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Return of seven Kurdish political prisoners to Orumieh’s central prison

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(21 February 2012) – Last week, the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center received reports that on Tuesday, February 14 seven Kurdish political prisoners were transferred from Section 12 of Orumieh’s central prison to an unknown location. Now, IHRDC has received reports that those prisoners were returned to Section 12 on Friday, February 17.

According to these reports, the political prisoners were held in solitary confinement in the jail of the Orumieh Intelligence Ministry branch. There, these prisoners were purportedly pressured by Intelligence Ministry officials to voice regret about their actions and make televised confessions on camera. Despite the pressure and threats they were subjected to, the prisoners did not concede. They were subsequently transferred back to Orumieh’s central prison on Friday.

This is just the latest report in a raft of reports indicating that security forces in Orumieh’s central prison and the intelligence branch of Orumieh frequently subject prisoners to extreme pressure. A few months ago, the reported pressures and threats culminated in a declaration from prison officials that Section 12 of the prison (where most political prisoners in the jail are typically held) would be closed.

Source: iranhrdc

UN nuclear inspectors declare Iran mission a disappointment

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International Atomic Energy Agency team blocked by authorities in Tehran from visiting suspect site.

UN nuclear agency declares latest inspection a failure Link to this video

The diplomatic options for a solution to the Iranian nuclear crisis narrowed on Wednesday after a team of UN nuclear inspectors returned from Tehran without agreement on visiting a suspect site.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is due to issue its latest report on the Iranian nuclear programme on Friday, but took the unusual step of criticising Tehran’s approach in a statement issued while the inspectors were still flying back to its headquarters in Vienna.

The main stumbling block was Iran’s refusal to allow the IAEA team to visit a military site at Parchin, where the last agency report, issued in November, said there was a steel chamber which could have been used for testing explosives of a type performed in the development of a nuclear warhead.

“It is disappointing that Iran did not accept our request to visit Parchin during the first or second meetings,” said the agency’s director general, Yukiya Amano. “We engaged in a constructive spirit, but no agreement was reached.”

Herman Nackaerts, the IAEA deputy director general and head of the safeguards department, who headed the mission, had made a Parchin visit the main litmus test for its success, according to diplomatic sources, but was rebuffed by the Iranians.

Speaking at Vienna airport on his return, Nackaerts said his team “could not find a way forward”.

A Vienna-based diplomat briefed on the visit said Iran had sought to focus the talks on a work-plan circumscribing the conduct of IAEA inspections.

“It was very hard work. The Iranians focused exclusively on process and they tried to get the team to sign a document which governed the ways they would work,” the diplomat said. “My reading is, what happened was that the meetings were monopolised by a lot of unproductive discussions on the wording of the agreement and practical questions put forward by the agency were put to the side.”

The IAEA said: “Intensive efforts were made to reach agreement on a document facilitating the clarification of unresolved issues in connection with Iran’s nuclear programme, particularly those relating to possible military dimensions. Unfortunately, agreement was not reached on this document.”

In the wake of the collapse of the mission, Friday’s report will almost certainly give a negative assessment of Iranian co-operation while noting the progress of the country’s nuclear programme and uranium enrichment, which the UN security council has demanded Tehran suspend.

Iran insists it has a right to enrich uranium and the country’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, put on a show of defiance on Wednesday with a rare meeting with Iranian nuclear scientists, insisting their work was peaceful, that Iran had no intention of building a bomb and vowing the programme would continue in the face of mounting international pressure.

“With God’s help, and without paying attention to propaganda, Iran’s nuclear course should continue firmly and seriously,” Khamenei said on Iranian state television. “Pressures, sanctions and assassinations will bear no fruit. No obstacles can stop Iran’s nuclear work.”

Doubts have now been cast over tentative plans to hold a new round of talks between Iran and a six-nation group of major powers, including the five permanent members of the UN security council together with Germany. The group, known as the P5+1, had been waiting for the new IAEA report before deciding whether to proceed with the talks.

It was also seeking clarification on whether Iran had dropped its earlier preconditions for negotiations, which included an immediate end to sanctions and a guarantee that uranium enrichment was a non-negotiable Iranian right.

There had been hopes that the P5+1 meeting could agree confidence-building measures, possibly including an exchange of Iranian low enriched uranium for French-made fuel rods. Diplomats said the group would now have to reassess if there would be any purpose in a meeting.

Some western capitals are pushing instead for Iran to be referred to the UN security council by the IAEA board of member states, with the aim of imposing further sanctions. An EU oil embargo is already planned for 1 July, at about the same time of US financial sanctions against the Iranian global oil trade.

