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“Furloughed, Not Released,” Says Osanloo’s Sister

7th June 2011

Despite earlier statements by prison authorities about his release, Mansour Osanloo, President of the Syndicate of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company (Sherkat-e Vahed), was released only on a short prison furlough.

Union leader Mansour Osanloo came for a prison leave on Thursday night while prison authorities had previously talked about his release. “So we thought he was released but then they told us he has just come on furlough, and he must return to prison after the [June national] holidays,” Fereshteh Osanlu, the union activist’s sister told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.

“We were contacted by prison officials on Wednesday morning to go and post bail for Mansour’s release. Since morning that day, we went after posting bail for him and we waited for him to come until 11:30 at night, when they said it couldn’t be done and to come back the next day. Again, we were looking for a custodian for him the next day, until they contacted us at night and said he was free and to go pick him up. When we got there, they said he was only coming on furlough, and that he must return to prison after the holidays again,” Fereshteh Osanloo told the Campaign.

Mansour Osanloo was arrested by security forces on 10 July, 2007 near his house and was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of “acting against national security,” and “propagating against the regime. With just a few months left to completion of his prison term, Osanloo’s doctors have repeatedly diagnosed him as incapable of serving the remainder of his prison term due to his heart disease. He has been hospitalized several times as a result of his three clogged arteries.

 

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Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki Denied Medical Treatment

TUESDAY, 07 JUNE 2011

HRANA News Agency – Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki’s second surgery has been postponed for the third consecutive time due to the interference of prison officials following orders issued by security and judicial apparatus.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki is an imprisoned blogger and human rights activist who was scheduled to have a surgery on May 22, 2011. However, prison officials have once again interfered with Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki’s medical care, endangering his life. Illegal actions taken in violation of prison statute have delayed this prisoner’s medical treatment for 17 days.

Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki is serving a 15 year prison term and also suffers from gallbladder discomfort.Despite his attending physician’s recommendations, Hussein Ronanaghi Malaki has been denied furlough to seek medical care.

 

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Iran sends military submarines to Red Sea for collecting information: report

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Tuesday, 07 June 2011

Iran has sent submarines to the Red Sea, the semi-official Fars news agency reported on Tuesday, citing an unidentified source, in a move that could anger Israel.

“Iranian military submarines entered the Red Sea waters with the goal of collecting information and identifying other countries’ combat vessels,” Fars said.

It did not specify the number or type of vessels involved but said they were sailing alongside warships of the Navy’s 14th fleet.

State-run Press TV said in May the 14th fleet, comprised of two vessels, the Bandar Abbas warship and Shahid Naqdi destroyer, had been sent to combat piracy in the Gulf of Aden.

“The fleet entered the Gulf of Aden region in May and has now entered the Red Sea in the continuation of its mission,” Fars said.

Two Iranian warships passed through the Suez Canal in February, the first such move since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, en route to Syria. Tehran said the mission was one of “peace and friendship” but Israel called it a “provocation.”

Iran announced last August it had expanded its fleet of domestically built 120-ton Ghadir-class submarines to 11 which it said would be used to patrol the Gulf and the Sea of Oman.

It has deployed warships further afield, as far as the Red Sea, to combat Somali pirates but has not previously said it sent submarines to those waters.

Israel, the United States and others want to stop Iran from what they fear is a push by Tehran to develop nuclear weapons. So far the pressure on Iran has been mostly through international sanctions but both Israel and the US have not ruled out a military strike if sanctions fail.

Iran says its nuclear program aims only to produce electricity.

 

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Iran sentences political prisoner to an additional 10 year prison term

June 7, 2011

On Tuesday, June 1, political prisoner Arjang Davoudi was taken to the 10thbranch of the Revolutionary Court in Karaj from the isolated hall 12 Cellblock 4 in Gohardasht (Rajayi Shahr) Prison, where it was announced to him that he had been sentenced to an addition 10 years and 8 months of prison after years of trials and being kept in an undetermined condition in prison.

He was also told in court that new charges will be brought against him for [crimes he committed] during his years in prison and that he will be transferred to the 1st branch of the Bandar Abbas Revolutionary Court for a trial.

This is while, political prisoner Arjang Davoudi lives in Tehran and was arrested in Tehran and according to the law, has to be tried in Tehran. It is still not clear for his family and lawyer why he is to be tried in Bandar Abbas.

According to reports, on the verge of the appointment of a UN Special Rapporteur for Iran and the Rapporteur’s trip to Iran in the future to investigate the violations of human rights in Iran, Iran officials intend to send resistant political prisoners to distant locations where the Special Rapporteur would not have access to them. (Human Rights and Democracy Activists in Iran – Jun. 5, 2011)

 

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Women’s Rights Activist, Rahil Ashnagar, Arrested

MONDAY, 06 JUNE 2011

HRANA News Agency – Rahil Ashnagar, blogger and women’s rights activist, was arrested by security agents in Bandar-e Anzali, [Gilan Province], on Tuesday, May 31, 2011.

