Home Blog Page 634

Opposition reports dreadful conditions in Iranian prisons

Mon, 05/09/2011

Iran’s dire prison conditions are being highlighted in the media due to recently released reports of sexual harassment and critically poor sanitation.

The Jaras opposition website published a letter from detained journalist Mehdi Mahmoudian, who is serving a five-year sentence in Rejai Shahr Prison in Karaj.

Mahmoudian’s letter, addressed to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, says the rape of young men in Rejai Shahr Prison is “an accepted and common everyday matter” completely ignored by prison officials.

In his letter, which was written last September but has not been published until now, the jailed member of the reformist Islamic Iran Participation Front writes: “I do not know what fate is in store for me after I write this letter” but he goes on to stress that every word of it is true.

Mahmoudian’s journalistic investigations and reports were instrumental in uncovering the crimes committed in the notorious Kahrizak Prison in the summer of 2009, when at least three detainees were killed while being tortured. He also reported on the alleged mass burials of slain protesters. He has been detained since September of 2009.

Kaleme, another opposition website, also reported that the families of female inmates at Gharachak Prison in Varamin have written a letter to the “Islamic Human Rights Commission.” It describes the “human disaster” taking place at the prison. According to Kaleme, the letter details the beating of prisoners and the lack of adequate food and sanitary facilities.

“In this prison there are four lavatories for 600 women, which have to be used for all washing purposes from washing clothes and dishes to bathing,” they write. “In addition, they cut off the water at the prison most of the day.”

The treatment of Iranian prisoners in Iran has declined steeply since the 2009 protests against alleged vote fraud in the presidential elections and has been criticized by various international groups.

Islamic Republic authorities have refused to allow external inspection of their prisons.

 

Source

 

More pressure on jailed human rights lawyer

Mon, 05/09/2011

Jailed Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh has been cut off from her family for the past ten days, her husband reports.

In an interview with We-change website, Reza Khandan reported that Sotoudeh was transferred to a different ward in Evin Prison days ago, and since then he has not been even allowed telephone contact with her.

Before the move, says Khandan, Sotoudeh was allowed in-person visits with her two young children in the visitor’s hall.

Sotoudeh reportedly had told her husband that the prison authorities informed her of their intention to transfer her to Charmshahr Prison in Varamin, which would make family visits with her very difficult.

Charmshahr Prison is located south of Tehran, and its prisoners reportedly go without adequate facilities for hygiene and other basic needs.

There have been several unofficial reports that a number of female political prisoners are to be transferred to Charmshahr Prison.

Sotoudeh was arrested last September for her connection to the banned Human Rights Defenders Centre and for her defence of several political prisoners. In December she was sentenced to 11 years in prison and a 20-year ban from practicing law and traveling abroad, having been charged with “activities against national security and propaganda against the regime.”

 

Source

 

Student Activist Remains in Intelligence Office Two Months After Arrest

9th May 2011

In an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Mohammad Taravatrooy, lawyer for Shiraz University student Loghman Ghadiri Goltappeh, said that his client’s “temporary detention” has been extended for a third time. “Loghman Ghadiri has been in detention since late February, and I have had no access to his case, nor do I know the reason for his arrest. When I went to Shiraz’s Revolutionary Court a few days ago, the case had not yet been reviewed and they had extended the detention orders. He is still in the custody of the Fars Province Intelligence Office. I surmised from what was said in the court that his charges are ‘acting against national security,’ ‘propagating against the regime,’ and ‘insulting regime authorities.’ But I can’t know for sure, as I have not read his case,” said Taravatrooy.

“He has limited telephone contact with his family. He has seen his father a few times, but as his family is from Orumiyeh and he is detained in Shiraz, the long distance makes visits with his family difficult. To travel between the two cities by land takes about 27 hours and traveling has become difficult for his family,” Taravatrooy added.

Loghman Goltappeh is a graduate student in sociology and a student activist at Shiraz University. He was arrested on 9 March and has been in detention in the Fars Province Intelligence Office ever since. The University Security Unit prevented him from entering the campus to attend his thesis presentation session on 8 March. He was arrested by security forces the next day. Previously, he was arrested during events at Shiraz University in December 2008 and was banned from his studies for a term.

 

Source


 

Student Activist Abruptly Transferred From Rajaee Shahr Prison Along With 200 Others

9th May 2011

Abdolali Madadzadeh, father of imprisoned student activist Shabnam Madadzadeh, spoke recently with the international Campaign for Human Rights in Iran about his daughter’s transfer from Rajaee Shahr Prison in Karaj, to Gharchak Prison in Varamin, on Tuesday evening without explanation. According to her sentence, Madadzadeh is to spend her prison term in exile at Rajaee Shahr Prison. Abdolali Madadzadeh, whose son Farzad Madadzadeh is also in prison, told the Campaign that he is shocked by the abrupt transfer. “Her mother traveled from Tabriz to Karaj yesterday to visit with her daughter, but she was not allowed to visit her. Authorities told her that they were transferring them to Gharchak Prison, and did not allow a visitation. Since yesterday, we are confused about what this means. This morning Shabnam called us for just one minute to tell me what happened. They allowed her to make a one-minute phone call and let us know,” said Abdolali Madadzadeh.

