Home Blog Page 476

Iranian activist arrested again

 

Iranian political activist Peymon Aref has been arrested for the third time by Iranian security forces.

HRANA reports that Aref, a journalist and former student activist, was arrested on Wednesday at his home.

Aref had been released only recently from Evin Prison, in November, on the condition that he report back to the courts in three days. He reportedly failed to do so.

Aref was arrested at the grave of Neda Agha-Soltan, the young woman who was shot to death during the street demonstrations that followed the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

In March of 2010, Aref was sentenced to a year in jail for propaganda against the regime because he spoke to foreign media. He was also sentenced to 74 lashes for writing an “insulting” letter to Ahmadinejad and, furthermore, was handed a lifetime ban from journalism and political activity.

Aref served out his sentence and was released last October, but only after receiving the 74 lashes.

While Ahmadinejad has sent an implicit message of criticism against carrying out such a sentence for the charge of “insulting the president”, the head of the judiciary, Ayatollah Larijani, said that all those who insult government officials are prosecuted in the name and interest of the public, and there is no need for charges to be filed by a specific official.

 Source: radiozamaneh

Guards Corp company wins subway contract

0

 

Tabriz City Council has awarded the $12-billion contract to develop the Tabriz subway system to Khatam-ol-anbia Construction Camp, the consortium run by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps.

The agreement, signed yesterday, commits the IRGC company to building 22.4 kilomtres of subway line with 20 stations over the next seven years.

The Kahtam-ol-anbia Consortium was formed after the Iran-Iraq War by the order of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, and it has been involved in Iran’s largest construction projects, including railways, dams, roads and oil industry developments.

Khatam-ol-anbia Construction Camp has been the main contractor in all government construction projects during President Mahmoud Ahamdinejad’s administration and is currently involved in developing natural gas projects in Southern Pars, contructing 900 km of pipeline from Oslouyeh to Iranshahr, and building Iran’s important piers and residential complexes.

Before becoming the Oil Minister, Rostan Ghassemi led the Khatam-ol-anbia Construction Camp and has said since that Khatam-ol-anbia should replace the foreign companies in Iran’s petroleum projects.

Last May, the Khatam-ol-anbia Construction Camp and all its subsidiary companies were put under sanctions by the United States.

A month later, the United Nation Security Council also blacklisted Kahtam-ol-anbia and four of its subsidiaries, together with another 40 Iranian companies and institutions.

Source: insideofiran

The Nightmares of the Commanders

 

Bahram Rafiei

The Iranian calendar year changes on March 21 from 1390 to 1391. This is the day when Iranians of all walks reflect on the past and look to the future. For the military it is a special year.

Even though on the instructions of Iran’s leader ayatollah Khamenei the country’s military institutions and leaders expanded the domain of their activities in 1390, the passing year was a tough one for their commanders. The year began with Ahmadinejad’s “ungratefulness” and is ending with dark clouds of war. This was the year when the military’s own engineered elections turned into a nightmare and fears of public protests that followed the 2009 elections continued to haunt the military. This was also the year when differences among the leaders of the country intensified resulting in greater defections and desertions.

The First Three Months: A Bitter Spring

A year that looked promising to the military, soon turned bitter. Two weeks into the new year, ayatollah Khamenei announced on April 3 that “a good forward change has started” in the armed forces and asked them not to be “disheartened” because of problems” but to rejuvenate the body of the forces.

In the first month of the year, inspired by the labeling of the year by the leader, the commanders of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) called for a “security Jihad” in response to “economic Jihad.”

The official magazine of IRGC’s political office – Sobh Sadegh – wrote, “Even if we the Guards looked at our duties strictly in security and military terms, then too security would be the most important issue and tool for the goal of creating a sustainable and expanding economy. It is our duty to work on this more than before and remove the minor security lapses and lost economic opportunities.”

As reports of the foreign threat took a more serious tone, the commander of the army’s ground forces Ahmad-Reza Poordastan announced, “We are now facing new phase of threats which are very different from those of the past in type, form and size, and so we must embark on new appropriate changes in our military structure.”

Amid these winds, ayatollah Khamenei’s representative in the IRGC cleric Ali Saeedi acknowledged that the heads of “the sedition” (the term Iranian officials use for the Green Movement and those who protested the results of the rigged 2009 presidential elections) continued to have popular support. He confirmed the arrest of the leaders of the Green Movement, Mehdi Karoubi, Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard and added, “This approach and putting the sedition leaders under house arrest is the best way to deal with them,” and confessed, “today the atmosphere is not right for clamping down on the leaders of the sedition.”

And even though he clearly tried not to reveal the inner problems of the IRGC, he did say, “In the IRGC, the burden is on some special people.”

By mid April, Guard commanders were experiencing unpleasant events. The differences between Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and ayatollah over the removal and re-appointment of the minister of intelligence caused the force to call their chosen president “ungrateful” and disown him from being “ayatollah Khamenei’s son.”

Ahmadinejad stayed at home for 11 days to show his displeasure, but the generals issued a serious warning which lead to another revelation. Khamenei’s representative in the Guards expressly issued a veiled threat: “We have continuously been among the supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad and voted for him during both elections, but many wanted to knock the president out, but the leader stood firm and defended him.”

Spring turned into the color of Fall. Mohammad-Hossein Safar-Herandi, recognized as one of the founders of the political office of the IRGC and a current advisor to the Guard chief in Shiraz told a group of Guards and Basijis, “The supreme leader is unhappy with some candidates.”