According to a report by the website of Fair Family Law, security agents raided Rahil Ashnagar’s house and confiscated her personal belongings. She has been allowed to contact her family twice since she was detained. Rahil Ashnagar has been charged with acting against national security.

Rahil Ashnagar was first transferred to Anzali Prison and then taken to Lakan Prison in Rasht where she is currently locked up with the general prison population.

 

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Sakhi Rigi Sentenced to Twenty Years

MONDAY, 06 JUNE 2011

HRANA News Agency – Sakhi Rigi, a blogger and a member of Mir-Hossein Mousavi’s Campaign Staff, has been sentenced to twenty years in prison by the Revolutionary Court in Zahedan [Sistan and Baluchistan Province].

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Sakhi Rigi has been exiled to the city of Ahvaz [in Khuzestan Province] to serve his sentence in Karon Prison.Sakhi Rigi is a civil rights activist who was arrested during presidential elections in 2009. On June 18, 2009, while he was driving his car, Sakhi Rigi was stopped on Zahedan University St. by the security forces and subsequently detained.

While he was in the custody of Iran’s Intelligence Agency in Zahedan, Sakhi Rigi endured seven months in solitary confinement and was charged with acting against national security and propaganda against the regime. Three months ago, Sakhi Rigi was transferred to Karon Prison to begin serving his twenty year term.

Sakhi Rigi is a 31 year old college student who was studying software development before being arrested and had only two terms left before graduating. It is not clear what other charges have been filed against him to justify issuing such a heavy sentence for this college student. However, it has been said that his blog postings were considered a crime and a threat to national security.

 

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Judge behind bars for supporting Mir Hossein Mousavi

06/07/2011

GVF — An Iranian judge from the eastern Iranian city of Birjand has been arrested for supporting Green Movement leader Mir Hossein Mousavi.

The Green Voice of Freedom has learned that Parviz Shahir-Razmandeh, a deputy to the Revolutionary Court of Birjand and a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war, has been detained for backing opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi after anti-government protests in February 2011.

Shahir-Razmandeh’s family had remained silent his case until very recently when they decided to speak out about the judge’s imprisonment. They are concerned about his state of well being in behind bars.

A founder of the Birjand branch of the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), Shahir-Razmandeh has held different position within the Iranian judiciary and has served as governor of the cities of Torbat Jam and Kashmar. He was also once a member of the command council of Birjan’s IRGC as well as chief of intelligence unit there.

The family of Shahir-Razmandeh have been approaching various officials in an attempt to follow up on his case and to obtain further details. They have even written letters to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as well as the Intelligence Ministry. Furthermore, Razmandeh’s father has unsuccessfully tried to gain more information about his son’s case by referring to the court of justice in Tehran, but to no effect.

 

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Outcry against Haleh Sahabi’s death

Mon, 06/06/2011

Female political prisoners in Iran have issued a statement condemning the “lies in the government media about Haleh Sahabi’s death” and calling for those responsible for her death to be brought to justice.

Sahabi, an activist, died after Islamic Republic security forces attacked the funeral of her father and, according to eyewitness reports, subjected her to beatings.

Sahabi was serving a sentence for her involvement in protests against the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009. She was temporarily released from prison after her father went into a coma before his death.

On Sunday, female political prisoners released their announcement to the Kaleme opposition website, calling for the identification and prosecution of those who caused what they refer to as her “martyrdom.”

The state denies any connection between Haleh Sahabi’s death and the security forces at the scene, claiming she died from a heart attack brought on by the stress of her loss. But hundreds of Iranian activists and prominent figures have challenged the official position and called for an investigation of her death.

Haleh Sahabi’s remains were seized by government forces and given a speedy burial on the very night of her father’s funeral.

Sahabi’s former cellmates at Evin have challenged the state’s version of events that led to her death, and two Nationalist-Religious prisoners, Hoda Saber and Amirkhosro Dekirsani, have announced that they are going on a hunger strike to protest what happened.

Meanwhile, 750 Iranian activists issued a statement saying the struggles of Ezzatollah and Haleh Sahabi for “freedom, peace and equality will continue haunting the Iranian establishment.”

“Despite all efforts by the Iranian government, the lives and deaths of the Sahabis are enmeshed with the fight for freedom in this country,” the Iranian activists write.

The Nationalist-Religious Coalition of Iran, which Ezzatollah Sahabi led until his death, issued a statement last week calling for a fair and open investigation of the perpetrators of the “shocking crime against Haleh Sahabi.”

The state has not responsed to the outrage triggered by Haleh Sahabi’s death.

 

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Iran beats and arrests mourners in opposition figure’s memorial service

June 6, 2011

Security forces banned the memorial service for the late [Ezatollah] Sahabi and beat and arrested a number of activists and others attending the event.

