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Union Leader’s Dangerous Health Conditions: Immediate Surgery Needed

2nd May 2011

In an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Parvaneh Osanloo, bus worker union leader Mansour Osanloo’s wife, described her husband’s deteriorating health in prison and the refusal of prison officials to transfer him to a hospital. “His arteries are clogged again and his situation is worsening everyday. Prison doctors said that he must have an operation as soon as possible. We showed Mansour’s medical documents to doctors outside the prison and we talked to the authorities, too. If they cooperate, he must be transferred outside the prison for surgery or at least for angiography as soon as possible,” Parvaneh Osanloo told the Campaign.

“They told me verbally to find his doctor and they would allow him to be sent outside, but until they transfer him outside and his medical work is done, I won’t believe it. Next, we will have concerns about his return to the prison after the operation; the prison environment is not suitable for him at all,” she added.

Mansour Osanloo, a union leader with the Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, is currently at Shahid Rajaee Prison in Karaj. In hand and foot cuffs, Osanloo was transferred to a hospital coronary care unit for his heart condition in 2008, where none of his family members were allowed to visit him. He was arrested by security forces on 10 July 2007 near his home and was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of “acting against national security,” and “propagating against the regime.”

During 4.5 years in prison, Mansour Osanloo has not been allowed a single day of furlough. “He is under difficult conditions. He doesn’t have telephone access. He is under pressure. His visits only take place through booths. His hygiene and nutrition conditions are not good. There is a large crowd inside his ward and all of these create stress. All of these led him to have a heart attack and his problems continue. His doctor said that the prison environment is dangerous for him, and that he mustn’t be under stress. He must have a good diet and be kept in a quiet environment. These are things he doesn’t have right now,” added Parvaneh Osanloo.

“Would you believe that all [prisoner] families are so happy to go to visits with their imprisoned kin, even if it is for just 20 minutes from behind glass? But when the visits end, we feel so bad that nobody talks to one another, because we have just seen their conditions and how much they are suffering. We have a lot to say, but just as we start to talk, the visitation time ends. All of this is so difficult. Even so, his morale is good and he has never complained. All prisoners say ‘we are O.K. don’t worry,’ but we can see their conditions and we cannot believe their words. Each time I try to go see him with more strength. Maybe he thinks the same thing, too,” concluded Parvaneh Osanloo.

 

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Shirko Maarefi transferred to solitary confinement, his imminent execution feared

May 2, 2011

HRANA news agency reported on April 30 that Shirko Maarefi, a political prisoner in Saqqez prison who has been on hunger strike since a few days ago, has been transferred to solitary confinement by the henchmen of the clerical regime.

The clerical dictators ruling Iran transfer prisoners to solitary confinement prior to their executions. As such, there are fears of Shirko’s imminent execution.

Shirko Maarefi was arrested about 3 years ago for charges of “moharebeh” or fighting against the religious government and was sentenced to death. Recent reports indicated that this political prisoner was verbally notified that his execution orders would be carried out in early May.

 

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Iran’s Revolutionary Guard awarded 2 giant natural gas projects

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May 1, 2011

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A business consortium connected to Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard was awarded without tender two giant natural gas development projects, a senior Iranian official said Saturday.

Mahdi Fakoor, a senior Oil Ministry official, said the Revolutionary Guard’s most important financial venture, Khatam-ol-Anbia, will develop two gas fields in the south of the country without tender.

“A contract to develop Halgan and Sefid Baghoon gas fields has been signed with Khatam-oil-Anbia … without tender,” the semiofficial Mehr news agency quoted Fakoor as saying.

 

Fakoor said development of the two gas fields located in Fars Province will result to production of 19 million cubic meters of natural gas a day.

Khatam-ol-Anbia is currently the largest contractor of government projects in Iran, handling 1,500 of the country’s most important state projects over the past four years.

The conglomerate is already involved in developing Iran’s giant South Pars Gas Field in the Persian Gulf. Khatam al-Anbia is one of the country’s largest corporations with stakes in mining, telecommunications and the oil and gas sector.

The guard, which was created after the 1979 Islamic Revolution to defend Iran’s clerical rule, has become a vast military-based conglomerate, amassing a network of economic and political power that extends to virtually every aspect of life in Iran.

Its finances are not on the government budget and are free from any state oversight. The Revolutionary Guard is accountable only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters in Iran.

 

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European socialists call for release of Mousavi, Karroubi

05/01/2011

GVF — The Party of European Socialists (PES) has condemned the ongoing repressions in Iran and called for the release of all political prisoners including Green Movement leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi.

The conference, which took place in Tunis (Tunisia) from 28-29 April, was the first conference held by a European Political Party in the region since the revolutions, “with the aim being to provide a solid progressive platform to promote democratic principles.”

The conference was held under the banner; “Arab Revolutions: time for democracy and progress” and intended to bring together European Socialist and Social Democratic representatives from the European Union and progressive representatives from North Africa and the Middle East.

