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Intel: Iran’s IRGC in Syria since 2008; Opposition claims nation occupied

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April 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — Iran has deployed 10,000 elite troops in Syria to protect the regime of President Bashar Assad and has been in effective control of the country for the past week, the opposition said.

U.S. intelligence sources said the IRGC is known to have maintained its presence in Syria since 2008.

The Reform Party of Syria said Iran has deployed its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Syria to bolster Syria’s defense. The Washington-based opposition group said the IRGC contingent in Syria includes 10,000 troops, with headquarters in the northern province of Homs.

“In essence, the IRGC now occupies Syria and has become its de facto ruler,” RPS spokesman Farid Ghadry said. “Syria has become the 32nd province of Iran.”

On April 10, at least five people were killed in clashes between security forces and protesters throughout Syria. All except one of the victims were identified as civilians.

RPS, regarded as authoritative, said IRGC was playing a leading role in regime security as well as Syrian defense, Middle East Newsline reported. The opposition said IRGC personnel included experts in missiles, nuclear development, security and training.

At first, IRGC monitored the anti-Assad protests. But since April 4, RPS said, IRGC has been directing all security operations through its command and control center in Homs, including monitoring the Assad family.

“All of Assad’s high echelon security generals now report directly to the IRGC as of April 4, 2011,” RPS said. “All the generals in Assad’s army and security apparatuses, with emphasis on the Alawite generals, including Maher Assad, are being closely monitored by the IRGC for fear of a military coup.”

Maher, Assad’s younger brother, was said to be playing a leading role in quelling the uprising in Syria. RPS said IRGC, in an operation by Hisham Bikhtiar, was monitoring telephones and tracking the vehicles of senior government officials.

IRGC was said to have played a key role in security operations in the southern city of Dera. IRGC said senior officers directed Syrian security forces to employ live fire in which nearly 30 civilians were killed in Dera on April 8-9.

“It targeted the city of Dera because the IRGC deemed that breaking the people’s will in Dera will demoralize the other cities,” RPS said on April 9.

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Baha’i Citizens Are Forced to Leave Iran

April 12, 2011

In an exclusive interview with Rooz, the spokesperson for the Baha’i International Community Farhad Sabetan talks about the Iranian government’s growing pressure on Baha’i citizens to force them to leave their country.

Demolition of Baha’i houses and cemeteries, denial of access to higher education, expulsion from universities, widespread arrests and the prevention of doing business in Iran are among the policies pursued by the Iranian regime against Baha’is, according to Sabetan and human rights activists and organizations.

In the same light, last week it was announced that the motion to reduce the prison terms of seven Baha’i leaders from twenty years to ten was rejected by an Iranian court whose judge cited Sharia law for his ruling.

Fariba Kamalabadi, Jamal din Khanjani, Afif Naeemi, Saeed Rezai, Behrooz Tavakoli, Vahid Tizfahm and Mahvash Sabet are seven Baha’i leaders who were in charge of the Yaran group managing the Baha’i society in Iran. Mahvash Sabet has been in prison since March 2008 and the rest of the group since May of the same year for allegedly committing security crimes, spying for Israel, insulting sacred values and engaging in propaganda against the state. The Baha’i community has rejected the charges.

According to Sabetan, the denial of the request for a reconsideration of the prison terms has been communicated to the Baha’i prisoners only orally while no written document has been issued in this regard and we don’t know exactly under what circumstances and on what grounds was this judgment reached. It seems that they want to put as much pressure as possible on the prisoners.” “The country’s general prosecutor has said the judgment issued by the appellate court is contrary to the Islamic Sharia law in the sense that the prosecutor has applied his personal interpretation of the law, which is most alarming for us,” he further said. According to Sabetan, “The sentence must be delivered in writing to the defense attorneys, which has not taken place. Only when the court decision is announced in writing can we assess how much it follows the legal code of Iran and what is its basis. But the failure to do so itself proves the innocence of these seven prisoners”.

Yaran members are spending their prison term in RajaeeShahr prison; Rooz asked the spokesperson for the Baha’i community whether he was aware of the living conditions of the prisoners, to which he replied, “We cannot speak with the prisoners directly so we cannot report on their living conditions, but as far as we know from their family members who have visited them, they are relatively ok.  You know that RajaeeShahr prison is among the most dreaded prisons in Iran where veteran criminals who have committed serious crimes and with heavy sentences are held. Unfortunately, political prisoners and prisoners of conscience, Baha’i and non-Baha’i, are being kept next to these serious offenders, which by itself is another distressing fact.”

