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U.S. grand jury indicts two Iranians in alleged Saudi envoy plot

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A U.S. grand jury decided on Thursday to formally charge two men suspected of being part of an alleged Iranian plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to Washington.

U.S. authorities announced last week they foiled a plot by two men linked to Iran’s security agencies to assassinate Saudi Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir. One suspect was arrested in the United States last month and the other is believed to still be in Iran.

The indictment was in line with the initial complaint against Manssor Arbabsiar, who is in custody, and co-defendant Gholam Shakuri, who is at large, the prosecutor’s office said.

Iran has strongly denied any involvement in what the U.S. says was a plot by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ elite Quds force to kill the ambassador by hiring assassins from a Mexican drug cartel for $1.5 million.

Authorities in the United States say the plot involved Arbabsiar allegedly trying to contract a Mexican drug cartel to kill the Saudi ambassador possibly through the bombing of a Washington restaurant.

According to the indictment, Arbabsiar and Shakuri conspired to “kill the Ambassador to the United States of Saudi Arabia, while the Ambassador was in the United States.”

To set up the alleged hit, Arbabsiar allegedly arranged for the wiring of $100,000 to the United States as a downpayment, the indictment says.

The two co-defendants are also accused of planning for a “weapon of mass destruction” to be used against the ambassador, creating “substantial risk of serious bodily injury to others by destroying and damaging structures.”

The affair has escalated tensions between the United States and Iran, relations poisoned by decades of mutual suspicion and more recently Western concerns over Iran’s nuclear program.

 

U.S. fears more plots from Iran’s Quds Force

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Reuters – The United States believes Iran’s shadowy Quds Force is becoming increasingly aggressive overseas and may be working on other international plots beyond the alleged plan to kill Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Washington, three U.S. officials told Reuters.

U.S. allegations last week of a foiled plot in Washington have escalated tensions between the United States and Iran. They have also renewed Washington’s focus on the Quds Force, the covert operations arm of Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which is believed to have sponsored attacks on U.S. targets in the Middle East — but never before in the United States.

“They’re being more aggressive … not only in Iraq but worldwide,” one senior U.S. official said in an interview. The official and others insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record and because of the sensitive nature of the matter.

U.S. officials have long charged that the Quds Force — the Arabic word for Jerusalem — has used proxies to attack U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

The Quds Force, whose power within Iran is believed to be growing, is also active in Lebanon, the Gulf, Syria and elsewhere, officials said.

Many Iran specialists have reacted skeptically to the disclosure of an alleged Iranian plot within the United States itself. Tehran has dismissed the charges as a fabrication.

Some foreign nations briefed on the plot have raised questions. While President Barack Obama has so far demanded tougher sanctions on Iran and not a military reprisal, representatives of those nations are nonetheless wary, given the flawed intelligence case President George W. Bush made for war in Iraq.

Even U.S. officials now convinced of the plot’s authenticity acknowledged they were initially doubtful due to the case’s odd facts, including the bumbling nature of the Iranian-American now in custody, and his approach to a supposed Mexican drug cartel figure who happened to be a U.S. federal informant.

U.S. officials who spoke to Reuters declined to provide details of the evidence that the Quds Force may have other plots in the works. But two officials stressed they were based on more than just speculation or analysis.

“These are not merely aspirational plots dreamed up by the Quds Force. In fact, there is active planning around them,” a second senior U.S. official told Reuters. Both senior officials played down concerns any attack was imminent.

A third U.S. official said the recklessness of the alleged attempt to assassinate Saudi Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir in Washington suggested that Quds “may be involved in other actions.”

In the wake of the U.S. government’s disclosure of the alleged plot, counterterrorism investigators in Britain are examining the possibility that other plots hatched in Iran were under way, a European government source said.

But the source said he and his colleagues were unaware of any current Iranian plots similar to the one the Americans said they had uncovered and disrupted.

IRAN’S ‘SECOND MOST POWERFUL MAN’

U.S. officials said they believed Iran’s Quds Force had expanded its power in recent years, exerting more control over the country’s foreign policy.

Its commander, Qasem Suleimani, a brigadier general, has led the group’s efforts to broaden Iran’s influence in the Middle East, including by supporting Iraq factions that oppose the U.S. presence.

“His prominence within the Quds Force cannot be overstated. He is directly responsible for everything the Quds Force does,” one U.S. military official, who is an expert on Iran, told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Karim Sadjadpour, an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, described Suleimani as “arguably the second most powerful man in Iran after the supreme leader,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The United States has blamed Iran for an upswing in attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq over the summer that made June the deadliest month for U.S. personnel there since 2008. The United States also accuses Tehran of supplying weapons to Afghan militants, although on a far smaller scale than in Iraq.

In recent years, Suleimani’s Quds Force has been “meddling in more places,” the first senior U.S. official said.

“There are opportunities they think they can exploit in various places in the Middle East, that either they’ve got some foothold, and we’re on one side, and they’re on the other,” the official said.

Vali Nasr, a professor of international politics at Tufts University, said the alleged plot cited by U.S. officials tracked with what appeared to be “far more aggressive Iranian behavior everywhere else.”

