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Six Members of Teachers’ Union of Kurdistan Summoned

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HRANA News Agency – On Monday, July 29, 2011, six labor activists and members of Teachers’ Union of Kurdistan were summoned to the Revolutionary Court.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Kamal Fakorian, Ali Qarishi, Mostafa Sarbazan, Parviz Nasehi and Ezat Nosrati are amongst those summoned on Monday afternoon by phone to appear before the Revolutionary Court in the city of Sanandaj.

Six labor activists have been ordered to report to the Interrogation Unit of the Revolutionary Court, Branch 4, promptly at 8:00am on Tuesday, August 30, 2011.

 

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Iran warns NATO against entering Syria “quagmire”

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Reuters – Iran warned NATO on Sunday against any temptation to intervene in Syria, saying that rather than the defeating a regime it would be bogged down in a “quagmire” similar to Iraq or Afghanistan.

Syria’s closest ally in the Middle East, Iran has in recent days tempered its strong support for President Bashar al-Assad with calls for him to respect the “legitimate demands” of his people.

But with the fall of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, aided by NATO bombings, Tehran is concerned at the possible, if unlikely, prospect of something similar happening in Syria.

“Syria is the front-runner in Middle Eastern resistance (to Israel) and NATO cannot intimidate this country with an attack,” Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi told the official IRNA news agency.

“If, God forbid, such a thing happened, NATO would drown in a quagmire from which it would never be able to escape…

“If the West should want to follow the same course as they have done in Iraq and Afghanistan they would not realize the desired result.”

The United Nations says 2,200 people have been killed since Assad sent in tanks and troops to crush demonstrations that erupted in March after the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt were toppled by popular protests.

While most neighboring countries have criticized the crackdown, Tehran has explicitly backed Assad, although Salehi said on Saturday that “governments must be responsive to the legitimate demands of (their) people … be it Syria, Yemen or other countries.”

 

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Wikileaks & Iran Flashback: How A Kickboxing Champion Became “Israeli Spy” & Was Sentenced To Death

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We reported last week on the sentencing of 26-year-old Majid Jamali Fashi to death after he was convicted of the assassination of physicist Masoud Alimohammadi in January 2010.

The case always had intriguing elements, given Alimohammadi’s supposed connections with Iran’s nuclear programme; however, in January 2011, EA uncovered an entirely new dimension.

Jamali Fashi, a professional kickboxer, supported the regime by beating up protesters after the 2009 Presidential elections — so how could he have be an enemy of the regime by working for Israel to murder an Iranian scientist and hinder Tehran’s nuclear research?

Read on….

This week Iranian authorities, supporting their claim of an Israeli plot — including the assassination of Iranian scientists — to undermine the regime, put Majid Jamali Fashi on national television. Fashi dutifully confessed to worked for Israeli’s intelligence service Mossad, receiving training overseas before returning to Iran to carry out nefarious plots.

 

But that is only the beginning of the story.

What Iranian TV, and indeed the Minister of Intelligence detailing the conspiracy, failed to mention is that Fashi already had an established vocation before he supposedly colluded with the enemy.

He was a prominent kickboxer.

In his confession, Jamali Fashi says he went to Israel via Azerbaijan. Well, in August 2009, he was indeed in the Central Asian country, winning a medal in a competition in Baku.

 

And if he was preparing under the cover of sports for another career, he was doing so quite effectively. Acquaintances say Jamali Fashi, a die-hard Ahamdinejad supporter, practiced his moves by beating up peaceful demonstrators during the Green Movement’s protests.

So how did a promising kickboxer, and a supporter of the President, wind up before the cameras — and possibly on the gallows — as an Israeli agent?

An EA correspondent, discussing this with me, pondered:

One theory goes back to October-November 2009 when it emerged that these kickboxers were deployed in the streets of Tehran to counter the Green protestors. The idea is that Jamali is being “silenced” by the (rogue?) security forces who enlisted him.

But that is as far as he got. When I asked, “Why would he be an embarrassment? Was he going to speak?”, the correspondent replied, “Well, we don’t really know that.”

