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Arrest of National Front Member in Ilam

March 7, 2011

On March 1, member of the National Front Party in Ilam Abdolkarim Soleymani was arrested and taken to an unknown location.

According to Daneshjoo News, after the arrest of Mr. Soleymani there has been no news of the charges [filed against him] nor of the place he is being held at.

Amidst increased pressure on National Front members in Ilam, the Revolutionary Court in Ilam sentenced president of the NF-Ilam student division Younis Rostami to six months in prison for “publicizing” against the Revolution. Rostami was taken to the Ilam Central Prison’s public row for drug traffickers and burglars.

Rostami, arrested for the second time only days after the February 14th protests, has called home only once and is currently barred from seeing visitors.

 

 

Two Kurdish political prisoners on death row, have visitation rights revoked

March 7, 2011

Lughman Moradi and Zanyar Moradi, two political prisoners sentenced to death, who had been recently interrogated numerous times, have had their visitation rights revoked.

According to reports by the Student Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, Lughman Moradi and Zanyar Moradi, are accused of killing the son of the leading cleric of the town of Marivan, and have been sentenced to a public execution. Both prisoners who have been recently summoned and interrogated several times in prison and the revolutionary court and placed under continuous pressure in order to have them seek forgiveness and amnesty for their crimes, have had all of their visitation privileges revoked . On January 15th of this year, both prisoners appeared before a Revolutionary Court headed by Judge Salavati, and were asked to write letters seeking amnesty, however these demands were met with resistance by both. On February 22nd, officials from the revolutionary guards interrogated both of the accused in Rejai Shahr prison, and again pressured them to sign written statements seeking amnesty.

It is not clear from these reports why the regime has continued to press for written statements, the Student Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners will report on this matter as more information is available.

Lughman Moradi, along with Zanyar Moradi have been labeled as Mohareb, as a result of their membership in Komala, and participation in the assassination of the Son of the head cleric of Morivan. Both of the accused deny these charges, and their conviction comes as a result of confessions which was reportedly obtained under threats of sexual torture, as well as harassment and threats against family members. The death sentences were given after more than a year and a half detention, and a trial which lasted less than twenty minutes in the Tehran Revolutionary Court Branch 15 under Judge Salvati.

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Women’s Rights in Iran

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March 7, 2011

by Hooman Rowshan March 06, 2011

NEW YORK, NY— Since the 1979 revolution in Iran, the status of women has been on a steady decline. In the cleric led Islamic Republic, women are not valued as equal to men. They earn less than men, have fewer rights under the Islamic law, and need permission from their husbands or fathers to leave country or apply for a passport.

Even in Iran’s Islamic courts, the testimony of a woman is viewed as being less than the testimony of a man.

Yakin Erturk served as the UN’s Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women from 2003 to 2009. Today, she is a professor of sociology at Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey.

According to Erturk,”in the family women face psychological, physical and sexual violence, and gender discrimination.”

Erturktold the audience in a new conference on the status of women in Iran that the Islamic Republic’s laws “do not provide protection for victims of domestic violence and make it difficult to escape violence through divorce,” adding that suffering spouses often endure “time-consuming judicial procedures and stigmatisation”.

“I am concerned that victims of rape face obstacles in seeking justice and if they cannot prove they have [been] raped they face sentences,” Erturk told the reporters, referring to instances where women complaining of rape were charged with adultery by the Islamic Republic.

Divorce for men is a simple and straight forward process in Iran. But it is not the case for women.

Women who wish to divorce their husbands may do so only if the woman can prove impotence, spousal absence from the home for more than six months, or failure by the man to support his spouse. Unless one or more of these grounds are proven by the woman, cleric courts of Iran will deny her request for divorce.

“The various forms of violence against women are underlined by a common element, namely the existence of discriminatory laws and malfunctions in the administration of justice”, said Erturk referring to Iranian laws and its system of Islamic justice.

These Islamic practices demeaning to women are not limited to Iran, but Iranian clerics have used these practices as a subtle form of social control in a country still overwhelmingly in favor of secular government and western style democracy.

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Two Weeks of Systemized Lies and Ambiguities: Mousavi’s Family Still Has No News of Their Parents

Sunday, March 6, 2011

(Kalame): While judicial and other government figures during recent days have issued systemized lies about the current state of Mirhossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard, the latest news suggest that the Mousavi family have no news of their parents.

Kalame News reports that the daughters of Mousavi and Rahnavard, after consulting many times, last night went to their parents’ home (located in Pasteur Avenue, Akhtar Alley) as the Tehran Public Prosecutor and other government figures announced that Mousavi and Rahnavard were at home. The Mousavi children hoped to finally see their parents after over ten days of worry but it was all in vain.

The Mousavi children reveal that last night security officers posted outside their parents’ home behaved rudely. The officers tried to say that Mousavi and Rahnavard were home but their strange attitude along with their insults further intensified the ambiguities.

The Mousavi and Karroubi families have announced many times that they have no news of their parents. Reliable eyewitness accounts suggest that the homes lie empty. Claiming to have no news of their parents, the Mousavi and Karroubi families have appealed to the clerics and higher religious authorities for help.

Although the Kayhan Newspaper announced yesterday that the families of Mirhossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi are permitted to see their first-degree relatives, this has not happened until now—thus increasing the ambiguities and worries about their possible house arrest or relocation to a prison.

