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Hessam Qorbani, a university student from Yassouj arrested by Ministry of Intelligence

The forces of the infamous Ministry of Intelligence raided the dormitory room of Hessam Qorbani, an activist student of the University of Yassouj while he was studying for his final exams, confiscated his books and notebooks and took him away; the cause of the raid is unknown, HRANA News Agency reported on July 10.

According to HRANA, the news outlet of the human rights activists in Iran, the Ministry of Intelligence has charged this student with “insulting the Supreme Leader, the sanctities of religion, and possession of banned religious and anti-regime books.”

 

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From Iran Primer: Ahmadinejad vs. the Revolutionary Guards

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President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is in hot water these days. His challenge to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, which began after he fired the minister of intelligence in April, has provoked the deepening wrath of Iran’s political and military elite. There is even talk of impeaching the president.

In the past, Mr. Ahmadinejad proved he is a survivor. He masterfully manipulated his way into Iran’s second most powerful position. Yet he now faces a challenge he may not be able to overcome. Mr. Khamenei has given the Revolutionary Guards the task of reining him in–and perhaps even helping select his replacement as president.

In a recent interview, Revolutionary Guards chief Gen. Ali Jafari said that his force is now in charge of dealing with the “deviant current” – the latest lingo used to describe Mr. Ahmadinejad, his controversial chief of staff Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei and others in his inner circle. Mr. Jafari also indicated that the Guards would help set the conditions for next year’s parliamentary elections as well as future elections.

Addressing the opposition, Mr. Jafari also said reformists who had not crossed the regime’s “red lines” would be allowed to run. This may include former President Mohammad Khatami, who recently asked the regime to “forgive” Iranians who protested after the disputed 2009 presidential election. Mr. Jafari’s comments reflected the growing power of the Guards as Iran’s political enforcer.

But Mr. Ahmadinejad is unlikely to go down without a fight. He shot back at Mr. Jafari by criticizing “illegal” border crossings used by government agencies to smuggle goods in and out of Iran, which is estimated to generate billions of dollars in illicit profits. Mr. Ahmadinejad implied that the smugglers were “brothers” with security and intelligence interests. His remarks have been widely interpreted in Iran as referring to the Guards, who are known to operate many jetties, crossings, and ports throughout the country. Mr. Jafari subsequently condemned these claims as “deviant.”

Ironically, the Guards played a critical role in Mr. Ahmadinejad’s election in 2005 and 2009. Mr. Ahmadinejad was once even considered to be among the Guards’ closest allies; he allowed them to amass political and economic power during his presidency. President Ahmadinejad publicly suggested that he knows their secrets, as he hinted about smuggling. And he may air more inside information if he feels further threatened.

The Guards are known to be a fractured force. Some members support the reformists, while others are loyal to Mr. Ahmadinejad. However, top Guards appear to be solidly behind Mr. Khamenei, who has ensured leaders of the elite military wing that they will be powerful long-term guardians of Iranian politics. Mr. Khamenei and Mr. Jafari are unlikely to allow the political faction loyal to Mr. Ahmadinejad to win elections for parliament in 2012 and the presidency in 2013.

So Mr. Ahmadinejad may be willing to challenge the very top members of the political elite, including Mr. Khamenei and Mr. Jafari. But the Guards are also demonstrating that they are willing to exert their growing powers – even against their own “brothers” – to protect their prerogatives.

 

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10,000 Revolutionary Guards cross the Iraqi border, force Kurdish villagers out of their homes

Following resumption of shelling of Iraqi Kurdistan by mullahs’ regime and the al-Arabia Television’s report about the border crossing and invasion by the Revolutionary Guards into the Iraqi territory, Iraqi media reported that 10,000 Iranian regime’s armed forces crossed the international borders and forced the people in Iraq’s northern villages to leave their homes.

The Iraqi al-Rafedain Television reported: “The Iranian regime has resumed bombing the border regions of Chouman in the Iraqi Province of Erbil. Witnesses said 10,000 Iranian soldiers have penetrated into Iraq. The armed forces of that regime used shells and mortars   in these attacks and forced residents of the region to leave their homes.”