End of the story so far, I thought. But then I remembered this feature from EA last month, “WikiLeaks and Iran 2009: The Regime’s Ninja Assassins?“.

in the category of “Strange…But True?” from the WikiLeaks documents….

In September 2009, an Iranian political source — who also happens to be trained in martial arts — tells the US Embassy in Azerbaijan that the regime is pressuring martial arts clubs, despite suspicions that they could be assisting opposition groups, to provide instruction for the Ministry of Intelligence and the Revolutionary Guards.

The outcome supposedly went beyond training: the source maintains that one of his acquaintances killed at least six intellectuals and young “pro-democracy activists” before he himself was eliminated.

Guess where the US Embassy that posted the report was located?

Baku in Azerbaijan.

So was Jamali Fashi the source? Was he named by the source? Or is just the case that anyone who was enlisted in the martial arts effort needs to be silenced to protect an assassination operation which was not Israeli but Iranian?

 

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Political Activist Sajjad Karami Detained

 

He was arrested after participating in a religious ceremony along with families of political prisoners and several reformists.

According to the witnesses, plainclothes agnets were all over the place even though the location was quite and there were no protests.

One of the plainclotehs agnets approched Karami and asked him to accompany him. He then took him to a police vehicle.

He was previously arrested in February for the charges of conspiracy aginats national security by persuading people to jon the February 14th protests and anti-regime propaganda. He was sentenced to one year in prison.

 

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Iranian opposition leader Karroubi moved to another location

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Fatemeh Karroubi, the wife of Iranian opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi, has told Saham News that security forces have moved her husband to a separate one-bedroom apartment.

Fatemeh Karroubi told Saham News today that the apartment is reportedly very small; therefore, she has not been allowed to join her husband, who is being held under the supervision of a number of security officials.

Mehdi Karroubi and his wife were put under house arrest on February 14, after he and MirHosein Mousavi called a rally to demonstrate in support of Arab uprisings in the region.

Mehdi Karroubi had protested against the occupation of his residential complex because it kept his neighbours from entering their units, and he had asked to be moved to a house that his sons had prepared for him in north of Tehran.

The authorities rejected the proposal, and he has now been moved to another location.

Fatemeh Karroubi also reports that during their 190 days of house arrest, Mehdi Karroubi was only allowed to walk in the open air one time, and his last visit with his family members was in July.

Fatemeh Karroubi says: “Since the beginning of his house arrest, Mehdi Karroubi has been denied all the basic rights of a prisoner, such as the right to fresh air, to visits and even the right to get books and newspapers, and this is all detrimental to his health.”

 

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Three Environmentalists Remain in Police Custody

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HRANA News Agency – Three Kurdish social activists and members of Management Council for Green Chya Forum in Marivan, Kurdistan Province, will remain in temporary police custody for another month.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Sharif Bajour, Behrooz Darvand and Iraj Ghaderi were arrested on July 23, 2011 by security forces in the city of Marivan. On August 23, 2011, the prosecutor granted a request made by the Intelligence Agency’s interrogator to keep these three prisoners behind bars for an additional month because investigations surrounding their cases have not yet been completed.

These three social activists have been permitted to call their families only for a few minutes during the last month.

 

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Syrian forces deploy as Iran boosts regime

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AP – Syrian security forces fanned out in flashpoint cities nationwide Saturday to crush protests against President Bashar Assad as the country’s powerful ally Iran warned of an unprecedented regional crisis if there is a power vacuum in Damascus.

More than five months into the uprising against Assad, the conflict has descended into a bloody stalemate with both sides showing no sign of giving in. The U.S. and other nations have accused Iran of helping Assad crush the 5-month-old uprising, which Assad and his supporters blame on thugs and foreign extremists.

“If a vacuum is created in the Syrian ruling system, it will have unprecedented repercussions,” Iran’s Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said Saturday, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency. He said Syria has “sensitive neighbors” and that change in the country could lead to regional crisis.

Syria is an important geopolitical linchpin. It borders five other nations, has close ties to Iran and powerful militant groups, and controls water supplies to Iraq, Jordan and parts of Israel.

The country also has a potentially volatile mix of religious groups and sects.

