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The end of Ahmadinejad. His cronies barred from election

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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the driving force behind Iran’s nuclear program and the most vocal of Israel’s enemies, is on his last legs as president. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has stripped him of most of his powers and shut the door against his having any political future.
DEBKAfile’s Iranian sources report his loyalists have been deserting him in droves since he went to New York to deliver an address to the UN General Assembly on Sept. 23. The Supreme Leader used his absence for the coup de grace: The removal of the president’s loyalists from the list of 4,000 contenders running for seats in parliament (the Majlis) next March.

That was easily arranged: Khameini handed his orders to Ayatollah Mohammad Kani, head of the Assembly of Experts, which In the Islamic Republic of Iran is responsible for screening all contenders for office. He was told to disqualify all the president’s associates. So, in the next Majlis, Ahmadinejad will be shorn of a loyal faction and any buddies sticking to him when his second presidential term runs out in May 2013 will be out of a job.

The Supreme Ruler degraded the president very publicly with one humiliation after another.

He waited for Ahmadinejad to go on the air in a US NBC interview on Sept. 13 to promise the release of Josh Fattal and Shane Bauer, the two American hikers convicted of spying, before cutting him down by suspending their release until the Iranian president was being booed by protesters in New York for reneging on his promise.
Tehran’s political, religious and military insiders were not surprised by his downfall, our Iranian sources report. For some time he had been getting too big for his boots, accumulating more powers than any president before him and only getting away with it so long as he was Khamenei’s fair-haired boy.

But then, the favorite, whose election in 2005 and reelection in 2009, Khamenei engineered at the cost of violent anti-government protests in Tehran, rewarded him with ingratitude. He increasingly flouted the master and in some cases began chipping away at his authority – until Khamenei had had enough and decided to reel him in.

At the last minute, he cancelled a live Ahmadinejad interview on Iran’s second television network wide publicized for the eve of his departure to the United Nations.
The affronts followed him home to Tehran, where waiting for him were serious criminal charges linking his name to the disappearance of three billion dollars from Iranian banks. The name of the embezzler has not been released but our sources in Tehran reveal him as Amir Mansour Arya, an entrepreneur who started a business five years ago with Ahmadinejad’s encouragement and whose fortune grew a thousand fold within a suspiciously short time.
Arya is accused of using his presidential connections to secure multi-billion dollar loans from Iranian banks and then spiriting large sums out of the country.

Ahmadinejad denies any complicity in the crime. He tried fighting back by threatening to publish within 15 days “dozens of names” of rivals he claims are guilty of financial crimes. The deadline came and went without publication.

The betting in Tehran is that the Supreme Leader will not actually sack Ahmadinejad but let him last out his term as yesterday’s man,  lame duck in political isolation.
DEBKAfile’s Iranian sources: Two frontrunners for future president most mentioned recently are two hardliners, Majils (legislature) Speaker Ali Larijani, a former senior nuclear negotiator with the West, and ex-foreign minister Ali Akhbar Veliyati, who is a member of Khamenei’s kitchen cabinet as senior adviser on international relations.

 

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Three State Media Journalists Arrested In Iran

 

RFE/RLThree Iranian journalists working for state media outlets are reported have been arrested in recent weeks, RFE/RL’s Radio Farda reports. The arrests of Mehrdad Sarjouei, Amir Ali Alamehzadeh, and Hadi Ahmadi add to a growing list of imprisoned journalists in Iran.

Numerous independent media outlets have been closed down over the past decade and many journalists have been detained or forced to leave the country.

Iranian opposition websites reported on September 25 that Alamehzadeh, who works for the Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA), was taken into custody on September 17. His whereabouts are unknown.

Ahmadi, who writes for the economy section of the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA), was arrested in Karaj, west of Tehran, earlier this month.

And the Kaleme website, which is close to opposition leader Mir Hossein Musavi, reported that Sarjouei, who writes the international section of English daily newspapers published in Tehran, was arrested more than two months ago. He is currently being held in Ward 209 of Tehran’s Evin prison.

Sarjouei used to work in the international relations department of the Strategic Research Center of the Expediency Council.

Meanwhile, Gholamhossein Gheibparvar, head of the Fajr Revolutionary Guards in Fars Province, announced the launch on September 25 of the Basij Media Organization.