By mid-May the commander of Tehran’s IRGC force Hossein Hamedani warned that the “deviant current” – a reference to Ahmadinejad’s chief of staff Rahim Mashaei – had been checked but not unseated and while labeling their gestures as a “soft threat” called on the Guards and the Basij to stop them from entering the “hard phase.”

Another Khamenei representative Mojtaba Zolnoor who also happens to be a faithful of extremist cleric Mesbah Yazdi announced said in no uncertain language that Ahmadinejad and his allies, “were planning to strike at the regime using state institutions. By about the middle of June, Zolnoor displayed the problems associated with getting rid of Ahmadinejad when he said, “For now, only the wings should be clipped because conditions in the country did not favor a suitable response.”

The Next Months: The Summer Nightmare

The creeping snake surfaced in summer and kept the generals engaged. Ayatollah Khamenei’s representative at the Tehran Guards revealed Ahmadinejad’s dangerous plans and said, “This group has two dangerous tasks on its agenda: they want to create an economic fever and moral corruption in the country.”

Mohammad Ali Jaafari, the top chief of the IRGC, and his brainchild Yadollah Javani made headlines when they rejected former president Khatami’s conditions to return to domestic politics. They accused the reformist chief executive of being a saboteur and the leader of the “sedition.” They also charged Ahmadinejad and his associates of planning to take over the Majlis and then send one of their own to the presidency.

After ayatollah Khamenei’s representative at the IRGC said “People had the right to elect,” Mohammad-Reza Naghdi, who had earlier in Spring declared, “There is no such thing as universal human rights,” qualified the leader’s statement and said, “Yes, people have the right to select but every selection was not right.” Then he went further and revealed that Basij’s policy for the elections was to enlighten people so they could choose the best candidates.

By this time, the magazine of the IRGC political office repeated its earlier claims that the “charcoal of the seditionist was still hot,” acknowledging that the reformers and Green Movement supporters were as alive as ever.  As deserters from the Guards and the Basij grew, the commanders approached extremist ayatollah Yazdi to lend a hand and stop the fallout. “What is your problem?” was Yazdi’s call to the Guards during one of his lectures. “Why do you stay in touch with tricksters who are in touch with foreign elements and ask for their advise,” a reference to Guards and Basijis who continued to be sympathetic to the reform and Green movement leaders.

For the Basij to enlighten the masses, some 11,000 political messengers were across the four corners of the country to help drive the “good candidates” to the Majlis to strengthen the position of the velayatefagih (the rule of clerics) in Iran’s political system.

And just as Mohammad-Ali Jaafari announced the relegation of the responsibility of battling the “deviant current” to the IRGC, his deputy confirmed that arrest of some associates of Ahmadinejad and even spoke of their “confessions of financial and moral corruption.”

As international pressure over Iran reached new heights, Khamenei’s representative in the IRGVC ground forces warned of a shortage of soldiers in the armed forces and called for a rise in the country’s population as a solution.

As international sanctions began to bite, Basij commanders positioned their “military-security units in mosques and rural bases to confront the “economic fever” and prevent the state from being hurt by the state’s own institutions. Soon, a large number of IRGC commanders and cadre left the force through self-retirement or resignations to join the Majlis to combat Ahmadinejad and his allies from working to get into the parliament.

The problems of the IRGC were revealed again when Guards colonel Fakhrali Gholizadeh from Orumieh said, “We cannot expect the first generation Guards to think like the second generation,” and then added, “We have not succeeded in creating the climate where these two generations would exchange ideas, views and culture, and talk to each other.”

As the clouds of war continued to gather over the skies of the region, Iran’s long-time neighbor Turkey announced that it would welcome the installation of NATO anti-ballistic sites on its soil. What followed was yet another threat by the Khatam-al Anbia air base who yelled during a Friday prayer, “If our enemies turn stupid and imagine attacking this holy land, Iran would turn into an air, ground and sea hell form them.”

The Third Quarter’s Drumbeats of War

To calm the agitated and petrified, a former Guards commander Rahim Safavi, who happens to be a current military advisor to Khamenei announced, “From my perspective a war cannot be imagined over Iran in the near future.” But a general of the joint chief of staff sang a different tune when he said, “If God-unwilling a new war breaks out, our forces shall be better organized than before.”

As planning and campaigning for the March elections appeared over the horizon, the Basij commander who had envisioned the force to be active in enlightening the masses, now turned to the task of “providing security for the ballot boxes.”

But even without the foreign war, another battle was already in full swing on Iran’s borders. It was announced that a large number of Guards had been killed in Mianeh (Iran’s Kurdistan) in a battle with the Kurdish PJAK group. A look at the killed guards indicated that the “mosaic plan” of the IRGC to establish self-containing units in each province had failed as the dead included guards from far way places such as Qom.

When Israel tested its new ballistic missile, Firoozabadi responded by saying, “We are prepared to punish an aggressor.” The deputy commander of the IRGC also announced  that “the enemy had embarked on a dangerous policy against the Islamic republic and was implementing its plans,” prompting the separation of the IRGC forces in Tehran to Karaj, and thus forming yet another IRGC provincial force.

Alarmed at the support that reformists and dissidents still enjoyed around the country, ayatollah Khamenei’s representative in the Guards called protestors “nuts” and called on the Basij and the IRGC to not be lenient in crushing them.

By the end of Fall, another of the ayatollah’s generals spoke about war. Mohammad-Bagheri, the deputy for intelligence and operations in the joint chiefs of staff went to the Majlis to speak about the possibility of war and an air and ground campaign against the country. “The fate of a war will be decided on the ground and that belongs to the Iranian nation. They [foreign states] know this and thus engage in psychological warfare, but have no guts to even engage in an air battle.”

