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Alireza Firouzi and Sourena Hashemi Began Serving 6 Month Prison Sentence

May 30, 2011

RAHANA: Alireza Firouzi and Sourena Hashemi were among the Zanjan University students who had been deprived of continuing their education after exposing ethical violations committed by one of the university officials. Hashemi, member of the Liberal Students and Firouzi, blogger, journalist and human rights activist, had spent one month in detention for this case and their 1.5 year prison sentence was reduced to 6 month in prison by the appeals court.

Hashemi and Firouzi were also detained in 2009 in Oroumiyeh and were held incommunicado for two months

 

 

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Security forces arrest mourners in funeral of soccer star

May 30, 2011

According to reports from eye witnesses, thousands of people participated in the funeral of celebrated Iranian soccer player Naser Hejazi in the Azadi Stadium during which a number of participants who chanted anti-government slogans were arrested and taken to unknown locations by security forces and plainclothes agents.

News agencies also reported that the body of Hejazi was buried by security forces in Behesht Zahra Cemetery in Tehran without the presence of his family. (Jaras Website – May 25, 2011)

 

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Iran hangs man in Gohardasht Prison after 7 years of serving harsh prison term

May 30, 2011

According to reports, the death sentence of a prisoner who was transferred to a solitary cell in cellblock 1 in Gohardasht (Rajayi Shahr) Prison in Karaj on Monday was carried out on Tuesday.

Sadeq Heshmatian, 27, was hanged in this prison after almost seven years of prison.

Despite being executed two days ago, the Judiciary and state-run media have still not announced this execution…

This young man was detained in Gohardasht Prison under harsh and inhumane conditions for close to seven years. Prison guards had transferred him to cellblock 5 known as the Methadone Cellblock and had kept him there for a long time to put pressure on him. He was recently transferred to cellblock 6. This young prisoner had protested the conditions in cellblock 5 along with his cellmates on a number of occasions and had taken over cellblock 5 with his cellmates twice. One of the reasons his death sentence was carried out was because he protested the dire prison conditions. (Human Rights and Democracy Activists in Iran – May 25, 2011)

 

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Mansour Osanloo back in prison despite serious illness; no phone contact with family

May 30, 2011

Mansour Osanloo, the imprisoned founding member of the Syndicate of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company (Sherkat-e Vahed), who had been hospitalized for the past few days for his heart condition was returned to prison again on Saturday, 21 May, despite his dire condition. “Because prison conditions are dangerous for Mansour’s health, I tried very hard through the Prosecutor’s office to have him come back home from the hospital, and to remain under house arrest [instead]. I even offered to look after the forces [watching Osanloo], just so that Mansour would return home, because according to his doctors’ diagnosis, he must be on a proper diet, eat fruits and vegetables, and stay in a stress-free environment. None of these would happen in prison,” Parvaneh Osanloo, wife of the labor activist, told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.

“I talked a lot on the phone with the Office Manager at the Prisons Organization, but, unfortunately, I neither heard a positive nor a negative answer, and on Saturday he was returned to prison,” said Parvaneh, regarding her request on behalf of Mansour. “He was hospitalized on 1 May, but ultimately the medical team decided that he should receive heart physiotherapy and drug treatment, because open heart surgery at his age and in his condition is very dangerous and it will be a lot harder for him to be in prison post-surgery”.

“Since Saturday when, despite my efforts, Mansour was returned to prison, we have not heard any news from him because the prison phones are disconnected. I’m requesting his quick release. The doctors have determined that he needs a stress-free environment and continuous treatment. He also needs to see his physician regularly so his medications are controlled. Worst of all is that because the telephone is disconnected, the authorities should at least maintain contact with us, so that we can learn about our loved ones’ conditions,” added Parvaneh.

 

Mansour Osanloo was arrested by security forces near his house in March 2007. After his trial on charges of “acting against national security” and “propagating against the regime,” he was sentenced to five years in prison. He is currently in Rajaee Shahr Prison in Karaj. Due to clogged arteries, the Medical Examiner has voted three times for an end to Osanloo’s prison term, but the judicial authorities have not reacted to this observation. He has been hospitalized several times during his prison term, most recently at a private hospital in Tehran on 1 May, though he was returned to prison after 20 days. (International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran – May 25, 2011)

 

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Iran tortures prisoners to force them into spy confessions

May 30, 2011

According to reports, agents of the Intelligence Agency have transferred all the prisoners they had arrested months ago on espionage charges from the public cellblock to cellblocks run by the Ministry of Intelligence to get new confessions out of them.

After Minister of Intelligence Moslehi announced that 30 CIA spies had been arrested in Iran, intelligence interrogators have put pressure on a number of prisoners, including some prisoners who have been in prison for more than a year, to force them to make new televised confessions. In the last few nights, state-run TV has broadcasted the confessions of some of these prisoners forced out of them when they were initially arrested. (Human Rights and Democracy Activists in Iran – May 27, 2011)

 

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Iran continues secret mass executions in Vakil Abad Prison in Mashhad

May 30, 2011

Despite the fact that judicial officials of the Islamic Republic are still keeping their silence regarding the execution of drug related prisoners in the Vakil Abad Prison in Mashhad and refuse to announce the implementation of such death sentences and the numbers of executed prisoners, credible sources have said that in mid-March, April and May 2011 close to 70 prisoners were executed. These executions were carried out weekly and in groups. Despite the fact that limitations in reporting out of prison makes it difficult to determine the exact number of executions, these sources have confirmed 70 executions.