He also cited Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Afghanistan.

“For some, it might be this news came in the context of a trendline that they were seeing with Iran,” Nasr said.

U.S. officials have told Reuters they believe Suleimani is connected to the latest U.S. plot.

“Whether he is doing this like other things on his own or whether this is the direction of Khamenei, we can’t say right now,” the first U.S. official said. “It’s a problem no matter what.”

Nasr said he doubted the Quds Force would be doing something as risky as a plot on U.S. soil without political clearance from above.

Some Iran watchers were stunned that Tehran would choose to carry out an attack on U.S. soil, a potentially dangerous departure from past protocol. But U.S. officials following Iran told Reuters the behavior was consistent with the activities by the Quds Force and Suleimani.

“It makes a huge difference to us that it’s on U.S. soil. But Iran has been, with only the thinnest of veils, seeking to kill U.S. troops and U.S. government individuals for years,” the military official said.

 

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Iran jails reformist journalist Tajik

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AFP – Iran has sentenced reformist journalist Abdolreza Tajik to six year in prison after he was convicted of propaganda against the regime, the governmental Iran newspaper reported on Thursday.

The report said that Tajik was arrested in June 2010 and charged with acting against the national security and propaganda against the regime.

He was also charged with collaborating with the Centre for the Defence of Human Rights, a banned organisation founded by Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, according Iran report.

It added that Tajik who worked for several reformist newspapers was detained for weeks twice before, once for disrupting public order and propaganda against the regime.

Dozens of journalists working for reformist publications have also been jailed following the government’s crackdown on the mass street protests that followed the June 2009 presidential election, which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s reformist challengers charged was rigged.

 

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UK freezes assets of five for alleged Iranian plot

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Reuters – Britain has frozen the assets of five men, including two key suspects in an alleged Iranian plot to kill the Saudi ambassador in the United States, a government spokesman said on Tuesday.

The five targeted included Manssor Arbabsiar, a naturalized U.S. citizen, who was arrested in September over the plot which Iran has dismissed as a fabricated “comedy show.”

Gholam Shakuri, an Iranian who has been named by the U.S. authorities as a co-plotter, was also included. He is a fugitive and believed to be in Iran.

“HM Treasury has designated five individuals under the Terrorist Asset-Freezing Act 2010 in relation to the terrorist activities of Iran and the Quds Force,” a government spokesman said.

“We will be consulting with partners, including our EU colleagues, Saudi Arabia, and the US, on how to take forward further action,” he added.

U.S. officials have said they believe it likely that the head of Iran’s elite Quds force knew of the alleged plot to kill Saudi ambassador Adel al-Jubeir.

Britain’s Treasury also blacklisted Qasem Soleimani, who it said was a commander in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. The other two were named as Iranian national Hamed Abdollahi and Abdul Reza Shahlai, who it said lived in Iran.

U.S. authorities said last week that Arbabsiar had paid a U.S. undercover agent posing as a Mexican drug cartel hitman to assassinate the ambassador.

The affair has escalated tensions between the United States and Iran, relations poisoned by decades of mutual suspicion and more recently Western concerns over Iran’s nuclear program.

 

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Detained lawyer denied visiting privileges

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Detained Iranian lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh is being denied visiting privileges for refusing to wear the chador in prison.Sotoudeh’s husband reports that last week he and his children were not allowed to visit Sotoudeh on the grounds that she had lost her visiting privileges.

Sotoudeh has refused to wear the chador on top of the regular hijab [head scarf and tunic], saying it is a violation of her rights.

Sotoudeh has indicated that political prisoners should not even be obliged to wear the usual prison uniforms given to other prisoners.

Male political prisoners are not obliged to wear uniforms and can wear their own regular clothes.

In September, the judiciary announced that the requirement for women to wear the chador in court had been rescinded.

Sotoudeh has been sentenced to six years in prison and a 10-year ban on practicing law for her involvement with the Human Rights Defenders Centre and for taking on the cases of political prisoners.

She has been charged with acting against national security and propaganda.

 

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France and Canada back U.S. allegations against Iran

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French President Nicolas Sarkozy has supported allegations that Iran was involved in a plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. and is calling for tougher sanctions against Iran.

Sarkozy said the evidence presented by U.S. authorities is highly credible and he expressed concern over the change of direction in the actions of Iranian leaders.

Iran has repeatedly denied any involvement in the plot and insists that the allegations are part of a “political and media show” set up by the Americans.

Sarkozy called for further tightening of sanctions against Iran in view of the recent allegations, Iran’s insistence on uranium enrichment and the rising tensions between Iran and Arab countries in the region.

In the meantime, Canada has imposed sanctions on five Iranian officials implicated in the alleged plot to assassinate Saudi Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir.

Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird announced: “Indications of the Iranian regime’s involvement are extremely serious. Canada will work with our international partners in considering the consequences for Iran’s actions.”

The five Iranians are: Mansour Arbabsiar, an Iranian-American currently in U.S. custody; Gholam Shakouri, Arbabsiar’s alleged partner; and Qud Force commanders Ghassem Soleymani, Hamed Abdollahi and Alireza Shahlayi.