As election campaigning began and the Basij entered the game to protect the ballot boxes against Ahmadinejad and his allies who were now free from the rivalry of the reformists who had boycotted the elections altogether, ayatollah Khamenei issued his decree licensing the military to participate in the elections and by saying “The Basij has always had a bright presence in all spheres including defense and politics,” and, “The Basij was political but not politicized,” gave the green light to the force to take events into its own hands if the need be.

Herandi immediately translated the words of the leader and said, “Ahmadinejad has lost some of his costly friends and instead has gained the support of a deviant current.”

The Last Quarter

Winter was definitely the harshest month for the commanders. Military threats reached still higher levels and the approaching anniversary of the 2009 and 2010 protests brought fear and insecurity to their hearts and minds.

Ali Saeedi, Khamenei’s representative in the Guards openly spoke of the IRGC getting in to the Majlis to give it “a powerful force and position for important decisions.”

And just as he had said in Spring that the arrested leaders of the Green Movement enjoyed public support, he said the situation had not changed as far they were concerned. He said they still had “space and supporters.”

General Attalla Salami, the commander of the army announced ayatollah Khamenei’s new defense posture, on the eve naval exercises in the Persian Gulf and threatened the US Navy. Britain responded by sending its most advanced warship to the region to support the US flotilla.

And as EU’s oil sanctions began, Iran’s generals again launched their threats that if Iran’s oil was boycotted, they would shut the Straits of Hormuz and no oil would then leave it altogether. But the US Navy along with some British warships ignored the threats and sailed their ships through the straits and positioned them in the Persian Gulf.

The Iranian generals retreated and defense minister Ahmad Valid said, “We did not say we would shut the Straits of Hormuz.” The IRGC naval exercises that were planned and had been announced for weeks were cancelled.

As the 1979 anniversary of the founding of the Islamic republic approached, which coincided with the anniversary of the house arrest of the leaders of the Green Movement, the generals sent a million and a half of their men to Tehran from all over the country just in case.

The growing number and intensity of military threats forced the generals to enlarge the “strategic depth and defense of the country from the resistance fronts in Lebanon and Syria” to the “southern provinces of the country.”  Jaafari in this regard said, “The enemy does not have the slightest ability to attack our dear country, let alone attack the central plains. Still, the southern provinces of Fars, Yazd, Khuzestan, Kerman and Hormozegan are our strategic depths against the enemy.”

Despite all the external threats, differences inside the armed forces still continue. Cleric Mohammad Kazem Bahrami spoke of the dangers of “dissent and division” during a seminar organized by the military police. “Espionage and regime overthrow are not the only security threats to the country. Differences definitely have a greater destructive effect,” he warned revealingly.

And as the March 2 elections passed, the generals continued to display their concern for Ahmadinejad’s possible plans to “stand against the regime.” This was of course in addition to the threats from outside, and the discontent amongst themselves and inside the forces.

Source: roozonline

Christians in Isfahan face increasing pressure and arrests

 

According to reports received in recent weeks by the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC), security agents from the Isfahan intelligence office in the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) arrested several adherents to the Christian faith in Isfahan in a pre-planned raid on Wednesday, February 22, 2012. The targeted individuals were arrested separately in their houses and then transferred to an undisclosed location.

Sources close to IHRDC confirm that Giti Afrouz Hakimpour, a 78 year old Christian woman, was one of the individuals arrested in the raid.  Hakimpour, who lives alone, had her house raided by security agents on February 22, at 6 AM.  The agents searched Hakimpour’s house for three hours and seized a large number of her personal belongings, including her passport, bank documents,  her pension book,  the deed to her house, vehicle title, Bibles and other religious literature, her computer and mobile phone, documents she had translated, her driver’s license, personal correspondence, and other items. After the agents concluded their search, they transferred Hakimpour to the Isfahan intelligence office, located on Hasht-Behesht Street.

Eye witnesses report that after Hakimpour’s detention, security agents entered her house yet again and proceeded to search through her belongings. After the search, her house looked as if it had been ransacked—furniture was turned upside down, picture frames were pulled off the walls and thrown across the room and drawers and wardrobes had been rifled through.

Hakimpour is a retired nurse-midwife and nurse supervisor who dedicated many years of public service to the health services section of the Iranian National Oil Institution, located in the city of Abadan and Masjid-Solaiman. Hakimpour comes from a prominent Christian family in Isfahan and is a member of the Episcopal Church of Iran. The Hakimpours are of Jewish ancestry but converted to the Christian faith many years ago.

Intelligence agents accused Hakimpour of evangelizing people in her own home. However, no court has issued formal charges against her.

On account of her old age and the efforts of the leaders of the Episcopal Church, Hakimpour was released from the Isfahan intelligence office on Saturday, February 25, 2012.

Since her release, Hakimpour is constantly monitored by security agents. Some of Hakimpour’s friends fear contact with her as they have also been threatened with questioning by security.

Further, before Hakimpour’s arrest, she planned a trip abroad to visit her family and purchased her airfare, but she is now unable to travel.   Her passport and other identification documents have been confiscated, thus, at present, she has no official identity under IRI laws.

Additionally, since her bank account book and other banking documents have been seized, Hakimpour no longer has access to her bank account.  Therefore she has had to sell some valuables in order to support herself.  It is unclear how long she can sustain herself in this manner.

On the same day as Hakimpour’s arrest, on Wednesday, February 22, security agents in Isfahan also arrested Hekmat Salimi, an Iranian and Farsi speaking Christian pastor and poet.  Salimi was arrested in Fooladshahr town (in Isfahan province); agents confiscated Salimi’s personal belongings and transferred him to an undisclosed location.  Prior to this arrest, Salimi was arrested on several previous occasions for his Christian beliefs, including in a raid by security agents in August 2003. After his arrest in August 2003, he was held in Dastgerd prison in Isfahan for a period of time.