Damascus has carefully nurtured fears of chaos in recent months, warning repeatedly that only Assad can keep the peace. And while most analysts say Assad is exploiting those fears, few deny that such violence is a serious possibility.

Human rights groups say Assad’s forces have killed more than 2,000 people since the uprising erupted in March, touched off by the wave of revolts sweeping the Arab world. The European imposed sanctions Wednesday against an elite unit of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, saying the Quds Force is providing equipment and other support to help crush the revolt.

The sanctions broadened the international pressure against Syria by directly targeting its key ally Iran.

On Saturday, the security presence was largest in Damascus suburbs, the eastern city of Deir el-Zour and the coastal city of Latakia, according to the Local Coordination Committees, an activist group that helps organize the protests.

Sporadic shooting also was reported.

The military operations come a day after Syrian security forces killed at least two people as tens of thousands of anti-government protesters flooded the streets on the last Friday of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Friday has become the main day for protests, despite the near-certainty that tanks and snipers will respond with deadly force.

The government crackdown escalated dramatically at the start of Ramadan, a time of introspection and piety characterized by a dawn-to-dusk fast. Muslims typically gather in mosques during the month for special nightly prayers after breaking the fast, and the Assad government used deadly force to prevent such large gatherings from turning into more anti-government protests.

The regime has banned most foreign journalists and placed tight restrictions on local coverage.

Although the crackdown has led to broad condemnation and sanctions, Assad is in no immediate danger of falling. Economic sanctions will chip away at the regime, although a new U.S. ban on Syrian oil is not a significant blow on its own as the U.S. has few business dealing with Syria. A possible oil embargo by the European ‘s 27 member states could significantly slash the Damascus government’s revenues, however.

Assad has promises a series of reforms, but the opposition has rejected the overtures while his forces fire on peaceful protesters.

On Friday, Syria’s ally Russia introduced a rival U.N. resolution on Syria that called for Assad’s government to halt its violence against protesters and expedite reforms, but made no mention of the sanctions sought by the U.S. and European nations.

Envoys for Britain and Germany said they welcomed Russia’s decision to seek any Security Council action on Syria. But they said Russia’s proposed resolution was weaker than the statement the group had issued earlier this month on the Syrian government’s violent crackdown on the opposition.

“This is a situation where continued activity by the Security Council might be helpful, if it is pushing the parties in the right direction,” Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said.

Russia’s draft resolution calls on the Syrian government to “expedite the implementation of the announced reforms in order to effectively address the legitimate aspirations and concerns of Syria’s people.”

 

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An appeal from Evin prison

 

Hossein Kazemeini Boroujerdi who is imprisoned in Tehran’s Evin prison since October 8, 2006‎ appealed to international human lawyers and organizations to support those who are imprisoned in  by the Iranian regime for standing up for democracy and freedom.

His statement that appeared in some websites said that the “defenseless prisoners are tortured physically and psychologically, at worst in solidarity confinements” by Iranian regime’s henchmen and “they fall prey to a variety of acute and chronic diseases, which irreparably damage their health.”

“We appeal to you, the independent and free international media as well as the leading independent and free international judicial institutions, particularly the UN: Do not abandon us,” the statement added.

 

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Iranian activist missing after arrest

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Iranian officials have so far refused to acknowledge they are holding Kouhyar Goudarzi, whose mother was also arrested

Human rights groups have expressed concern over the fate of Kouhyar Goudarzi, a prominent Iranian activist who was arrested last month by plainclothes security forces.

Goudarzi, 25, an active member of the Committee for Human Rights Reporters (CHRR) in Iran, was picked up from a friend’s house in Tehran on 31 July, but authorities have so far refused to acknowledge they are holding him.

Neighbours said Goudarzi was taken away with two of his friends by people believed to be from Iran’s ministry of intelligence. His whereabouts are unknown but speculation is rife that he has been taken to Evin prison.

A day after Gourdarzi’s arrest his mother, Parvin Mokhtareh, was detained in the southern city of Kerman. She has been accused of insulting the supreme leader, propaganda against the regime and acting against the national security. Amnesty said the charges stemmed from an “interview she gave when her son was imprisoned in 2010 in relation to his peaceful human rights activities”.