According to reports, security forces blocked all the roads and streets leading to the Hojat Ibn Hassan Mosque in Sohrevardi Street [where the memorial was to be held].

Plainclothes agents also attacked the dispersed crowds around the streets leading to the mosque and beat and arrested the mourners.

Amin Ahmadian, a member of the OCU [Office for Consolidating Unity] who is also the husband of political prisoner Bahareh Hedayat was arrested and has still not been released.

Ezatollah Sahabi’s daughter in law, Saied Madani and a number of other political activists were also arrested in today’s service.

There were also reports that the members of the Mother for Peace and Mourning Mothers who were chanting outside of the mosque were violently beaten and that plainclothes agents also violently beat those who had reached the mosque to participate in the service.

Amin Ahmadian gave interviews to a number of websites yesterday saying that he was a witness to the beating of Haleh Sahabi, Ezatollah Sahabi’s daughter, by security forces in her father’s funeral. [Haleh Sahabi suffered a cardiac arrest and later died in the hospital]. (Human Rights Activists in Iran – Jun. 2, 2011)

 

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Senior Mousavi aide: Protests after 12 June will not be ‘silent’

06/06/2011

GVF — A top advisor to Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, has said that after the 12th of June protests, anti-government demonstrations will not be held in silence.

In a statement published on Tuesday, the Coordination Council of the Green Path of Hope, the Green Movement’s highest decision-making body, called for “silent” protests on 12 June to mark the second anniversary of the 2009 presidential election. The race was overshadowed by widespread vote rigging and unprecedented crackdown on protesters questioning the election outcome.

In a recent interview with the Persian service of Germany’s international broadcaster Deutsche Welle,Ardeshir Amir-Arjomand, a senior advisor to 2009 presidential candidate and Green Movement leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, said the Iranian month of Khordad (22 May – 22 June) “will mark the beginning of a series of actions. The march on 12 June is one of them, and it will not be the last. The [different] social networks must express their viewpoints until a decision is made for 13 and 14 June and perhaps later days in Khordad too.”

 

Amir-Arjomand said that the planned demonstrations for 12 June would be “an opportunity to change the shape of future protests based on the capacities created. We have always placed an emphasis on demonstrations as an expression of citizen rights.”

Mousavi’s top aide, currently in exile, also stressed that staging street protests was not the only way forward for the pro-democracy struggle in Iran, and even street protests could take different shapes and forms. “Based on the conditions and circumstances, we must try to choose the most suitable method for attracting the highest level of participation. In recent months we have tried out different methods for holding protests. It seems that this [silent] method can lead to a good turnout, provided all the suppoerts and activists of the Green Movement cooperate.”

“We must not be afraid of trying out different methods … we’ve seen how they [the authorities] can occupy a whole city and thwart protests by enforcing a state of emergency and an undeclared curfew in the city. This form of [silent] protest is a new tactic which can open the way and it must be tested.”

When asked about Green Movement’s position on the widening rift between Ahmadinejad and the country’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Amir-Arjomand replied: “[During the 2009 presidential race], two groups or a group of people joined forces to commit fraud, to engineer an election and to steal the people’s votes. They then joined hands in suppressing the people and preventing their rights from being realised. In the same way, the have instrumentalised religion. At the moment, their conflict is over the monopolisation of power.”

He went on to add, “The men’s fight is about total control over power. Our dispute with them is over the quality of governance. We have a democratic approach in mind, and for this reason we believe their dispute is not in the interests of the people.”

“Our position has not changed with respect to the past,” he continued. “Whether we hold protests or not will not bring any change to their dispute.”

Amir-Arjomand said the current power struggle within the Iranian regime would “continue to persist,” despite efforts from inside the conservative camp pushing for reconciliation.

“We believe that holding demonstrations preserves movement’s passion, enthusiasm and vigour. The 12th of June is an important day; the month of Khordad is an important month and must be honoured.”

In the end, Amir-Arjomand called on Green Movement activists and social networks to participate in developing new strategies to better help the movement in achieving its goals.

The Coordination Council of the Green Path of Hope had announced that 12 June protests would be held “in absolute silence” on the pavements of Tehran’s Vali-Asr Avenue and would stretch from Vanak Square to the important Vali-Asr Square. The Council also promised to release further statements outlining its plans for the coming weeks.

“Protesters will shout these demands with their sealed lips,” the statement had said. “The release of movement’s leaders and political prisoners; holding free elections; immediate and effective action for resolving the problem of high prices and unemployment.”

110 days ago, the leaders of the opposition movement Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi were placed under house arrest after calling on Iranians to demonstrate in solidarity with protesters in the Arab world. The leaders and their spouses have been held under house arrest without any official charge or trial, resulting in the outpouring of worldwide condemnation against their continued captivity.

 

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