Sabetan explained that the Baha’i community intended to continue its protests so that perhaps the Iranian regime would at least respect the rights of its prisoners, Baha’i or not, and also allow international observers to inspect these conditions in Iranian prisons.

On October 29, 2005, the chairman of Iran’s supreme armed forces command general Firuzabadi ordered the ministry of intelligence, the Basij militia, the police force, the Revolutionary Guards and the commander of the armed forces to secretly monitor all the activities of the Baha’is and provide him with a complete report on their political, social, and cultural activities with the purpose of identifying them. A copy of this letter was also sent to the head of the judiciary and the supreme leader’s office.

This issue is also referenced implicitly in a confidential letter that seyed Mohammad Reza Hashemi Golpaygani, the secretary of Iran’s Cultural Revolution council sent to the supreme leader. Rooz has obtained a copy of this letter which specifically references the orders of the supreme leader to draw up policies for the Baha’is and lists the policies as follows:

General Position of Baha’is in the Country

1.    Baha’is are not be expelled from the country for no reason

2.    They are not arrested, imprisoned or punished for no reason

3.    Baha’is must be dealt with in such a manner that their progress and development is blocked

Cultural Position

4.    They should be accepted in schools if they have not declared themselves to be Baha’is

5.    They should be registered in schools that have strong ideological teachers and complete control over ideological issues

6.    If they declare themselves to be Baha’is, they should not be enrolled, or if enrolled, should be expelled

7.    Their political activities (espionage) have been outlined in laws and regulations and their ideological and propaganda activities should be dealt with through religious, propaganda and cultural issues

8.    Propaganda organizations (such as the Islamic Propagation Organization) should set up special divisions to confront the ideological and propaganda activities of the Baha’is

9.    Proposals should be submitted for confronting them outside Iran and destroying their cultural roots

10. They should be allowed to have living conditions at the level that others in the country enjoy

11. Baha’is should be allowed to exercise the normal and general rights that other Iranian citizens enjoy, such as owning ration cards, passports, burial permits, the right to work etc only if they do not encourage Baha’ism

12. They should be denied employment if they declare themselves to be Baha’is

13. Privileged jobs and posts (such as teaching) should be denied to them

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Baha’i Student Sara Mahboubi Detained

April 12, 2011

 

Sara_MahboubiShe was arrested after the authorities searched her father’s house and confiscated her books, notes, CDs and computer. According to the Human Rights House of Iran, she had previously been arrested for 24 days last May and had been later released on bail. On Thursday, her lawyer was served with a 10 month long prison sentence.

Membership in the “anti-revolutionary” site of facebook is one of the alleged charges. She had previously been summoned to the Sari Court over the phone but she had refused to appear since the summons had taken place over the phone.

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Baha’i Student Sara Mahboubi Detained

April 12, 2011

 

Sara_MahboubiShe was arrested after the authorities searched her father’s house and confiscated her books, notes, CDs and computer. According to the Human Rights House of Iran, she had previously been arrested for 24 days last May and had been later released on bail. On Thursday, her lawyer was served with a 10 month long prison sentence.

Membership in the “anti-revolutionary” site of facebook is one of the alleged charges. She had previously been summoned to the Sari Court over the phone but she had refused to appear since the summons had taken place over the phone.

Source

Three on trial in Bahrain charged with spying for Iran

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April 12, 2011

DUBAI (AFP) — One Bahraini and two Iranians are on trial in Bahrain on charges of spying for Iran, which the kingdom has accused of meddling in its internal affairs, the official BNA news said on Tuesday.

The three are accused of providing military and economic information to the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guards between 2002 and April 2010, with “the intention of harming the national interests of the country,” BNA said.

The court has adjourned the case until April 20, it said. It did not say when the prosecution of the three began.

The case comes at a time of heightened tension between Iran and Bahrain, with the kingdom accusing the Islamic republic of supporting a mid-February to mid-March Shiite-led pro-democracy uprising there.

Tehran sharply criticised the March intervention of a Saudi-led Gulf force in Bahrain, which freed the Sunni rulers of the Shiite-majority state to crush the protest movement.

The Gulf emirate of Kuwait has also put several people on trial on charges of spying for Iran. A court there on March 29 condemned two Iranians and a Kuwaiti national to death after convicting them of belonging to an Iranian spy ring.

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Three on trial in Bahrain charged with spying for Iran

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April 12, 2011

DUBAI (AFP) — One Bahraini and two Iranians are on trial in Bahrain on charges of spying for Iran, which the kingdom has accused of meddling in its internal affairs, the official BNA news said on Tuesday.

