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The Washington Post: Assassination operations in Iraq via branches of IRGC’s Qods Forces

July 4, 2011

The Washington Post reported on June 30 that 15 U.S. troops were killed in June by paramilitary forces to pressure U.S. into leaving Iraq. The Associated Press reported that the militia backed by the Iranian regime have increased their attacks against American troops and have turned June into the bloodiest months in two years.

Three separate militia groups participate in these attacks, especially Kataib Hezbollah which is founded and trained by the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards Corps and its special operations arm, the Qods Force.

Regarding the latest toll on U.S. troops, an American official in Baghdad said on Thursday that three U.S. soldiers were killed when a large missile known as IRAM was fired at a desert base a few miles from the Iran-Iraq border in southern Wasit Province on Wednesday.

Maj. Gen. Jeffrey S. Buchanan, chief spokesman for the U.S. military in Iraq said that IRAM missiles are signatures of Kataib Hezbollah, a militia group that follows orders from the Iranian regime.

U.S. military also mentioned Iranian regime’s constant efforts for withdrawal of U.S. forces and mullahs’ regime’s increased meddling into Iraqi affaires.

 

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US denounces arrest of women activists in Iran, AFP

July 4, 2011

WASHINGTON–The United States voiced concern Friday at Iran’s arrests of women activists including filmmaker Mahnaz Mohammadi and urged the clerical regime to respect its people’s right to free expression.

“We are deeply concerned by the recent string of arrests of human rights activists, journalists and artists by Iranian authorities and condemn this continuing crackdown on peaceful dissent,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters.

“We call on the Iranian government to live up to its obligations, including its international ones, and respect the universal rights of the Iranian people, including the right to due process and freedom of expression,” he said.

 

Mohammadi, whose work has focused on female rights including the role of women in the disputed 2009 election, was arrested at her home Sunday, according to the opposition website Kaleme.com.

Authorities earlier seized her passport, preventing her from going in May to Cannes for Reza Serkanian’s “Marriage Ephemeral,” in which she was the lead actress, according to cinema industry sources.

Toner also voiced concern about the safety of other Iranian women he said were recently detained including rights activists Maryam Madj and Maryam Bahrman and journalist Zahra Yazdani.

Iran imposed restrictions on women including rules for conservative dress after the 1979 Islamic revolution, but the country still has a vibrant community of female activists — notably Nobel Peace Prize-winning lawyer Shirin Ebadi, who now lives in exile.

The United States has been increasingly vocal about Iran’s human rights record. President Barack Obama took office offering to hold talks with Iran to repair relations, but the administration says Iran has shown it is not interested.

 

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Germany calls on Iran to release journalist

MONDAY, 04 JULY 2011

AP  – The speaker of Germany’s parliament is appealing to his Iranian counterpart to release an Iranian female sports journalist arrested a day before she planned to leave for the women’s soccer World Cup in Germany.

Norbert Lammert’s office said Monday he wrote a letter to the president of Iran’s parliament, Ali Larijani, denouncing photographer Maryam Majd’s arrest “not only as an attack on media freedom but also as a striking breach of internationally guaranteed freedom rights and human rights.”

Lammert called on Larijani to shed light on what happened to Majd and urging him to support her swift release.

Iranian officials have made no comment on the arrest.

The foreign ministries in Berlin and London last week also denounced the arrest and called for her release.

 

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Three Kurdish Prisoners in Limbo for Fifteen Months

MONDAY, 04 JULY 2011

HRANA News Agency – Three political prisoners from the city of Sanandaj have been locked up in Rajai-Shahr Prison in Karaj for fifteen months without any formal charges. In this state of limbo, their future and fate remain uncertain.

According to a report by Mukrian News Agency, Arman Bahmani, Ramin Karami and Fakhrudin Azizi were arrested about fifteen months ago by Iranian security forces and transferred to Karaj’s Rajai-Shahr Prison. These three Kurdish citizens are originally from the city of Sanandaj in Kurdistan Province.

During the initial interrogarations, these three political prisoners were accused of cooperating with religious groups and organizations. However, no formal charges have been filed thus far.

 

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Families urge Iranian parliament to probe prison conditions

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Sun, 07/03/2011

Iranian parliament has been urged to probe into the situation of Iranian prisons and the situation of political prisoners in a letter from prisoners’ families addressed to the parliament’s National Security Commission.

“Indifference to the lives of citizens persists, especially to the most oppressed ones who are currently in chain,” Kaleme opposition website quotes the letter; “and the parliament, as the pulse of the society, is locked in a hard shell of numbness and apathy which is in turn triggering deep rage amongst voters.”

The letter calls on the Commission to assign a panel to investigate the “true situation” of Iranian prisons and detention centres and present it to parliament before Ahmad Ashaheed, recently appointed United Nationals Human Rights Rapporteur for Iran, travels to Iran.

