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IRGC: Black Magic Family Arrested in Hamedan

June 20, 2011

A member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps informed Fars News Agency, “Throughout this search, 10 people were identified in the village of Bahar who engaged in witchcraft, sorcery, black magic, and magic charms.” He added that the detainees were aged 35 to 70 years old, and seven of them belonged to one family. Based on this report, the Bahar Public Prosecutor has issued a verdict[AD1] for the detainees. “Items such as prayers, charms, special books, tools, etc. were discovered.”

According to the IRGC official whose name is not mentioned, these arrests were conducted within the framework of the National Security Commission, the Ministry of Interior, and other security organizations in order to fight “sects, superstitions, and false claims.” Based on this report, this case has about 30 private complaints. It is also said that these detained individuals would earn $25 to $75 for each visit by their clients

 

 

 

 

12 political prisoners begin ‘indefinite’ hunger strike

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06/19/2011

GVF — Twelve inmates at Tehran’s Evin prison have commenced an “indefinite” hunger strike to show their outrage and protest over the killing of two fellow political prisoners Hoda Saber and Haleh Sahabi, according to reports.

According to a letter published by opposition website Kaleme, the twelve prisoners claim to have begun an indefinite hunger strike on Saturday morning to protest the killing of two political prisoners and to pay tribute to the martyrs of the Green Movement.

The website said it had obtained the statement with the help of Green Movement sympathisers inside the prison. Signatories include prominent journalists, activists and politicians such as Feizollah Arabsorkhi, Abdollah Momeni, Bahman Ahmadi Amooei, Emad Bahavar and Emadoddin Baghi.

On the second anniversary of the rigged 2009 presidential election, Hoda Saber, who had been imprisoned for ten months, died of cardiac complications after being transferred from Evin prison to Tehran’s Modarres hospital. Following his death, 64 political prisoners held in ward 350 testified that Saber had been beaten violently by state agents prior to his death and had also been prevented from receiving adequate and timely medical attention.

Saber began his hunger strike after learning about the tragic killing of Haleh Sahabi, daughter of veteran dissident Ezzatollah Sahabi, at her father’s funeral. Haleh had been behind bars until a month before Ezzatollah Sahabi’s death and was given furlough after the deterioration of his death.

In their letter, the inmates say Iranians are seeking the “rights and freedoms elaborated in the constitution and mentioned in international treaties ratified by our country. They preach tolerance in dealing with everyone regardless of the different [political] tendencies they present, while also being committed to the law and national interests.”

“In memory of the martyrs of the Green Movement from Neda to Haleh and from Sohrab to Saber, we express our condolences and sympathies to the families of the martyrs…and begin a hunger strike in protest,” the inmates say in their announcement.

Neda Agha-Soltan and Sohrab Arabi were two protesters shot dead on the streets of Tehran in 2009 during mass-protests that followed the re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for another term in office. The two have since become symbols in the struggle for democracy in Iran.

The prisoners also denounced the harsh and “unjust” prison sentences handed down to political prisoners as well as numerous violations during legal proceeding. They described the Green Movement as a “turning point” in the nation’s quest for “defending the homeland and freedom.”

They say the Iranian regime is faced with a new challenge to its legitimacy as a result of Saber’s murder while in prison, “first of all, due to his unsystematic and callous imprisonment for ten months without any indictment or legal ruling, something that was taking place before the eyes of responsible bodies and those who claim to represent judgeship and justice; also because of the indifference and ill intention demonstrated towards him after his hunger strike, the beatings that led to his unjust martyrdom and the detailed account of his death based on testimonies provided by political prisoners in ward 350.”

 

The political prisoners expressed hope that such “disasters” would not occur ever again.

The death of Hoda Saber and Haleh Sahabi has provoked widespread condemnation from various human rights organisations.

On 17 June, a former foreign minister of the Maldives, Ahmed Shaheed, was named United Nations human rights investigator on Iran, the first in nearly a decade. This came after the UN’s Human Rights Council established the independent post of special rapporteur on human rights in Iran on March 24.

The signatories’ names are as follows:

Bahman Ahmadi Amooei, Hasan Asadi Zeidabadi, Emadoddin Baghi, Emad Bahavar, Ghorban Behzadian-Nejad, Mohammad Davari, Amir-Khosro Dalir-Sani, Feizollah Arabsorkhi, Abolfazl Ghadyani, Mohammad Javad Mozaffar, Mohammad Reza Moghisseh, Abdollah Momeni.

