Home Blog Page 504

Labour activist Mahdi Farahi Shandiz to serve 3-year prison sentence

0

 

GVF — The Human Rights Activists news agency has reported that unionist teacher Mahdi Farahi Shandiz was arrested in the first week of January to serve a three-year jail term.

Shandiz had been previously detained on May 1, 2010 and had spent more than eight months in solitary confinement in the notorious Evin prison before being released on January 26, 2011.

Intelligence Ministry agents have arrested the 51-year-old teacher and labour activist Shandiz numerous times before.

On Friday, The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint programme of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), called for urgent action on the recent arrests of and acts of harassment against several Iranian trade unionists, including Shandiz, Shahrokh Zamani, Mohammad Jarrahi, Nima Pouryaghoub, Sassan Vahebivash, Sheys Amani, Sadiq Karimi, Sharif Sa’ed-Panah, Mozaffar Salehnia, Maysam Nejati-Aref, Ebrahim Madadi, Reza Shahabi, Mohammad Hosseini and Mehdi Farahi Shandiz.

Iran hands prison terms to Baha’i university staff

0

 

Six members of the Baha’i Institute for Higher Education (BIHE) have received severe prison terms from the Islamic Republic judiciary.

The Human Rights Reporters Committee reports that the sentences given to the Baha’i online university administrators have been approved by the appellate court.

Kamran Mortezai is sentenced to five years in jail, and Riaz Sobhani, Ramin Zibai, Fardah Sedghi, Mahmoud Badavam and Noshin Khadem are each sentenced to four years in prison.

The six were arrested eight months ago and charged with “membership in illegal groups with the intention of committing crimes against national security.”

The report adds that Vahid Mahmoodi, who was arrested along with this group, was given a suspended sentence of five years in jail and released.

Last June, Iranian authorities raided the homes of the professors and administrators of the BIHE in Tehran, Esfahan, Shiraz and Mazandaran. Since then, 20 people have been arrested for their connection with the BIHE, and another 50 professors and students have been summoned for questioning.

The Ministry of Science has announced that “the online university BIHE does not have the necessary permits for operation, and all its activities are illegal.”

The on-line university was launched by the Baha’i community to serve the needs of young Iranian Baha’is, who face serious discrimination in accessing secondary education.

The Islamic Republic does not recognize Baha’ism as a legitimate religion, and although Iran is the birthplace of the Baha’i faith, its practice is banned in Iran.

Iran says blocking Strait of Hormuz still on the table

0

 

Iran’s representative at the United Nations has announced that Iran is not bent on blocking the Strait of Hormiz, but serious threats against the Islamic Republic would mean that all options are on the table. Mohammad Khazai also rejected recent reports that Iran is extending arms assistance to Syria.

Khazai, the permanent Iranian envoy at the UN, said in an interview with Charlie Rose that

He added, however, that at the moment there are no concrete plans to block the strategic waterway, which carries one-fifth of the world’s oil trade.

He said that if foreign powers try to create problems in the Persian Gulf, Iran and the other countries in the region have the right to defend themselves.

Recently, a wave of international threats to impose sanctions on Iranian oil prompted Iran’s Vice-President to say that if Iranian oil became the target of a boycott, the Islamic Republic would cut off traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.

The United States responded that it would not tolerate any disturbance in the strait’s daily traffic, and U.S. President Barack Obama sent a letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader to discuss the security of the strait.

In his interview, Mohammad Khazai rejected allegations that Iran is giving military assistance to Syria, adding that Iran generally refrains from meddling in the internal affairs of other countries.

He said, however, that Iran has evidence that the French government is giving arms assistance to anti-government groups in Syria.

The U.S. and Britain have accused Iran of extending arms assistance to the government of Bashar Assad for putting down protests in Syria.

U.S. Says Iran Is Helping Syria Evade Oil Sanctions

0

 

WASHINGTON — U.S. officials say they have uncovered an effort by Iran to help its close ally, Syria, evade U.S. sanctions on its petroleum sector.

The story, first reported by “The Wall Street Journal,” was confirmed to RFE/RL by a U.S. Treasury Department spokesperson, who said that officials had identified an Iran-chartered tanker attempting to bring Syrian oil to Tehran for resale, with the proceeds apparently to be funneled back to Damascus.

“The Wall Street Journal,” citing unnamed “officials and executives,” reported on January 19 that the tanker took on 91,000 metric tons of crude last November 19, 20, and 21 at the Syrian port of Baniyas, and intended to unload it at Iran’s Ras Bahregan oil terminal.