The al-Rafedain TV added: “The Iranian regime’s forces have recently established about 50 military posts and checkpoints and continue their road-making activities in those mountainous areas.”

The Iranian Resistance condemned shelling of Iraqi Kurdistan and invasion of Iraq by the clerical regime’s Revolutionary Guards and forceful expulsion of people in Iraqi Kurdistan’s villages from their homes and called on the international community, especially the United Nations Security Council to condemn these criminal acts and to confront the aggressions and anti-human crimes of the mullahs’ regime.

As a reminder, recently, Danaifar, Iranian regime’s ambassador in Iraq admitted to the shelling of Iraqi Kurdistan and brazenly claimed that these criminal aggressions are done in coordination with the Iraqi officials. This is while despite Maliki government’s silence and inaction, Iraq’s Parliament, political factions, and patriotic forces of Iraq have strongly condemned the clerical regime’s attacks as “aggression against Iraq’s Sovereignty.”

On Sunday, the al-Sabah Daily reported that the U.S. Military in Iraq announced: We are ready to participate in stopping the shelling of border regions by Iranian regime. General Jeffrey Buchanan, spokesman of the U.S. Military in Iraq said: The Iranian regime must respect Iraq’s national sovereignty.

 

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Iranian actress Pegah Ahangarani jailed

GVF — Iranian actress Pegah Ahangarani has been in prison since three days ago, according to media reports.

According to the Arabic-language news channel Al Arabiya, there’s been no news of acclaimed actress Pegah Ahangarani for the past three days while the place of her detention remains unknown.

During the rigged 2009 presidential elections, Ahangarani had supported opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi and was summoned and interrogated by authorities in the days after the announcement of the poll results.

Prior to her arrest, Ahangarani had been expected to report on the 2011 Women’s World Cup for Germany’s Deutsche Welle.

 

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MP: RGC has duty to deal with toppling movement

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A member of the Majlis’s [Iranian Parliament] National Security Commission said that the insults of the illegal Mosharekat Party [Participation Party] against the commander of the Revolutionary Guards Corps is a result of a failed conspiracy of the seditionist movement to topple the Islamic Revolution.
“The RGC has a duty to deal with the internal toppling movement like it would deal with the external enemy”, she said.
In an interview with Fars, Zohreh Elahian, the representative of the people of Tehran and a member of the National Security Commission and Foreign Policy of the Islamic Council Majlis said that the RGC is the legal defender of the Islamic Revolution.
“The Constitution requires the RGC to protect the Islamic Revolution in the face of all the attacks that threaten the revolution, therefore in the 2009 seditions the RGC defended the government in its entirety against the over-throwers”, she said…
“The RGC will deal powerfully with any faction or party that intends to act against the Islamic Revolution and it does not make a difference in what government or time this deviated movement takes form. What is important is that the RGC has to act upon its duty”. (Jahan News state-run website – Jul. 10, 2011)

 

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Political prisoner goes on dry hunger strike in protest to being beaten in prison infirmary

Peiman Karimi Azad announced that he was on a dry hunger and medicine strike after being beaten by a medic in Evin Prison’s infirmary.
According to reports, this political prisoner, who was recently tried for a second time on charges of insulting the leader, was beaten by a medic for talking to a female political prisoner in the infirmary.
After filing a complaint against the medic, he was summoned to the court in Evin Prison and was faced with new charges.
This political prisoner who was arrested on December 27, 2009 went on a dry hunger and medicine strike because of the violent treatment he received and because his insulin doses were decreased. (Human Rights Activists in Iran – Jul. 11, 2011)

 

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Iran continues to execute in secret

Iran Human Rights –  has reported on recent executions that were carried out in Iran without any announcement or follow-up report by Iranian authorities. The reports include information on secret mass executions in Vakilabad and Ghezel Hesar prisons.

Four people were executed in Qom prison in the past two weeks

Qom said in a press conference today that four people convicted of smuggling drugs have been executed in Qom prison during the last two weeks.

The main theme of the press conference was about the arrest of more than 200 people, including 32 drug dealers, 79 “dangerous drug addicts”, and 137 drug users. Mir-Heydari described the four executions as “marginal”.