 

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‘Iranian spies falsified travel documents for IHH flotilla’

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06/19/2011

3 Iranian spies reportedly on house arrest after they forged passports in Istanbul; spies have had contact with al-Qaida, German ‘Bild’ reports.

Talkbacks (10)

Iran’s suspected connection to the Turkish IHH flotilla is at risk of being exposed, German daily Bild reported on Saturday, citing intelligence sources.

Following the Iranian government’s concern over the possible revelation, three Iranian spies have reportedly been placed under house arrest after they falsified passports andtravel documents in Istanbul for organizers of the IHH flotilla.

According to the Bild report, the spies’ cover names are “The Broker,” “Bit Taxim” and “Hot Chai” and they reportedly have been in contact with al-Qaida and the Iranian al-Quds Brigade.

On Friday, the IHH announced that it will not take part in a Gaza protest flotilla later this month due to repairs needed for the Mavi Marmara, prompting activists to pledge that they will reach the shores of Gaza independently.

Bulent Yildirim, head of the IHH, announced at a news conference that the vessel will not sail for Gaza because of unrepaired damage caused by the IDF raid on the ship which left nine Turkish activists dead in May 2010.

“The Mavi Marmara unfortunately suffered so much damage we couldn’t get it ready in time,” Yildirim said.

Speaking to reporters in Istanbul, he denied that Ankara had forced the organization’s hand, saying “there is absolutely no obstruction by the government.”

Following the IHH’s announcement, the Free Gaza Movement posted a message on their website in which they said: “the fact that the Mavi Marmara will not participate in the FF2 [Freedom Flotilla 2], means that the misinformation put forward by the Israeli government and its supporters that the flotilla is a “Turkish” and “Islamist” effort will be exposed.

“Hundreds of people from around the world are sailing to break the blockade on Gaza. FF2 will include more ships than the first flotilla, even without the Mavi Marmara.

Moreover, the coalition consists of significantly more member organizations this time – from all over Europe, North America, the Middle East and North Africa,” the message continued.

Earlier this month, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was quoted in the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet as saying that “Israel should wait for a new Palestinian government to be set up and then lift the blockade on Gaza. The aid flotilla should also wait to see what happens with the Rafah border crossing being opened, and to see how Israel perceives the new government.”

Soner Cagaptay, a senior fellow and director of the Turkish Research Program at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Friday night that he believes Ankara pressured the IHH to pull out of the flotilla, partly out of a desire to avoid seeing the organization designated a terrorist group.

Cagaptay added that while Turkey is a democracy, the power of Erdogan’s AKP party is such that the IHH would be hesitant to ignore their concerns.

“Their political power everyone feels – they are the longest ruling party since multi-party democracy began in Turkey,” he said. “Any Turkish organization that would cross them would feel their weight.”

Cagaptay said that with US-Turkish relations currently in a “happy phase,” they may have wanted to prevent the IHH from taking part in order to avoid souring the “vast avenue of cooperation” between the two countries.

“I think that Turkish-US policy has entered a positive phase,” he said. “The relationship with the US is kind of taking off, and there is now not only a positive area for cooperation, but it’s possible to move forward. Perhaps they’re saying in Ankara that things are sweetening up with Washington.”

 

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No News on the Condition of Former Student Activist Saeid Naeimi

18 , June , 2011

His family has expressed grave concern over his heath since they have not heard from him.

He contacted his family 2 weeks ago and his voice indicated that he was extremely tired.

While he was being arrested, the authorities failed to take his medications despite the insistence of his wife.

He was arrested in April and in a phone call to his family, he informed them that he has been transferred to the solitary confinement unit of Tabriz Prison.

 

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Funeral of Hoda Saber Under Heavy Security

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June 18th, 2011

Security agents prevented the funeral of imprisoned journalist Hoda Saberi from taking place at 7:30am today. Saberi was an Iranian journalist, translator and political activist who died three days ago during a hunger strike, The agents completely surrounded the family and funeral organizers until mid-afternoon.  After many hours waiting among heavy security and military forces shouting abusive language, the Saber family began the funeral around noon at Tehran’s Behesht-e-Zahra Cemetary, section 100, row 165. The death prayer of martyred journalist Reza Hoda Saber was undertaken behind the ablutions compound at Tehran’s Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery surrounded by security forces and under heavy video surveillance. Saber was then buried.