The tanker, named “The Mire,” was insured by the U.S. branch of the Mutual Protection and Indemnity Club (P&I) and registered by the Liberian International Ship and Corporate Registry (LISCR), whose headquarters are in a suburb of Washington, D.C.

U.S. officials notified the companies that in picking up Syrian oil, the ship had violated U.S. sanctions that prohibit doing business with Syria’s petroleum sector.

P&I subsequently rescinded the ship’s insurance coverage, and LISCR revoked its registry, effectively preventing its travel in international waters.

Scott Bergeron, the CEO of Liberian International Ship and Corporate Registry, told RFE/RL that the company’s oversight responsibilities do not include a duty to monitor the commercial activities of vessels they register.

He said his company has issued advisories to its fleet informing them of applicable sanctions.

The Treasury Department spokesperson, who spoke on background, noted that most maritime insurance companies are based in the United States or European Union, meaning that ships intent on carrying Syrian oil will have to look elsewhere for coverage or risk being caught amid U.S. scrutiny.

The spokesperson said the incident is in keeping with Iran’s history of defying Western sanctions regimes and shows the strength of Tehran’s relationship with Damascus, as well as the impact sanctions against are having against Syria, which he said is “trying anything it can do to offload its oil.”

The U.S. ban on companies doing business with Syria’s petroleum sector was imposed in August 2011 as part of a package of sanctions aimed at pressuring President Bashar al-Assad to stop his government’s deadly violence against antigovernment protesters and step down.

The EU instituted a similar ban.

Washington and Brussels have also accused Tehran of providing weapons and technology to Damascus to fuel the crackdown.

There was no immediate response to the U.S. investigation by Iran or Syria.

Earlier this month, Cyprus held up a Russian-operated ship carrying what local officials said were munitions bound for Syria, in defiance of Western sanctions.

The ship was released after Cyprus said it received assurances that the ship would not complete the delivery.

However, it later docked at the Syrian port of Tartus.

The imam sends a satrap

0

 

Asharq Alawsat – After months of hand wringing and, perhaps, internal squabbles, Iran appears to have decided to play a direct role in shaping the outcome of the struggle over Syria’s future.

Several signs indicate the change in policy.

For almost a year, the state-owned media had tried to appear neutral on the Syrian issue. News of the uprising was either under-played or presented in a more or less balanced way, reflecting the views both of the Baathist regime and its opponents.

In recent weeks, however, the Khomeinist media have adopted a position openly hostile to the Syrian opposition. Instead, they offer a narrative that echoes the Syrian regime’s claim that the uprising is a “foreign plot” and that the violence that has claimed over 5,000 lives is the work of “terrorist groups.”

However, the Tehran media have not deemed it fit to cover the Syrian events directly. Not a single Iranian media outlet has despatched a reporter to Syria. Two of Iran’s state-owned news agencies have permanent offices in Damascus. But they, too, make no attempt at covering the nationwide revolt. The reason is that even the most mercenary journalist would not be able to put his name to the Baathist regime’s brazen lies.

Another sign that Iran may have decided to heighten its profile in Damascus is the increase in arms shipments to Syria. An Iranian air cargo company, Aseman [Airlines], reports a 50 per cent increase in flights to Damascus. Although part of the “air-bridge” may be used for non-military cargo, the dramatic increase could also be related to faster gunrunning to save the Syrian regime.

There is also an increase in overland transport to Syria. While the flow of pilgrims from Iran has dwindled to a trickle, the number of trucks carrying cargo, including arms, has risen sharply. Last week, Turkey impounded four Iranian trucks on suspicion of smuggling weapons to Syria. Despite denials from Tehran, Turkey insists that this is the second time in six months that it has stopped Iranian trucks ferrying weapons to Syria.

Yet another sign of Iran’s greater involvement in Syria is the recent visit to Damascus of General Qassem Suleimani who commands the Qods Force (Sepah Quds), an ad hoc military unit with the official mission of “exporting revolution”.

According to Tehran sources, Suleimani held a four-hour meeting with President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus to discuss “coordination of strategy to protect Syria against foreign conspiracies.”

Suleimani reports directly to the “Supreme Guide” Ali Khamenei. Thus, his visit might indicate that the ” Supreme Guide” has seized control of policy on Syria, by-passing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Foreign Minister Ali-Akbar Salehi.

On a number of occasions, Ahmadinejad and Salehi have expressed reservations about backing the Syrian regime. It now seems that Khamenei has brushed aside those reservations. Sources in Tehran tell me that the “Supreme Guide” has decided to prevent the fall of Syria into “the camp hostile to the Islamic Republic.”

Could Iran save the Syrian regime?

