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Jailed activist Hoda Saber dies after hunger strike

06/12/2011

GVF — Imprisoned Iranian journalist and political activist Hoda Saber has died in prison after going on hunger strike, opposition website Kaleme reported.

According to the website, Saber, who had been arrested after the disputed 2009 presidential election, died of cardiac complications after being transferred from Evin prison to Tehran’s Modarres hospital. Kaleme said that Saber’s heart complication had been induced by his hunger strike in prison.

“Doctors at Moderres hospital believe that the cause of death was his hunger strike in addition to the prison officials’ indifference in taking him to hospital in time.”

Hoda Saber, along with fellow imprisoned activist Amir Khosro Dalir-Sani, had gone on hunger strike to protest the tragic death of Iranian activist Haleh Sahabi at her father’s funeral.

Haleh died on 1 June at the funeral of her father and prominent dissident figure Ezzatollah Sahabi, after being attacked by security forces monitoring the ceremony.

The two hunger strikers began their show of protest on 2 June without making any personal demands and in the hope that such heartbreaking episodes would never occur again.

Saber’s death coincides with the second anniversary of the rigged 2009 presidential election that saw Ahmadinejad re-elected.

 

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Paralyzed political prisoner returned to prison despite need for urgent treatment

June 12, 2011

According to reports, on Tuesday June 7, on orders of the Ministry of Intelligence, political prisoner Hadi Abed Bakhoda who was on a medical leave from prison and was receiving treatment was once again returned to the Lakan Prison in Rasht despite the fact that his treatment was not yet finished.

This political prisoner is paralyzed and can only move with a wheelchair. A number of his body organs such as his bladder and kidneys no longer work. He has a urinary sack attached to his body which has to be changed on a daily basis but according to the head of the prison’s infirmary, these kinds of facilities do not exist in prison. It was for this reason that [during his last detention] his urinary sack was not changed for 40 days which led to a severe infection in his body.

This political prisoner was transferred back to prison which lacks minimum medical facilities even as the Medical Commission and Medical Examiner have announced in a written report to the Revolutionary Court that he cannot tolerate prison conditions and the prison infirmary has announced that it does not have the necessary facilities for Mr. Bakhoda and will not be held responsible [if anything were to happen].

Notably, the inhumane flogging sentence for this political prisoner was carried out in the 1st branch of the Rasht Revolutionary Court on May 23. Political prisoner Hadi Abed Bakhoda was sentenced to 51 lashes for not turning himself in on time. (Human Rights and Democracy Activists in Iran – Jun. 9, 2011)

 

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Iranian economist gets one year in jail

Sun, 06/12/2011

An Iranian economist who criticized government-subsidy cuts by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s administration has been sentenced to one year in prison

According to Aftab news, the charges against Fariborz Rais-Dana range from “membership in Writers’ Association, preparing press releases for seditionists, issuing announcements against the regime and propaganda for leftist and Marxist groups, interviews with the BBC and VOA, and accusing the Islamic Republic of prisoner abuse.”

The Iranian government implemented the so-called “targeting of subsidies” law last year, causing Iranians to pay higher prices for energy and food staples. The government gave cash benefits to households to help them adjust to the higher costs of everyday needs. The plan was criticized by many experts, including Rais-Dana, who predicted rising inflation and hardship for the working class.

Rais-Dana was arrested last December after he spoke against the subsidy changes with the BBC. He was released on bail after a month.

 

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IRGC and Basij paramilitary forces participate in suppressing Syrian uprisings

June 12, 2011

Agence France Presse:  Syrian repressive forces of Bashar al-Assad along with Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards have not refrained from committing any crimes against the Syrian youth and rising people.

According to Agence France Presse, many Syrians who were wounded in recent bloody attacks and have sought refuge in Turkey said that the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards and repressive forces were collaborating with Syrian armed forces to stifle the Syrian uprisings in every step of the way.

One of the youths said he personally saw Iranian regime’s armed guards who did not speak Arabic and had beards; in Syrian armed forces it is forbidden to wear beards.

Another young man said the Iranian regime’s forces wore black clothing, did not speak Arabic, and their weapons were different than those of the Syrian forces. He said they were Basijis [Iranian regime’s paramilitary forces attached to the IRGC] and were employed as snipers who were shooting into the demonstrators.

Meanwhile, according to Aljazeera, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister characterized Syrian government’s suppression of demonstrations as “inhumane” and said pressuring dissidents in Syria was “heinous and unacceptable”.

