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Political Prisoner Hassan Faraji Mousavi in Critical Condition

Mousavi who has been imprisoned for the past 20 months is suffering from intestine problems. The doctors have informed him that the problem may lead to cancer in the long-run if not treated and his family is extremely concerned since he has been denied medical leave.

He is sometimes transferred to the clinic in prison due to the extreme pain he suffers and is injected with painkillers but the doctors have said that he needs to undergo surgery due to intestine infection.

In the past 6 months, three political prisoners Mohsen Dogmehchi, Hassan Nahid and Hoda Saber have passed away in prison.

Mousavi has been sentenced to 7 years in prison and he is in urgent need of medical furlough.

 

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Women’s rights activist arrested in Qom

 

Maryam Bigdeli, an Iranian women’s rights activist and a member of the One Million Signatures Campaign to End Discriminatory Laws, has been arrested in Qom to serve out a prison term she has challenged as illegal.

Human Rights Reporters Committee reports that Bigdeli was picked up Thursday morning at her home and transferred to Langarood Prison in Qom.

Bigdeli was previously arrested together with Fatemeh Masjedi, another women’s rights activist, in May 2009. She was released on bail after two weeks.

The two women were sentenced to six months in prison and $2,000 in fines for the charge of “propaganda against the Islamic Republic” because they supported the work of a feminist group by collecting and publishing signatures to change discriminatory laws against women.

Bigdeli challenged the sentence, saying the aim of the One Million Signatures Campaign is to present its collected signatures as a petition to the legal system. She added that no judicial body has declared the One Million Signatures Campaign to be illegal.

The court has rejected Bigdeli’s challenge and demanded that she serves out her sentence.

Masjedi was also arrested last January and was released after serving out her six-month prison term.

 

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MP accuses Ahmadinejad of withholding financial data

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Iranian MP Ahmad Tavakoli has accused Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of blocking the publication of accurate and timely data on the national economy.

Tavakoli, who is also the head of Parliament’s research committee, said the information is being withheld from the Iranian public on Ahmadinejad’s direct orders. He said such actions mislead both officials and citizens, and result in bad decisions.

The conservative MP contends that the President has instructed the Central Bank to refrain from releasing accurate inflation data.

Iran’s Central Bank recently announced it will no longer publish inflation rates and left that task to the Statistics Centre. The Central Bank said it will continue to collect inflation data but will no longer publicize it.

Over the past three years, the Central Bank has also refrained from announcing economic growth rates. This has led some MPs to speculate that the bank may be covering up a decline in Iran’s economic growth rate under the Ahmadinejad administration.

Tavakoli added that in the absence of accurate data from the Central Bank, the president has been making false announcements about the country’s economic performance, such as annual inflation of 3.5 percent and economic growth of 10 percent.

Tavakoli also accused the administration of flooding the market with money to hide the effect of cuts to government subsidies, even though it drives inflation higher.

Parliament has also accused the administration of using Central Bank resources to pay for the family benefits given to households to counter the effects of subsidy cuts. The administration claims its actions are legal.

Tavakoli also criticized the Ministry of Economy’s failure to provide Parliament with a report on the administration’s financial activities since January.

 

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Regime’s medieval policies at Gohardasht prison let to the death of a prisoner

NCRI – In order to be freed from the harsh and unbearable conditions of the clerical regime’s prisons, a prisoner committed suicide and died, the Human Rights and Democracy Activists in Iran reported on July 22.

On Tuesday, Ali Ashraf Noroozi, 40, who was imprisoned in the section 7 of methadone division at former women’s jail of Gohardasht Prison and was under medieval and inhumane conditions, attempted suicide to be freed from those unbearable conditions, and after a long delay was transferred to the prison’s clinic.

For a long time, the prison clinic didn’t take any steps whatsoever and left Noroozi alone, which led to his death, Human Rights and Democracy Activists reported.

In recent weeks, the number of suicides and bloody fights leading to the death of inmates in Gohardasht Prison has been on the rise but no steps are taken to prevent such incidents and prisoners’ conditions are becoming harsher and more inhumane day by day.

 

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Azeri Political Activist Sentenced to Prison

 

Ayat Ali Biglou has been sentenced to one year in prison for hiding Hadi Mousavi and helping Sajjad Radmehr to exit the country illegally.

According to the Human Rights House of Iran, he was arrested in 2009 and released on bail after 9 months of solitary confinement.

The case for 5 of his other charges, membership in the Gamoh Party, acting against national security, anti-regime propaganda, conspiracy and anti-regime gathering,  and espionage is still being reviewed.