They also note that the panel must also include a number of reformists MPs to avoid “false reports.”

The signatories add that they have tried several times to meet with judiciary officials and the head of parliament, Ali Larijani but have received no response.

They add that now, two years after the controversial presidential elections of 2009, many “truths” have been revealed that attest to the “legitimacy” of the allegations made by the post-election detainees.

Thousands of Iranians were arrested in the protests that followed the disputed victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009. Many of these detainees in the course of the past two years have reported inadequate conditions and being subjected to abuse and torture by prison authorities.

Iranian judiciary has adamantly denied the allegations.

 

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Militias using Iranian weapons to target U.S. in Iraq

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Sunday 03 July 2011

CNN: American officials say there is strong evidence that Shiite militias in Iraq are using Iranian weapons to attack U.S. troops, comments that followed reports that Iraqi security forces began cracking down on the groups near Iran’s border.

Materials found following recent attacks against U.S. troops “have been traced back to Iranian origin,” an official told CNN. The claim supports the U.S. military position that the militias are backed by Iran, a charge Tehran has long denied.

The material collected indicates the militias are using Iranian materials in “Improvised Rocket-Assisted Munitions” attacks against U.S. forces, the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Saturday. The official was not authorized to release the information to the media.

The munitions, or IRAMS, are metal canisters packed with explosives and propelled by rockets. IRAMS along with armor-piercing grenades are believed responsible for the majority of U.S. deaths in recent months, the official said.

The official acknowledged the weapons could have been assembled and manufactured elsewhere, but said IRAMS are a signature weapon of the militant group Kataib Hezbollah, which is “funded by Iran and receives training there. ”

The news about the weapons arose as Iraqi security forces began a crackdown in the volatile Maysan province, a Shiite stronghold in southern Iraq that serves as one of the main arteries from Iran.

The U.S. military has not been asked by the Iraqi government “to provide any substantial assistance so far to the operations reported in Maysan province,” Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan, the top U.S. military spokesman in Iraq, told CNN.

Iraq’s southern provinces make up the majority of the Shiite heartland, home to the holy cities of Karbala and Najaf. It is in this area where a majority of the Shiite militia attacks have been launched against U.S. troops, who operate from a number of bases in the region.

“While it is clear these militias receive training and weapons from Iran — using them as proxies for Iran’s own agendas in the region — we have no evidence of Iranian forces being directly engaged in the recent violence in Iraq,” Buchanan said in an email late Saturday.

Buchanan said the United States is encouraged by the Iraqi operation, though the security in Iraq remains complex.

While violence has dramatically fallen off since the height of sectarian violence that nearly tore the country apart, attacks and bombings remain a daily occurrence.

The recent increase in attacks pushed June’s death toll to the highest this year for Iraqi security forces and civilians. More than 270 people, including 155 civilians, were killed in attacks, Iraqi authorities said.

Fourteen U.S. soldiers were also killed in combat-related incidents in June, the largest loss of life among U.S. troops in Iraq since 2008, according to CNN figures.

The roughly 47,000 American troops in Iraq are due to withdraw by January 1, 2012, under a U.S.-Iraqi security pact, though Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is consulting with lawmakers over whether to request troops stay beyond the deadline.

The U.S. military has said the Shiite-militias — Kataib Hezbollah, Asaib al Haq, and the Promise Day Brigade — are using the bombings to try to take credit for driving American forces out of the country.

“If anything, these groups have proven to be resilient and we have no doubt they will continue to conduct violent attacks in the months ahead,” Buchanan said.

He said Iraq’s best weapon against the violence was to continue targeting the groups.

 

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Prominent Attorney Mohammad Ali Dadkhah Sentenced to 9 Years in Prison

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3 , July , 2011

Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, the spokesperson for the Human Rights Defenders’ Committee, stated that he has been sentenced to a 10 year ban on the practice of law, 8 years in prison for plotting a soft revolution, one year of imprisonment for anti-regime propaganda, lashes and a monetary fine.

According to the Human Rights House of Iran, Dadkhah is the spokesman and one of the founders of the Human Rights Defenders’ Committee.

Another prominent attorney Nasrin Sotoudeh has also received an 11 year prison sentence, a 20 year ban on exiting the country, and a 20 year ban on the practice of law.

 

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Incarcerated Political Prisoner in Urgent Need of Treatment

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Saturday 02 July 2011

Human Rights House of IRAN:Farah Vazehan incarcerated Iranian citizen behind bars at Evin prison is in urgent need of furlough in order to receive medical treatment. Judicial officials however, continue to ignore her dire condition.

Vazehan who is currently serving a 17 year prison sentence, is suffering from a tumor in her feet. Her physical well being is in grave danger and she is unable to perform mundane, daily tasks.