The head of Iran’s Basij force, Mohammad Reza Naghdi, had previously said the purpose of establishing the Basij Media Organization was to “confront the propaganda invasion by [our] enemies.”

Paris-based journalist Morteza Kazemian told Radio Farda that the Iranian authorities want to make the utmost use in the media of those forces that are loyal to the establishment.

Kazemian said those forces, which are financed from Iran’s considerable oil revenues and supported by military institutions to carry out security projects, know the media play a significant role in shaping social movements in civil society.

 

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House of Cinema criticized for support of detained filmmakers

 

A number of Iranian government supporters have called for the House of Cinema to be shut down for its support of documentary makers recently arrested for allegedly collaborating with the BBC.

The House of Cinema has issued two announcements since their arrest on Sunday, calling for “respect for detainee rights and adherence to all legal provisions.”

MP Behrouz Jafari, a member of Parliament’s cultural commission, told the Fars News Agency: “While the House of Cinema is a professional organization, it has become more involved in political activities rather than professional ones and, therefore, supervisory boards should look into rescinding its licence.”

He added: “House of Cinema has a history of getting involved in politics by honouring anti-regime films and supporting filmmakers that have acted against the regime or committed security crimes.”

Hamidreza Taraghi, a member of the conservative party Motalefe Eslami, also described House of Cinema’s support of “those connected to Persian BBC” as “hard evidence of the need to rescind their licence and overhaul of House of Cinema’s administrators.”

Sattar Hedayatkhah, a spokesman for Parliament’s cultural commission, announced that it is investigating the announcement issued by the House of Cinema, saying: “This announcement is not in fact an announcement by the Islamic Republic’s House of Cinema, it is the announcement of the old British colonizer’s house of cinema.”

Iran’s largest professional organization for filmmakers in Iran, the House of Cinema was founded in 1987. It is funded through the allotment of two percent of all cinema revenues in order to improve the situation of all people involved in the business of filmmaking.

A House of Cinema official rejected these statements and expressed dismay that “a simple professional defence of the most obvious rights of the members of this organization has turned into a great political dispute.”

He added that if all legal procedures are properly followed, the House of Cinema board has every hope that the filmmakers will be acquitted of all charges.

Six Iranian documentary makers were arrested last Sunday, accused of collaborating with the BBC. The BBC has declared that these detainees have never been employed or contracted by the broadcaster.

 

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Iranian civil activist gets 11 years in jail

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Nargess Mohammadi, the deputy head of Iran’s Human Rights Defenders Centre and chief executive of the National Council of Peace, has been sentenced to 11 years in prison by the Islamic Republic judiciary.

In a statement to the BBC, Mohammadi said she will challenge the sentence, maintaining: “I am neither political nor a seditionist and do not accept such a sentence for myself.”

Mohammadi was summoned in April 2010 for being a member of the Human Rights Defenders Centre and was released on bail of $50,000. She was arrested once more the following June and was held for another month.

Mohammadi is charged with “assembly and collusion against national security and membership in organizations that aim to disrupt national security as well as propaganda against the regime.”

Mohammadi emphasized that she is a civil activist and challenged the language of the sentencing, which accuses her of “insistently denying the charges against her.”

 

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Iran Sets up Economic, Cyber Defense Bases

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Payvand – Head of Iran’s Civil Defense Organization Brigadier General Gholam Reza Jalali announced that Tehran has established an economic and a cyber defense base to counter and decrease enemies’ threats to the Iranian security and society.

“The cyber base was launched through cooperation among Iran’s Islamic Culture and Relations Organization, Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) and Intelligence Ministry to reduce enemy’s individual, social and security threats,” Jalali told reporters in a press conference on Monday.

He further explained that enemy threats in the field of civil defense include constant psychological operations, soft war, economic threats and cyber attacks, and said enemies’ economic attacks on Iran have led to the blockade of the economic activities of a large number of Iranian companies.

Jalali said the economic defense base was launched in a bid to assess enemies’ threats, and stated that due to the emphasis of Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei on Iran’s economic progress, the country should strive to focus on this field to identify deficiencies as well as the existing capacities and capabilities to remove these imperfections and flaws.