 

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A Letter to Dr. Ahmed Shaheed The UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Iran by a Former Diplomat

Translation by Iran Briefing:

Hossein Alizadeh (46) former iran’s charge d’affairs in Helsinki,  was a career diplomat in the Iranian Foreign Ministry for 22 years. In protest to Islamic Republic repressive treatment to its innocent people, he resigned form his career  in September 2010 declaring his support for Iran’s Green Movement. He received a master’s degree in International Relations from the School of the Iranian Foreign Ministry. Alizadeh has published many books and articles before and after his defection. He speaks Persian, English and Arabic fluently.He  has recently written an open letter to the UN Human Rights Rapporteur in iran evaluating the Islamic Republic’s refusal to allow the Rapporteur enter Iran’s territory as an evidence on horrible and wide spread violation of human rights in Iran.His contact information is: [email protected]

He who has nothing to hide, has nothing to fear

His excellency Dr. Ahmad Shahid

The UN special rapporteur of human rights in Iran

What compelled me to write this letter is the fact that we share a common background serving as diplomats for our countries. Such commonality brings us closer together and encourages mutual understanding of a single issue.  With your remarkable background as Foreign Minister of the Maldives, now the most highest international organization trusts you to investigate the human rights situation in my country. Yet I, a temporary charge d’affaires and former ambassador in Helsinki, after 21 years of service in the Iranian Foreign Ministry, am now a political refugee in my host country, Finland.

My colleagues and I, protesting against the merciless crackdown on the Iranian people and desiring to relay the cry of a suffering and helpless nation to the world, saw no alternative but to execute a political move reflecting all victims of the Islamic Republic’s human rights violations: the stifled voices, stitched mouths, bruised chins, bound prisoners, lost martyrs, childless mothers, shuttered newspapers, dissolved political parties, prohibited minority religions, and most importantly, punished defense lawyers.

Excellency,

I write this open letter so I can reiterate the thousand-fold, relentless human rights violations in Iran. I’m very sure that dozens of UN resolutions, hundreds of statements from human rights organizations, and thousands of testimonies to the inhumane tragedies in the black well called the “Islamic Republic” are sufficient documentation to detail the crimes of depraved officials and vulgar rulers. Such records are enough to enlighten you of the tragedies that abound in the Islamic Republic.

Is there better rationale than the Islamic Republic becoming the first country appointed a special human rights correspondent to investigate and assess its human rights situation since the Council’s founding in 2006? If there wasn’t any satisfying proof or documentation, the Council would never have thought of appointing Iran a human rights correspondent.

I’m conveying pain in this letter, and, alongside the solid proof you have, I lay down my simple argument for the critical human rights situation in Iran. I contend that Islamic Republic senior officials’ harsh reaction of “blocking the correspondent’s entry into Iranian soil” only corroborates the depth of the horrible and monstrous tragedies taking place. The regime is even ready to justify its rejection of your shocking testimony to their crimes.

The line of Persian poetry quoted at the beginning of this letter is an Iranian’s simple description of crooks involved in bad actions. Let’s imagine that an Iranian citizen, accused of possessing stolen property or hiding a body in his home, gets investigated by the court. What better proof for his guilt than when he professes to be innocent but refuses to allow officials to search his home? Thus the Persian proverb says:

Excellency,

“He who has nothing to hide, has nothing to fear.”

This explains why Islamic Republic officials—from the head of the judiciary to the Foreign Minister, head of the National Security Council, and the IRGC’s Top Commander—hold the flag symbolizing their refusal to let you enter our dear country. Dissecting their foolish talk, it is very appalling that on one hand the president calls Iran “the most free country in the world” and Javad Larijani, head of the human rights desk at the Judiciary, calls Iran “the only democracy in the Middle East” while the Judiciary’s head Sadeq Larijani boldly announces that “Our policy is not to accept the correspondent”.

It is also distressing to hear Sadeq Larijani, the Judge of all Judges, say that “The basis of Western-style human rights is not enforceable, and we cannot let them impose on us a notion of human rights adopted from a liberal cultural system. Our religious regime can itself create a human rights system based on its principles.”

Did the world forget that the Islamic Republic, until yesterday, was very keen on becoming a member of the Human Rights Council? Maybe the Islamic Republic forgot that it must execute the terms of a contract, treaty or convention unless it pulls out. What is the difference between accepting unexpected IAEA inspections of Iran’s nuclear sites (since the IAEA is an international authority), and accepting a special correspondent from another international authority, the Human Rights Council?

Excellency,

Our country’s Judge of all Judges knows well that even if there wasn’t an international human rights treaty or any other treaty containing the Islamic Republic’s signature, these government officials would still have committed overt violations of the country’s laws and Constitution. Iran defying its international obligations is another story. Let me give you an interesting example.

Based on the Islamic Republic’s civil code (derived from Islamic jurisprudence), a person is innocent until proven guilty by a legitimate court. It is appalling that in a country claiming to be free and democratic, two prominent Islamic Republic figures, former Prime Minister Mirhossein Mousavi and former head of Parliament Mehdi Karroubi have been under house arrest for five long months. Neither has a trial has been formed for them nor a verdict issued to sentence (or condemn) them.

Considering the Islamic Republic’s contradictory treatment of the civil code and the Constitution, the question is: if Mehdi Karroubi announced that he would attend the trial himself and if these two men are criminals, then why their wives are under house arrest as well? You must acknowledge that the Islamic Republic’s problem begins with this simple example and ends with what Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi claims to be thousands of systematic human rights violations!