 

According to Iranian opposition website Kaleme, Mir Hossein Mousavi’s top advisor Ardeshir Amir-Arjomand was also among the participants at the conference.

In its final declaration, the conference condmned the continuing suppression in Iran and called for the release of Green Movement leaders who were placed under house arrest following anti-government protests on 14 February.

“We condemn the repression in Iran, welcome the emergence of democracy movements in the country and call for the liberation of opposition leaders including Moussavi, Karoubi and all political prisoners.”

 

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Iran sentences political prisoner to another 4 years of prison

Saturday April 30, 2011

Political prisoner Reza Sharifi Bukani who is jailed in Rajayi Shahr Prison in Karaj was sentenced to four years of prison by the Tehran Revolutionary Court. The 15th branch of the Revolutionary Court sentenced him to this prison term even as he was sentenced to another 3 and a half years of prison before this by the 1st branch of the Revolutionary Court. 
Bukani has now been sentenced to seven years and six months of prison overall.
He was arrested in May 2010 in Tehran in an internet café and was taken to cellblock 209 in Evin Prison. (Human Rights Activists in Iran – Apr. 27, 2011)

 

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Political prisoners face appalling conditions in Sanandaj Prison

Saturday April 30, 2011

According to reports from the Central Sanandaj Prison, security forces in this prison raided cellblock 3 under the excuse of conducting a search and beat prisoners with batons. They then forced the barefoot prisoners out of their cells and violently conducted a search of their personal belongings. Notably the condition of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience is deteriorating on a daily basis. Prison officials use their informers in prison to put pressure on these prisoners. Narcotics are widely distributed while criminals are hired to harass political prisoners every day while they are in the prison yard. Political prisoners have also been threatened by prison officials that if they protest the status quo, they will be sent to prisons in the farthest corners of Iran. 
Political prisoners are constantly attacked by prison thugs who are detained on charges such as murder and drug dealing. This is while according to the laws of the Islamic Republic, prisoners with special cases have to be kept in separate cells but in the Sanandaj Central Prison, political prisoners are detained with dangerous criminals. 
On the other hand, prisoners with dangerous and contagious diseases and viruses like hepatitis are also kept with political prisoners. (Pars Daily News website – Apr. 28, 2011)

 

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Shirko Maarefi in Danger of Imminent Execution

SATURDAY, 30 APRIL 2011

HRANA News Agency – Yesterday, Shirko (Bahman) Maarefi, a Kurdish political prisoner sentenced to death, was transferred to solitary confinement.  Previously, Saqqez Prison officials responsible for carrying out executions had verbally informed him of his pending fate.  As the time for his execution approached, Shirko Maarefi started his hunger strike on April 28, 2011.

 

According to a report by the Student Committee for Defense of Political Prisoners in Iran, Shirko Maarefi was arrested on October 1, 2008 and was subsequently sentenced to death by the lower court for the charges of acting against national security, waging war against God and membership in the Kurdish Komalah party.  Due to objections made by the attorneys to the legality of charges and the trial proceedings, the defendant’s request for a hearing by the Head of the Judiciary Branch, Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani, was accepted, and the case was referred to the Supreme Court.

 

As a result of the decision made by Saqqez’s prosecutor to modify the charges against Shirko Maarefi, the case should have been retried and similarly the death penalty not upheld.  However, since the Appeals court in Kurdistan Province didn’t considered itself qualified, the case was once again referred to Tehran.  Given the fact that the legal objections have been accepted by the Head of the Judiciary Branch, the attorneys have not yet received an official confirmation of death penalty.  Meanwhile, on March 22, 2011, Saqqez Prison officials verbally notified Shirko Maarefi that his death sentence would be carried out on May 1, 2011, the International Workers’ Day.

 

On April 26, 2011, Shirko Maarefi issued a statement from prison to confirm the verbal notification of his pending execution although his attorney, Ahmad Saeed Sheikhi, hasn’t received an official or legal correspondence regarding this matter.

 

Despite the fact that Shirko Maarefi’s death penalty has not been upheld, his case has been referred to the officials responsible to carry out executions in Kurdistan Province.  Reacting to this situation, Shirko Maarefi announced his hunger strike on April 28, 2011.

 

Because some sources have reported that Shirko Maarefi has been transferred to solitary confinement, concerns regarding his imminent execution has increased.  In an interview with Radio Neda, Khalil Bahramian, the consulting attorney on the case, explained, “Any time, the order can be carried out.”

 

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Imprisoned student activist still in prison after sentence ends

April 29, 2011

A young political prisoner in Iran, Hamed Yazerlou, has been transferred to Evin Prison’s Ward 209 despite the fact that his three-year prison sentence has come to an end.

Mr. Yazerlou has spent three years in Evin and Gohardasht prisons, and according to reports, he was due to be released on April 23.

According to an association defending the rights of imprisoned Iranians, the regime’s agents transferred Mr. Yazerlou to Evin without the knowledge of his family or lawyer.

 

According to these reports, on April 24, a day after the transfer, he contacted his family by phone and said in a short conversation that he is being held at Ward 209. It is unclear what the regime plans to do by continuing the arbitrary detention.