The first two have been indicted by a New York court. The 56-year-old Arbabsiar is under arrest, and Gholam Shakouri is related to Arbabsiar, according to U.S. authorities, and is currently in Iran.

Earlier, all five individuals were put under sanctions by the United States and Britain.

Arbabsiar is accused of colluding with Gholam Shakouri to engage the services of a Mexican criminal gang to assassinate the Saudi ambassador.

Analysts have indicated that the indictment bears many ambiguities and does not show a direct connection between Arbabsiar, the Quds forces and Iranian authorities.

Mothers of Park Laleh: Human Rights Violations Reaching Record High in Iran

 

The following statement has been released by Mothers of Park Laleh on the International Day Against Death Penalty, October 10, 2011:

The Nobel and Honorable People of Iran:

How can we believe the government when there is so much evidence to the contrary?Since the Islamic Republic of Iran came to power, human rights violations began. Mass killings in Kurdistan, the Cultural Revolution, the dismissal of large numbers of students and professors from universities, the oppression of political parties and the imprisonment of their members, barbaric and violent tortures, the mass executions of prisoners, the continuation of a destructive war with large numbers of fatalities and disabled veterans, the dismissal of bright and intelligent individuals from their places of employment, the Chain Killings in Iran and abroad, orchestrated attacks against dormitories and murdering college students, driving the country’s gifted and talented scientists abroad, opening fire on crowds in the streets, attacking gatherings of women, workers, teachers, students and funeral processions in homes and cemeteries and thousands of other human rights violations which can’t be mentioned here one by one. So what must be done?

No individual or organized voices of dissent are allowed in Iran. Everyone including those with connections to the regime are killed or imprisoned once they dare to express the smallest amount of dissatisfaction. Religious convictions and laws have been turned into an excuse for the officials to get rich. The current situation has reached such dire proportions that even attorneys don’t feel safe to practice their profession because they are accused of serious crimes, pressured by security forces and imprisoned.

Hasn’t the time come to protest widely against these blatant violations of human rights? As mothers to all Iranian children, we, Mothers of Park Laleh, raise our voices against brazen violations of human rights in Iran.

Dr. Ahmad Shaheed and human rights organizations across the globe, be aware that human rights violations have reached a record high in Iran.

To prove this point, we submit the following data representing only the names and information related to a small number of individuals either imprisoned or killed in the last ten years, excluding those officially executed in prisons or gunned down in the streets during the same period of time. We do so with the hopes that everyone is reminded what our obligations are and how a solution must be reached to end this injustice.

 

Human Rights Organizations and Attorneys:

  • Narges Mohammadi was arrested on June 10, 2010 and sentenced to 11 years in prison. She is currently free on bail.
  • Nasrin Sotoudeh was arrested on September 4, 2010, sentenced to 6 years in prison and banned from practicing law and leaving the country for 20 years.
  • Mohammad Safezadeh’s current condition is unknown. On April 22, 2011, his family was informed that he was being held in Urmia Central Prison. He has been sentenced to 2 years in prison and banned from practicing law and teaching for 10 years.
  • Mohammad Ali Dadkhah was arrested on June 28, 2009 together with some of his colleagues. He has been sentenced to 9 years in prison and banned from practicing law for 10 years. Additionally, his law business has been closed down.
  • Abdualfatah Soltani was arrested on September 10, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Masoud Shafihi was the attorney defending American hikers arrested in Iran. On October 2, 2011, he was detained while he was trying to leave the country. Consequently, his passport was seized, and he has been banned from leaving the country.

 

Women’s Rights Activists:

  • Alihe Eghdamdoost was arrested on January 29, 2009 and sentenced to 3 years in prison.
  • Zainab Bayazdi was arrested on November 15, 2008 and sentenced to 4 years in prison.
  • Mahbobeh Karami was arrested on May 15, 2011 and sentenced to 3 years in prison.
  • Roonak Safazadehe was arrested on October 9, 2007 and sentenced to 6 years in prison.
  • Faranak Farid was arrested n September 3, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Fareshteh Shirazi was arrested on September 3, 2011 in the city of Amol and is currently in a legal state of limbo.

 

Supporters of Mourning Mothers:

  • Lila Safe Allahei was arrested on February 8, 2010 and was released on bail after 36 days. She has been sentenced to 4 years in prison and has appealed her conviction.
  • Jilla Karamzadeh Makvandi was arrested on February 8, 2010 and was released on bail after 36 days. She has been sentenced to 4 years in prison and has appealed her conviction.
  • Mansoureh Behkish has been summoned and subsequently arrested by the security forces multiple times. The most recent arrest occurred on June 12, 2011. She was released on bail after 28 days and is currently waiting to appear in the 15th branch of the Revolutionary Court on October 10, 2011.Her passport was confiscated on March 17, 2010 while she was trying to leave the country. Since then, she has been banned from leaving Iran.

 

Student Activists:

  • Ali Akbar Mohammad Zadeh was arrested on February 14, 2011 and sentenced to 6 years in prison.
  • Majid Tavakoli was arrested on December 7, 2009 and sentenced to 8 ½ years in prison.
  • Majid Dori was arrested on July 9, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison.
  • Mahdieh Golroo was arrested on December 2, 2009 and sentenced to 2 years in prison.
  • Bahareh Hedayat was arrested on December 31, 2010 and sentenced to 9 ½ years in prison.

