so. Iran denies any plan to and says its aims are entirely peaceful.

During talks in Baghdad this week, six world powers failed to convince Iran to scale back its uranium enrichment program. They will meet again in Moscow next month to try to defuse a decade-old standoff that has raised fears of a new war in the Middle East that could disrupt oil supplies.

Friday’s report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a Vienna-based U.N. body, showed Iran pressing ahead w

ith its uranium enrichment work in defiance of U.N. resolutions calling on it to suspend the activity.

It said Iran had produced almost 6.2 metric tons (6.83 tons) of uranium enriched to a level of 3.5 percent since it began the work in 2007 – some of which has subsequently been further processed into higher-grade material.

This is nearly 750 kg more than in the previous IAEA report issued in February, and ISIS said Iran’s monthly production had risen by roughly a third.

“This total amount of 3.5 percent low enriched uranium hexafluoride, if further enriched to weapon grade, is enough to make over five nuclear weapons,” ISIS said in its analysis.

It added, however, that some of Iran’s higher-grade uranium had been converted into reactor fuel and would not be available for nuclear weapons, at least not quickly.

Enriched uranium can be used to fuel power plants, which is Iran’s stated purpose, or to provide material for bombs, if refined to a much higher degree. The West suspects that may be Iran’s ultimate goal despite the Islamic Republic’s denials.

Iran began enriching uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 percent in 2010, saying it needed this to fuel a medical research reactor. It later expanded the work sharply by launching enrichment at an underground site, Fordow.

It alarmed a suspicious West since such enhanced enrichment accomplishes much of the technical leap towards 90 percent – or weapons-grade – uranium.

The IAEA report said Iran had installed more than 50 percent more enrichment centrifuges at Fordow, which is buried deep under rock and soil to protect it against any enemy attacks.

Although not yet being fed with uranium, the new machines could be used to further boost Iran’s output of uranium enriched to 20 percent.

ISIS said Iran still appeared to be experiencing problems in its testing of production-scale units of more advanced centrifuges that would allow it to refine uranium faster, even though it had made some progress.

Source: Reteurs

Iran Is Seeking Lebanon Stake as Syria Totters

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Now Lebanon-Farther south, in the dense suburbs of Beirut, Iranian largess helped to rebuild neighborhoods flattened six years ago by Israeli bombs — an achievement that was commemorated this month with a rollicking celebration.

“By the same means that we got weapons and other stuff, money came as well,” the Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, exclaimed to roars of approval from the crowd. “All of this has been achieved through Iranian money!”

Iran’s eagerness to shower money on Lebanon when its own finances are being squeezed by sanctions is the latest indication of just how worried Tehran is at the prospect that Syria’s leader, Bashar al-Assad, could fall. Iran relies on Syria as its bridge to the Arab world, and as a crucial strategic partner in confronting Israel. But the Arab revolts have shaken Tehran’s calculations, with Mr. Assad unable to vanquish an uprising that is in its 15th month.

Iran’s ardent courtship of the Lebanese government indicates that Tehran is scrambling to find a replacement for its closest Arab ally, politicians, diplomats and analysts say. It is not only financing public projects, but also seeking to forge closer ties through cultural, military and economic agreements.

The challenge for Iran’s leaders is that many Lebanese — including the residents of Tannourine, the site of the proposed hydroelectric dam — squirm in that embrace. They see Iran’s gestures not as a show of good will, but as a stealth cultural and military colonization.

“Tannourine is not Tehran,” groused Charbel Komair, a city council member.

The Lebanese have largely accepted that Iran serves as Hezbollah’s main patron for everything from missiles to dairy cows. But branching out beyond the Shiites of Hezbollah is another matter.

“They are trying to reinforce their base in Lebanon to face any eventual collapse of the regime in Syria,” said Marwan Hamade, a Druse leader and Parliament member, noting that a collapse would sever the “umbilical cord” through which Iran supplied Hezbollah and gained largely unfettered access to Lebanon for decades.