The three are accused of providing military and economic information to the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guards between 2002 and April 2010, with “the intention of harming the national interests of the country,” BNA said.

The court has adjourned the case until April 20, it said. It did not say when the prosecution of the three began.

The case comes at a time of heightened tension between Iran and Bahrain, with the kingdom accusing the Islamic republic of supporting a mid-February to mid-March Shiite-led pro-democracy uprising there.

Tehran sharply criticised the March intervention of a Saudi-led Gulf force in Bahrain, which freed the Sunni rulers of the Shiite-majority state to crush the protest movement.

The Gulf emirate of Kuwait has also put several people on trial on charges of spying for Iran. A court there on March 29 condemned two Iranians and a Kuwaiti national to death after convicting them of belonging to an Iranian spy ring.

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Plainclothes Attack Against Dariush Mehrjui’s “Study”

April 12, 2011

Agents famously known as the “plainclothes” who claim to be the “followers of wilayat” attacked the theater where the play Study was being performed, shouting pro-regime slogans and chants against “leaders of strife”. The play stopped half-way.

According to news agencies and the attackers themselves, this incident happened because it became known that former Iranian president Mohammad Khatami was watching the play at the Iranshahr Theater.

The play Study, written by Eugene Yonesko and directed by the famous filmmaker Dariush Mehrjui, debuted at the Iranshahr Theater.

Ahmad Masjed Jamei (Khatami-era Minister of Guidance) and Fereydoon Amoozadeh Khalili (reformist journalist and writer) as well as close friends of Mohammad Khatami such as Bahareh Rahnama and Payman Ghasem Khani (screenwriter) had accompanied the former Iranian president.

After the plainclothes supporters of the regime, who forced the play to stop half-way, the prominent director Dariush Mehrjui went on stage and dedicated this play to Mohammad Khatami.

Police officers stationed outside the performance hall had full knowledge of the plainclothes’ attack, their slogans and disruption of the play. The police officers did not make any effort to halt the rioters.

The play’s producer Reza Darmishian said, “Study had 22 successful performances late February to early March. According to official statistics published by the Iranshahr Theater it’s been the most profitable play of the winter season, and it was able to debut at the Professor Samandarian as the most sold-out play in one run.”

Study is the story of a student who studies with a professor. Amir Jafari (the professor), Tanaz Tabatabai (the student), and Nader Salimifard (the servant) are the three actors in this play.

 

The European Union Sanctions 32 Iranians for Human Rights Violations

April 12, 2011

The European Union has passed a resolution sanctioning 32 Iranians for Human Rights violations. These individuals will not be issued visas and their assets in EU member countries will be frozen. Regarding the protests throughout Africa and the Middle East, British Foreign Minister William Hague noted that the Tehran regime’s crackdown is worsening: “The European Union agreed to execute the most severe sanctions against 32 individuals who we think are responsible for Human Rights violations in Iran. Based upon the agreement made by the foreign Ministers of the 27 EU member countries, these 32 individuals will not be issued visas and their assets in EU member countries will be frozen.”

He did not mention any names but some reports have listed the following:

Mohammad Ali Jafari (IRGC Commander); Hassan Firouzabadi (Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces); Ali Saeedi (Supreme Leader’s Representative in the IRGC); Abdullah Araqi and Hossein Hamedani (Prophet Muhammad IRGC Commanders); Hossein Taeb (Head of the IRGC Intelligence Bureau); Mohammad Reza Naghdi (Commander of the Basij); Esmail Ahmadi Moghadam (Chief of Police); as well as ministers, judiciary officials, the Head of the Judiciary and his deputy Saeed Mortazavi (Former Tehran Prosecutor), and a number of Revolutionary Court judges.

The British Foreign Minister mentioned that the confinement of opposition leaders, arrest of journalists, and issuing of execution orders were some of the extreme Human Rights violations in Iran. “It seems that Iran believes that because of the changes now taking place in the Middle East, it can create a more dismal human rights situation,” Mr Hague said.

Because Iran refuses to negotiate on the nuclear issue, the European Union has levied sanctions against the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program. On March 22 the European Union stressed the necessity of sanctioning human rights violators in Iran, hence the latest resolution. Shirin Ebadi, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, in early March called on EU member countries to freeze the assets of 80 Iranian officials and block them from travelling to Europe. The United States also made such a request to European countries. Whoever is responsible for Human Rights violations in Iran, Washington enacts sanctions against them.