 

Labor Activists:

  • Shahrokh Zamani was arrested on June 7, 2011 and sentenced to 11 years in prison.
  • Behnam Ebrahim Zadeh was arrested on June 12, 2010 and sentenced to 20 years in prison. He is currently in a legal state of limbo.

 

Teacher Activists:

  • Rasoul Badaghi was arrested on September 2, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has been banned from participating in any form of social activism for a period of 5 years.
  • Hashem Khastar was arrested on June 25, 2009. He was transferred to Ward 102 in Vakilabad Prison in the city of Mashhad on May 23, 2011. This ward is where inmates who are on death row are kept. Eventually, he was released on September 10, 2011.

 

Human Rights Activists, Journalists, Bloggers, Writers and Translators:

  • Heshmatollah Tabarzadi was arrested on December 28, 2010 and sentenced to 9 years in prison and 74 lashes.
  • Henghameh Shahidi was arrested on February 25, 2011 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. Since May 2011, she has been given furlough to seek medical care.
  • Issa Saharkhiz was arrested on July 3, 2009 and sentenced to 3 years in prison. He has been banned from journalism and other forms of media related activities for a period of 5 years.
  • Saied Matinpour was arrested on July 1, 2009 and sentenced to 8 years in prison.
  • Abolfasel Aabdini-Nasr was arrested on May 3, 2011 and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
  • Keyvan Samimi Behbahani was arrested on June 13, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has been banned from participating in any form of social activism for a period of 15 years.
  • Masoud Bastani was arrested on July 5, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison.
  • Adnan Hassanpour was arrested in November 2006 and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
  • Heva Botimar was arrested in November 2006 and sentenced to 8 years in prison.
  • Arash Saghar was arrested on November 22, 2009 and sentenced to 5 years in prison.
  • Mohammad Sadigh Kabodvand was arrested on August 1, 2007 and sentenced to 10 ½ years in prison.
  • Hossein Ronaghi Maleki was arrested on December 13, 2009 and sentenced to 15 years in prison.
  • Mehdi Mahmoudian was arrested on September 16, 2009 and sentenced to 5 years in prison. He has also been banned from journalism.
  • Hamid Mozani was arrested on September 27, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Ali Malehi was arrested on February 9, 2010 and sentenced to 4 years in prison.
  • Shiva Nazar Ahari was arrested on December 20, 2009 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Koyar Godarzi was arrested on December 20, 2009 for the first time and sentenced to one year in prison. He was again arrested on July 31, 2011 together with his mother, Parvin Mokhtareh. They are both currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Ali Akrami was arrested on October 5, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Mehdi Afsharneek was arrested on October 5, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Mohammd Haydari was arrested on October 5, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.

 

Clergy Opposing the Regime:

  • Ayatollah Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi was arrested on October 8, 2006 and sentenced to 10 years in prison. Additionally, all of his property has been seized.

 

The Office of Strengthening Unity (Advare Tahkim-e Vahdat):

  • Ahmad Zeydabadi was arrested on June 13, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has been exiled to Gonabad for 5 years.
  • Shabnam Madadzadeh was arrested on February 20, 2009 and sentenced to 5 years in prison. She has been exiled to serve her prison term in Rajai-Shahr Prison.
  • Abdoullah Momeni was arrested on June 21, 2009 and sentenced to 4 years and 11 months in prison.

 

Artists:

  • Jafar Panahi was arrested on March 2, 2010 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has also been banned from making films, writing movie scripts, leaving the country and conducting interviews with any sorts of media inside and outside the country for a period of 20 years. On May 25, 2010, he was released on bail.
  • Hadi Afarideh was arrested on September 17, 2011.
  • Shahnam Bazdar was arrested on September 17, 2011.
  • Naser Safarian was arrested on September 167, 2011.
  • Mohsen Shahnazdar was arrested on September 17, 2011.
  • Mojtabah Mir Tahmasab was arrested on September 17, 2011.
  • Katayon Shahbani was arrested on September 17, 2011.
  • Ramin Parchami is a performer in the cinema and theater. He was arrested on February 14, 2011 and sentenced to 1 year in prison.
  • Pegah Ahangarani is an actress arrested on July 10, 2011. She was released on bail after 17 days.
  • Mahnaz Mohammadi is a documentary film maker and women’s rights activist. She was arrested on June 26, 2011 and released on bail after 1 month.
  • Maryam Majad is a photographer arrested on June 17, 2011 and released on bail after 1 month.
  • Marzihe Vafamehr was arrested in June 2011 and sentenced to 1 year in prison and 90 lashes.

 

Political Activists:

  • Saied Masouri was arrested in December 2000 and sentenced to life in prison.
  • Hamid Haeri was arrested on December 6, 2009 and sentenced to 15 years in prison.
  • Abbas Badfar was arrested in 2009 and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
  • Hamed Rohinejad is a college student arrested on May 4, 2009 and was sentenced to death by the lower court. The Appeals Court reduced his sentence to 10 years in prison. He suffers from asthma and has difficulty seeing and hearing.
  • Maryam Akbari Monfared was arrested on December 31, 2009 and sentenced to 15 years in prison.She has been serving her term in Rajai-Shahr Prison.