Of course, Iran could ease the effect of sanctions on Syria by supplying it with money and arms. It could also play a role by bolstering the Syrian regime’s policy of trying to crush the revolt by killing and kidnapping.

General Suleimani already has a presence in Syria with a military mission of over 600 men. He could bring in units from the Lebanese branch of Hezbollah to help Syrian forces loyal to the regime. The Qods Force has trained hundreds of Hezbollah fighters for operations outside Lebanon. Suleimani has tested some of those fighters in operations in Iraq.

Suleimani could also count on elements from the Iraqi Jaish al-Mahdi (The Amy of the Hidden Imam). Although it is supposed to have disbanded, Jaish al-Mahdi has retained its arms and maintains informal existence under Suleimani’s men.

Stronger support from Iran could also raise the moral of Syrian ruling elites, some of whom have began to waver in recent weeks. Some potential deserters from the Syrian security forces may decide to await the outcome of Iranian intervention before making their move.

Iranian intervention could also persuade Russia and China to continue dragging their feet over possible United Nations’ intervention to stop the massacre in Syria.

More importantly, as some circles in Tehran suggest, the Islamic Republic could promote a formula under which President Assad is asked to step down so that the Baathist regime could survive in a new configuration.

Despite all that, Tehran’s chances of success in Damascus are slim.

To start with, the Syrian armed forces have never really warmed to the Tehran-Damascus axis. Although the two countries have signed a defence pact, exchanges between Iranian and Syrian military have remained limited. Iran has more such exchanges with North Korea and Venezuela than with Syria.

Syrian elites are equally cool towards alliance with the Iranian imamate.

The Baathist Party claims to stand for a secular, non-sectarian system of government with a Socialist programme. The Iranian imamate, on the other hand, is based on religious mumbo-jumbo, sectarian superstitions, and anti-left hatred. A Syria controlled by “Walayat al-Faqih” [Guardianship of the Jurists] might not be attractive to many members of the elite in Damascus.

Even if Tehran succeeds in making Suleimani de facto Satrap of Syria, the Syrian revolt may prove more resilient than Khamenei imagines. Ahmadinejad and Salehi have understood this. This is why, in cryptic style, they have tried to put some blue water between the Baathist regime and Iran.

Iran has no national interest in helping crush the Syrian uprising. Its military intervention could open the way for other nations to also send troops to Syria.

Prudence dictates that Iranian policymakers take into account the possibility that the Syrian revolt may succeed in bringing about regime change in Damascus.

By trying to prevent Syria from moving to the “hostile camp”, Khamenei and Suleimani may well render that inevitable.

By Amir Taheri

 

Source

Crackdown on journalists continues

0

 

Peymon Pakmehr is the fourth journalist to be arrested by Islamic Republic authorities in the past few days in a new wave of cracking down on Iranian media activists.

Daneshjoo News reports that Ministry of Intelligence officers arrested Pakmehr two days ago in Tabriz. He has been charged with “propaganda against the regime” in Tabriz Revolutionary Court.

This is the fourth in a string of arrests that started with the detention of Parastoo Dokouhaki and Marzieh Rasouli earlier this week, and yesterday’s arrest of Sahameddin Bourghani, the editor in chief of the Iran Diplomacy website.

The crackdown appears to have been triggered by the approach of the March parliamentary election and the establishment’s fear of renewed protests around the election proceedings.

Iran warns neighbours not to join isolation attempts

0

 

Iranian foreign minister says Gulf states co-operating with western efforts to isolate Tehran would be in ‘dangerous position’.

Tehran has warned its Gulf neighbours that it would be “dangerous” for them to join a western-led effort to isolate Iran, with the warning coming as a meeting of European ambassadors in Brussels failed to agree on the details of an EU oil embargo.

The EU permanent representatives council had been due to agree a far-reaching sanctions package including a phased embargo on oil imports from Iran and a freezing of the assets of the country’s central bank.

But Greece refused to agree to a Danish proposal to begin the oil embargo on 1 July, calling for more time to enable it to complete existing contracts with Iranian suppliers and find new ones.

The ambassadors will work through the weekend in an effort to complete a deal before foreign ministers meet on Monday.

The sanctions package includes a freeze on European assets belonging to the Central Bank of Iran, with loopholes to allow non-oil trade to continue. Britain is also pushing for a partial asset freeze on an Iranian private bank.

Iran – which already faces US sanctions on the global financing on its oil trade, effective in June – focused its attentions yesterday on trying to persuade Gulf Arab states not to co-operate with the western isolation campaign.