In September 2010, Washington levied sanctions against Iranian officials such as Aziz Jafari (IRGC Commander), Gholamhossein Ejehi (Judiciary Spokesman), Saeed Mortazavi (former Tehran prosecutor), and Hossein Taeb (Head of the IRGC Intelligence Bureau). These are individuals said to be responsible for Human Rights violations in Iran and the murder of protestors of the 2009 Presidential Elections results. In early March, Washington added Abbas Dolatabadi Jafari (Tehran prosecutor) and Mohammad Reza Naghdi (Commander of the Basij) to this list.

The Human Rights situation in Iran has worsened throughout the two years since the riots against the June 2009 Presidential Elections. The crackdown has intensified against Civil Rights activists, students, journalists, religious minorities and critics of the Islamic Republic’s leaders. UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon on, March 15 2011, stated that Iran has intensified its crackdown against opponents, with increasing executions of political prisoners, juveniles, and drug smugglers.

Responding to the horrible Human Rights situation in Iran, the UN Human Rights Council, in its March 24th meeting in Geneva, agreed to appoint a Special Iran Human Rights envoy. The United States and other Western countries welcomed this move but Iran called it “political and unfounded”, saying that it will not cooperate with the UN envoy.

 

Iran Briefing Exclusive on the 2005 Rafiq Hariri Assassination

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April 12, 2011

When the case of Rafiq Hariri’s assassination was presented to the UN International Criminal Court in the Hague in February of this year, informed sources reported that 14 Iranians have had second and third degree charges filed against them. Among those listed are Ali Khamenei and Commanders of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Command and the Quds Force at the time of the 2005 assassination, the Iranian Foreign Minister, the Iranian ambassador to Lebanon and employees at the Iranian embassies in Lebanon and Syria, as well as two Iranian businessmen in the grain industry who sent explosive materials and cars to Lebanon via shipments from East Asian countries.

It is said that an informed source at The Hague, whose first name is Fash, told Iran Briefing that in the last few months Iran and another European country have been negotiating to have the Supreme Leader’s name, as well as those of elite Iranian military commanders, erased from the court’s list of suspects. Based on this report, Ali Khamenei and lead Commanders of the IRGC and the Quds Force are accused of supporting and planning this assassination. 18 Hezbollah members in Lebanon and three Lebanese police officers are listed as those who carried out the assassination.

Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri was killed in a car bomb attack on his motorcade in Beirut on February 14, 2005.

From the very beginning, Syria and the Lebanese Hezbollah were the prime suspects. Because of growing pressures Syrian security and police forces left Lebanon two months after the assassination of Rafiq Hariri. The Lebanese Hezbollah also faced heavy pressure. Hezbollah responded very aggressively against these accusations, considering the arrest of 18 members as an American legal move.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, in a meeting with the Emir of Qatar responded to the accusations and the investigations made by the Hague,  by saying that the UN Court, in order to pursue the case of Rafiq Hariri, “…is an officious court whose every verdict is rejected.” His statement came after Hezbollah Leaders said that they expected the UN Court to “lie” in accusing the Hezbollah members of murdering the former Lebanese prime minister.

It is said that more than ten witnesses from various countries such as Syria, Lebanon, France, Iraq, and Iran were present at the court to testify about the terrorist activities of Hezbollah and the IRGC Qud Force in Lebanon. As the Lebanese newspaper al-Diyar wrote in December 2010, two former IRGC members are among the witnesses. Al-Diyar claimed that these two former IRGC members had information about the IRGC’s and the Lebanese Hezbollah’s involvement in the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri. These two Iranian witnesses are Alireza Asgari, elite IRGC commander and deputy to the former Iranian Defense Minister, and former member of the Quds Force.

 

 

 

Journalist Sam Mahmoudi in Poor Physical and Psychological Condition

April 11, 2011

The journalist, who suffers from chronic migraine and gastric complications, is being subjected to severe pressure in prison.

Mahmoodi was arrested on March 1, and his condition is deteriorating because he needs to follow a restrictive diet and medication regime. He has been denied any family visits, speaking to them only by phone.

Mahmoodi is held in the quarantine section of Evin Prison and fears a harsh sentence.

The charges against him are propaganda against the regime and insulting the leader, as well as writing the song “I Confess…” and possessing a copy of Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses.

Mahmoodi has told his interrogators he acquired the controversial novel because he planned to publish a special article on the anniversary of the death sentence issued by Ayatollah Khomeini against Rushdie.

Mahmoodi was arrested for more than a month during the protests that followed the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and was released on a $300,000 bail.

Scores of journalists were arrested during that time, and many still remain behind bars.

Reporters Without Borders reported that in 2010 Iran experienced the world’s largest exodus of journalists, with 30 of them in exile.

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