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Iranian Intelligence Agents Viciously Attack and Arrest 1980s Political Prisoner

Agents from the Ministry of Intelligence attacked the private residence of 1980s political prisoner Mehdi (Houshang) Abedi Bakhoda and arrested him while he was bedridden and ill, taking him to an unknown location. Human Rights and Democracy Activists report that on Sunday, July 3, around 10pm Ministry of Intelligence agents entered the premises without knocking on the door, climbed over the walls and broke into Abedi’s house in Rasht. Despite the fact that he was bedridden and ill and had IV tubes connected, he was taken to an unknown location while in a critical physical condition.

Abedi’s family protested against the Iranian Intelligence agents’ unusual attack. With widespread support from neighbors, the family yelled at the agents in order to stop the arrest; the agents quickly retreated from the disquieted neighborhood. During the raid, Ministry of Intelligence agents confiscated the family computer, personal address book, mobile phones, and other personal items.

Since the arrest of their loved one, the Abedi Bakhoda family has been visiting the public prosecutor’s office and the Rasht Revolutionary Court daily in order to find out about Bakhoda’s condition and where he is detained. Until now the family has not received any answers.

 

Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie Disappears

 

HRANA News Agency – Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie, a Green Movement activist, has disappeared during the past few days. Since the Ministry of Intelligence summoned him over the phone several days ago, it is likely that he has been arrested.

According to a report by Tahavol Sabz Web Site, Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie was summoned by intelligence agents a few days ago. After leaving his house on Wednesday, June 29, 2011, he has not returned home, and his family has not heard from him.

It has been reported that since 2009 presidential elections, Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie has been repeatedly threatened by officers working for Iran’s Intelligence Agency, but because he has not engaged in any illegal activities, they have been unable to obtain a warrant for his arrest. However, two days after being summoned to the Ministry of Intelligence office located at Sayyed Khandan district, he has not returned home. Meanwhile, his family members are extremely worried about him and fear for safety.

Although Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie’s family members have contacted the police and the Iranian Intelligence Agency in order to locate him, security officials refuse to provide any information to the family and claim to have no news of him to share with his parents.

Since Mohsen Kashefzadeh Saraie was summoned by intelligence officers two days prior to his disappearance, it is safe to assume that he has been kidnapped by the Iranian Intelligence Agency.

In recent days, Mohammad Zarei, a student activist, was also arrested. Mohammad Zarei studies Applied Chemistry at Semnan University and is a member of the Islamic Association of Students.

 

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IRAN: Commander outlines Revolutionary Guard’s muscular role in politics and economy

TUESDAY, 05 JULY 2011

Los Angeles Times – The commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard all but admitted Tuesday that his elite military branch is overseeing the country’s domestic politics, shutting both the country’s reformists and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s confidants out of power.

Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari also opined on the country’s foreign policy objectives in an interview with the semi-official Mehr News Agency [link in Persian] and admitted that the Revolutionary Guard was heavily involved in Iran’s energy sector.

In the extraordinary interview conducted Monday, Jafari outlined the muscular role the ideologically driven Revolutionary Guard, or IRGC, sees for itself in policing Iran’s political elite, especially after the arrests of key figures around Ahmadinejad, described contemptuously as “the deviant current” by Iranian hard-liners.

“Since the IRGC serves as law officer of the judiciary and since the deviant current’s case has special complications, the IRGC arrested and detained these people based on a recommendation by the judiciary,” Jafari was quoted as saying. “These people have not committed security crimes; however, they have committed economic and moral offenses. The people that have been arrested had close ties with main figures of the current.”

The Revolutionary Guard’s powerful role in Iran came to light following Iran’s 2009 presidential elections, which many allege was blatantly rigged by Jafari in favor of Ahmadinejad to prevent moderates from taking over.

The moderates and reformists cried foul, joining millions in the streets for months of pro-democrcacy street protests derided as “the sedition” within the cosmology of regime pillars such as Jafari, who used the security forces to crack down on demonstrators.