Source: guardian

Tehran steps into US-Israel Iran row with threat of pre-emptive strike

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Deputy Chief of Iran’s Armed Forces Gen. Mohammad Hejazi issued a new threat Tuesday, Feb. 21: “Our strategy now is that if we feel our enemies want to endanger Iran’s national interests… we will act without waiting for their actions.”
DEBKAfile’s military sources report that an Iranian preemptive attack on Israel has been in the air for some weeks. It became realistic because the dragging out of the argument between Washington and Jerusalem over a military strike and the two government’s indecisiveness gave Tehran a golden opportunity to further its interests.
It bestowed on Iran the gift of entering into talks on its nuclear program with the six world powers (P5 plus 1) free of a military threat and therefore in a superior bargaining position. For openers, Tehran has already pocketed the Obama administration’s promise of permission to continue to enrich uranium up to 5 percent in any quantity and will be more than ready to lay down more demands.
Gen. Hejazi’s threat of a preemptive strike against Israel also serves the Islamic regime in its run-up to a general election on March 3. It aims to show the Iranian voter and Middle East public that Iran has successfully turned US and Israeli aggression against Iran against them and demonstrated they are no more than paper tigers incapable of carrying through on their rhetoric. The military initiative therefore stays in Iran’s hands.
In Tehran, the standard Israeli cliché of “We don’t’ advise anyone to test our resolve” has worn thin.
By letting two Iranian warships bearing arms for Assad pass Israel’s coast on its way to Tartus without interference, Israel encouraged Tehran to assume that, in the last reckoning, it will abstain from a unilateral strike to eradicate Iran’s nuclear facilities without Washington’s blessing.
The Netanyahu government’s resolve is expected to melt away under the bulldozer assault of one American emissary after another touching down at Ben-Gurion airport to corner them into backing down.
Once Israel lets its hands be tied, Tehran calculates, it will become progressively harder to break them loose, so that if Tehran does carry out a limited “preemptive” missile attack on the Jewish state, Jerusalem will again bow to Washington and let itself be coerced into not responding.
Thursday, Feb. 23, US National Director of Intelligence James Clapper arrives in Israel to tackle its military and intelligence chiefs on the question, after US National Defense Director Tom Donilon spent three days in fruitless discussions with government leaders Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak. Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Chiefs of Staff tried his hand at persuasion earlier this month. This cycle of pressure will peak with Netanyahu’s White House talks with President Obama on March 5.
The Iranians felt confident enough to safely deny requests from the team of IAEA inspectors who arrived in Tehran Monday for access suspect nuclear locations and meetings with scientists employed in their nuclear program.
Gen. Hejazi’s words were backed up by a four-day air defense exercise, dubbed Sarallah (God’s Revenge), in the south of the country. The Islamic Republic also took another initiative by cutting off oil exports to Britain and France and so turning the tables on the European Union’s oil embargo on Tehran.

Source: debka

Azerbaijan arrests suspected attack plotters with ties to Iran and Hezbollah

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Police in Azerbaijan have arrested an unspecified number of people linked to Iran and to Lebanese militant group Hezbollah suspected of planning attacks in the country, state television said Tuesday.

State broadcaster AzTV, quoting the National Security Ministry, said police had detained people linked to Iranian intelligence services and Hezbollah who intended to stage attacks on foreign citizens in the country.

The report said the suspects had gathered intelligence on targets and bought explosives, guns and ammunition, but gave no further details.

The reported arrests come after a car bomb last week critically injured an Israeli diplomat in New Delhi while Georgian officials defused a second device in Tbilisi.

A suspected Iranian bomber had his legs blown off as he hurled a grenade at Thai police. Israel blamed Iran for the attacks which came at a time of heightened tensions over Tehran’s nuclear program.

A senior Israeli official involved in counter-terrorism warned on Friday that Iran and Hezbollah were planning to carry out new anti-Israeli attacks around the world after the incidents in India, Thailand and Georgia.

Police in mainly Muslim but officially secular Azerbaijan last month also arrested two men with alleged links to Iranian intelligence on suspicion of plotting to kill prominent Israelis in Azerbaijan.

The allegations infuriated Tehran, which sent a diplomatic note of protest accusing Baku of collaborating with Israel’s spy services and helping assassins who have killed Iranian nuclear scientists.

Baku responded with a letter to Tehran calling the claim “absurd, unsubstantiated and false”, according to Azerbaijani media reports on Tuesday.

Tehran has been angered by Baku’s friendly links with Israel, while Azerbaijan has accused Iran of sponsoring Islamic radicals on its territory.

Relations between the ex-Soviet state and the Islamic republic are complicated by the presence of a huge ethnic Azeri minority in Iran, which far outnumbers Azerbaijan’s own population of 9.2 million.