Excellency,

Because you have a Muslim background, you know better than anyone else the meaning of shahid….which also happens to be your last name. Shahid means the one who sacrifices his life for protecting his greatness, dignity, and nation. No doubt that thousands of helpless Iranians have been martyred throughout the centuries, but we must note that during the imposed war with Iraq in the 1980s the term “living martyr” became popular.

According to our fighters, the “living martyr” was someone who didn’t get martyred on the battlefield, but with his then damaged and broken body witnessed Saddam’s invasion of dear Iran.

Dr. Shahid, if there weren’t thousands of martyrs for the cause of freedom, democracy, and human rights so that the report on the Islamic Republic’s inhuman abuses reaches you, then the Islamic Republic itself is a black well full of living martyrs who can illustrate for you just a small portion of these crimes. Some of these living martyrs are Mohammad Nourizadeh, Narges Mohammadi, and Nasrin Sotoudeh.

Conclusion

Finally, we must not forget that although the troubling speech of the Islamic Republic leaders never ends, we cannot ignore the honest discourse of sympathetic people and human rights activists. Unfortunately, some exploit the issue of human rights as a political tool to acquire power—disregarding their country’s right as well as other countries’ opinions.

You must acknowledge that such behavior only makes countries such as the Islamic Republic bolder in committing human rights violations. Although the solution to this problem does not lie in your agenda or your hands, we know well that you (as an individual internationally renowned in the field of human rights) are more eloquent and capable than anyone else to help end the exploitation of human rights.

An entire nation and its future are bound to the serious task at hand, and I wish you success.

A Former Diplomat

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IRGC denies shooting down U.S. drone

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Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has denied reports that Iranian military forces have shot down a U.S. spy drone near the Fordo nuclear facility, the Iranian Student News Agency (ISNA) reports.

IRGC public relations announced yesterday that it had targeted a test plane in the Province of Qom and not a U.S. spy plane, as earlier reported by some media. The statement emphasized the U.S. drones are not capable of penetrating Iran’s air space. It added that military news can only be corroborated through military sources.

On Wednesday, MP Ali Aghazadeh Dafsari, a member of Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, was cited by local media as saying the IRGC had downed a U.S. spy drone near the Fordo nuclear plant near the city of Qom.

He claimed the drone was gathering information about current construction work on the Fordo plant when it was shot down by Iranian air defence.

In the past, the IRGC has reported shooting down several U.S. spy planes in the Persian Gulf region.

While the U.S. has not reacted to any news about the plane near Qom, it previously has denied earlier reports of its spy planes being shot down by the Iranian air force.

 

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Henchmen of clerical dictatorship exert excessive pressure on female political prisoners

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Human rights website Edalat reported on July 20th that by transferring a number of female political prisoners from the Qarachek Prison in the city of Varameen to the infamous Evin Prison, this prison has become overcrowded even more.

This occurs at a time when due to lack of sanitary and health measures as well as other pressures and inhumane treatment by the regime, most of the female political prisoners are suffering from various diseases, which have reached, in some cases, very dangerous levels.

Additionally, for some time now, the henchmen of the mullahs’ regime have denied any visits for the female political prisoners and have cut off their access to phone, Edalat reported.

 

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Ahmadinejad proposes IRGC member to lead oil ministry

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Rostam Ghassemi, a member of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps and commander of the IRGC Khatam-ol-nabia Construction Camp, is Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s choice to run the Ministry of Oil, Iranian media report.

The Khabar-on-line website reports that Ahmadinejad will soon officially present Ghassemi to Parliament.

The report adds that talks between the Ghassemi and the administration have been going on for more than a month, and the IRGC’s refusal to relinquish Ghassemi had delayed negotiations. However, Ahmadinejad met with IRGC commanders on Thursday, and an agreement was reached to allow Ghassemi to lead the Ministry of Oil.

The Khatamol-nabia Construction Camp is directly linked to the IRGC and is one the country’s largest construction contractors for large road and rail projects, as well as oil, gas and petrochemical developments.

Ghassemi also served as an MP in the third and fifth Parliaments.

In the course of merging ministries, Ahmadinejad removed his former minister of oil, Massoud MirKazemi, and took the helm himself as interim minister.

Earlier reports that former Ahmadinejad aide Mohammad Aliabadi was the president’s choice for the oil ministry drew immediate criticism from Parliament. Several MPs rejected the choice, insisting he did not have the necessary background to take over the country’s most vital ministry.

 

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235,000 prisoners crammed into prisons made for only 85,000 prisoners

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According to a statement by the head of the Prison Organization, the existing facilities in prisons have been made for 85,000 prisoners even as there are currently 235,000 people jailed [in Iran].
Zamani, the spokesperson of the Majlis Social Commission [Iranian Parliament] said in an interview with ISNA, “In Tuesday’s Commission session, the head of the Prison Organization gave some explanations about the current situation and facilities in prisons to the members of the commission”.
“According to Ismaili’s explanations, the existing facilities in prisons have been made for 85,000 prisoners while there are currently 235,000 people jailed and this has caused problems”, he added. (Khorasan state-run daily – Jul. 21, 2011)

 

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