In the interview, Jafari — appointed to his post by the country’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei — took it upon himself to outline the conditions he would set for the return to politics of reformists — including former President Mohammad Khatami, who was elected to office twice with more than 70% of the popular vote.

“Members of the reformist camp who have not crossed the red lines can naturally participate in political campaigns,” he said. “However, Mr. Khatami’s success in his activities depends on his stances. Mr. Khatami did not pass his test successfully during the sedition incident and he showed a lot of support for the sedition leaders.”

So far, Jafari continued, Khatami “has not yet adopted a stance to distance himself from those actions. … I do not think people will forgive him.”

Jafari also spoke about the IRGC’s involvement in the economy, particularly the energey sector, where its construction wing — Khatim Anbiya — has taken on a gas exploration project in the Persian Gulf.

“The IRGC’s approach toward implementation of economic projects has always been accompanied with a jihadi spirit,” he said.

On foreign policy, Jafari was relatively cautious. He dismissed as politics retiring U.S. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates’ contention that Iran could have a nuclear bomb in three years. “They make a lot of nonsense remarks,” he said. “Whenever they become disappointed or fail to achieve their goals, they resort to political accusations or assassination.”

He said the IRGC had taken up responsibility for protecting nuclear scientists after a spate of assassinations last year.

“At the moment, the enemy who has become disappointed in taking military measures against Iran aims to carry out terrorist actions and to cause insecurity and assassinate,” he said. “We have gained evidence and information about such moves. The solution is that all intelligence and security organizations and officials in different bodies should remain vigilant.”

Jafari accused the U.S. of stirring up the uprising in Syria — the IRGC’s base for spreading its power to the eastern Mediterranean region — “because Syria is the only country of the region that stood up to U.S. and Israel.”

But he noted what he described as differences between the American and Israeli positions on Syria. “They are worried that if they provoke unrest in Syria, certain groups might come to power in the country which could act against Israel’s interest,” he said.

 

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Prominent Iran Lawyer Jailed For Nine Years

TUESDAY, 05 JULY 2011

RFE/RL – A Tehran court has sentenced a prominent lawyer to nine years in jail on charges of attempting to overthrow the ruling Islamic system.

Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, a founder of the Defenders of Human Rights Center along with Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, had represented activists and opposition supporters arrested after the disputed 2009 presidential election.

The semi-official ISNA news agency reported on July 4 that Dadkhah had been banned from working as an attorney or pursuing any academic activity for 10 years and fined the equivalent of $300 for possessing a satellite TV receiver in his apartment.

Dadkhah told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda on July 4 that his “verdict is based on neither a fair trial, nor the religious or common law.”

He said he would appeal the verdict.

 

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Regime rejects UN rapporteur visit, continues to crack down on free expression

TUESDAY 5 JULY 2011

Arbitrary arrests are continuing in Iran even as the regime has refused to accept a visit by Ahmed Shaheed, the person appointed by the UN Human Rights Council as special rapporteur on the human right situation in Iran. Three journalists and a netizen have been arrested in the past few weeks and others have been summoned for interrogations.

The three journalists include two women – a documentary filmmaker and a sports photographer. The third is the editor of a literary magazine in the north of a country. The netizen is a woman who is an online defender of the families of political prisoners who were arbitrarily executed in the 1980s.

“The human rights situation in Iran keeps on deteriorating,” Reporters Without Borders said. “We continue to see suspicious deaths of detainees and activists and mistreatment in various prisons, especially Evin and Raja’i Shahr. Prisoners of conscience are in constant danger, as the families of many detainees said in a letter to the special rapporteur.

“We urge the Iranian authorities to cooperate with the United Nations without trying to impose any conditions and to facilitate the special rapporteur’s visit. The international community must pressure the Iranian authorities to accept its prerogatives.”