 Source: Freedomessenger

UN finds evidence of 27 per cent uranium enrichment in Iran

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Iran has enriched uranium closer to the level required to arm nuclear missiles, according to evidence discovered at an underground facility by the UN’s atomic agency.

In its latest report on Iran’s nuclear activity, the International Atomic Energy Agency said it had found traces of uranium enriched up to 27 per cent at the Fordow enrichment plant near Qom.

That is substantially below the 90 per cent level needed to make the fissile core of nuclear weapons. But it is above Iran’s highest-known enrichment grade of 20 per cent, the level from which uranium can quickly turned into weapons-grade material.

Diplomats shown the report, which was distributed among the agency’s 35 member states today, said it was possible the centrifuges may have initially “over-enriched” at the start of their output. The IAEA said Iran had claimed the higher-grade enrichment may have happened “for technical reasons beyond the operator’s control”.

However, the finding will intensify concerns that Iran is merely using the current round of international talks to play for time while it pursues its nuclear ambitions.

The IAEA’s report also confirmed that Iran had added a further 350 centrifuges – capable of churning out 20 percent uranium – this year at the Fordow facility, in addition to 700 installed earlier.

US critical of Iran and Syria in human rights report on ‘tumultuous’ year

America’s annual human rights report describes 2011 as a ” tumultuous and momentous year” of change, from the Arab spring to the dramatic political opening in Burma which may yet inspire what it calls other closed societies – from Iran to North Korea and Eritrea – to open up.

But the US state department report, compiled from information gathered from US embassies around the world, warned of disturbing trends in other ways from growing persecution of religious minorities to deepening discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT) people.

The 2011 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices made strong criticisms of the situation in China, Russia and several countries inAfrica. It had particularly harshly worded condemnation of Iran andSyria, two countries where the US has made it clear it would like to see a change of government.

“These reports … make clear to governments around the world: we are watching, and we are holding you accountable. And they make clear to citizens and activists everywhere: You are not alone. We are standing with you,” said the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.

Clinton noted that the report was released as Egyptians are holding a free election for the first time in their history.

“We will support people everywhere who seek the same. Men and women who want to speak, worship, associate, love the way they choose – we will defend their rights; not just on the day we issue these reports, but every day,” she said.

But the state department was forced to defend the report from accusations that human rights are too often subordinated to US political and security interests, such as Washington‘s restrained criticisms of the government of Bahrain’s violent crackdown on dissent.

The report also does not scrutinise the US’s own human rights record, including criticism from groups such as Amnesty International over the Guantánamo Bay prison, executions and drone strikes that have killed thousands of innocent people in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen.

The report said that the Arab spring has changed the Middle East and led to a general improvement in human rights but that it will take time to build free societies.

“Transitions are times of uncertainty,” it said. “They can be chaotic, unstable, and at times violent. And even when they succeed, they are rarely linear, quick, or easy. The challenge during these transitions is to keep societies open to political debate. Protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms ensures that negotiations over a country’s future can take place without fear or intimidation, and that anti-democratic forces do not snuff out genuine political participation.”

But in a move that will be widely interpreted as political, some of the strongest criticism was reserved for Iran and Syria.

“Iran sentenced hundreds of people to death and carried out hundreds of executions without due process. It cracked down on all forms of dissent, arresting and detaining activists, opposition leaders, lawyers, journalists, artists, and academics. It executed juveniles, tortured political prisoners, and detained more journalists than nearly any country in the world,” the report said.

On Syria, the report said: “The government of President Assad used indiscriminate and deadly force to quell peaceful protests throughout the country and launched military assaults on several of its own cities. At the year’s end, activists reported ongoing arrests, torture, intimidation, rape, extra-judicial killings and the use of military force against civilians.”

Clinton said: “The Assad regime’s brutality against its own people must and will end, because Syrians know they deserve a better future”.

The tone in criticising Bahrain’s crackdown on demands by the Shia majority for political reform and greater civil rights, including torture and arbitrary arrest by the security forces, is more restrained. Nearly 100 people were killed and thousands injured. The US has a large military base in Bahrain.