 Source: alarabiya

Lawyer of woman sentenced to death by stoning jailed for 6 years

 

The Iranian lawyer of a woman who was sentenced to death in 2006 for adultery has himself been sentenced to six years in prison by a court in Iran, according to human rights group Herana.

The court in the northern Iranian city of Tabriz sentenced Javid Hutan Kian, the lawyer for Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtian for “attacking the Islamic Republic’s security and hurting the reputation of the country by granting interviews to the foreign media regarding criticising the Iranian authorities about the Sakineh casem” Herana said.

According to his lawyer Taqi Mahmoudi, Kianhas already been in prison for one-and-a-half years and is in poor health due to torture.

Kian was arrested by Iranian intelligence agents in October 2010 in Tabriz. Last March he managed to send a smuggled letter to Adnkronos International that said he was tortured in prison and pleaded for international support.

Source: insideofiran

Iranian journalist sentenced to jail

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Iranian journalist Mahsa Amrabadi has been sentenced to a prison term for the second time in the past two years.

The Kaleme opposition website reports that Mahsa Amrabadi has been sentenced to five years in jail for “assembly and collusion against national security.” Four years of her sentence is suspended; however, one year of it must be served immediately.

Amrabadi is charged with refusal to denounce opposition leaders MirHosein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, attending the Quran-reading gatherings of political prisoners, giving interviews and writing reports for newspapers, visiting independent members of the clergy and defending the rights of her husband, detained journalist Massoud Bastani.

Amrabadi was arrested for the second time last March by intelligence officers of the Revolutionary Guards and was released on bail.

She was first arrested in June of 2009 during the widespread crackdown on election protesters who claimed the presidential elections were rigged. She was sentenced to one year in prison.

Amrabadi has collaborated with several reformist newspapers.

Her husband, Massoud Bastani, was arrested in the post-election crackdown of 2009 as he was inquiring about the arrest of his wife. Bastani was later sentenced to six years in prison for his journalistic activities.

Journalists became one of the chief targets of post-election crackdown in 2009, and according to the journalists’ rights group Reporters Without Borders, more than 30 journalists and 24 netizens are currently behind bars in Iran.

Source: radiozamaneh

Rights group calls for accountability in Khuzestan deaths

 

The group Justice for Iran has issued a statement denouncing the crackdown on protesters in Khuzestan that saw two detainees killed while in custody.

Justice for Iran claims that the people responsible for these deaths appear to enjoy immunity from prosecution in Iran. It has called on anyone who has any information about these incidents to share it with Justice for Iran for use in its database of human-rights violators.

More than a month ago, the authorities in Shoush, Hamidiyeh and Ahvaz arrested more than 60 protesters who were calling for a boycott of the parliamentary elections. Two of the detainees, Mohammad Ka’abi and Nasser Alboshokeh, have been pronounced dead by the authorities, and so far no one has been held accountable for their deaths.

Human Rights Watch says 65 people were detained in Khuzestan in the past month, also reporting that Alboshokeh and Ka’abi appeared to have been killed under torture.

Authorities informed the family of Mohammad Ka’abi that he had been killed and buried. They warned the family against holding any commemoration services and even refused to tell the family where the body is buried.

Ka’abi, a 35-year-old law student at Dezfool University, has left behind a pregnant wife and two children, aged eight and five. His wife is currently being held incommunicado at her home.

Nasser Alboshokeh, who was 19, was arrested at the clothing store where he worked for writing graffiti and slogans on city walls.

Justice for Iran reports that Alboshokeh was arrested on January 26 and died four days later. His body was held for more than 11 days, delaying the announcement of his death.

The family reports that the authorities forbade them from holding a burial in Ahvaz so they laid him to rest in a neighbouring city. They also report that telltale marks of beatings and physical abuse were evident on his body.

Khuzestan Province has faced repeated outbreaks of protests against “unfavourable and discriminatory conditions” but Islamic Republic authorities have consistently put down the protests by force.

Source: radiozamaneh

‘Regime responsible for post-election unrest’ says conservative MP

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A conservative Iranian lawmaker has blamed the country’s officials for the unrest sparked by Iran’s disputed 2009 presidential elections.

Ali Motahhari made the comments during a debate with pro-Ahmadinejad student leader Mehrdad Bazrpash at the Khajeh Nasir Toosi University of Technology.

“The main people to blame were those who managed the [post-election] crisis,” he said. “Some of the population was discontented. But how ought they have been dealt with? Let’s even say [for the sake of argument] that their leaders [Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi] were traitors. But all these ordinary citizens and [religious] women in chadors came out and protested. Shouldn’t we have allowed them to assemble in order to gradually extinguish the turmoil?”

“Why did you [the authorities] act in a way that directed the slogans towards the leader [Ali Khamenei]?” Motahhari asked. “You didn’t even give them a single minute to speak out.”