The latest journalist to be arrested is documentary filmmaker Mahnaz Mohammadi, who was picked up at her Tehran home by intelligence ministry officials on 26 June and was taken to Tehran’s Evin prison. She was previously arrested with fellow filmmaker Jafar Panahi during a ceremony for the victims of repression in Tehran’s Behesht-e Zahra cemetery on 29 July 2009 and was held for 19 days.

Since then, she had been subjected to a great deal of harassment and had been summoned and interrogated on several occasions by intelligence ministry officials. She had alluded to the possibility of being arrested again in a message to the Cannes film festival last May that was read out by Greek filmmaker Costa Gavras: “I am a woman, I am a film-maker, two sufficient reasons to be guilty in this country.”

Maryam Majd, a sports photographer and contributor to several newspapers was arrested at her home by intelligence ministry officials on 17 June, on the eve of her planned departure for Germany to write a book about women’s soccer at the invitation of Petra Landers, a member of the German national team. She was also taken to Evin prison. The reason for her arrest has not been revealed.

The other journalist arrested in the past four weeks is Said Mohamadi, also known as Moghanli, who writes for Azeri-language newspapers and edits the literary magazine Yashagh. He was picked up on 8 June in the northern province of Ardebil and was transferred to intelligence ministry headquarters in the nearby city of Tabriz. He was previously arrested with three other journalists in Tehran on 10 September 2008 and was freed two months later on 50 million toman (45,000 euros) in bail.

The online activist is Mansoureh Behkish, 58, who was arrested in Tehran on 12 June and was transferred to Evin prison’s section 209. She had six close relatives (four brothers, a sister and a brother-in-law) who lost their lives as a result of their opposition to the regime and she has been fighting for years to establish the truth about the executions of political prisoners.

She is a member of the “Mothers of Laleh Park” and the “Mothers of Khavaran” (named after the south Tehran cemetery used as mass grave for political prisoners who were executed en masse in 1988). The families who belong to these organizations are harassed by the authorities for demanding justice and for holding ceremonies commemorating the deaths of their loved-ones.

Behkish, who posts articles on various websites about these groups, their ceremonies and the harassment to which they are subjected, has herself been constantly harassed and has been arrested several times. She was last arrested on 9 January 2010 along with 33 other relatives of victims during a demonstration in Tehran’s Laleh Park. She was banned from leaving the country when freed on 17 March.

 

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Relatives of Camp Ashraf residents face crackdown in Evin

July 5, 2011

In a new plot against political prisoners who are relatives of Mojahedin members at Ashraf, the mullahs’ regime transferred them to solitary confinement in section 209 of the infamous Evin Prison. These prisoners include: Mohammad-Ali Mansouri, Saleh Kohandel, and Farzad Madadzadeh, in addition to political prisoner Behrooz Javid Tehrani.

Other reports indicate that due to prevention of medical treatment, the health conditions of Mr. Allahverdi Rouhi, father of two Ashraf residents, has become acute and he is in need of immediate surgery, but henchmen of Karaj’s Gohardasht Prison are preventing him from receiving any medical treatment in order to slowly and painfully kill this political prisoner.

Additionally, according to received reports, the memorial ceremonies on the second year anniversary of Mahmoud Raissi-Najafi, one of the martyrs of the national uprising, was held at the section 225 of Behesht Zahra cemetery on Friday July 1.  Raissi-Najafi’s friends and relatives kept his memory alive by placing flower wreaths on his grave. These ceremonies were held despite the ban by mullahs’ Intelligence Ministry on commemorating anniversary of the martyrs.