Michael Posner, the assistant secretary for democracy, human rights and labour, acknowledged that human rights are often competing with national security and diplomatic interests. But he said that the US pursues “principled engagements” that includes human rights.

“We recognise we have a range of interests,” he said. “But human rights is an important part of what we do across the board.”

On Bahrain, he said that the US has pressed the government there to curb abuses. “We raised these issues in Bahrain recognising that this country is at a turning point.”

The report warned of rising persecution over sexual orientation. “In many countries there was an uptick in discrimination against members of racial and ethnic minorities; people with disabilities; and lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) people, all of whom were frequent targets of abuse, discrimination, and violence,” it said.

The report contained strong criticism of China where it said “the human rights situation deteriorated, particularly the freedoms of expression, assembly, and association”.

It noted the harassment and detention of human rights activists, journalists and dissidents.

“Public interest lawyers who took cases deemed sensitive by the government faced disbarment and the closure of their firms, and in some cases were subject to arrest and detention. Activists, dissidents, and members of religious minorities were denied the freedoms to assemble, practice their religions, or travel,” it said.

Some of the worst abuses were documented in Africa. The report noted the appalling human rights abuses that continue in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo where militia groups are responsible for systematic, rape, torture and murder.

It also criticised what it described as “widespread human rights violations” under Eritrea’s authoritarian regime including forced labour, the use of torture and the detention of more than 30 journalists whose whereabouts are not known.

In neighbouring Ethiopia, “the government continued to repress civil society, including the media”.

It condemned Sudan’s continued “bombardment of civilian areas” and use of militias that “killed, injured, and raped civilians” as well as the use of child soldiers.

The report noted that the “chronically bad human rights situation” in Zimbabwe has not improved despite the installation of a power sharing government. It accused Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party of using the security forces “to arrest, abuse, and torture non-Zanu-PF party members and civil society activists with impunity”.

On Israel, the report notes continuing racial discrimination against non-Jews, particularly Arabs. Among other things a long standing practice of villages running “community admissions committees” to decide whether a person or family is permitted to move there was codified into law after the high court ruled that the committees were illegal. The practice is most commonly used to discriminate against Arabs.

The report also noted the practice of issuing “kosher certificates” indicating that no Arabs were employed by a business.

 Source: TheGuardian

Oil Minister warns West against sanctions

Iran’s Minister of Oil warned today that sanctions on Iranian oil will lead to a leap in the price of oil on the global market and he called on the West to move wisely in this regard.

Rostam Ghassemi spoke at the opening of Tehran’s Friday Mass Prayers, saying that EU sanctions on Iranian oil have already driven up oil prices.

U.S. sanctions against Iran will take effect on June 28, and the EU oil embargo begins on July 1.

Iranian officials insist they are in no way concerned about the sanctions or the market for their petroleum exports.

Ghassemi, who was head of the Khatam-ol-Anbia financial group linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, says Iran “with the support of the Supreme Leader will triumph in the economic war waged against it by the West.”

The United States has managed to make a significant dent in Iran’s oil market, convincing many countries to completely boycott Iranian oil and others to sharply reduce their imports.

Ghassemi added that Iran’s enemies have long been intent on stopping Iran’s oil and gas developments and now they are also trying to restrict its oil market.

Ghassemi said the vacuum created by Shell and Total’s withdrawal from contracts to develop Southern Pars has been filled by domestic contractors, and Iran’s oil industry will soon become self sufficient.

The IRGC-based company Khatam-ol-Anbia has taken over many oil-sector contracts in recent years.

While the Iranian economy is heavily dependent on its oil exports, recent sanctions have caused a sharp rise in the price of oil, which has created an unprecedented rise in Iran’s oil revenues, according to reports from the Central Bank of Iran.

Despite a fall in Iran’s oil production, its oil revenues are reportedly on a sharp rise.

 Source: Radiozamaneh

New Wave Of Blocking Gonabadi Dervishes’s Blogs

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Bandar Abbas’s dervishes weblog”, one of the oldest personal blog that is belong to the Gonabadi dervishes, was filtered for the sixteenth times .