The recent arrests in Isfahan are not limited to the above names.  IHRDC will release more information about these arrests as it is received.

The Iranian authorities’ arrests and treatment of Hakimpour and Salimi directly violate numerous provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), of which the IRI is a signatory.  Specifically, the Iranian government’s actions in these cases contravene Article 9 (individual freedom and security), Article 12 (freedom of movement), and Article 18 (freedom of religion and belief) of the ICCPR, and accordingly it is in violation of its international obligations and commitments.

Source: iranhrdc

With Arms for Yemen Rebels, Iran Seeks Wider Mideast Role

 

In the past several months, Iran appears to have increased its political outreach and arms shipments to rebels and other political figures in Yemen as part of what American military and intelligence officials say is a widening Iranian effort to extend its influence across the greater Middle East.

Iranian smugglers backed by the Quds Force, an elite international operations unit within Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, are using small boats to ship AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenades and other arms to replace older weapons used by the rebels, a senior American official said. Using intercepted cellphone conversations between the smugglers and Quds Force operatives provided by the Americans, the Yemeni and Indian coastal authorities have seized some shipments, according to the American official and a senior Indian official.

The scale of Iran’s involvement remains unclear, and some Yemeni officials and analysts remain skeptical about the impact of any weapons shipments, citing a long history of dubious accusations by Saudi Arabia — Iran’s regional nemesis — and Saudi allies in Yemen.

But American officials — who had sometimes dismissed such accusations as propaganda — say there now appears to be at least limited material support from the Iranians.

Earlier this year, Iran tried to send to Yemen material used to make explosive devices, known as explosively formed penetrators, or E.F.P.’s, according to a high-ranking Yemeni security official. The material was shipped in freighters from Turkey and Egypt that docked in Aden.

The cargo was destined for Yemeni businessmen affiliated with the rebels, known as the Houthis, but was intercepted by the government, the Yemeni official said. American officials said Iran supplied the same lethal roadside bombs to insurgents in Iraq during the worst of the violence there, an accusation that Iran has consistently denied.

“Iran is really trying to play a big role in Yemen now,” the Yemeni official said from his office in Sana, the country’s capital.

American officials say the Iranian aid to Yemen — a relatively small but steady stream of automatic rifles, grenade launchers, bomb-making material and several million dollars in cash — mirrors the kind of weapons and training the Quds Force is providing the embattled government of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria. It also reflects a broader campaign that includes what American officials say was a failed plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States in October, and what appears to have been a coordinated effort by Iran to attack Israeli diplomats in India and Georgia earlier this year. Iran has denied any role in the attacks.

“They’re fighting basically a shadow war every day,” Gen. James N. Mattis, the head of the military’s Central Command, told a Senate hearing last week.

“They are working earnestly to keep Assad in power,” he said, explaining that in addition to arms and scores of Quds Force trainers and Iranian intelligence agents, Iran is providing the Syrian security services with electronic eavesdropping equipment “to try and pick up where the opposition networks are.”

In early January, American intelligence officials said, the Quds Force commander, Qassim Suleimani, visited Damascus, Syria, raising suspicions that Iran was advising Mr. Assad on how to quash the uprising. “What we’re seeing is a much more aggressive Iranian effort to become involved in a number of areas and activities,” President Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, said in a recent interview.

The authorities in Azerbaijan announced Wednesday that they had arrested 22 Azeri citizens suspected of spying for Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and plotting to attack the United States and Israeli Embassies and the British oil company BP, according to Reuters, citing the country’s National Security Ministry.

Analysts say Yemen could be highly useful in any effort by Iran to retaliate against an Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear facilities. The country’s longtime president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, formally stepped down earlier this year after a year of widespread protests and violence, but Yemen remains highly volatile, with its political elite divided and much of the country outside the control of the government. Militants linked to Al Qaeda continue to battle the Yemeni military in the south, and much of the north is under the control of the Houthi rebels.

The Houthi rebels are based just across the border from Saudi Arabia, and they practice a quasi-Shiite form of Islam that makes them natural Iranian allies. Skilled guerrilla fighters, they fought a short war with Saudi Arabia in 2009, and could presumably be used as an Iranian proxy force. “Iran is hoping to use Yemen as a pressure point against Saudi Arabia and all the countries in the Arab Gulf,” said Yahya al-Jifri, a leader of Al Rabita, one of Yemen’s independent political parties.

A Houthi spokesman, Yahya al-Houthi, denied that the movement had received any Iranian weapons, training or money, and added that the accusation was an old one leveled by the United States and Saudi Arabia.

Many Yemeni political and tribal figures dismiss any Iranian military support as insignificant, noting that the Houthis have plenty of weapons, and that Saudi Arabia has been supplying Yemeni factions with arms for decades. Some add that any substantial shipments of arms across inland Yemen would have left a clear trail of evidence.

There have been reports on the subject in the Yemeni press — as in years past — but those are widely dismissed as rumors disseminated by Saleh loyalists, or allies of Saudi Arabia. One high-ranking Yemeni official said that he had been told about the Iranian military aid by Mr. Brennan, but that he had no other reason to believe it.

True or not, the claims of Iranian support are now held up as gospel by Sunni tribal figures in northern Yemen, where fears are rising of a proxy conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia. One prominent Sunni tribal leader in northern Jawf Province, Abdullah al-Jumaili, said: “We don’t even call them the ‘Houthis’ anymore. We refer to them as ‘the followers of Iran.’ ”

Weapons aside, Iran is offering financial help, training and encouragement to a number of groups that protested against Mr. Saleh’s rule in the past year, according to Yemeni political leaders, diplomats and tribal figures.