The sources have said that these executions were secretly carried out in groups in the Vakil Abad Prison in Mashhad.

The last rounds of executions in the past two months were carried out on May 16 when 10 prisoners were hanged. These executions targeted drug related criminals who had been sentenced to death. They were carried out without the knowledge and presence of family members and lawyers and even without notifying the prisoners from before…

A number of prisoners charged with narcotics crimes have said that they were denied due process and in many cases, the execution sentences issued by judges of the Mashhad Revolutionary Court were issued without adequate evidence and only on the grounds of confessions taken under duress and torture. (International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran – May 25, 2011)

 

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51 lashes for disabled political prisoner in Iran

May 29, 2011

The Iranian regime has carried out a lashing sentence against a disabled political prisoner in Rasht city, according to Human Rights and Democracy Activists on Friday.

The sentence of 51 lashes against Hadi Abedi Bakhoda was carried out in Rasht prison on Monday, May 23. Mr. Bakhoda is physically disabled as a result of spinal injuries and cannot move. He uses a wheelchair to move around.

He was sentenced by a court in Rasht for failing to refer to the prison on time after a brief time out of prison.

Mr. Bakhoda spent some time in prison in the 1980s on charges of supporting the main opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK). He was placed under brutal torture by the clerical regime.

At the time of his arrest he was shot in the spine which resulted in his disability. Despite his injuries, he spent many years in prison and under torture. He was again arrested two years ago on the same charges and sentenced to two years in prison.

 

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Post-Election Detainee Amir Aslani Still Held in Evin Prison

29 , May , 2011

One of his charges includes sending emails regarding the ways to increase the use of electricity as a means of protesting the election results.

He was arrested in August of 2009 in front of his workplace and was transferred to an unknown location.

Aslani, 33, spent 185 days in solitary confinement of the IRGC run ward 2A and 70 days in the solitary confinement unit of Ward 209. He was then transferred to the ward 350 general ward. He has been sentenced to 4 years in prison.

 

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Egypt to expel Iran diplomat spy suspect: security

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SUNDAY, 29 MAY 2011

AFP – Egypt will expel an Iranian diplomat who was briefly detained on suspicion of spying on the North African country for Tehran’s intelligence services, security officials said on Sunday.

The officials said the diplomat, who had been released earlier in the day, would be “expelled within 48 hours.”

The decision was made public shortly after the man, identified as Qasim al-Hosseini, an employee at Iran’s mission in Cairo, was freed after his arrest on suspicion of spying for Tehran’s intelligence services.

Egypt’s official MENA news agency had earlier reported that the state security prosecution let Hosseini go after it was “notified by the (Egyptian) foreign ministry that he was a diplomat in the Iranian mission.”

It quoted a security official saying that Hosseini “breached diplomatic protocol” by organising a spy ring to glean Egypt’s military and economic secrets.

An initial probe found he gathered “information about Egypt on the latest developments the country has experienced and the conditions through which it is passing, then sent them to Iran’s intelligence services.”

The Iranian interests section in Cairo had denied that Hosseini was arrested.

“He is in the embassy as I speak. It did not happen that way, he was not arrested,” an official in the section told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Earlier, in Tehran, the Arabic-language television channel Al-Alam quoted a source as saying that Hosseini “is currently in his office and working normally” in Cairo.

“We are following the case,” he added without elaborating.

Iran and Egypt have no diplomatic ties and relations between the two countries were tense under former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Tehran severed diplomatic relations with Egypt in 1980 in protest at Cairo’s peace treaty with Israel signed a year earlier, and the two states maintain only interests sections in each other’s capitals.

But the two Muslim countries have signalled they plan to mend ties in the wake of the fall of Mubarak’s regime on February 11 this year.

Mubarak’s regime had accused Shiite Iran of trying to gain a foothold in the Sunni country through a plot by the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah to attack tourist sites and shipping in the Suez Canal.

The defendants in the case, several who received life sentences, said they were merely sending arms to Palestinian militants in the neighbouring Gaza Strip and Iran denied Cairo’s assertions.

 

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Baha’i Citizen Houshang Fanaian Sentenced to 4.5 Years in Prison

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SUNDAY, 29 MAY 2011

Rahana – Baha’i citizen Houshang Fanaian has been sentenced to 4.5 years in prison.

Baha’i citizen Houshang Fanaian who had been detained in February of last year has been sentenced to 4.5 years in prison.

According to the Human Rights House of Iran, he has been sentenced to 3 years in prison for membership in anti-regime groups.  He has also been sentenced to one year in prison for anti-regime propaganda by membership in facebook and 6 months in prison for insulting the Supreme Leader.

 

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