Iran’s Telecommunications Department in an effort that is certainly from the security agencies have been ordered to filter the dervishes blog.

The administrator of this blog said to Majzooban reporter : “It is for many years that , some outlaw groups, exclusivists and totalitarians have tried to boycott the news of dervishes because they want to hide their oppression and cruelty to the noble Iranian nation and especially to religious dissidents and religious minorities and they intend to control public opinion .

As we are inspired by the mystical teachings of Sufism School, during these three years, we have always insisted on enforcement of fair law and realize the national rights and in the way of enlightenment and awareness of the people, will continue and be more determined than before .

It is a long time that the security and intelligence centers are not with the people’s will and do not do any for society’s interests and benefits and there is no rule of law and outlaws, with cunning and deceit, have run the country and with self-centered have destroyed legitimate freedoms of citizens.

For dictatorship, using the tight fist is known as a solution to their problems…and its greatest enemy is awareness for community and hence, all that they do is trying to keep people in ignorance!

But we will stand and scream for justice and freedom to get our legal rights and our brothers’s rights too .”

It should be noted that, after retrogressive attacked the Gonabadi dervishes in Kavar town, in Shahrivar (September) last year, a new wave of blocking blogs and websites of Gonabadi dervishes has been started which during the past eight months more than a dozen blogs that would inform news of dervishes, have been completely out of service by the judicial and security authorities and also Majzooban Noor website has been filtered 12 times over the past eight months.

Source: Freedom Messenger

Update on the Condition of Mohammad Seddigh Kaboudvand in Evin Prison

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After weeks of receiving reports about the hunger strike taken by Kurdish political prisoner Mohammad Seddigh Kaboudvand, who is currently incarcerated in ward 350 of Evin prison, the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC) has just received an update on Kaboudvand’s condition in a short conversation with his wife Mrs. Parinaz Hosseini.

In her conversation with IHRDC, Mrs. Hosseini confirmed that Kaboudvand, the secretary of the Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan (in Kurdish, the Rexistia Mafe Mirovan li Kurdistane, or RMMK) and a journalist, had been on hunger strike since Monday, May 14, 2012.  He announced his hunger strike in a letter to the Tehran Prosecutor. Mrs. Hosseini said the reason for the hunger strike was Kaboudvand’s dispute with the authorities concerning his request for provisional release to tend to his ill son.

Mrs. Hosseini claims that on Thursday, May 17, 2012 prison guards transferred Kaboudvand to the court located in Evin prison where he met a man named Rajabi, one of the assistants to the Tehran Prosecutor.  Rajabi threatened Kaboudvand with a transfer to solitary confinement if he did not cease his hanger strike. Rajabi told Kaboudvand that his leave request was under review—he further promised that the request would be confirmed in the coming weeks. On the basis of this promise, Kaboudvand has temporarily broken his hunger strike, pending the acceptance of his leave request, since last Thursday, May 17, 2012.

Kaboudvand has been held in prison since July 1, 2007. He was convicted and sentenced to more than 10 years’ imprisonment for founding the Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan. During Kaboudvand’s time in prison, he has frequently been denied furlough—which is customarily granted.  Kaboudvand also went on hunger strike on an earlier occasion, on February 13 of this year, when his same son was sent to hospital for illness. Again, following the promises of the judiciary and Evin prison authorities to consider his requests for leave to visit his son, Kaboudvand broke his hunger strike after one week.  Kaboudvand was then able to visit his son four times under special protection in the hospital. Despite that grant of visitation, Kaboudvand’s requests for subsequent visits to his ailing son have since been denied, as well as his requests for sick leave for his own hospitalization (he suffers from serious heart ailments).

Source: Iranhrdc

Insight: Iran’s “Great Game” in Afghanistan

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With most foreign combat troops set to withdraw from Afghanistan by 2014, Iran is using the media in the war-ravaged nation to gain influence, a worrying issue for Washington.

Nearly a third of Afghanistan’s media is backed by Iran, either financially or through providing content, Afghan officials and media groups say.

“What Iran wants, what they are striving at, is a power base in Afghanistan that can counter American influence,” said a senior government official, who like others for this report, spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity.