“We have been treated unjustly by Saudi Arabia, and we do not mind taking help from Iran, which has been sympathetic to our cause,” Sultan al-Samie, a prominent tribal figure and militia leader in the central city of Taiz, said in a telephone interview. Mr. Samie said that he traveled to Iran to attend an all-expenses-paid conference last fall, along with scores of other protesters, but he denied widespread reports in Yemen that he has accepted Iranian payments.

Iran appears to be playing its hand shrewdly, offering financial help and sympathy but insisting that there are no strings attached, according to Mr. Samie and others. That is an important distinction in an area where Saudi Arabia is widely perceived to have used cash to manipulate Yemeni political and religious currents. Iran also recently added a daily Yemen program to its Arabic-language channel, Al Aalem, that is now popular across Yemen for its anti-Saleh slant. The channel is also viscerally anti-American, like all Iranian official media.

There also appears to be increased Iranian influence among Yemeni activists, especially those not affiliated with the Islamist party Islah, and even more so among supporters of the southern separatists movement, known as the Herak.

A large contingent of Yemenis attended two conferences in Tehran in September and January intended to link Iran with protesters affiliated with the Arab Spring movements. “We need another force today to make balance and I think that force is Iran,” said Aad Qaid, a 28-year-old activist who supports the southern secessionist movement and attended the January conference. “Iran supports the Houthis and Herak.”

Source: insideofiran

Kurdish political prisoner Habibollah Golparipour transferred to undisclosed location; at risk of imminent execution

 

The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC) has received reports that yesterday Habibollah Golparipour—a Kurdish political prisoner on death row—was transferred from Orumieh central prison to an undisclosed location by Iranian intelligence forces. Golparipour has faced execution ever since his death sentence was approved by Iran’s Supreme Court last year.

Golparipour was arrested and charged with “Moharebeh” (enmity against God) in the fall of 2009 and cooperation with PJAK—a Kurdish nationalist party banned in Iran. While Golparipour accepts the charge that he cooperated with PJAK, he strongly denies having been armed at the time of his arrest.

In an IHRDC interview from last December, Habibollah Golparipour’s father, Nasser Golparipour, also rejected the accusations that his son was armed. IHRDC has not been able to contact Golparipour’s attorneys but sources confirm that every possible legal step to stop the execution has been exhausted but to no avail.

Source: iranhrdc

Prisoner Fatemeh Rahnama’s sister: “My sister is penalized for another person’s quest for the presidency.”

 

Political prisoner Fatemeh Rahnama’s sister: “Why must my sister pay the price for someone else’s run for the presidency? We want to understand why we must suffer in this way.”

Mojtabah Saminejad
Translated by Laleh Irani

Fatemeh Rahnama is a female political prisoner who is spending her 10-year prison sentence in exile in Sepidar prison in Ahvaz. She was detained at her home on July 29, 2009.

Her sister Zahra Rahnama spoke to Human Rights House of Iran about Fatemeh’s situation. She is about to spend her third Norouz (Persian New Year) behind bars without any furlough.

“My sister’s situation is the same as it has been and nothing has changed. My sister is being held in Sepidar Prison in Ahvaz. We recently made another official request for her release, and we asked for an answer to my sister’s written letter. But unfortunately so far they have refused to grant her freedom. When we asked the authorities why they are keeping my sister behind bars, they said it was because of her crimes. What those crimes are, we still do not comprehend but anyway they have refused to free her.”

Rahnama’s sister spoke of the refusal to grant furlough to her sister.

“So far [3.5 years] she has not been granted any furlough. Recently there was an announcement with the names of prisoners in Sepidar prison in Ahvaz who have been granted furlough and my sister’s name was not on that list. They said prisoners who have committed crimes against national security would not be on the list. Not only now during Norouz (Persian New Year), but even months ago when my sick mother ended up in a coma for 6 months before losing her life, my sister was not allowed out to see her mother or attend her funeral.”

In a session of parliament, Elias Naderan, a conservative member of parliament and supporter of the Ahmadinejad regime referred to Fatemeh Rahnama as the “mistress” of Shapour Kazemi, who is the brother of Zahra Rahnavard. Zahra Rahnavard, wife of Mir Hossein Mousavi has been under house arrest along with her husband for over a year.

The allegation that Fatemeh Rahnama was the “mistress” of Shapour Kazemi was not only made by state run media, but it was published by the Islamic Revolution Documents Center. In their documents they made the written allegation that “on June 16, 2009, Mr. Shapour Kazemi, who has dual citizenship with the United Sates of America and is brother of Mrs. Zahra Kazemi, known as Rahnavard, wife of Mr. Mir Hossein Mousavi, was arrested along with his mistress Ms. Fatemeh Rahnama as they were creating disturbances in Vanak Square and burning motorcycles.”

Zahra Rahnama, sister of this prisoner has a different version of events.

“Mr. Shapour Kazemi and my sister were detained on the same day. After a few months behind bars, Mr Kazemi was exonerated and released, but my sister is still in prison. The state run media were very vulgar in their coverage of this news, and accused my sister of dishonorable actions. They claimed that my sister was detained while she was burning 7 motorcycles. But my sister’s neighbors are even witnesses to the fact that security agents went to her home at night and detained her. If Mr. Kazemi wanted to damage this regime, he had much better ways to do so than burning several motorcycles. What is interesting however is that Mr. Kazemi was exonerated of all charges while my sister has been held behind bars for the past 3 years. This is always how it is; the poor and innocent are targeted and sacrificed. My sister is a victim.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of her sister’s condition in prison.