 

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26 political prisoners pressured and interrogated in prison for signing complaint against RGC and Ministry of Intelligence

June 12, 2011

The 26 political prisoners who filed complaints to the Evin Prison Court against the Revolutionary Guards Corps and the Ministry of Intelligence were summoned and interrogated. The Assistant head of the court has asked these prisoners to refute their statement, saying that if they did not, their prison terms would be increased.

The purpose of these interrogations was not to see into their complaints but rather to find out how they provided and then published the signed complaint. Prison officials are trying to discourage them from making complaints…

In this statement which was signed by 26 political prisoners and was published in websites, these prisoners asked officials to see to their complaints…

These political prisoners once again detailed the tortures they were subjected to in their statement and said that they were violently arrested and were insulted and degraded to the point that many of them were severely beaten upon their arrest. (Kalameh Website – Jun. 9, 2011)

 

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Iran deploys security forces on vote anniversary

June 12, 2011

TEHRAN — Thousands of security forces were deployed in Tehran on Sunday to prevent any opposition protest on the second anniversary of the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, witnesses said.

The security forces were deployed on Vali Asr street, which bisects the city from north to south, and in nearby areas, they said.

Reformist opposition supporters called on their websites and Facebook for a silent march on the pavements of the street to mark the 2009 presidential election, which saw Ahmadinejad elected for a second term by a landslide.

Ahmadinejad, who is now challenged by the ruling conservatives in his own camp, defeated opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi in a poll they continue to reject as fraudulent.

Their opposition to Ahmadinejad sparked a wave of unrest in the Islamic republic, plunging the regime into one of its worst political crises.

The protests left scores dead while thousands, including many close to the opposition as well as journalists, were arrested, with some handed long prison sentences.

Mousavi, a former prime minister, and Karroubi, a former reformist parliament speaker, have been under house arrest for the past four months.

Their access to the outside world was cut off after they called for a demonstration in February, gathering thousands of people.

 

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Labor Activist Arrested in Tabriz

SATURDAY, 11 JUNE 2011

HRANA News Agency – A labor activist has been arrested in Tabriz, [East Azerbaijan Province], and locked up in this city’s central prison.

According to a report by Urmia Workers Website, Shahrokh Zamoni was arrested on June 7, 2011 and transferred to the central prison in Tabriz.Shahrokh Zamoni is a painter and laborer who was involved in the Committee to Explorer the Establishment of Painters Union and then became an active member of the Painters Union after the formation of this trade syndicate.

 

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Ali Nejati Will Be Tried Again

SATURDAY, 11 JUNE 2011

HRANA News Agency – On Saturday, June 11, 2011, Ali Nejati will be tried again on charges for which he has already faced prosecution and served prison time. His trial will be held in Ahvaz Appeals Court, Branch 13. Before being fired from his job, Ali Nejati was a laborer at Haft Tapeh Sugarcane Company. He is one of the board members of Haft Tapeh Sugarcane Company Workers’ Trade Union.

According to a report by the website of the Coordinating Committee to Create Labor Organizations, Ali Nejati has spent six months in prison for the same charge. After his prison term was over, prosecutors attempted to try him again, but the charges were dismissed by the court since they were repetitive.

After the acquittal, because of the prosecutor’s objection and pressure from intelligence officials, Ali Nejati’s case was once again referred to the appeals court at the provincial capital.

During previous court proceedings, the trail was postponed due to Ali Nejati’s heart attack. Now, he is being retried while suffering from heart failure and the clogging of arteries and is physically weak after having undergone several heart surgeries.

For more than two years, Ali Nejati has been the target of pressure, prosecution and imprisonment for representing workers and being a board member of Haft Tapeh Sugarcane Company Workers’ Trade Union. Since he was fired from his job, he has also been suffering financially and has lost the means to support himself.

Once again, Iran’s judiciary and intelligence apparatus is exerting more pressure on Ali Nejati and his family in order to prevent this labor activist to seek justice for workers. He is being tried again on charges for which he has already served prison time.

 

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Press Release: IHRDC Publishes Report On Rape In Iranian Prisons

June 10, 2011

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT – In commemoration of the second anniversary of the post-election violence and crack-down on dissent orchestrated by the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC) today published a report on the use of rape as a method of torture by Iranian prison authorities. The report, Surviving Rape in Iran’s Prisons, may be found here http://www.iranhrdc.org/english/publications/reports/3401-surviving-rape-in-iran-s-prisons.html.  The Persian version will be available next week.