 

Individuals Initially Sentenced to Death for Unknown Charges:

  • Farah Vazehan was arrested on December 29, 2009 and sentenced to 17 years in prison.
  • Fatemeh Rahnama was arrested on July 29, 2009 and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
  • Iraj Mohammadi was arrested in 2007 and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
  • Abdoul Reza Ghanbari is Sakina Ashtiani’s husband arrested on January 4, 2010. His current condition is unknown.

 

Religious Monitories:

  • Mahmoud Badavam was arrested on May 22, 2010 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Kamran Mortezahie was arrested on May 22, 2010 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Noshin Khadem was arrested on May 22, 2010 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Vahid Mahmoudi was arrested on May 22, 2010 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Farhad Sadeghi was arrested on May 22, 2010 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Reyaz Sobhani was arrested on June 15, 2011 and is currently in a legal state of limbo.
  • Yosef Nadarkhani was arrested on October 12, 2009 and sentenced to death on charges of apostasy and propaganda for Christianity.

 

The Movement to Free Iran (Nehzat-e Azadi-e Iran):

  • Ebrahim Yazdi was arrested for the first time on December 28, 2009 and then for the second time on October 1, 2010. He was released on March 20, 2011.
  • Emad Bahavar was arrested on March 13, 2010 and sentenced to 10 years in prison. He has been banned from any type of media related activities for a period of 10 years.
  • Mohsen Hakimi was arrested on October 5, 2011.

 

Religious Activists:

  • Mohammad Malaki was first arrested on July 3, 1981 and spent 5 years in prison. After he was released, he was banned from leaving the country. Since then, he has been arrested a number of times. His last arrest was on August 21, 2009. He was subsequently released on March 1, 2010.

 

The Participation Front of Islamic Iran (Jebheye Mosharekate Iran-e Eslami) and the Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization:

  • Mohsen Mir Damadi was arrested on June 20, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has been banned from all sorts of political and media related activities for a period of 10 years.
  • Mostafa Tajzadeh was arrested on June 13, 2009 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He has been banned from political activities for a period of 10 years.

 

Opposition Figures within the Government:

  • Zahrah Rahnavard has been on house arrest since February 2011.
  • Mir Hussein Mousavi has been on house arrest since February 2011.
  • Mehdi Karroubi has been on house arrest since February 2011.

 

Rapes:

Reports of rapes in prisons of Iran are not isolated phenomena occurring only recently. In the years immediately following the Revolution, virgin girls under the age of eighteen were first raped before being executed in order to deny them entry into the heaven. After the presidential election in 2009, a number of inmates also alleged to have been raped in prisons of Iran. Witnesses are available and may be interviewed. However, we will not mention their names here.

 

Tortures and Flogging:

  • Behroz Javid Tehrani was arrested for the first time on July 9, 1999 and released in March 2004. He was arrested again on May 25, 2005 and sentenced to 4 years in prison and 74 lashes. He was flogged on November 10, 2010.
  • Samihe Tohidlo is a sociology PhD student arrested on June 14, 2009 and sentenced to one year in prison and 50 lashes. She then received clemency and was released on bail after 70 days. She was flogged in shackles on September 14, 2009 in Evin Prison.
  • Payman Aref is a student activist and journalist arrested on February 10, 2011. He was sentenced to one year in prison and 74 lashes and banned for life from journalism. He was released on October 9, 2011 after being flogged.

 

Suspicious Murders Inside and Outside Prisons:

  • Zahra Kazemi was an Iranian-Canadian freelance photographer arrested on June 23, 2003 in front of Evin Prison. She was killed on July 16, 2003.
  • Zahra Bani Yaghoub was a physician arrested in a park on October 12, 2007 and taken to a detention center in the city of Hamadan. After 48 hours, her family was notified of her death.
  • Amir Javadifar was arrested after 2009 presidential elections and killed while locked up in Kahrizak Prison.
  • Mohammad Kamrani was arrested after 2009 presidential elections and killed while locked up in Kahrizak Prison.
  • Mohsen Rohollahmeni was arrested after 2009 presidential elections and killed while locked up in Kahrizak Prison.
  • Ramin Aghazadeh Ghahramani was arrested after 2009 presidential elections and killed while locked up in Kahrizak Prison.
  • Halleh Sohabi was a religious activist arrested in 2009 and sentenced to 2 years in prison. She was on furlough to attend her father’s funeral when she was killed on June 1, 2011.