“Prison is prison and it can never be a good place, but a few days ago my sister was again saying she didn’t understand why she had to be among prisoners who have committed serious crimes. Of course many of these same prisoners could be good people and better than some who are free.”

“But the fact remains that this is an injustice that has been committed against my sister; they sentence her to 10 years in prison, they exile a 50 year old woman to a prison that is 1000 kilometers away from where she lives and force her to spend her time behind bars so far away. Her mother dies and they refuse to grant her furlough. There are so many other circumstances that have exasperated us. We are baffled at why things are as they are. It is very troubling that the judiciary in Iran behaves in this manner. I don’t know what else to do, every door we knock on is slammed in our faces. I just don’t understand why we are being so challenged considering my sister has no affiliations, she has not done anything nor committed any crime. In my sister’s court dossier, there is no evidence of any crime. For her to be imprisoned due to other issues is a very dismal reflection on the judiciary in Iran.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of the difficulty of visitation due to the prison’s distance.

“Due to the prison being so far from where we live, we can only travel there every one or two months by plane. Ahvaz is too far for us to able to travel there once a week. I was never able to take my mother there and mother didn’t even once get to visit her daughter in prison.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of her follow-up actions for her sister’s case.

“Through our lawyers we have presented all the facts with great detail to the judiciary and they have responded that they will report to the Ministry of Intelligence. According to what the Judiciary is saying it is the Ministry of Intelligence that is prohibiting furlough for my sister. In my opinion it is they who owe an explanation, they cannot just arbitrarily arrest a person, sentence that person to prison in forced exile a thousand kilometers away from her home.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of the agony of her sister not being allowed so see her sick mother before she passed away.

“I went to the office of Mr. Kamkar, who is deputy prosecutor of Tehran, under Mr. Dolatabadi. I told him what had happened, that the authorities didn’t even grant her furlough to attend the funeral after my mother died. He was very surprised and said he didn’t comprehend why considering it is the legal right of every prisoner to get furlough for these reasons. He told me to write a letter and attach my mother’s death certificate. This was a month after my mother had died and they were supposedly going to at least allow my sister a few days of furlough so she could grieve by her family’s side.”

“We did everything they asked and provided every document they requested, but unfortunately nothing ever happened. We wrote the letter as they asked and delivered it. Every time we follow up they give us a different story. They claimed it got lost, they said it went to a different office, when we went to that office they said it was somewhere else, and we ended as always running around with no answers. Nobody seems to know where the letter went. After the entire running around we are told our request is in the hands of the person in charge of my sister’s file. Well clearly that person is the interrogating officer who is the one who prohibited her from furlough to begin with. Mr. Dolatabadi, Tehran’s Prosecutor told our lawyer Mr. Alizadeh that the person in charge of my sister’s file has denied her request for furlough.”

During the past three years the family of Fatemeh Rahnama has tirelessly made every effort to gain her freedom or time off on furlough.

Zahra Rahnama spoke of her family’s efforts in the past 3 years to obtain release for her sister.

“Recently we visited the leadership’s offices and told them we would like to provide a written request. We have done this in the past and they always tell us to go to the offices of the Justice Ministry. We have written letters to the Ministry of Justice and delivered them to various offices; the office of the Judiciary at Shahid Beheshti, the office of the Judiciary Committee on Human Rights, the office of the Judiciary at Shahid Moghadas, and every place you can possibly imagine of, we have been to. But unfortunately all our efforts have been to no avail. They tell us it is too late, that we should have done something before the sentencing was handed down, and now all we can do is hope for a pardon. So according to what they are saying my sister has to hope that they forgive her for something she has not done. It is very interesting that she has endured 3 years of prison, must endure 7 more years unless she is forgiven for an alleged crime that she never committed.”

Zahra Rahnama pleaded with human rights organizations for help.

“This is very heavy. I am pleading with human rights organizations to help all prisoners if you can. Please do something for them. For the love of god, these youth are rotting in our prisons. Why has my sister been in prison for 3 years? For what crime? We have suffered so much. We have been so damaged. My family has been devastated and broken apart in the past 3 years. It isn’t a joke for gods sake. My mother was sick, but these pressures caused her health to plunge and we lost her. My father is now 80 years old. I don’t even dare get in touch with him at nights because every time I talk to him all he wants to know is what is happening with my sister’s situation. Every time he asks, “why is my daughter in prison?” He says, “all you do is go to offices and still my daughter is in prison? I don’t understand why have they imprisoned her?” I keep telling him, “Father I swear I don’t know. They will not give us any answers. Nobody will even talk to me to give me a straight answer.” Well how am I going to answer my father? My retired father who worked for the youth of this country for over 30 years, now so many successful people benefiting from his efforts. Is it right that such a man, after all he has done for his country, at the end of his life he should endure such anguish and pressure? Does he deserve to suffer this way from his daughter languishing behind bars? Every time I talk to him he asks, “When will she be free?” I tell him she’ll be out in 5 or 6 months. I have to respond like that.”

She continued.

“I have to endure all this pain. We have suffered so much and all for nothing. I have even told Mr. Dolatabadi’s deputy the following. One person wanted to be president and that happened. Two others wanted to be president and it didn’t happen. But we are the ones paying the price; the price of a person becoming president. But why? We want to know why we have to suffer the price?”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of the report by Ahmed Shaheed, UN Rapporteur.