In the city of Ahwaz, memorial ceremonies for the second year anniversary of Yaqub Berwaye, one of the martyrs of the national uprising, was held at his gravesite by his family and a large number of the people of Ahwaz in the town of Berwaye-Trichi. Yaqub Berwaye who was a Masters Degree student of Performing Art, was shot and wounded by plain-clothed agents of the regime in front of Lolagar Mosque in Tehran and after two weeks of unconsciousness, passed away at the Loqman Hakim Hospital

 

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Iranian lawyer summoned to serve sentence

Tue, 07/05/2011

Iranian lawyer Hassan Younesi was summoned today by Evin Prison authorities to serve out his one-year sentence for “propaganda against the regime and assembly and collusion to commit crime.”

Younesi, who was arrested in the protests that followed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s disputed election victory in 2009, was also given a $6,000 fine and a five-year ban on practising law.

A court attorney and legal consultant for the strategic research centre of the Expediency Council, Younesi is also the son of a former intelligence minister in the reform government of Mohammad Khatami.

Younesi’s verdict specifies: “In a text published under the pretext of determining the real versus the fake Islamic Republic, he accused the system of human rights violations, lying, deceiving, murdering dissidents and critics … intimidation and coercing false confessions.”

Thousands of people were arrested after the 2009 election as authorities attempted to quell mass protests, and in the past two years there have been numerous reports of Iranian prisoner abuse.

Prisoners’ families recently called on Parliament to investigate prison conditions, asking that reformist MPs be included on the panel to avoid any “false reports.”

 

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Mohammad Zarei, Semnan University Student Activist, Arrested

TUESDAY, 05 JULY 2011

HRANA News Agency – In the early hours of Saturday, July 2, 2011, Mohammad Zarei, a student activist, was arrested. Mohammad Zarei studies Applied Chemistry at Semnan University and is a member of the Islamic Association of Students.

According to a report by Jaras News, Mohammad Zarei who is a dissident was arrested while leaving a bus to enter the university and subsequently taken to unknown location. Jaras News has also reported that Mohammad Zarei is the fourth Semnan University student detained in recent months. were arrested previously but released on bail.

 

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Government officials resign to run for Parliament

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Tue, 07/05/2011

The head of Iran’s Election Headquarters has announced that 52 government officials have handed in their resignations in order to run as candidates in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

The Iranian Student News Agency reported Solat Mortazavi’s statement that all the resignations had been approved, including “four deputy governors, seven municipal chiefs, two prefects and 30 executive chiefs from various branches of the government and three members of the clergy.”

It has also been announced that 90 members of the Open University staff and 38 mayors and deputy mayors from across the country have stepped down in order to join the campaign race.

According to Iran’s election law, government officials who intend to run must resign six months in advance.

Iran’s conservative elite has been concerned that a so-called “deviant current” headed by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s chief of staff, Esfanidar Rahim Mashai, is trying to take over Parliament in the coming elections.

The administration has been accused of misappropriating funds and using government money to secure votes. Parliamentary Speaker Ali Larijani, who is also head of the Guardian Council, has warned against government interference in the elections.

 

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Sunday Times: Iran Started a Vast Smuggling Network to Bypass Sanctions

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(Iran Briefing): On July 3, 2011, the British newspaper The Sunday Times published a memo declaring that Iran is using an extensive smuggling network in order to bypass sanctions. This finding comes from a 75-page report written by Security Council experts, against Russia and China’s wishes, regarding Iran’s atomic and missile program. Based on this report, Iran has used a vast smuggling network in order to satisfy its technological needs and started bogus companies abroad to acquire the material for making bombs and advancing the nuclear program.

The Sunday Times emphasized that Iran has smuggled most of its material from Italy, Turkey, and South Korea. The Security Council report highlights the fact that 300 containers of explosive material were discovered on an Iran-bound cargo ship from Italy. This shipment was hidden among dry milk boxes. Likewise in Singapore a shipment of aluminum powder (material used for building explosive material) was seized from an Iranian cargo ship.

The article reports that Iran currently has about 4 tons of enriched uranium, which is enough to make an atomic bomb. The report adds that Iran was able to build long-range (max. 1250 miles) missiles without help from Russia or North Korea.