 

Death or Suicide of Prisoners Tortured or Placed Under Duress:

  • Alburz Ghasemi was a member of Iran’s armed forces serving in the navy. He died on December 22, 2010 after being denied medical care and furlough when he was in critical condition.
  • Akbar Mohammadi was a political activist. He died in prison on July 30, 2006, and his body was transferred to the medical examiner’s office. Sohrab Solamani, the Chief Warden of prisons in Tehran Province, announced Akbar Mohammadi’s death on July 31, 2006 and claimed that he was on hunger strike.
  • Valiollah Feyz Mahdavi was arrested in October 2001. Evin Prison officials announced his death on September 6, 2006 and claimed that this prisoner hanged himself in his cell and died after he was transferred to the prison’s medical clinic.
  • Ebrahim Lotfollahi was a student activist arrested in Sanandaj on January 6, 2008. Nine days later, the authorities informed his family that he had committed suicide while he was locked up in the Intelligence Agency’s detention center in the city of Sanandaj. The family was also told that his body had already been buried in Sanandaj’s cemetery.
  • Amir Hussein Heshmatsaron was arrested in 2004 and sentenced to 16 years in prison with 8 years suspended. He was the founder of a political party called National United Front of Iran. After 4 years, he died suspiciously in Gohardasht Prison on March 6, 2009.
  • Amir Reza Mir Siafi was a blogger arrested for the first time on April 22, 2008 for insulating the Supreme Leader of Iran in his blog titled “the Reporter.” After 41 days, he was released on bail approximately equivalent to $9,500. In October 2008, the 25th branch of the Revolutionary Court sentenced him to 2 ½ years in prison. On March 18, 2009, Iranian government officials announced his death while he was behind bars in Evin Prison.
  • Mohsen Doghmechi was arrested on Monday, September 7, 2009 and locked up in Ward 209 in Evin Prison. On March 28, 2011, prison officials announced his death. He was 53 years old.
  • Hassan Nahid was a telecommunications engineer arrested in 2004 for revealing classified documents. He was sentenced to 3 years in prison and fined approximately $87,000. In March 2011, Evin prison officials announced his death while he was locked up in Ward 350.
  • Abdulreza Rajabi was a political activist arrested in 2001 and charged with membership in the People’s Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI). During his arrest, he was injured by a grenade fragment. Initially, he was sentenced to death, but then this verdict was reduced to life in prison. He spent his prison term in Diesel Abad Prison in Kermansha and also wards 350 and 8 in Evin. On October 28, 2008, after he was transferred from Evin to Gohardasht Prison, his death was announced on the same night.
  • Kaveh Azizpour was a Kurdish political activist arrested in 2006 in the city of Mahabad. He was sentenced to 3 years in prison on charges of helping the opposition groups. In April 2008, he was transferred to the Urmia Hospital and spent 20 days in coma after which he died on May 16, 2008.
  • Hasem Ramzani was a Kurdish citizen arrested in December 2008 in Urmia. After four days, his family was informed that he had committed suicide, and his body could be picked up from the Intelligence Agency’s office in Urmia.
  • Mohammad Rajabisani was arrested on September 29, 2004 after a fight with two other individuals and locked up in Ghezel Hesar Prison. After a few days, he was transferred to a hospital in Rajai-Shahr and subsequently suffered brain death.
  • Hadi Reza Zadhe Saber was a religious activist, journalist and translator arrested in 2000. He was sentenced to 5 ½ years in prison and banned from any form of social activism for 10 years. To protest Haleh Sohabi’s suspicious death, he went on hunger strike and died on June 11, 2011 in Modares Hospital.

 

Death or Suicide of Citizens Under Duress:

  • Behnam Ganji was arrested on July 31, 2011 and subsequently released on August 8, 2011. He committed suicide at midnight on Thursday, September 1, 2011.
  • Nahal Sohabi committed suicide on Thursday, September 29, 2011 following Behnam Ganji’s death.
  • On September 24, 2011, frightened by security forces raiding a gathering in the city of Mashhad, a young girl, while trying to escape, fell from the balcony of an apartment building on the sixth floor and died.

 

Sentenced to Death:

  • Zeinab Jallalian is a Kurdish activist arrested in 2007.
  • Habibollah Golparipour is a Kurdish activist arrested on April 2, 2010.
  • Anvar Rostami is Kurdish activist arrested in December 2008.
  • Habibollah Latifi is a Kurdish activist arrested on October 23, 2007.
  • Rashid Akhandi is a Kurdish activist arrested in April 2008.
  • Shirko Maarefi is a Kurdish activist arrested on September 30, 2008.
  • Mostafa Salimi is a Kurdish activist arrested in 2003.
  • Sayed Jamal Mohammadi is a Kurdish activist arrested in 2008.
  • Sayed Sami Husseini is a Kurdish activist arrested on June 4, 2008.
  • Aziz Mohammadzadeh is in a legal state of limbo.
  • Abdoullah Sarvarian is in a legal state of limbo.
  • Zanyar Moradi is in a legal state of limbo.
  • Loghman Moradi is in a legal state of limbo.
  • Javad Lari is a political activist arrested on June 15, 2009.
  • Hassan Talehi is a Kurdish activist arrested in 2008.
  • Mohsen Daneshpour Moghadam is Motahereh Bahrami Haghighi’s husband. He was arrested on December 27, 2010.
  • Ahmad Daneshpour Moghadam is the son of Mohsen Moghadam and Motahereh Haghighi. He was arrested on December 27, 2010.
  • Saleh Soltanzadeh is a political activist arrested in 2006.
  • Hussein Forheideh is a Kurdish activist. The date of his arrest is unknown.
  • Hamid Ghasemi’s date of arrest is unknown.
  • Mehdi Ghiasi is a physician and political activist whose date of arrest is unknown.
  • Yoness Aghayan Mirza is a member of a religious minority commonly known as Ahl-e Haqq. He was arrested in 2004.
  • Mohammad Amin Abdoullahi is a Kurdish activist arrested in 2005.
  • Yosef Nadarkhani is a Christian priest arrested on October 12, 2009.