I saw in the news that the Minister of Justice is very upset about the report made to the UN by Special Rapporteur Ahmed Shaheed. But the situation described in the report is true and happening as described. I don’t know about every single scenario. But I certainly see what has happened to my sister. She is being harassed. It is not right. My sister Fatemeh Rahnama had one activity that could be construed as political in her life and that was in 1982 when she was only 19 years old. At that time she was arrested and sentenced to 3.5 years in prison on the charge of ‘supporting’ the MKO [Mojahedin Khalgh Organization]. She spent her sentence behind bars and now, almost 27 years later they again bring up an issue that is from over 2 decades ago.”

She explained the background to Human Rights House of Iran.

“My sister was employed at the company of Mr. Shapour Kazemi, brother in law of Mr. Mir Hossein Mousavi, for 15 years. Her job was neither related to Mr. Ahmadinejad nor to Mr. Mousavi, nor to the presidency. She was just an employee of the company. But all of a sudden she gets arrested and is accused of trying to associate Mr. Mir Hossein Mousavi and his family to the MKO organization. This is what my sister is accused of yet there is no evidence of this in her court dossier. Not one of the countless people who are affiliated with Mr. Mir Hossein Mousavi, includig Mr. Shapour Kazemi, have supported these allegations against my sister, and they have all repudiated these false charges.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of her sister’s coerced confession.

“As I said in the court dossier there is no document showing any evidence of this alleged crime besides the confession my sister was coerced into making while under the influence of drugs they administered to her, along with threats and promises that the judiciary knows better than anyone. They forced her to agree to claim she had given monetary support to the MKO organization. This is all they have as their evidence. During the past few months my sister has written several letters refuting this forced confession, which we have delivered to the Ministry of Justice. In her letter she describes the condition she was put in, under severe duress and held in solitary confinement, when she was forced to sign the false confession. In this 4-page letter my sister describes her maltreatment and in detail all the events that transpired while she was held in solitary confinement for two months. This letter is now in her court dossier at the Shahid-Beheshti Ministry of Justice but unfortunately none of the judiciary officials have made any acknowledgement or commented on this letter.”

Rahnama continued.

“It’s as if everyone has gone blind and deaf. There is only one reason I can come up with for this. The authorities are in a situation where they are not able to now admit that what my sister is saying is true. They know that if they acknowledge what my sister is saying, they will be admitting wrongdoing and this will create huge questions for the Ministry of Intelligence and the Ministry of Justice for imprisoning a person who has done nothing whatsoever.”

Zahra Rahnama spoke of her sister’s court session and sentencing.

“During the preliminary session at Branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court my sisters lawyer wanted to defend her against the charge of ‘moharebeh’ (enmity against god), which had been brought up before the court session. But Judge Pir-Abassi presiding told my sister’s lawyer that it wasn’t necessary to defend this charge since thankfully she would not be charged with “moharebeh.’ Therefore her lawyer Mr. Keshavar did not defend this charge. My sister said that the whole court session was about her relationship with Mr. Kazemi, with accusations of immorality, and both of them were exonerated of these charges. But the sentencing that was issued later was a whole other matter. I myself was standing outside the court that day, when my sister’s lawyers, Mr. Keshavarz and Mr. Ghorbani came out and said everything went well in court and that were very optimistic. They said the judge accepted their defense and seemed to agree. But then, when the sentencing was issued it was a very different story.”

Zahra Rahnama, in closing asked again that human rights organizations pay more attention to the plight of her sister Fatemeh Rahnama and pleaded that they do whatever they can to help her.

Source: rahana

Hacked Emails; Iran advises Assad on crackdown

 

Bashar al-Assad has taken advice from Iran on countering a revolt against his rule and joked about his promises of reform, according to a trove of e-mails taken from the personal accounts of the Syrian president and his wife, Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported on Wednesday.

One of the estimated 3,000 emails which the Guardian said it obtained from an unnamed Syrian opposition member indicated that Assad and his family were urged to quit Syria in January by a daughter of the emir of Qatar, one of his sharpest Arab critics.

The Guardian said the emails, which portrayed an Assad family insulated from the uprising that threatens to pitch Syria into civil war, came from the private accounts of Assad and his wife and was confident they were genuine.

The emails were intercepted from June last year until early February as Assad cracked down on opponents in a revolt that the United Nations estimates has killed 8,000 people.

Some emails showed that Assad’s British-born wife Asma was arranging for the purchase of an Armani lamp from London’s posh Harrods store, placing orders for jewelled necklaces from Paris and chasing up on a delivery of furniture to Damascus.

But one Asma sent to her husband in late December gives an indication of the strain on the couple as international pressure grew on Syrian authorities to halt the violence.

“If we are strong together, we will overcome this together … I love you…,” the email read.

The emails appear to show that Assad received advice from Iran or its militant proxies on several occasions.

Ahead of a speech Assad delivered in December his media consultant prepared a long list of themes, reporting that the advice was based on “consultations with a good number of people in addition to the media and political adviser for the Iranian ambassador”.

“VIOLENT LANGUAGE” ADVISED

“I believe the language must be powerful and violent because the people need to see a powerful president defending the country” and to show appreciation for support from “friendly states”, the adviser wrote.

The memo also advised that Assad’s government should “leak more information related to our military capability” to convince the public that it could withstand a military challenge.

In July, when his wife e-mailed that she would be finished by 5 p.m., Assad replied: “This is the best reform any country can have that u told me where will you be. We are going to adopt it instead of the rubbish laws of parties, elections, media…

The email purportedly sent by the emir of Qatar’s daughter was sent to Assad’s British-born wife, Asma, the paper said, and indicated that Qatar’s capital Doha could be one place the Syrian leader could seek refuge with his family.