Speaking in Turkey, the Iranian foreign minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, said the US was looking for allies in the region and added: “I am calling to all countries in the region – please don’t let yourselves be dragged into a dangerous position.” Salehi left it unclear whether he was referring to military operations or actions on the oil market.

Earlier this week, Saudi Arabia angered Tehran by suggesting that, in the event of an embargo, it could supply Iran’s Far East customers. Iranian officials have said in the past that they would view any such step as a hostile act.

Japan, which buys 22% of Iran’s oil exports, said it would cut its purchases but would seek a waiver from the US sanctions in order to continue to buy some Iranian crude.

Salehi claimed Tehran had received a letter from Washington trying to persuade Iran to enter into negotiations on its nuclear programme, which western governments believe is aimed at building nuclear weapons or at least the capacity to make them.

“Mr Obama sent a letter to Iranian officials, but America has to make clear that it has good intentions and should express that it’s ready for talks without conditions,” he said.

“Out in the open they show their muscles, but behind the curtains they plead to us to sit down and talk. America has to pursue a safe and honest strategy so we can get the notion that America, this time, is serious and ready.”

The White House has denied sending a letter, but there have been US reports that Washington sent a message to Tehran through unspecified channels, warning it not to go through with threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, the 20-mile wide opening to the Gulf, in retaliation for oil sanctions.

Salehi said Iran was ready to resume talks in Istanbul with a six-nation group of negotiators which broke down a year ago. However, the office of Catherine Ashton, the EU foreign policy chief who represents the negotiating group, said she had not received an answer to her invitation to Tehran last year to restart the discussions.

European diplomats argued that Salehi was trying to give the impression that Iran was open to talks without committing it to negotiating over its nuclear programme.

Iran has also invited inspectors from the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency to Tehran on 29 January.

The IAEA has yet to officially confirm the two-day visit because it is seeking some assurances over what will be on the agenda.

 

Source

Widespread Targeting of Journalists Continues with Three Arrests

0

 

With only six weeks until the Iranian parliamentary election, security officials have cast a wider net in the capital with the arrest of three journalists. Journalists Parastou Dokouhaki, Marzieh Rassouli and Sahamoddin Bouraghani  are the latest in a series of arrests, following the other recent arrests of journalists Fatemeh Kheradmand and Ehsan Houshmandzadeh, who were detained on 7 January 2012.

Security officials arrested Dokouhaki, Rassouli, and Bouraghani, all reformist journalists, in their homes. All three arrests were accompanied by a home search and confiscation. On 15 January 2012 authorities arrested Dokouhaki, followed by the 17 January arrests of Rassouli and Bouraghani.

Heydar Moslehi, Minister of Intelligence, one day after the arrests of journalists Fatemeh Kheradmand and Ehsan Houshmandzadeh and civil activist Said Madani on 8 January 2012, at the end of a government announcement, claimed that some people have been arrested for allegedly ” attempting to implement the American objectives regarding the upcoming parliamentary elections.” As quoted by the Student News Agency ISNA, Moslehi said that the arrested spies had relations with people outside of the country both on-line and through social networks. Nevertheless, authorities did not provide an explanation or reason for either the arrests of Kheradmand and Houshmandzadeh or the three journalists recently arrested.

Fatemeh Kheradmand, a freelance journalist wrote on health and social issues and Ehsan Houshmandzadeh, journalist and ethnic researcher, were both arrested in their homes. Said Madani, editor of the monthly “Iran Tomorrow” and of the quarterly research journal “Social Welfare” and former university professor, was also arrested on 8 January. So far no charges have been brought against them.

Sahamoddin Bouraghani is a young journalist and son of Ahmad Bouraghani, MP from Tehran during the 2001-2004 parliament term, and the National Press Director for the Ministry of Culture and Guidance during the Khatami era. He was arrested on the eve of January 17. This journalist wrote for the reformist Etemaad-e Melli, and was the editor for the Iranian Diplomacy website.

Parastou Dokouhaki, journalist, blogger, and women’s issues researcher, was arrested on the eve of January 15 by security forces in her father’s home. At the time of her arrest, security officials seized her laptop as well as other personal items.
A family member of Parastou Dokouhaki told the Campaign that Dokouhaki became extremely depressed after the death of her father a few months ago and she was under special medical treatment. In the past three years, this journalist has not been involved in political or journalistic activities and her activities were limited to working with the Shariati Foundation as an editor and translator. Dokouhaki, who is in her early thirties, started her journalism career in her twenties, writing about women’s and social issues. She has worked for the now-banned women’s issues monthly Zanaan and other reformist newspapers such as Yas-e No, Vagha-ye Etefaghiyeh, Norooz, Hambastegi, and Etemaad-e Melli.