In the past two days some government figures have anxiously dismissed Kalame’s news about the Green Movement Leaders’ transfer to prison, but did not disclose any clear statement on their current situation. They only contented themselves with contradictions and generalizations. At present it can be said that in the best case scenario Mirhossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard as well as Mehdi Karroubi and his wife have disappeared.

 

 

 

 

Persecution and Torture of 25 Bahman Detainees at the IRGC Afsarieh Detention Center

March 6, 2011

Iran Human Rights News Agency (HRANA): After two or three days of incarceration at the IRGC’s Afsarieh Detention Center in Tehran, dozens of 25 Bahman (February 14) detainees have either been transferred to the Evin Prison or released. They endured heavy persecution and torture during their detention at Afsarieh.

 

A detainee transferred to this detention center told HRANA, “I was kept blindfolded and handcuffed along with the others for three days. The small space and the high number of detainees forced us to sit while sleeping for the entire three days.”

 

The Afsarieh Detention Center is an IRGC-controlled military prison at the Qasr-e-Firouzeh garrisons. Last year, many reports were published regarding the transfer and detention of protestors against the Tenth Presidential Election results. Some newspapers had previously talked about the detention of some famous prisoners at Afsarieh. This detention center operates outside the supervision of the Iran Prison Organization and the Ministry of Justice.

 

On February 14th, this anonymous person along with some others were arrested at Keshavarz Boulevard in Tehran and taken to the Afsarieh Detention Center. He told the Iran Human Rights House, “During the entire three days, we didn’t have our handcuffs on only during meals and going to the bathroom. They behaved very rudely with us throughout those three days. The officers beat and harassed many of the detainees.”

 

These detainees were imprisoned in a public hall lacking facilities, forced to sleep sitting up on cold floors the entire time.

 

Likewise a student activist who was before incarcerated at this detention center told Iran Human Rights House, “After the arrest they beat us and took us to an unknown location. For 15 hours we were blindfolded and handcuffed at this place which we didn’t recognize at first. An officer later informed us about this matter.”

 

Some of the February 14 detainees held for two to three days were then transferred to Row 2A at the IRGC-controlled Evin Prison, while others were either freed or taken to Evin’s public row.

 

HRANA earlier on March 1 had reported about the transfer of detainees to unknown and illegal locations during the past few weeks. The Ayatollah Saeedi School and the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) were such places. Many detainees were sent to the Fateb House and the Shariati Avenue Security Police Station.

 

 

 

Political prisoner with paralyzed arms sent to solitary confinement

March 6, 2011

Orumiyeh Central Prison

February 5, 2011, Human Rights Activists News AgencyAli Afshar is a political prisoner who has been held in solitary confinement for the past 40 days in the Orumiyeh central prison. Security agents transferred him there from the Orumiyeh intelligence agency.

About three months ago, Ali Afshar was arrested by Iran’s security forces in northwestern Iran near Bukan and Mahabad. During the arrest, security agents shot Ali Afshar five times, causing severe injuries. Following a rudimentary outpatient care, he was moved to the Orumiyeh intelligence agency.

Due to the gun shot wounds, Ali Afshar became completely paralyzed in both arms. Currently, his health is suffering greatly and his life is under great threat. He is being held in solitary confinement where these is no heat. In the winter, the temperature in Orumiyeh can reach ten degrees below the freezing point.

Ali Afshar is accused of cooperating with a Kurdish party. He is charged with “Enmity against God” and “Corrupter on Earth”.

Source

Two hanged in Oroumieh

March 6, 2011

The clerical dictatorship in Iran has executed two others in Oroumieh Prison as part of its attempts to terrorize the population and ward off further dissent.

According to Iran Khabar, Iraj Hassan Nejad and Behrouz Shokouhi were executed on Thursday in the northwestern city’s central prison.

Nine others were hanged in the prison on Monday.

Separately, it was reported that the regime’s prosecutor in Kerman has issued hanging sentences for three more people.

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Judiciary spokesman reveals widespread arrests in Iran

March 6, 2011

According to the state run Mehr News Agency, Mohseni Eje’ie, the Judiciary spokesman acknowledged the widespread arrests in Iran and said, “250,000 cases are referred to the courts in Iran every month. This is while the judicial system still has a shortage on judges and employees”.
“In the first 6 months of this (Persian) year, one million and 506,042 cases have entered the courts. This is while 280,000 cases were still not seen to from the year before and we still have not counted the cases for the second six months of the year”, he said.

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Prisoners cramped into prisons with little space

March 6, 2011

The head of the Prison Organizations, Qolamhussein Ismaieli said, “In the past one and half years, 55 thousand people were added to the total number of prisoners in Iran”. This is while prison space has not even increased 55 meters.
“Currently, the capacity of prisons across the country is to hold 85 thousand prisoners but these prisons hold more than 220 thousand prisoners”.
These figures are only a part of the true figures and do not include prisoners in secret detention centers, safe homes which belong to the RGC and the Ministry of Intelligence and other secret and suppressive institutions.

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The critical condition of political prisoner Zahra Jabari

March 6, 2011

The health of Zahra Jabari who was arrested on Qods Day’s protests of 2009 is critical and she is receiving no medical treatment. She is suffering from heart problems and progressive rheumatism because of which she can hardly walk.

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