The remarks come amid reports that the Israeli military is planning a major cyber war against Iran by setting up a military cyber command.

The new cyber command, which has been described as central to the “defense capability” of the Israeli regime, will directly report to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The Israeli command center, supported by the military, has reportedly conducted a series of “soft” espionage missions, including hacking into Iran’s version of Facebook and other social networking sites.

A source with close knowledge of Israel’s cyber war preparations said that Tel Aviv has two principal cyber targets, namely stopping Tehran’s nuclear program and its civil infrastructure.

Iran’s Minister of Communications and Information Technology Reza Taqipour said on August 10 that the Islamic Republic has taken appropriate countermeasures, including the establishment of a cyber command, to control and foil cyber attacks targeting the Islamic Republic.

 

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CIA and Iran to assist clampdown on PKK

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Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan revealed plans on Sunday to bolster secretive joint military operations with the CIA and Iran against Kurdish guerillas based in occupied Iraq’s semi-autonomous north.

At a press conference after a visit to Washington DC the premier said US officials had agreed “in principle” to base unarmed Predator drones operated by the US in Turkey.

“There is no question of any postponement,” Mr Erdogan warned.

The CIA has deployed intelligence-gathering drones in support of Turkish counter-insurgency efforts from bases in occupied Iraq since 2007.

But the US military is scheduled to pull out of Iraq at the end of December.

Mr Erdogan has been urging the Obama administration to relocate the drones to Turkey.

The Turkish PM has also worked to strengthen ties with Iran.

On Sunday he said that “relevant” Iranian and Turkish officials “are conducting work regarding joint operations to be carried out by Turkey and Iran” against suspected Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) bases in Iraq.

“We already co-operate with Iran in the field of intelligence to combat terrorism,” he confirmed.

PKK militants have escalated their attacks in Turkey since authorities detained six of the 36 recently elected MPs of the progressive Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party over their alleged links to the PKK.

PKK fighters have killed dozens of soldiers, police and pro-government militiamen and at least 10 civilians since July, while Turkish air strikes on suspected PKK bases in Iraq backed by US intelligence and Iranian shelling have reportedly claimed around 100 lives since then.

It is unclear how many civilians have been killed in those attacks.

 

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Rumsfeld Warns Iran, Syria Against Interfering in Iraq

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VOA – U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has warned Iran and Syria against interfering in Iraq’s affairs.

Rumsfeld made the comment Friday in Taormina, Sicily, where he was meeting with his NATO counterparts.

He said the United States has taken a series of initiatives to try to show Iran and Syria that their actions are harmful to the new Iraqi government and the region.

He did not specify the alleged actions, but U.S. officials have previously accused Iran of encouraging radicalism among Iraq’s Shi’ites and allowing dangerous materials to cross the border. The United States also alleges Syria allows foreign fighters to travel into Iraq.

Rumsfeld met Friday with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov. He said they discussed Iran’s controversial nuclear program, but he refused to elaborate.

 

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Kurdish Student Shirzad Karimi Detained

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Shirzad Karimi has been arrested by the security forces and there are no reports on the reason for his arrest.

Three members of the Democratic Union of Kurdish students Mehdi Doagou, Milad Karimi and Souran Daneshvar  have been arrested in the recent days.

Furthermore, Jafar Afshari, a political prisoner at Oroumiyeh Prison has gone on hunger strike to protest his false charges and his condition in prion limbo.

Azeri student Afshin Shahbazi has also been arrested on September 22nd. He had been summoned to Intelligence Minsitry several times.

 

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ILNA reporter arrested by Iranian authorities

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Amirali Alamehzadeh, an Iranian journalist working for the official Iranian news agency ILNA (Iranian Labour News Agency), has been arrested, the opposition website Jaras reports.

According to Jaras, Alamehzadeh was arrested last Saturday, and no information has been released as to the charges against him. No official government body has taken responsibility for the arrest of Alamehzadeh, who worked for ILNA’s international reports department.

A few days ago, it was reported that Mehrdad Sarjouyi, a reporter for a number of English-language dailies published in Iran, had been arrested at his home more than two months ago.

Over the past two years, journalism and activities in the arts and culture arena have become highly highly hazardous in Iran.

Last week, five Iranian documentary makers were arrested and charged with “collaboration with the BBC.”