Allegations of rape and sexual violence of political prisoners began to emerge after the Islamic Republic of Iran was established in 1979 and have continued, to varying degrees, to the present. However, not surprisingly, there is no reliable estimate of the number of prisoners raped in the Islamic Republic’s prisons. The reasons are simple:  few rape victims are willing to speak about their experiences due to (1) government pressure and acquiescence, and (2) social stigma. Iranian authorities have and continue to acquiesce to rapes of prisoners by guards and interrogators who use rape to crush detainees’ spirit, inflict humiliation, discourage their dissent, force them to confess to crimes, and ultimately to intimidate them and others – all in violation of international human rights and Iranian law.

This report documents the ordeals of five former prisoners – two women and three men. They span the almost 30 years of the Islamic Republic’s existence. Four witnesses were raped; one was threatened with rape and saw rape victims. All were traumatized and some considered suicide.

 

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Iran ‘grooms Mehdi Army for gulf ops’

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June 10, 2011

BAGHDAD, June 9 (UPI) — As Iran steps up its drive to expand its influence across the Middle East, exploiting the political upheaval in the Arab world, the Revolutionary Guards are reported to be beefing up a key Shiite group in Iraq for covert operations in the Persian Gulf monarchies.

Intelligence Online, a Web site that covers global security issues, reports that the Guards Corps’ elite Quds Force is grooming the Mehdi Army, a militia headed by radical cleric Moqtada Sadr, to operate outside Iraq for the first time as an Iranian proxy.

The Quds Force is the Revolutionary Guards’ external arm that conducts clandestine operations across the region. It runs Iran’s main surrogate, Hezbollah of Lebanon, and is known to have carried out operations across the region.

 

In the past, Tehran has called on Hezbollah, the most powerful military force in Lebanon, to mount clandestine operations on its behalf.

The U.S. military says Hezbollah operatives helped the Revolutionary Guards, also known as the Pasdaran, train and operate the Mehdi Army and other Shiite groups in Iraq against U.S. forces after the 2003 invasion.

But Hezbollah currently has its hands full in Lebanon facing Israel, building up its strength for a new war against the Jewish state that many see as inevitable, and backing the party’s political rise.

“If the Guardians of the Revolution have their way, the Mehdi Army will carry out covert operations in the gulf and the Near East, following Hezbollah’s example,” Intelligence Online noted.

It said the Quds Force summoned Sadr and Ammar al-Hakim, leader of the Badr Organization, military wing of the Iranian-backed Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq, to Tehran in mid-May to discuss the training and reorganization of these groups.

IO said the Iranian program in Iraq is headed by Brig. Gen. Mohsen Chirazi, the third-ranking commander of the Quds Force.

Chirazi was recently reported to have been in Syria, Iran’s key Arab ally, training counter-insurgency forces there to combat an 11-week-old insurrection that seeks the overthrow of the Damascus regime of President Bashar Assad.

Chirazi was a pivotal figure in Iran’s clandestine operations in Iraq against the Americans and the Baghdad government in 2005-07.

He worked closely with Qais Khazali, a leading figure in the League of the Righteous, an offshoot of Sadr’s movement controlled by Tehran.

The Iranian general was captured by U.S. forces in Baghdad in December 2006 with another high-ranking Quds Force officer. They were later freed in a prisoner exchange with Tehran.

“One of Chirazi’s priorities is to provide the Shiite militia with a counterintelligence service that can prevent splits and infiltrations,” IO reported.

“Members of Hezbollah, whose own internal security is exemplary, are in charge of setting up the service.

“In the past the Mehdi Army has been hit by dissension … By professionalizing the Mehdi Army and the Badr Organization, Iran will have a backup force that will be able to intervene in Syria to support Bashar Assad’s regime, or in Lebanon should Hezbollah come under intense attack.

“Having failed to take control of the Shiite protest movements in Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, the Pasdaran also want to strengthen their networks of covert cells in the gulf, and count on the Iraqi groups to further develop and run the network,” IO noted.

In March, a Kuwaiti court sentenced two Iranians and a Kuwaiti to death for spying for Iran and planning sabotage attacks in the northern Persian Gulf emirate, a U.S. ally.

Bahrain, a tiny island kingdom in the gulf off Saudi Arabia’s east coast, has accused Iran and Hezbollah of inciting and aiding Shiite protesters demanding the downfall of the Sunni monarchy in political turmoil that erupted in February.

Sadr, who fled Iraq in 2007 when his forces were crushed, returned in 2010 and has warned that his partisans will take up arms again if the U.S. military withdrawal isn’t completed on schedule by Dec. 31.

The government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki appears to want some U.S. forces — between 10,000-20,000 by some accounts — to remain after that date to maintain stability.

The Americans concur, because a full withdrawal will open the door to Iranian power in Iraq, which could then threaten Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the other oil-rich Sunni monarchies on the Persian Gulf’s western shore.

 

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