Reports indicate that in addition to Shabnam Madadzadeh, Baha’i leaders Mahvash Sabet and Fariba Kamaliabadi were also transferred to Gharchak Prison on Tuesday evening. There is no detailed information about the names of other female political prisoners transferred to Gharchak Prison.

“We only talked for one moment. She said 200 people were transferred to Gharchak Prison. She said the bathrooms and showers don’t function properly. In one spot, both clothes and dishes are being washed and people are taking baths, too. She said: ‘We have nothing. Criminals who have knifed their victims, murderers, political prisoners, con artists, opium addicts, they are all kept in one place,’” Madadzadeh told the Campaign about his daughter’s phone call.

“Do you think the law is carried out?! They take [the prisoners] wherever they like. It’s not just my child, they have taken 200 people from Rajaee Prison to Gharchak,” said Abdolali Madadzadeh about the reasons for the transfer.

“What can I expect when the doctor at the prison infirmary told her, ‘We brought you here to torture you, not to treat you?’ My child is sick in there. Not just Shabnam, all the prisoners are ill. I have two children in prison and I don’t know about which one to talk. Farzad is at Rajaee Shahr Prison now. The brother and sister had not been able to visit each other for several months there.  Shabnam wasn’t allowed to visit her brother before being transferred,” he added.

Shabnam Madadzadeh, the former Political Secretary for the Islamic Student’s Association at Tarbiat Modares University in Tehran, was arrested on 20 February 2009. On 9 February 2010, she was sentenced to five years in prison in exile at Rajaee Shahr Prison. The sentence was upheld on 2 June 2010. Madadzadeh’s transfer to a different prison ended her chances of occasional visits with her brother.

 

Source


 

Dervishes in Gonabadi Order Summoned and Sentenced to Lashes, Prison, and Exile

9th May 2011

A lawyer close to the case of dervishes from Gonabad described the status of those arrested for the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. “On Wednesday, 13 April, eight dervishes by the names of Abdolreza Kashani, Shokrollah Hosseini, Alireza Abbasi, Ali Kashanifar, Mohammad Marvi, Nazarali Marvi, and Zafarali Moghimi, all of whom had been sentenced to five months in prison, 50 lashes, and one year’s exile on charges of ‘disrupting public order through assembly in front of Gonabad Justice Department and Prison,’ were arrested in coordinated and simultaneous operations in the towns of Beydokht, Gonabad, and Ghoochan, and were all transferred to Vakilabad Prison in Mashad,” he told the Campaign.

Also on Wednesday, 13 April, Nourali Tabandeh, leader of the Gonabadi Nematollahi order, was summoned by a Tehran investigative court on behalf of the Justice Department in Gonabad on charges of “threatening public hygiene through burial of deceased individuals inside Beydokht’s Soltani Cemetery.” On 17 April, Tabandeh’s lawyer, Gholamreza Harsini, appeared before the court, but judicial authorities insisted on Tabandeh’s appearance in order to inform him of his charges.

According to reports, hundreds of dervishes and followers of the Gonabadi order have gathered in Beydokht to show their support and solidarity to their leader, Nourali Tabandeh, and to voice their protest at the recent arrest of several Beydokht dervishes.

“High government authorities have not yet reacted to this issue, but local authorities’ reactions indicate threats against dervishes for their arrests and imprisonment and demolition of Beydokht’s Soltani Cemetery. On Tuesday, 20 April, a meeting was held for several hours inside the Gonabad Prosecutor’s Office in which the Prosecutor and Chief of Police, along with several lawyers representing the dervishes were present. The meeting ended after the Prosecutor, Zeinali, stated that charges raised against Mr. Tabandeh and the case raised against him…will be resolved within 72 hours. Despite the silence, order, and peaceful presence of the dervishes, after this meeting a large number of plainclothes forces, special forces, and Basij forces from different regions of the province were dispatched to Beydokht and surrounded Soltani Cemetery. Slowly over the next 24 hours, the town of Beydokht assumed a military and security atmosphere, to the point where local people and travelers’ comings and goings were strictly controlled by these forces. But suddenly, most of these forces were removed from the region and returned to military bases. On Saturday, 23 April, a group of lawyers representing the dervishes went to the Prosecutor’s Office in Gonabad and asked the prosecutor to keep his commitment to solve the Beydokht problems and issues. Despite earlier negotiations on 20 April, however, the prosecutor suddenly changed his position and threatened the dervishes with judicial action, destruction of the Beydokht Soltani Cemetery, and definite prosecution for Dr. Tabandeh, due to the US President Barack Obama’s Nowruz message in which he supported the dervishes,” the lawyer told the Campaign.