Ali Motahhari is the son of Ayatollah Morteza Motahhari, a leading scholar and close aide to Imam Khomeini who was killed in a terrorist attack three months after the 1979 Revolution.

Despite being considered a conservative politician, Motahhari is known for his outspoken attacks on the Ahmadinejad administrations and pro-government lawmakers.

“There are [even] MPs in the Majlis who say I am a lawyer for the government and are proud of this,” he said. He denounced those who attempted to undermine the role of the parliament and bashing its members while hiding behind the Supreme Leader.

Motahhari expressed his disapproval at Ahmadinejad’s slanderous comments about Hashemi Rafsanjani during the televised presidential debates in 2009. “I defended Hashemi in 2009 and I continue to do so. Hashemi faced injustice in the 2009 crisis. In front of 50 million viewers they [Ahmadinejad] asked [Hashemi] ‘How have you made this much wealth?’ They didn’t even give him a chance to defend himself.”

Some in the conservative camp have even accused Hashemi Rafsanjani of fomenting the post-election unrest, a charge denied by the former president and parliament speaker.

US sees signs of Iran activity in Yemen

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Iran is becoming more active in Yemen and could pose a deeper threat to its stability and security, the US envoy to Yemen said on Monday, highlighting what would be yet another layer of uncertainty in a near-failed state.

US Ambassador Gerald Feierstein’s warning is likely to reinforce long-held fears among Sunni Gulf monarchies that Shi’ite Muslim power Iran is trying exploit regional unrest.

“We do see Iran trying to increase its presence here, in ways that we believe are unhelpful to Yemen’s stability and security,” Feierstein said in an interview one day before Yemenis head to the polls to elect a new president to replace Ali Abdullah Saleh, ending his three decades in power.

The election, where Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi is the sole candidate, is part of a power transfer plan backed by the United States and brokered by Gulf Arab countries after a year of protests against Saleh’s rule.

“I think that we are seeing increasing Iranian outreach to various actors,” Feierstein said.

Washington is leading international efforts to isolate Iran over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear programme which many countries believe is aimed at building nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran denies.

Top oil exporter and close US ally Saudi Arabia has accused Iran of fomenting unrest among Shi’ite populations in its east and in neighbouring Bahrain.

Tehran accuses Washington of seeking to exacerbate religious and political differences between the majority Shia Islamic Republic and the mostly Sunni Gulf Arab states.

In addition to its political uncertainties, Yemen faces an active wing of al Qaeda, an economic crisis that has brought it to the brink of famine, a Shi’ite rebellion in the north and a southern secessionist movement.

The northern “Houthi” rebels, who draw their name from a tribal leader, control Saada province bordering Saudi Arabia, which intervened military in Yemen in 2009.

There is ongoing fighting between the Houthis, who are members of the Zaydi branch of Shi’ite Islam, and Salafis – Sunni Muslims whose puritanical creed mirrors doctrines widespread in Saudi Arabia, and classes Shi’ites as heretics.

“We do definitely see a rise in Iranian finance, efforts on the part of Iran to increase its influence not only with Zaydi Shia elements but with Sunni elements as well,” Feierstein said.

“We do think that we have evidence of Iranian activities that will build up military capabilities as well. It’s a relatively recent phenomenon, Iran is taking advantage of this period of political instability and loss of government control over large parts of the country.”

The US Ambassador also said that while there were signs that the Houthis were willing to engage in dialogue to bring some stability to the country, the group was also expanding its territory.

“But we’re also concerned about conflicts between Houthis and others in the north and a fairly aggressive effort on their part to expand their territory and their control and so we hope that through this process of national dialogue they will engage politically and work in a positive way that will end this conflict.”

Source: insideofiran

Eight Baha’is arrested in Mashhad

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Islamic Republic security forces have arrested eight Baha’i youth at a craft show held at the home of a Baha’i citizen in Mashhad.

The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reports that on Friday, security forces raided the home of a Baha’i citizen where a craft show was being held. The report indicates that after searching the house and interrogating participants, the forces took eight people into custody.

The participants were given forms to fill out, and their identities were recorded.

In recent months, Iran’s Baha’i community has been assailed by the government.

Two weeks ago, four Baha’is were summoned by the Ministry of Intelligence in Shiraz and were arrested once they reported for questioning.

Earlier, the homes of 30 Baha’i families were raided and at least seven people were arrested.

The Baha’i Open University (BIHE) has also been the target of an Islamic Republic clampdown, with many of its staff and faculty members arrested and its activities branded as illegal by the Intelligence and Education ministries.

Although Baha’ism originated in Iran, the Islamic Republic does not accept the Baha’i faith as an official religion, and members of the Baha’i community face widespread discrimination in all areas of life.

Source: radiozamaneh