“They are without a doubt doing this through supporting and funding our media.”

Iran spends $100 million a year in Afghanistan, much of it on the media, civil society projects and religious schools, says Daud Moradian, a former foreign ministry advisor who now teaches at the American University in Kabul.

“It is using Afghanistan to send a message to America that it can’t be messed with. Afghanistan becomes a managed battlefield as a result.”

Officials in Tehran could not be reached for comment despite repeated attempts and the Iranian embassy in Kabul said it was not prepared to talk about the issues raised in this report.

NEW STRATEGIC PACT

The landmark agreement NATO leaders sealed this week in Chicago, handing control of Afghanistan over to its own security forces by the middle of next year, puts the Western alliance on an “irreversible” path out of the unpopular, decade-long war.

Some security analysts say the withdrawal could lead to increasing instability and then to civil war — and an opportunity for Iran and others to move into the resulting power vacuum.

When the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989 following a decade-long occupation and the pro-Moscow government in Kabul collapsed, Afghanistan’s neighbors moved in to arm and fund proxies to gain regional influence as the country plunged into civil war.

Although Kabul’s ties with Tehran have seen sporadic improvement after the 2001 ouster of the Taliban, which had emerged triumphant after the civil war, the relationship is combustible.

The latest flashpoint is the recent signing of a long-term strategic agreement between the United States and Afghanistan. Though vague on details, the pact was meant to signal U.S. financial and security commitments to Afghanistan through 2024 – particularly for funding the large Afghan National Army.

Iran, whose frayed ties with the United States have worsened over its disputed nuclear programme, sees the pact as a threat. Iranian-backed media in Afghanistan responded by churning out reports critical of the agreement, and Tehran’s ambassador to Afghanistan Abu Fazel Zohrawand threatened to expel Iran’s one million Afghan refugees if the pact was not rejected.

IRAN’S TALKING HEADS

Afghanistan’s intelligence department, the National Directorate of Security (NDS), had earlier gone public with Iran’s alleged meddling in the media, saying that weekly newspaper Ensaf and TV channels Tamadon and Noor had received financial support from Iran.

A journalist who recently left Tamadon TV, owned by Afghanistan’s most prominent Shi’ite cleric Ayatollah Mohammed Asef Mohseni, told Reuters that while the station never confirmed it was getting support from Tehran “it was obvious”.

“My salary of $600 a month would fluctuate dramatically, as it was pegged to Iran’s rial,” said the 23-year-old, one of 200 employees at Tamadon, where he worked for four years before resigning over fears his employment would land him in trouble with Afghan authorities.

“Our office is full of posters calling for protests against the strategic pact with America. We’d invite pro-Iran analysts onto our shows saying Iran was the only one who could help Afghanistan with food and supplies,” said the recent graduate, dressed in a tight black long-sleeved t-shirt and jeans.

Tamadon TV dismissed the claims of Iranian backing as an “insult”. Editor in chief Mohammad Rahmati said the station was targeted “because we show core Islamic values; we don’t show half-naked dancing women”.

GREAT GAME

Afghanistan has been so much a focus of big power rivalry over the past 200 years — a failed British occupation in the mid-19th century, the failed Russian one in the 1980s, for example — it has its own historical sobriquet, “The Great Game”.

As the United States prepares for its own dispirited withdrawal from Afghanistan, it is worried about Iran gaining a strategic advantage in Afghanistan, after seeing Tehran win influence in Iraq following the 2003 U.S. invasion.

More than half of the 171 TV, satellite channels and radio stations licensed to broadcast in Iraq today are funded by Iran, with others backed by the United States and Arabic Gulf countries, government communications officials say.

Iran’s media strategy is but one strand in a multi-pronged projection of “soft power” into Afghanistan. The two countries share cultural, language and historical links — for centuries they were part of the ancient Persian empire — as well as a long and porous border.

Iran said in 2010 it has provided some $500 million in official assistance for reconstruction projects. Tehran has built religious schools for Afghan Shi’ites, who comprise a fifth of Sunni-majority Afghanistan’s 30 million people.