Dokouhaki’s blog, called “Written by a woman” (Zan Nevesht) was awarded best blog by an Iranian journalist by Deutsche Welle. In her last blog post, on 31 December 2011, she wrote about depression:

The long sickness and death of my father. Seeing the destruction of a human being. Understanding the physical deterioration before death. A life that was diminished day by day. My exposure to this painful process has left me vulnerable. Such that I am dying bit by bit. I think about death and I accept death. I even desire death so I can get out of the dysphoric life. The passing of time has not helped; it has not diminished it. I know. I am sick. I am deeply depressed. I’m struggling with absolute absurdity. I don’t have any motivation for creating even small goals. But to change this condition I must do something. Maybe the first step is writing this?

Marzieh Rassouli is another young journalist who was arrested in her home on 17 January. According to a report by BBC Persian, security officials presented a warrant at the time of her arrest, showing her charge as “actions against national security.” Rassouli was a music and literary critic for several years and was never politically active and never wrote about political affairs. She previously wrote for reformist newspapers such as Sharq, Kargozaran, and Etemaad.

 

Source

Hypocritical Iranian regime condemns interference in Syria, Hails Reform

0

 

(Reuters) – Iran condemned what it called foreign interference in the affairs of its closest Arab ally, Syria, on Tuesday and praised reforms President Bashar al-Assad has pledged to undertake as “problem-solving”.

“We are fundamentally against interfering in the affairs of other countries. We think it does not solve the problems but will only make them more complicated,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast told a weekly news conference.

Tehran has tempered its rhetoric on Syria as the crisis there has dragged on for 10 months. At first, it wholeheartedly supported Assad’s stance against public opposition, now it is encouraging reforms to take account of popular grievances.

“The good reforms which have been announced by Syrian officials are pushing the ambience towards dialogue and solving the problems, though some countries do not like this,” Mehmanparast said.

Assad has announced the end to a draconian state of emergency, granted citizenship to many Syrian Kurds and promised parliamentary elections later this year. On Sunday he issued the latest of several amnesties for those detained since the uprising began.

Syria’s opposition has dismissed Assad’s gestures as hollow, given a continued spate of killings and a lack of dialogue even after Arab League peace monitors arrived three weeks ago.

The United Nations says more than 5,000 people have been killed during Assad’s 10-month-old military crackdown on popular unrest, with violence continuing despite the presence of Arab League monitors.

Qatar, the most Arab country most outspoken against Assad, has proposed sending in Arab troops to halt the bloodshed.

Non-Arab, Shi’ite Muslim Iran is closely allied with Assad’s Syria and both support militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah.

Iran has backed “Arab Spring” uprisings that toppled several Western-allied dictators in predominantly Sunni Muslim North Africa, while maintaining support for Assad, a member of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam.

To help deter foreign intervention in Syria, Iran has used various regional cards, including fears that it could unleash militant proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas against Israeli and U.S. interests in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia has indicated it could increase oil output to make up for Iranian crude in the event of a European Union embargo against Iranian oil [ID:nL6E8CG2PF], a stance criticised by Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi.

“These signs and signals are not friendly and will be remembered in the history of relations between the two countries,” Salehi told Iran’s state-run Arabic language television channel al Alam.

Mehmanparast said he doubted the EU would push ahead with its oil embargo, a move Iranian OPEC Governor Mohammad Ali Khatibi said would be “economic suicide” for a bloc that is in the grip of a huge currency crisis.

Iran cracks down on journalists

0

 

In a new wave of arrests targeting media activists, Marzieh Rasouli has been arrested in Tehran.

The Human Rights House of Iran reports that Rasouli’s home was raided and many of her belongings confiscated before she was arrested on the charge of “acting against national security.”

Rasouli has a history of collaboration with Iran’s Student News Agency (ISNA), the Shargh and Etemad dailies and several film publications.

This week, Parastoo Dokouhaki, another journalist and women’s rights activist, was also arrested in Tehran.

Dokouhaki was one of the first bloggers in Iran, and her blog “Zan-nevesht” received a “best weblog” prize from Deutsche Welle in 2005.

Dokouhaki has collaborated with several Iranian newspapers, including Hambastegi, Etemad Melli, Shargh and Sarmayeh.

Mohammad Soleymani-nia, a translator and writer, was also arrested this week.

Fatemeh Kheradmand, Ehsan Houshmand and Hassan Fathi are the other journalists that have been arrested in recent weeks.

Last week, Reporters Without Borders once again sounded an alarm over the situation of Iranian journalists and, in an open letter to UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay, called for her immediate intervention on behalf of Iran’s persecuted media activists.