In issued statements, the dervishes explained that the summons for Dr. Nourali Tabandeh Majzoob Alishah, the leader of the order, and the demolition of Beydokht Soltani Cemetery, “the capital of spirituality and Sufism,” may appear to be minor to outsiders, but for the dervishes it is “unforgivable and impossible to ignore.” The dervishes vow to “resist these illegal actions at any cost.”  “The dervishes also announced that they are not approaching the issue from a position of power, they do not wish to threaten anyone, they do not want to fight and confront, their view is of national solidarity and maintaining the unity of Muslim society, and in both words and actions they seek peace, tranquility, patience, and forgiveness,” the source told the Campaign.

“It is worth mentioning that upon pressure by security organizations, the town of Gonabad’s Health Network forbade burials of the deceased inside Beydokht Soltani Cemetery in March 2009.  Since then, through reports by the Intelligence Office and complaints filed by the Health Network, family members of deceased individuals and the facility’s caretaker have been summoned to court and sentenced to prison. The Gonabadi Nematollahi Order’s leader is ultimately in charge of the endowed property,” the source added.

 

Source

 

Expediency Council member, a commander of Revolutionary Guards attack Ahmadinejad for disagreeing with Khamenei

May 9, 2011

The state-run Fars News Agency reported on May 6 that Mullah Alamalhoda, a member of regime’s Expediency Council, once again targeted Ahmadinejad and said: “Those who stand against the spiritual leader and do not obey his orders, and offer a model opposed to ‘Velayat” (absolute rule of spiritual leader), are nothing but Satanists.”

Additionally, on May 7, Fars reported that Mullah Taeb, a commander of Revolutionary Guards, who has been a close ally and supporter of Ahmadinejad, warned him that: “If we find out that a person is not perfectly aligned with the spiritual leader, we will push him aside as easily as drinking a sip of water.”

“Didn’t you solemnly swear to act in accordance to the constitution? The constitution gives the Spiritual Leader the right to say this Minister can stay and that Minister should go. If the spiritual leader says a Minister should stay and you say ‘no, he has to leave,’ then first of all, you have to pay retribution for your sin, because you have broken your solemn swear,” Taeb said. “Oh God! You have witnessed for the last 6 years that we felt this danger… The individual constantly creating sideline issues for the deviated current is a dangerous man! Dangerous! Suddenly, he saw that the Ministry of Intelligence (MOI) has opened its eye and found out what the deviated current is doing, and he suffers a blow if MOI opens its eyes.”

 

Source

Disturbing reports from Ahvaz: 9 executed among them one minor- IHR demands international investigations

May 9, 2011

Iran Human Rights, May 8: According to the reports from Iran nine people, among them one minor, have been executed in the city of Ahvaz south of Iran.

According to the Persian section of Alarabiya (the news website of Alarabiya TV channel), Iran’s Judiciary has announced that nine people charged with murder of the security officers and committing acts against chastity, have been executed.

Quoting the website Ahvaz news, Alarabiya reported that three of the men were hanged in public in Ahvaz, while the other six were hanged inside the prison of Ahvaz. According to these reports one of those hanged in the prison was 16 years old.

 

According to Ahvaz news the nine men executed were identified as follows:

Three brothers identified as Ali Heydari (25), Jasem Heydari (23) and Naser Heydari (23) were hanged in public in the Hamidiyeh area west of Ahvaz. The executions took place on Thursday May 5th according to the report.

Six others who were hanged inside the Karoun prison of Ahvaz were identified as Amir Moavi, Ali Na’ami, Amir Badvi, Ahmad Naseri (22) and Hashem Hamidi (16 years).

All those executed had been arrested in connection to the unrests in April 2011 in Ahvaz, where several people had been killed in clashes between the security forces and the inhabitants of an Arab neighborhood in Ahvaz.

Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the spokesperson of the Iran Human Rights urged the world community and the United Nations to conduct an independent investigation on the reports regarding the executions and unrest in Ahvaz.

 

Source

News World news Syria Iran helping Syrian regime crack down on protesters, say diplomats

May 9, 2011

Iran has been helping the Syrian regime crack down on protesters, according to diplomatic sources. Photograph: Majed Jaber/Reuters

 

Iran is playing an increasingly active role in helping the Syrian regime in its crackdown on pro-democracy protesters, according to western diplomatic sources in Damascus.

The claim came as Syria‘s security forces backed by tanks intensified operations to suppress unrest in three new flashpoint towns on Sunday and it was confirmed that four women had been shot dead in the first use of force against an all-female demonstration.