 

Journalist and political activist Reza Hoda Saber, who was imprisoned with other political activists at Evin Prison’s Section 300, died three days ago from a heart attack during his hunger strike. Officers on Friday transferred him from Evin Prison to the Modarres Hospital because of Saber’s heart failure, but Saber subsequently died. Hoda Saber and Amir Khosrow Dalir Thani, two religious-nationalist activists imprisoned at Evin Prison’s Section 300 announced that they began their hunger strike on Thursday, June 2, 2011, at sunset to protest the June 1st tragedy in which Haleh Sahabi was killed. Sahabi was a member of Mothers for Peace and an Iranian humanitarian and democracy activist during the post-election events two years ago. The hunger strike possibly caused Hoda Saber’s death, but currently no exact information about the condition of protester Amir Khosrow Dalir Thani is available.

 

Six years of Behrouz Javid-Tehrani’s prison sentence has passed without a day of furlough

17 , June , 2011

Behrouz Javid-Tehrani was arrested in June of 2005 and spent 3 months in solitary confinement under physical and psychological pressure.

According to the Human Rights House of Iran, Javid-Tehrani made a complaint against his interrogators for the injuries sustained on his head during the interrogations but his complaint was never reviewed by the authorities.

He was tried and sentenced to 7 years in prison and 74 lashes which was upheld by the appeals court. His charges included anti-regime pr0paganda, insulting the Supreme Leader, gathering in front of the office of the United Nations and membership in the Democratic Front of Iran.

Contrary to the existing laws, he was taken to the Rajei Shahr Prison which is a place for holding criminals. He was beaten on numerous occasions by the guards and transferred to solitary confinement several times.

He has gone on hunger strike several times in order to protest the violation of his rights . He has also made complaints about having to change his prison ward frequently.

He is currently held in Rajaei Shahr Prison and has been denied furlough despite the fact that 6 years has passed since his arrest.

He was also arrested during the student protests of 1999 and served a 3 year prison term.

 

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Mourners commemorate jailed journalist under forces’ scrutiny

Fri, 06/17/2011

A commemoration service for Reza Hoda Saber, the jailed Iranian journalist who died of a massive heart attack 10 days into a hunger strike, was held under strict security measures in Tehran.

Kaleme reports that more than 2,000 people attended, including Saber’s fellow Nationalist-Religious activists and several senior political reformists.

More than 200 security officers were deployed in the street and another 50 plainclothes officers were stationed inside the mosque.

The women’s section was kept under the control of female officers, and the entire ceremony was filmed and photographed.

Kaleme adds that one person rose during the ceremony and called upon attendees to say a prayer for the health of all political prisoners. According to Kaleme, officers immediately arrested that person.

Security forces reportedly prevented another ceremony planned for Wednesday night at the home of Firouzeh Saber, the sister of the deceased.

Reza Hoda Saber, a nationalist-religious activist who was last incarcerated in 2008, had gone on a hunger strike to protest the recent death of activist Haleh Sahabi, who died when security forces raided her father’s funeral.

Ten days into his hunger strike, Saber died of a massive heart attack. His family contends that prison authorities are responsible for his death because they delayed his transfer to hospital after the onset of his pain.

On Tuesday, 64 political prisoners, with whom Saber had been incarcerated, issued an announcement declaring that Saber was badly beaten on the eighth day of his hunger strike.

The authorities maintain that Saber received all necessary medical care and they deny any wrongdoing on the part of prison personnel.

 

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British government condemned continued repression in Iran

June 17, 2011

In a statement published by the British Embassy in Tehran, Alistair Burt, assistant British foreign secretary for the Middle East and North African affairs called on the Iranian regime to immediately release all those detained on Sunday and in the past two years for simply exercising what should be legitimate freedoms.

According to the website of the British Embassy in Tehran, Burt said: “There are deeply worrying, credible reports of arrests and violence against protesters.”

He added: “I am struck by the courage of those ordinary Iranians who continue to stand firm against attempts to beat them into silence, exemplified by journalists such as Hoda Saber, whose death yesterday following a hunger strike in prison shocked Iran.”

 

“As the foreign secretary said yesterday, the Iranian regime’s feigned support for those demanding their rights elsewhere in the region is belied by its brutal crackdown on freedoms at home,” Burt said.