 

Under such a dire state of affairs and total violations of human rights in the country, Iranian statesmen, while visiting the United Nations, boast about being capable of managing the world as if Iran has turned into a modern and free society where equality rules under their leadership, and now the time has arrived for them to spread democracy, justice and equality to the rest of the world. Perhaps they have forgotten that Iran has been ruined under the reign of Islamic Republic. Let us remind them of the following:

  • Iran holds the third highest inflation rate in the world.
  • We are witnessing reports of more embezzlement by government officials every day.
  • Iran holds the first rank amongst the countries of the world in the number of citizens and underage prisoners executed.
  • The number of reported divorces, child abuse, spousal abuse, poverty, prostitution and unemployment has reached an all-time record high.
  • Our natural resources, national treasures and environment such as Lake Urmia, Zayandeh Rood, forests and archaeological sites are being destroyed.
  • We are neither allowed to be happy nor mourn a loss. Citizens are being arrested because of engaging in water sports or a variety of other group activities. Funeral processions and anniversaries in Tehran’s Behesht-Zahra and Khavaran cemeteries are being attacked by security and intelligence agents monitoring these locations around the clock. Furthermore, families of the fallen are harmed and harassed regularly.
  • The number of citizens dying of self-immolation and other forms of suicide, murder, accidents and diseases has reached an all-time record high. Our air, water and food are polluted.
  • It is as if hatred towards human beings is a guiding principle empowering the current regime. During the last 33 years, thousands of Iranian men and women have been executed, killed in the streets, slaughtered in the Iran-Iraq war or murdered in a variety of other ways. Several thousands of individuals suffer from irreparable psychological and mental problems. A large number of gifted and talented young adults have been forced to choose leaving the country while many others are addicted to narcotics.
  • Iranians have no safety whatsoever, and their lives and livelihoods have been threatened now and in the past. In a country where citizens must wait in long lines for months in order to apply for small loans while billions of dollars are embezzled, no one is held responsible to answer why.
  • The officials in the Islamic Republic of Iran claim that holocaust is a myth. We ask whether the killings during the last 33 years have also been a myth. It is possible to claim that these murders have not been less than a holocaust. People in Iran and around the world have reached the conclusion that the time to be patient and tolerant has long ended, and they must stand up against oppression and injustice. Indeed they are standing up proudly; so we wish them success.

On the International Day Against Death Penalty (October 10th), Mothers of Park Laleh demand the abolition of capital punishment and request the following:

  • We demand the abolition of capital punishment and the killings of human beings in any way, shape or form.
  • We demand the immediate released of all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience without any conditions or exceptions.
  • We demand public and just prosecution and punishment of those responsible for crimes committed by the Islamic Republic of Iran since its inception.

Mothers of Park Laleh
October 10, 2011

 

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Majid Dori Denied Medical Care in Behbahan Prison

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HRANA News Agency – Political prisoner Majid Dori’s health is fast deteriorating while officials in Behbahan Prison continue to deny him the necessary medical care.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), although Majid Dori suffers from migraines and anemia and needs to be treated by a specialist, prison officials refuse to transfer him to a hospital outside the prison.

In an interview with HRANA, one of Majid Dori’s family members reported that the officials have turned down the family’s request to transfer Majid to one of the prisons in Tehran.

In one of his letters written from prison, Majid Dori described his situation and wrote, “I have not only been behind bars since July 9, 2009, they have also given me the court’s verdict sentencing and exiling me to 6 years in prison so that I forego my youth and make myself ready to face an unfair and unjust imprisonment as far from the smallest amount of fairness as possible. The judges condemned me to spend this prison term behind bars in the city of Izeh. It was as if Intelligence Agency’s interrogators had forgotten to tell the judges that Izeh had no prisons. Inevitably, I had to be exiled to another prison with the lowest and smallest amount of standards possible, a prison situated in the worst climate under primitive conditions similar to that of the Dark Ages.”

 

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Fear of Physical and Psychological Pressure on Journalist Inside IRGC’s Ward 2-A

 

A month after his arrest, judicial authorities informed the family of detained journalist Amir Ali Allamehzadeh that he is held in a solitary cell inside Ward 2-A of Evin Prison, a friend of Allamehzadeh told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. “Mr. Allamehzadeh was arrested on Sunday, 18 September in Tehran, along with five documentary filmmakers, and was transferred to an unknown location. Mr. Allamehzadeh has only been able to meet with one of his family members once, under unusual security conditions in a location other than the prison visitation hall. Forces present during the short visit did not allow him to talk about his case, his interrogations, or his detention location,” said the source.