 

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Karroubi wife denied basic prisoner rights

04/29/2011

GVF — Fatemeh Karroubi, spouse of Mahdi Karroubi who spearheads Iran’s opposition Green Movement, has said that her husband is in good spirits despite being under house arrest and that he is prepared to pay any price for defending the rights of the Iranian people and reforming the derailed 1979 Islamic Revolution.

In an interview with Saham news, the official website of Karroubi’s National Trust Party, Fatemeh Karroubi expressed her gratitude over the outpouring of “unwavering kindness and support” from both inside and outside the country for the opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi.

Karoubi and his wife were placed under house arrest on 10 February after he and fellow 2009 presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi called for rallies in solidarity with the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. A few days later and at the same time as the 14 February opposition protests, Mousavi and his wife Zahra Rahnavard were also placed under illegal arrest.

After enduring 71 days of house arrest, Fatemeh Karroubi was allowed to leave their family home for medical treatment. However, yesterday afternoon, Ms Karroubi was allowed to rejoin her husband who has been incarcerated in their home for close to eighty days.

During the interview, Fatemeh Karroubi said that following the 14 February anti-government demonstrations, state-sponsored thugs, gathered outside their home in Tehran for six consecutive nights, creating havoc, mayhem and terrorising the neighbourhood by stealing property such as closed-circuit cameras, throwing sound bombs inside the house and vandalising the residence.

“Resorting to thugs and hooligans is a simple measure by adopted by dictatorships, and today these measures are being enforced in other countries in the region too. But let us not forget that the establishment’s stain of shame will remain,” she added. “Those who have a role in these oppressions or pave the way for these people to gain ground should know … that sooner or later, this will include them too.”

Speaking about the couple’s condition under detention and their captives’ treatment, she continued, “Prior to the New Iranian Year, the conditions were very severe and the treatments harsh. My husband and I were even deprived of the rights enjoyed by a prisoner in solitary confinement. But in the New Year, a new attitude was adopted and our condition under incarceration underwent a slight improvement.” [1]

“The term commonly used term ‘house arrest’ is not fitting, because the security forces have not only took over the residential complex, but have taken control of our apartment unit too.”

“For 71 days, I did not even enjoy for a single day, the normal rights of a prisoner such as daily access to open air or telephone. There’s a lot to be said in this regard and God-willing, I will speak more in the future,” she added. Regarding her husband’s spirits she stressed “Mr Karroubi is in very good morale. As I have said many times, he believes in continuing the path of reforming the deviation that has occurred in the revolution and defending the rights of the people, and he is prepared to pay any price in this path.”

Fatemeh Karroubi, a former member of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis), expressed her gratitude and appreciation towards all those who have offered their “unwavering” support and sympathy to Iran’s opposition leaders currently under house arrest.

She also expressed regret over the continued nuisance caused for her neighbours who have no choince but to listen to the use of foul language used by state-thugs after midnight in attempt to intimidate the green leader and his neighbours.

 

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Prisoner’s Lifeless Body Delivered to His Family After 20 Days

FRIDAY, 29 APRIL 2011

HRANA News Agency – Shahram Golchin’s lifeless body was delivered to his family after 20 days.  He was one of the victims killed during the incidents that resulted in the death and injury of hundreds of detainees in Ghezel Hesar Prison in Karaj, Iran.

 

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Shahram Golchin was detained by the Basiji militia in Ayatollah Kashani region and killed during the events that took place in Ghezel Hesar Prison.  After more than two weeks of repeated threats, pleas and inquiries from his family, his death was confirmed, and the dead body was delivered to his relatives.

 

One of the prisoner’s friends told a HRANA reporter, “Shahram Golchin was arrested at a checkpoint in Ayatollah Kashani region because he was one of the most energetic and enthusiastic young men on the street.  The same friend added, “There was no news of Shahram in prison after the riot.  On March 19, 2011, because of his family’s insistence to see him, the authorities announced that he was in the prison hospital.  However, according to the documents, we know that he was dead by then.”

 

Confirming that Shahram Golchin’s family had no news of him until after the Persian New Year holidays, this informed source told HRANA, “After the holidays and follow ups, it was determined that his dead body was in Karaj’s morgue, and lung infection was announced to be the cause of death.”

 

In reply to inquires about visible marks of beatings and torture, this eyewitness who had managed to see Shahram Golchin’s body said, “His legs and back were bruised, and the markings indicated that they were caused by the impact of a heavy and tubular shaped object.  Head injuries and fracture were also evident.”

 

Because of threats from the security and intelligence agencies, the family of this prisoner has told acquaintances that Shahram was killed in a car accident.

 

In the final days of the year 1389 in Persian calendar [March 2011], widespread protests broke in Karaj’s Ghezel Hesar Prison against the execution of ten prisoners.  Following this uprising, eighty prisoners were killed and more than 150 of them were injured.  During these clashes, prison and anti-riot guards opened fire on the prisoners and used live ammunition.

 

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