According to the Human Rights House of Iran (RAHAHA) despite suffering from an internal infection and her dire physical condition, her medical needs have been neglected to date. Vazehan’s family have requested that the prosecutor’s office grant her furlough from prison in order to receive medical treatment, but have not yet received a response to their request.

It is worth mentioning that despite complaints by human rights activists in the recent years regarding the lack of access to appropriate medical treatment for political prisoners in Iran’s notorious prisons, judicial officials have continued to ignore their health and well being.

Farah Vazehan was arrested on December 29, 2009 at home in Tehran. Her arrest took place two days after the Ashura uprising and mass protests by citizens against the election results in Iran. She was transferred to solitary confinement at Evin’s ward 209.

On August 4th, 2010, Vazehan was sentenced to death after eight months of temporary detention. The ruling was rendered by Judge Salavati of the Revolutionary Court’s 15th branch and Vazehan was charged with “participating in street protests”, “being a Mohareb [enemy of God] as a result of “collaboration with the Mojahedin Khalgh (MKO)”

Vazehan denied these charges in court. Though her death sentence was initially upheld by the appeals court, it was later over ruled by the 28th branch of the Revolutionary Court in January 2010. She was later sentenced to 17 years imprisonment and exile to Rajai Shahr prison.

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Political Prisoner Kourosh Kuhkan Might Lose His Leg

SATURDAY, 02 JULY 2011

HRANA News Agency – Evin Prison officials have refused to provide medical care to Kourosh Kuhkan, a political prisoner reported to be in critical condition.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Kourosh Kuhkan’s knee is severely infected such that if he doesn’t receive immediate medical attention, he might lose his leg entirely.

Iranian intelligence agents injured Kourosh Kuhkan’s knee during interrogations. After 17 months following this injury and repeated requests from him and his family, Kourosh Kuhkan was transferred to Taleghani Hospital to undergo a surgery after which he was locked up in Evin Prison again without any medical care or access to health care facilities.

Kourosh Kuhkan was tried at the Revolutionary Court, Branch 26, and sentenced by Judge Peerabasi to three years and six months in prison and 74 lashes. Kourosh Kuhkan is currently serving his sentence at Evin Prison in Ward 350.

 

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Iran denies US claims of smuggling weapons to Iraq, Afghanistan

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Saturday, 02 July 2011

Iranian Defense Minister, General Ahmad Vahidi, dismissed as “ridiculous lies” US claims that Tehran smuggled weapons to Iraq and Afghanistan, Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency reported Saturday.

“The ridiculous and repeated lies of the Americans are aimed at justifying their own errors,” General Vahidi was quoted as saying.

General Vahidi instead advised the US to review their policies and tactics in the region, stressing that Washington’s policies are the cause of the “failure of its plans in the region.”

“The people of no country would ever tolerate presence of security mercenaries on their lands and Iraqi people are no exception to this fact,” General Vahidi said.

The Wall Street Journal on Friday quoted unnamed US officials as saying Iran supplied allies in Iraq and Afghanistan with rocket-assisted exploding projectiles.

Citing unnamed US officials, the newspaper said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has supplied its allies with rocket-assisted exploding projectiles, which have already killed American troops.

The officials said Iranians had also given long-range rockets to the Taliban in Afghanistan, increasing the insurgents’ ability to hit US and other coalition positions from a safer distance, the report said.

“I think we are likely to see these Iranian-backed groups continue to maintain high attack levels,” Major General James Buchanan, the top US military spokesman in Iraq, told The Journal. “But they are not going to deter us from doing everything we can to help the Iraqi security forces.”

Violence killed more Iraqis last month than at any time since September, figures showed on Friday after the US reported deaths that also made June the deadliest month for its troops in Iraq for three years.

The Baghdad government blames Al Qaeda for most of the 271 deaths of its citizens last month, while the US military accuses Iranian-backed Shiite insurgent groups for the attacks that killed 14 Americans.

According to the US, three separate militias have been involved in the attacks, particularly a small but deadly group known as the Hezbollah Brigades, believed to be funded and trained by Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard and its special operations wing, the Quds Force.

Data compiled by the health, interior and defense ministries showed that 155 civilians, 77 policemen and 39 soldiers died in attacks last month, 34 percent more than the 177 killed in May.

The majority of American troops killed in June died in rocket attacks against military bases, or by roadside bombs that targeted their convoys.

Last month’s toll was the highest since June 2008, when 23 American soldiers were killed, at a time when US forces were directly involved in fighting insurgents.

Earlier in the week, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei, blamed the US presence in Iraq for the worsening security situation in the war-torn country and the region.

Speaking at a meeting with Iraq’s President Jalal Talebani in Tehran, Ayatollah Khamenei called the US presence in Iraq as “a source of problems in the country and in the region.”

 

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