Allamehzadeh was arrested by three plainclothes forces on Sunday, 18 September at his father’s home in Tehran. The warrant the forces presented showed that Allamehzadeh’s arrest was authorized by the Investigative Judge of Branch 14 of Government Employees and the Media Court.

“So far, Mr. Allamehzadeh has been deprived of the right to have access to a lawyer and meeting a lawyer, and all his interrogations have been carried out without the presence of a lawyer in an unknown location,” said the source. Expressing concern about the conditions of the former International Editor at ILNA News Agency, the source added, “Amir Ali had severely unfavorable psychological and physical conditions during this visit. This, along with keeping him inside a solitary cell inside the IRGC Ward, and the concurrency of his arrest with the arrests of the five documentary filmmakers intensify the concern that this reporter may be under potential illegal pressure and psychological and physical torture to make false confessions.”

“So far, the case officials have maintained silence about Mr. Allamehzadeh’s charges and evidence related to the charges. Even so, establishing his case file inside the Government Employees and Media Court indicates that he has been arrested for his press activities,” said the source on condition of anonymity.

Ward 2-A of Evin Prison is illegally operated by the IRGC and officials of the Prisons Organization have no access to prisoners in this ward. Prisoners inside this ward are kept in solitary or shared cells and are deprived of any contact with the outside world. Political prisoners and prisoners of conscience inside this ward are routinely subjected to beatings and inhumane torture for forced confessions.

The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran is concerned about the information blackout about this journalist, and demands clarification of his charges and his access to a fair trial.

 

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Iranian ‘bomb plot’ could have severe consequences for Khamenei

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The Guardian – If US accusations are proved unfounded, Khamenei has much to gain. But the threat of sanctions is perilous for the regime

Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, has a serious crisis on his hands. President Barack Obama seems to believe that the “Iranian bomb plot” allegations provide a genuine case against the Tehran regime – otherwise he would not have taken the risk of having them scrutinised in a civilian court.

Obama’s confidence seems to stem from intelligence gathered inside Iran, which convinced the US government that the head of the revolutionary guards (IRGC) had co-ordinated the plot.

Despite Obama’s confidence, some experts are expressing serious doubts about whether the IRGC would be involved in such an uncharacteristically unsophisticated operation with a trail leading right to their doorstep. There are others who doubt whether the Mexican Zetas drug cartel would want to be involved in such a joint operation with the IRGC.

Should evidence from the US fail to convince the courts and the case is thrown out, Khamenei would have good reason to celebrate. This would boost his position at home, where he could say that his regime has been the innocent victim of a US intelligence plot, like Mohammad Mosaddegh was in 1953. Abroad he could say the precedent set by the case discredits all US opinion and reports with regards to Iran’s nuclear programme.

In the meantime, Obama is using the evidence at his disposal in an effort to bring Russia and China on board but the worst news for Khamenei is Obama’s talk of imposing severe sanctions. This could mean sanctions against Iran’s central bank – a very serious threat, which Khamenei can only ignore at his peril. New sanctions will mean less money at home to buy the loyalty of the IRGC and politicians, which could impact on the regime’s stability.

Gone are the days when true believers joined the revolution because of ideology. These days the revolution is being run by the IRGC whose loyalty Khamenei needs to buy through corruption and lucrative contracts, so that its officers can send their wives and kids on expensive shopping trips to Dubai.

The same goes for people outside the IRGC, such as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who took 100 people with him on his recent trip to the UN in New York, including his son, wife, daughter-in-law and her mother. While he was giving his anti-US tirades, his entourage were busy shopping.

Less money could also mean more corruption scandals surfacing as means of score settling between factions who will be fighting over less money. The recent corruption scandal surrounding more than $2.6bn (£1.6bn) of embezzled money from banks could be a sign of things to come.

Ahmadinejad or his right-hand man Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei could be the biggest victim from the fallout. Both have been divisive figures and Khamenei will now have more reason to weaken them. He may even consider removing them, although the chances of this in the immediate future are not very high. Such quarrels within the regime are what dreams are made out of for its opponents as they can be fatal.

Although the regime has called the recent accusations “lies”, within the corridors of power serious questions are probably being asked about the IRGC. Questions such as: is it possible that the organisation has become so inefficient and lax that a rogue operative could undertake such an initiative? Is it possible that Khamenei was kept out of the picture? Or was Khamenei set up by those inside the regime who want to use the wrath of US to weaken him?

The worst case scenario for Khamenei would be if he had supervised or approved the plan himself and news about this reached Iran’s politicians. This would damage his standing, as well as that of his IRGC allies. It would make them look incompetent and careless. The affair could also impact on the position of IRGC Quds force commander Qasem Soleymani inside Iran and any potential political ambitions he may have.

However, there is also some good news for the regime. Regardless of whether the Iranian government is innocent or not, US reaction to the allegations will put an end to the internal fighting and discussions about whether Iran should seriously pursue dialogue with the US. Those against can use Obama’s reaction to justify their anti-US stance.

This would be a welcome development for Khamenei as this question has been yet another divisive issue within his regime. Most probably, recent events will push Khamenei towards taking a harder line at home. He already has enough problems with his own politicians, and now with the US. He will have even less patience for what the people of Iran want.

 

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