None of those executed were identified by name and the Iranian media did not announce the news of the executions earlier.

Since Iranian authorities fail to announce all the executions, human rights groups believe that the real number of executions are much higher than those announced by the Iranian media.

A group execution in Iran

Earlier, Iran Human Rights reported that 25 people in Ghezel Hesar prison (in Karaj, west of Tehran) had been hanged on July 3rd.…all those executed were men convicted of drug-related offences. The executions took place in the prison’s yard.

These executions have not been reported by the official Iranian media.

According to the group “Iranian Activists for Human Rights and Democracy”, 7 people were hanged in Tehran’s Evin prison also on July 3rd. Six of the prisoners were transferred from Ghezel Hesar prison and one was transferred from Rajai Shahr prison. One of the men, who was not identified by name, was an Afghan citizen. The other six men executed were identified as, Hamid Nader, Seyed Abolfazl Azimitabar, Mehdi Bashir, Javad Abdollahvand (54 years old), Asghar, and Masoud Ali Moradi (30 years old, transferred from Rajai Shahr prison).

Iranian authorities have not reported on these executions.

Several human rights groups had reported earlier about secret mass executions in prisons in the province of Khorasan. According to our reports, secret mass executions have also been occurring in other Iranian prisons like Ghezel Hesar.

It is believed that the number of executions in Ghezel Hesar prison might even exceed those in Mashhad’s Vakilabad prison.

According to the IHR annual report on the death penalty in 2010 , in Iran, at least 474 people were executed as a result of the secret mass executions in the Khorasan province. At least 205 of the executions were not included in the annual report due to ongoing investigations.

Most of the people executed were convicted of drug-trafficking.

The Prosecutor of the southern Khorasan province confirmed in a press conference last week that 140 prisoners convicted of drug-trafficking had been executed in that region from the period of March 2010 to March 2011. The majority of these executions had not been reported by the Iranian media.

IHR urges the newly appointed United Nations Special Rapporteur Mr. Ahmad Shaheed to pay special attention to the reports concerning the secret mass executions in Iranian prisons.

 

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Iran tightens online censorship to counter US ‘shadow internet’

 

Iran has stepped up online censorship by upgrading the filtering system that enables the Islamic regime to block access to thousands of websites it deems inappropriate for Iranian users.

The move comes one month after the United States announced plans to launch new services facilitating internet access and mobile phone communications in countries with tight controls on freedom of speech, a decision that infuriated Tehran’s regime and prompted harsh reactions from several Iranian officials.

The upgrade had at first appeared as a relaxation of the censorship machine. Iran’s online community said on Monday that filtering was temporarily lifted for the entire country, giving users access to banned websites such as Twitter and Facebook. But hopes for an end to censorship were dashed when news agencies reported later in the day that the respite was due to the process of making the upgrade.

Despite the filtering, many Iranians access blocked addresses with help from proxy websites or virtual private network (VPN) services. The upgrade is aimed at stopping users bypassing censorship.

More than 5 million websites are filtered in Iran. Media organisations including the Guardian, BBC and CNN are blocked, though access to the New York Times website is allowed. On Google, the Farsi equivalents for words such as “condom”, “sex”, “lesbian” and “anti-filtering” are filtered out.

Iran is believed to be worried about the influence of the internet and especially social networking websites as pro-democracy activists across the Middle East use them to promote and publicise their movements.

Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency quoted an unnamed official as saying: “The ministry of communications and information technology is strengthening the filtering system and recent disruptions were the result of this upgrade.”

At the same time, Nasimonline.ir, an agency that publishes short Twitter-style bursts of news, said it had received information that “a new filtering system that targets Google and Yahoo search engines” had been installed and tested on Monday.

“I think that the new upgrade in the filtering system is a signal from Iran that the regime is prepared to stop any attempt by the US to challenge the country’s online censorship,” said an Iranian who spoke to the Guardian by phone from Tehran on condition of anonymity.