Iran may even have MPs on its payroll. An Afghan official who declined to be identified told Reuters that up to 44 of the 249 members of the Afghan parliament are suspected of receiving money from Iran. Iran has not responded to those allegations, which have also been aired in the Afghan media.

EFFORTS INTENSIFIED

Iran’s vehement opposition to the new strategic pact with the United States appears to have intensified efforts to influence public opinion about it.

Ensaf newspaper, one of the three media outlets the government has said receives funding from Iran, and whose parent company Avapress has offices in Tehran, has published six critical articles on the pact since it was signed by President Barack Obama on a whistle-stop visit to Kabul on May 2.

The three media outlets feature news reports that hold little interest for Afghans, but are important to Iran, using the same messages and wordage carried by Iranian state media.

The state of Israel, for instance, is called “the Zionist regime”, a term Afghan officials generally avoid using.

“The fact is the stories broadcast have been made available by Iranian sources for propaganda purposes”, Loftullah Mashal, a spokesman for the intelligence agency NDS, said last month. The NDS later retracted that claim.

Iran first started attempting to influence Afghan affairs through the media in 2006, said Abdul Mujeeb Khalvatgar, executive director of the Afghan media development group Nai.

“The pace has been quickening since 2011, which is when Iran began to actually inject its viewpoint into Afghan media,” he said.

Last year, Afghans were shocked when Tamadon TV broadcast a live speech by Iran’s parliament speaker Ali Larijani criticizing the presence of Western troops in Afghanistan.

Kabul is countering with its own pressure.

The Kabul-based reporter of Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency, Abdul Hakimi, was arrested two weeks ago on charges of spying, Afghan officials said. The NDS declined to comment.

The relatively large, often Western-backed press corps can also face intimidation, abduction or even death for reporting on issues such as corruption and other government failings. Afghanistan ranks seventh on the Committee to Protect Journalists’ “Impunity Index”, a listing of countries where journalists are killed regularly and governments fail to solve the crimes.

One man who says he is painfully familiar with Iranian interference is author and journalist Razaq Mamoon. He says a masked man who threw acid in his face in January of last year was working for Tehran. The Iranian embassy in Kabul has not commented on his allegations.

Though media reports at the time said his assailant staged the attack over a soured love affair, Mamoon says his 2010 book which accuses Iran of sabotage and espionage in Afghanistan, motivated Iranian intelligence agencies to attack him.

Source: Reuters

Jailed blogger on hunger strike

Jailed Iranian blogger Hossein Ronaghi Maleki has once again begun a hunger strike to protest his dire situation at Evin Prison.

The Human Rights Activists News Agency reports that the Ronaghi Maleki is suffering from a failed kidney and is being refused medical attention so he has begun a hunger strike to draw attention to his situation.

Doctors have said that the jailed blogger’s left kidney has completely failed and his right kidney is on the verge of total shutdown. Therefore, he is in need of urgent surgery.

HRANA reports that Ronaghi Maleki’s medical problems are being superficially treated in prison with injections of morphine and other painkillers, which are compounding his condition with problematic side effects.

HRANA reports that the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence department has forbidden prison authorities from giving Ronaghi Maleki the sick leave recommended by several doctors.

Ronaghi Maleki was arrested during the crackdown on the 2009 election protests and sentenced to 15 years in jail for his critical blogging on government actions.

 Source: Radiozamaneh

Court sentences opposition protester to 5 years in jail plus flogging

An Iranian protester has been sentenced to five years in jail and flogging, say human rights sources.

According to the Human Rights news agency, 28 year-old Amir Seif has been sentenced to five years in prison as well as 74 lashes for having taken part in opposition protests against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election in June 2009.

Seif was charged with “insulting” the officials of the Islamic Republic and “acting against national security by taking part in illegal assemblies.”

Following the hotly contested presidential election in June 2009, millions took to the streets to protest what they saw as a monumental electoral fraud. Many were either killed, while many others who were arrested received harsh sentences.

 Source: Irangreenvoice