“I only pray that you will convince the president to take this as an opportunity to exit without having to face charges,” Mayassa al-Thani, daughter of Qatar Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, wrote to Asma on January 30.

“Looking at the tide of history and the escalation of recent events – we’ve seen two results – leaders stepping down and getting political asylum or leaders being brutally attacked. I honestly think that this is a good opportunity to leave and re-start a normal life,” the email added.

“I am sure you have many places to turn to, including Doha.”

Assad has ruled out leaving power under duress and branded his opponents as “terrorists” and “armed gangs” who he says are tools of a foreign conspiracy to overthrow him.

Some emails indicated that Assad was briefed in detail about the “illegal” presence of Western journalists in the Baba Amr district of Homs, the battered epicentre of the uprising, and urged to “tighten the security grip” on the city in November.

In emails sent to Assad in November and December, advisers told him the government should “be in control of all public spaces every evening”.

The Guardian said it had made extensive efforts to authenticate the emails by checking their contents against established facts and contacting 10 individuals whose correspondence appears in the cache.

“These checks suggest the messages are genuine, but it has not been possible to verify every one,” the Guardian said.

Other emails showed Assad sidestepped extensive U.S. sanctions against him by using a third party with a U.S. address to make purchases of music and apps from Apple’s iTunes.

Source: insideofiran

Head of Iran’s Quds force warns enemies of the regime

0

 

In rare comments, Qassem Suleimani says his forces ‘will show Iranian zeal in the face of any possible aggression’

The head of Iran’s Quds force, Qassem Suleimani, keeps a low profile in the media. Unlike other Iranian commanders who make hawkish statements in the face of foreign threats to the Islamic republic, Suleimani usually remains quiet.

Mounting pressure on Iran from Israel, however, has left little choice for the man who heads the external arm of the Iranian revolutionary guards tasked with its overseas operations, but to issue a warning against any military strike against the country.

The semi-official Mehr news agency today quoted Suleimani as saying that his armed forces “will show Iranian zeal in the face of any possible aggression against the country”.

Part of the responsibility of the Quds force is to protect the concept of Islamic revolution which the revolutionary guards see as being closely tied up with protecting the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“Major general Qasem Suleimani also highlighted the role of the vali-e faqih [rule by the clergy] in safeguarding the Islamic system,” Mehr reported.

Little is known about Suleimani but in a dispatch from Baghdad, my colleague Martin Chulov reported last July on his influence in Iraq as the man who, many believe, is “secretly running” that country.

More recently, opposition groups in Syria have accused Suleimani of aiding Syria’s Bashar al-Assad in his crackdown on pro-democracy movements there.

He is pictured in a photo gallery here, showing him in a religious ceremony in the city of Kouhbanan in Iran’s southern province of Kerman.

As Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s presidential term comes to an end, rumours have been rife among Iranian opposition activists that Suleimani is being groomed by Khamenei as a possible successor to the president.

 

Source: insideofiran

India names three Iranian suspects of an attack against an Israeli diplomat

0

 

Three Iranians have been named by Indian police as the main suspects in an attack on an Israeli diplomat in New Delhi in February, reports said on Thursday.

The men entered the country on tourist’s visas and left after the bombing in the center of the Indian capital which badly wounded a female worker at the Israeli embassy, the Times of India reported.

The report, citing anonymous police and intelligence agency sources, said police had warrants for the men and their names would be given to the Iranian government.

The Indian Express said that India would seek help from Interpol, the international police organization, to track down the suspects.

Last week, police made their first arrest in the case as they detained a Delhi-based Indian freelance journalist who worked part-time for Iran’s news agency IRNA.

On February 13, a hitman on a motorbike attached a magnetic bomb to the back of an Israeli embassy car carrying the Israeli diplomat as she went to pick up her children from school.

Malaysia to extradite Bangkok suspect

Meanwhile, Malaysian authorities on Thursday applied for a court order to extradite to Thailand an Iranian man suspected of involvement in an alleged bomb plot against Israeli diplomats in Bangkok.

Masoud Sedaghatzadeh was arrested at Kuala Lumpur’s international airport on February 15, a day after the alleged plot was exposed by an apparently unintended blast at a Bangkok house occupied by three Iranian suspects.

He had arrived in Malaysia the night before on a flight from Thailand.

Sedaghatzadeh denied involvement in the botched Bangkok bomb case as he appeared before a Kuala Lumpur court for the extradition application.

“Why am I here? I don’t have anything to do with the case,” he said in Farsi, speaking to the court through an interpreter.

Malaysia was acting on a Thai extradition request, said Kamal Baharin Omar, head of extraditions with the attorney-general’s office.

A decision may be weeks away and the government has asked for a month delay until the next hearing, saying it was awaiting further evidence from Thai authorities backing the extradition request.

The next hearing was set for April 16.

Sedaghatzadeh’s lawyer, Mohamad Nashir Hussin, said the application was invalid as there was no extradition treaty between the two neighbors and the government based its request on an “old” 1911 treaty that he said was outdated.

But Kamal said the Thai request was valid.

Sedaghatzadeh is one of three Iranian men detained in a case that saw tensions spike between arch-foes Iran and Israel following earlier bomb attacks targeting Israeli embassy staff in India and Georgia.

Israel has accused Iran of orchestrating a terror campaign, a charge angrily denied by Tehran.

One of the Bangkok suspects had his legs blown off as he hurled an explosive device at police while fleeing the blast in the Thai capital.

Sedaghatzadeh has said he is a car parts dealer who came to Malaysia on business, while his lawyer said his client had visited Thailand for a “short holiday.”

He was seeking transit to Iran when he was arrested, Malaysian authorities have said.

Source: alarabiya