The New York Times reported last month that the Obama administration is leading a global effort to deploy what is known as “shadow internet” or “internet in a suitcase” by spending $2m (£1.25m) on secretive projects to create “independent cellphone networks inside foreign countries”. The aim is to provide services that allow “wireless communication over a wide area with a link to the global internet” in support of dissidents in countries that have tightened their grip on freedom of speech.

In reaction to the US move, Iran’s intelligence minister, Heidar Moslehi, was quoted by Fars as saying: “We had predicted these actions, such as the internet in suitcase, and we have planned proper ways to combat them.”

In an interview with the semi-official Mehr news agency, Iran’s minister for communications and information technology, Reza Taghipour, accused the US of “cyber terrorism” for its plans to launch “internet in suitcase”.

In April, the Tehran government announced that it intended to launch “halal internet”, a country-wide intranet and a parallel network that conforms to Islamic values with the ultimate goal of substituting for the global internet.

Iran’s opposition believe that Iran is buying its filtering technology from China. In September 2009 Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards, a body under the direct control of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, purchased 51% of the Telecommunications Company of Iran, which monitors internet filtering in the country.

 

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Kurdish Political Prisoner Jamal Alizadeh on Hunger Strike

HRANA News Agency – Kurdish political prisoner Jamal Alizadeh has gone on hunger strike in Urmia’s central prison in the West Azerbaijan Province.

According to a report by Mukrian News Agency, Jamal Alizadeh is a resident of Peeran-Shahr who has been behind bars in Urmia Prison for more than five months. On July 9, 2011, Jamal Alizadeh began his hunger strike in order to protest against prison officials’ lack of response to his request. Jamal Alizadeh has asked to be transferred to a prison in the city of Naqadeh.

The Revolutionary Court has sentenced Jamal Alizadeh to fifteen months in prison on charges of cooperating with a Kurdish political party.

 

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Iranian prisoners condemned to gradual death: jailed journalist

In an urgent letter to a United Nations human rights official, jailed Iranian journalist Issa Saharkhiz has accused Iranian authorities of using harsh prison conditions to slowly kill political prisoners.

“What is happening now in the Islamic Republic prisons is a crime against humanity and has nothing less than Stalin’s inhumane treatment of prisoners in the forced labour camps of Siberia,” Saharkhiz wrote to Ahmad Shaheed, the UN Human Rights Rapporteur on Iran. The letter was posted on the personal website of Mehdi Saharkhiz, the jailed journalist’s son.

Saharkhiz writes that political prisoners are not the sole target of this policy, and the situation for general prisoners is “no less disastrous.”

Saharkhiz warns that the objective of the Iranian authorities is “to kill the protesting prisoners silently and gradually.”

Referring to the death of two political prisoners, Hoda Saber and Mohsen Dokmehchi, he writes: “They are deliberately trying to destroy us and have prepared a silent death for us because they fear our survival even behind bars.”

Reza Hoda Saber, a Nationalist-religious political activist and journalist died 10 days into his hunger strike; it was in protest of the death of Haleh Sahabi, a fellow political prisoner. She died when security forces descended upon her father’s funeral. Hoda Saber’s fellow inmates have declared that he was beaten by prison authorities eight days into his hunger strike.

Mohsen Dokmehchi, an Iranian businessman, was also arrested in the post-election protests of 2009 and sentenced to 10 years in prison and exile to Rejaishahr Prison in Karaj. He died last March from pancreatic cancer. He had been charged with supporting the exiled dissident group People’s Mojahedin of Iran organization and lending financial support to the families of political prisoners.

Saharkhiz adds that the prison situation is so dire that “other disastrous events” could come at any moment. He urges Shaheed to act immediately to inform the public of the prisoners’ plight, stressing that any delay will only result in more deaths.

Issa Saharkhiz is a prominent Iranian journalist and one of the founders of Society for the Defense of Press Freedom in Iran. He was arrested in July of 2009 and sentenced to three years in prison for “insulting the leader and the regime.” He is also banned from political and media activities for five years and prohibited from leaving the country for a year.

He is currently at Rejaishahr Prison and while he suffers from severe health problems, he has not been allowed any temporary leaves.

 

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