While Iranian authorities have described the detainees as links in a network “providing the needs of the spying services of the old colonizer,” BBC has announced that it has no employees or collaborators in Iran.

 

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Americans convicted in Iran say they were hostages

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(Reuters) – Two American men jailed in Iran for more than two years for spying arrived in New York on Sunday, saying they were innocent and had been held hostage simply because of their nationality.

Josh Fattal and Shane Bauer, arrested with their friend Sarah Shourd while hiking along the Iraq-Iran border in July 2009, were freed on Wednesday after Oman paid bail of $1 million. Shourd was released on $500,000 bail a year ago.

Fattal and Bauer were sentenced to eight years in prison last month after a trial held behind closed doors. Washington denied the group were spies and U.S. President Barack Obama said on Wednesday they should never have been detained.

Flanked by family members at a news conference in New York, Bauer and Fattal said the case against them was a “total sham” with “ridiculous lies that depicted us as being involved in an elaborate American-Israeli conspiracy to undermine Iran.”

“The only explanation for our prolonged detention is the 32 years of mutual hostility between America and Iran,” Bauer said. “We were convicted of espionage because we are American. It’s that simple. No evidence was ever presented against us.”

With no diplomatic ties between Washington and Tehran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution — when 52 Americans were held hostage in Iran for 444 days until January 1981 — several countries worked to mediate the release of the hikers.

Bauer and Fattal’s freedom coincided with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to New York for the U.N. General Assembly. Ahmadinejad, at odds with Washington and other western governments over Iran’s nuclear program, described the release as a humanitarian gesture.

“Sarah, Josh and I have experienced a taste of the Iranian regime’s brutality. We have been held in almost total isolation from the world and everything we love, stripped of our rights and freedom,” said Bauer, who is engaged to Shourd.

Bauer said whenever they complained about their treatment, the guards would remind them of conditions at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where terrorism suspects are held, and at secret CIA prisons.

“We do not believe that such human rights violations on the part of our government justify what has been done to us. Not for a moment. However, we do believe that these actions on the part of the U.S. provide an excuse for other governments, including the government of Iran, to act in kind,” Bauer said.

NO FORGIVENESS

The men spent the first three months of their detention in solitary confinement before they were put in an 8 foot by 13 foot (2.5 meter by 4 meter) cell together. They spent their time reading and testing each other on various topics and were allowed a short time in an outside room to exercise daily.

During 781 days in jail, they had 15 minutes of phone calls with their families and one short visit from their mothers, Fattal said. They staged repeated hunger strikes over demands they be given letters sent by their families, he said.

“Many times, too many times, we heard the screams of other prisoners being beaten and there was nothing we could do to help them. Solitary confinement was the worst experience of our lives,” Fattal said.

“It was clear to us from the very beginning that we were hostages. This is the most accurate term because, despite certain knowledge of our innocence, the Iranian government has always tied our case to its political disputes with the U.S.”

Bauer and Fattal thanked U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the governments of Turkey and Brazil, Oman and the Swiss ambassador to Iran.

They also expressed gratitude to actor Sean Penn, boxer Muhammad Ali, philosopher Noam Chomsky, singer Yusuf Islam, U.S. anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan and Nobel laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mairead Maguire.

Bauer and Fattal plan to spend time with their families in an undisclosed location and appealed to the media for privacy.

Despite the secrecy about the men’s immediate travel plans, at Fattal’s family house in the Philadelphia suburb of Elkins Park neighbors hung a big blue “Welcome Home” banner and posted other homecoming messages in potted flowers.

The collection of signs and plants grew throughout the day Sunday at the red brick home in the quiet suburb.

One sign included the words “With love from all of Elkins Park.”

Shourd told the news conference in New York that the trio, in their late 20s and early 30s, would be speaking and writing “at great length” about their ordeal in the future.

She said they regret not knowing more about the area where they chose to go hiking but their detention had nothing to do with them crossing the border.

Bauer said they could not forgive the Iranian government when it continued to imprison other innocent people.

“It is the Iranian people who bear the brunt of this government’s cruelty and disregard for human rights,” he said.

“If the Iranian government wants to change its image in the world, and ease international pressure, it should release all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience immediately. They deserve their freedom just as much as we do.”

 

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