A senior western diplomat in Damascus expanded on assertions, first made by White House officials last month, that Iran is advising president Bashar al-Assad‘s government on how to crush dissent.

The diplomat pointed to a “significant” increase in the number of Iranian personnel in Syria since protests began in mid-March. Mass arrests in door-to-door raids, similar to those that helped to crush Iran’s “green revolution” in 2009, have been stepped up in the past week.

Human rights groups suggest more than 7,000 people have been detained since the uprising began. More than 800 people are said to have died, up to 50 during last Friday’s “day of defiance”. Last night two unarmed demonstrators were reportedly killed during a night rally in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor.

“Tehran has upped the level of technical support and personnel support from the Iranian Republican Guard to strengthen Syria’s ability to deal with protesters,” the diplomat said, adding that the few hundred personnel were not involved in any physical operations. “Since the start of the uprising, the Iranian regime has been worried about losing its most important ally in the Arab world and important conduit for weapons to Hezbollah [in Lebanon],” the diplomat said.

Last month White House officials made similar allegations about Iranian assistance for the regime, particularly in terms of intercepting or blocking internet, mobile phone and social media communications between the protesters and the outside world. But the officials did not provide hard evidence to support their claims.

Activists and diplomats claim Iran’s assistance includes help to monitor internet communications such as Skype, widely used by a network of activists, methods of crowd control, and providing equipment such as batons and riot police helmets.

Syria has denied seeking or receiving assistance from Iran to put down the unrest. In a statement issued on Friday, Iran’s foreign ministry stressed Syria’s “prime role” in opposing Israel and the US, and urged opposing forces in the country to compromise on political reform. US policy towards Syria was based on “opportunism in support of the Zionist regime’s avarice”, it said.

The Assad family, from the Shia Muslim minority Alawite sect, is likely to be nervous about appearing to be helped by its Shia-dominated ally to crush protesters drawn from the 75% Sunni population.

Regime forces backed by tanks were in action over the weekend in Homs, in the town of Tafas north of Deraa, and in the coastal city of Banias, activists said. Violence was also reported in the Damascus dormitory town of Zabadani.

Along with arbitrary detentions, shootings have continued.

Razan Zeitouneh, a lawyer in the capital who is monitoring the protests, said four women were shot dead in the village of Merqeb, close to Banias, and six men were shot dead in Banias on Saturday.

 

Source

Director General of the Zahedan Ministry of Justice Public Relations Arrested for Drug Trafficking

May 7, 2011

Director General of the Zahedan Ministry of Justice Public Relations, Ahmad Zahed Sheikhi, was arrested on the charge of being involved with drug trafficking. He is a former IRGC member and member of the Army Staff for Combating Drug Trafficking in Zahedan Province.

He was arrested for carrying with him 500 kilograms of drugs in his government vehicle.

According to local sources, there were 450 kilograms of opium and 50 kilograms of heroin with him, along with a warrant and weapons. He was stopped by police officers at the Sahlabad Station where they discovered the drugs.

A reliable source in an interview with Iranbriefing claimed that though Sheikhi was rumored to be a drug smuggler for a long time, and apparently this was not the first time he was smuggling. The source stated that the public disclosure of this issue and his arrest are unrelated to the latest struggles between the Supreme Leader and President Ahmadinejad, despite the fact that Zahed Sheikhi and his brother headed the Ahmadinejad election campaign in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, and another brother Mohammad Reza Zahed Sheikhi is the Director General of the Sistan and Baluchestan Province Ministry of Cultural and Islamic Guidance.

It is said that official sources have not published any report about Zahed Sheikhi’s arrest. However, local sources indicate that he was arrested at a police station. Officers thought his resistance to having his car searched was suspicious. After discovering the drugs and seeing the warrant and documents that confirmed the car was government-owned, officers were initially suspicious of his identity. Senior officials confirmed this issue and are asking for his detention.

 

 

 

Eight prisoners executed in different cities in Iran

May 7, 2011

Two of the executed were under 18 at the time of alleged crime

The clerical regime hanged two prisoners in the city of Sari (northern Iran) on Tuesday, May 3. Another prisoner was hanged in a village of the Ashtian Township.  The head of Judiciary in the central province announced the charge of this prisoner as “creating unrest and pessimism against the regime” and described the goal of this execution as “promoting the security level in the society”.

On April 28, a prisoner was hanged in public in the city of Mahshahr ( southern Iran) and on April 21, four prisoners were executed collectively, two of whom were under 18 at the time of alleged crimes.

Earlier, the head of Fars Province Judiciary had informed of executing prisoners “publicly in near future” in order to “increase the security factor. (State run news agency- April 17)

Escalating the number of public executions in various cities of Iran, especially execution of the youth, bespeaks of the fear of flattering regime of mullahs of the spread of public abhorrence and protests that have targeted elimination of the regime in its totality.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
May 5, 2011

 

Source