 

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Revolutionary Guard ‘with Khamenei’ official warns Ahmadinejad

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June 17, 2011

Teheran, 16 June (AKI) – A senior official from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards corps has warned hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that its allegiance lies with the country’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“The Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guards) are totally loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and will not tolerate any form of disobedience towards him,” said Ali Sahidi in speech to a group of commanders of the elite military corps, according to website ‘Digarban’.

In an apparent warning to Ahmadinejad, who has in recent months been embroiled in am unabated power struggle with Khamenei and his supporters, Sahidi continued:

 

“We will use force to oppose any attempt to deviate from the principles of the (1979 Iranian) Revolution. All members of the Pasdaran are loyal to the Supreme Leader and are ready to intervene whenever he should be in danger.”

Khamenei’s supporters contend that Ahmadinejad’s government has been openly challenging the Supreme Leader’s authority in the theocratic state.

In recent weeks, the judiciary, which is close to Khamenei, has arrested 12 associates of Ahmadinejad, widening the rift at the pinnacle of power in Iran.

 

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“Gross Negligence, Rulers Wanted Him Dead,” Says Hoda Saber’s Former Cellmate

16th June 2011

In an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, political activist Reza Alijani, talked about his former cellmate Hoda Saber and his death. “All the evidence shows that the rulers and security apparatus wanted him to die,” Alijani told the Campaign. “I see Hoda’s death as an invisible execution and a type of threat against others on hunger strike, that if they continue their strike, they will face death,” he said, referencing the negligence of prison authorities that resulted in Saber’s death.

Following his hunger strike and subsequent heart attack, journalist and Nationalist-Religious political activist Hoda Saber died on the morning of 11 June. Saber had been on a hunger strike since 2 June to protest events leading to the death of Haleh Sahabi. Starting on Friday morning, as Saber’s health deteriorated, he repeatedly asked prison authorities for help, but was transferred to Tehran’s Modarres Hospital hours later, where he died of a heart attack following his hunger strike.

“All prisoners and interrogators know that a prisoner may face death under two circumstances–one is when they are flogged with a cable and there is a high probability that they will need kidney dialysis; that’s why interrogators make prisoners drink water and force them to walk. The other is during hunger strikes.  On the eighth day of his hunger strike, Hoda developed chest pains and called on prison officials several times, but they only went to check on him several hours later. I heard an hour ago that all of Saber’s cellmates are willing to testify that he kept screaming and asking for help, and that his death was caused by intentional negligence, and he was sent to hospital very late. When Dr. Shakouri Rad visited him later, he said that if he had been sent to the hospital earlier, he could have been saved,” said Alijani.

“If Mr. Nourizad had not gone to Modarres Hospital that day for his medical treatment, if he had not heard about Hoda Saber’s death from one of the hospital personnel, and if he had not put the news on his Facebook page, who would have known about it?! They probably wanted to announce the news after 12 June.  Visitation days are on Mondays and Thursdays, and Hoda’s cellmates have no contact with the outside world and their telephones are cut off. Nobody would have found out that he was transferred to the hospital or that he died,” Alijani told the Campaign.

One week after Hoda Saber and Amir Khosrow Dalirsani announced their hunger strike, Nationalist-Religious activists Habibollah Peyman, Hossein Shah Hosseini, and Ahmad Sadr Haj Seyed Javadi asked the two in a letter to end their hunger strike. There is no news of the condition of Amir Khosrow Dalirsani.

“If messages asking Saber to break his hunger strike had reached him, he would have broken his hunger strike. If prison authorities had told him that Shamekhi, Shah Hosseini and Peyman had asked him to end his hunger strike, he would have broken his hunger strike because he believed them to be the elders of the Nationalist-Religious movement. Hoda’s interrogators were very familiar with his characteristics and knew how he would react if the news reached him, and that he would end his strike,” said Alijani.

“I believe next to Mr. Sahabi, Mr. Saber was interrogated most intensively and for the longest period of time. This in itself was a harsh torture. Most of the pressure was put on him during interrogations. They would take him to several hours-long interrogations in the middle of the night. I can testify that Saber was threatened with execution and rape. Beatings were common during the interrogations and of course he was also kept in a long solitary confinement for over 200 days,” said Alijani about Saber’s torture in prison.

Hoda Saber had been arrested several times over the past decade. The last time he was arrested was in July 2010, when he was transferred to Evin Prison without being informed of his charges.

 

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