Goudarzi’s lawyer, Mina Jafari told the opposition website Roozonline: “We are very worried for Kouhyar’s physical and mental health. Our only source of information about Kouhyar was through his mother, who herself got arrested … Now, we have no information about Kouhar, nor his mother. Whatever happens to him, those who arrested him should be held responsible.”

Amnesty called for Iran to allow Goudarzi to have access to his lawyer and family. “Kouhyar Goudarzi’s arrest is cause enough for concern, let alone his effective ‘disappearance’. He has been denied contact with the outside world and this puts him at real risk of torture or ill-treatment,” said Amnesty’s UK media director Mike Blakemore.

“The Iranian authorities should immediately reveal where Kouhyar Goudarzi is being held and allow his family and lawyer to visit him. If he is being held solely because of his peaceful human rights activities then we would consider him a prisoner of conscience who should be released immediately and unconditionally.”

Goudarzi was previously arrested in the aftermath of Iran’s disputed presidential elections in 2009. He was initially accused of moharebeh(waging war against God), which carries a death sentence, but was convicted of “spreading propaganda against the regime” and sentenced to a year in prison. While there, Goudarzi won the National Press Club award for his human rights activities. He was released from prison in December last year.

 

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Iranian doctor murdered after examining rape victims, says his son

 

The son of an Iranian doctor who was killed after examining the rape victims of the country’s 2009 unrest has spoken for the first time about the motives behind his father’s assassination.

Abdolreza Soudbakhsh, a physician and professor at Tehran University, was shot dead by men on a motorcycle as he left his office last September. At the time of his assassination, Iranian officials denied his murder had anything to do with the cases of alleged rape in Kahrizak, a detention centre that Iran used to imprison many of the opposition activists caught up in the protests following the country’s disputed presidential elections.

Many protesters are believed to have been tortured to death in Kahrizak and several have claimed they were raped. But the doctor’s son Behrang Soudbakhsh said in an interview with Fereshteh Ghazi of Roozonline, an opposition website, that his father had indeed examined the rape victims of Kahrizak and was under pressure to remain silent about those who died under torture.

Kahrizak became a scandal for the regime when Mohsen Rouholamini, the son of a former senior advisor to the Revolutionary Guards, was named among prisoners who died in the centre.

After Rouholamini’s death, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ordered the closure of Kahrizak but the opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi later spoke out about the extent of rape inside the centre after meeting some of its victims.

“[My father] was told to say that the victims of Kahrizak had Meningitis. He asked to see the dead bodies and when he examined them, he concluded that they had died under torture and not Meningitis,” Behrang Soudbakhsh said.

“Once he said that how could they rape an 18-year-old kid so severely that he died after that? How could they rape the children,” he asked.

The doctor was planning to leave Iran on the night of his assassination, which his son said suggested he was killed to prevent him from revealing more information. Soudbakhsh Sr had given an interview to Deutsche Welle’s Persian network a few weeks before his death, in which he had mentioned rape inside prison.

“They were thinking that my father was going to the US to reveal his information in details in an open society. My father was one of the few experts in Iran who had precise information [on the issue],” Soudbakhsh Jr said. “They killed my father because he didn’t want to lie and he didn’t lie.”

According to the doctor’s son, Soudbakhsh was wearing a bulletproof vest at the time of his assassination. He was shot where the vest did not protect his body by a gun with a silencer. His son said this showed the killers were aware he was wearing the vest.

Soudbakhsh Jr said the police refused to co-operate with an inquiry into his father’s death. According to witnesses who spoke to the son, but who have spoken in public, the killers appear to have been so unworried about being caught that they did not cover their faces. But the dead man’s family has been unable to watch CCTV footage of the incident.

Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards and its intelligence unit are believed to be the main groups responsible for the suppression of protesters in the country’s post-election unrest. Families of the dead protesters have appealed to the UN human rights special rapporteur, Ahmed Shaheed, to investigate the events related to the 2009 unrest but Iran has signalled it will not allow the monitor to enter the country.

The scandal has also taken the life of another Iranian doctor, Ramin Pourandarjani, known as the “Kahrizak doctor”, who examined the inmates in the detention centre. He died in November 2009 under mysterious circumstances.

 

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