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Shiva Nazar Ahari’s Sentence Reduced to 4 Years Imprisonment in Exile and 74 Lashings by Appeals Court

January 8, 2011

Persian Report by CHRR | Saturday, January 8, 2011
Translation by Banooye Sabz | Edited by P2E

Committee of Human Rights Reporters Shiva Nazar Ahari, a human rights activist was sentenced to 4 years imprisonment, exile to a prison in Karaj, and 74 lashings by the 36th Branch of the Appeals Court.

Shiva Nazar Ahari had previously been sentenced to 6 years imprisonment at Izeh Prison and 76 lashings.  She was acquitted today of one of her charges, namely “colluding and conspiring against the regime” and as a result her sentence was reduced to 4 years in prison and her exile location was moved from Izeh to one of the prisons in the city of Karaj.

Shiva Nazar Ahari, former Secretary of the Committee of Human Rights Reporters (CHRR) was arrested on December 20, 2009, when she was on her way to attend the funeral service of Ayatollah Montazeri. Nazar Ahari was released on September 18, 2010, after almost one year in prison and three months of solitary confinement on approximately $500,000 bail.

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Coordination Committee member Khaled Hosseini arrested

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Saturday, 08 January 2011

RAHANA – Khaled Hosseini, labor activist and member of the Coordinating Committee has been arrested. His arrest took place during the police officers’ raid on his home. Reportedly during this conflict he was faced with police officers at his door, his car was hit by agents and was beaten and arrested when he objected.
According to the Coordinating Committee, Khaled Hosseini was getting ready to leave  with the help of people but his car was shot and he was stopped by the police.
At the same time while a 14 year old boy named Salar Khaledian’s ankle was wounded and was transferred to the hospital, Kahled  Hosseini was arrested by the officers of Police Station 11. His whereabouts remain unknown at this time.

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Teacher’s Union Activist Nabiollah Bastan Arrested

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Saturday, 08 January 2011

RAHANA – The Appeals Court of the Province of Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari has upheld the one year prison sentence for Nabioolah Bastan, a Teacher’s Union activist in Shahrekord while he was hospitalized.

He had been summoned to serve his sentence over the phone but he had refused to appear at prison and had stated that they can come and detain him if they want to transfer him to prison,

The security forces detained the literature teacher on his way back from school. His children took his personal belongings to prison the next day.

Currently, Secretary General of the Teacher’s Organization Alireza Hashemi, Secretary General of the Teacher’s Union Ali Akbar Baghani, Spokesperson for the Tehran Teacher’s Union Mahmoud Beheshti-Langaroudi, Tehran Teacher’s Union member Mahmoud Bagheri and Kurdistan Teacher’s Union member Mokhtar Asadi, who have all spent time in solitary confinement, are awaiting their court hearing.

Mohammad Davari, Rasoul Bodaghi, Abdolreza Ghanbari and Abdollah Momeni are also among the teachers who are currently confined in prison.

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Political prisoner’s cancer spreads due to lack of medical attention

January 6, 2011

It has become clear that the constant stomach pains of Political prisoner Mohsen Dokmehchi, who has been in a critical condition from some time ago and was accused of ‘faking his illness’ by prison officials, is actually a kind of cancer.

The lack of attention and negligence of Evin Prison officials has caused hi illness to deteriorate. Dokmeh Chi who is a Tehran Bazaar merchant has been detained for more than 15 months for giving financial assistance to the families of political prisoners.

According to reports, he was suffering from constant pain for several months but prison officials refused to give him medical attention or see to his problems and transfer him to a hospital, until his condition became very critical. Because of his late transfer to the hospital, doctors have said that his cancer has advanced and that there was no hope in treating him.

According to this report, prison officials still refuse to give him a short furlough and he was once again transferred to prison.

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Iran arrests ex-president Khatami’s aide: report

January 6, 2011

TEHRAN (AFP) — A close aide to former Iranian reformist president Mohammad Khatami has been arrested by security forces, opposition websites reported on Thursday.

Morteza Haji, who was education minister during Khatami’s first term from 1997 to 2001, was arrested on Wednesday evening, Rahesabz.net reported.

Rahesabz, which is close to reformist opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, cited “informed sources” as saying that Haji had been taken to Tehran’s Evin prison, but it did not say why he had been arrested.

The arrest comes after Khatami warned that more “restrictions” will be imposed on future elections in the Islamic republic, and called on the authorities to ensure “fairness” in the electoral process.

Haji was previously arrested in December 2009 following opposition protests against the re-election of conservative President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which turned deadly on the Shiite sacred day of Ashura.

Haji, who was among the founding fathers of Khatami’s non-governmental Baran organisation, was reportedly released in January 2010 after nearly two weeks in detention.

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Iran continues its crackdown on journalists and workers

January 6, 2011

Coming upon this especially gruesome eruption of boss journalism at Press TV, which blames the Jews (conventionally and variously described for purposes of plausible deniability as the Zionists, or Israel, or the Zionist Entity) for the New Year’s Day slaughter of 21 Coptic Christians who were innocently celebrating Mass at Alexandria, one is informed of several interesting things.

There are obvious and amusing lies. “Since the emergence of Islam, Muslims and Christians in the East have always coexisted peacefully,” for one. “Never, ever have the Christians in Egypt complained of any problems keeping them from carrying out their religious duties,” for another. We are informed that Israel and the United States have been carrying out acts of terror against Christians in Muslim countries for years, that the coming referendum on independence for Southern Sudan is really an Israeli ploy to control the flow of the Nile River in order to exact ransom from the 11 countries through which the Nile passes, and so on.

What is most revealing about the article, however, is not just that it appears in Press TV, the Khomeinist regime’s English language propaganda arm (which most noticeably employs the scab George Galloway, the reputed free-speech champion and darling of the western world’s anti-imperialist “left,” as its most prominent celebrity presenter). It’s that the author of the article is none other than Hassan Hanizadeh, the president of the scab union Iranian journalists are obliged to join – the Islamic Journalists Association of Iran.

The head of the Iran’s legitimate press union is Mashallah Shams Al-Waizeen, chairman of Iran’s Journalists Union. Two years ago, Al-Waizeen bravely engaged Hanizadeh in a direct confrontation, televised on Al Jazeera. Al-Waizeen refused to kowtow to Hanizadeh’s propaganda claim that Iran’s wingnut president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had allowed press freedom in Iran, pointing out that 175 newspapers and magazines had been shut down by the Khoemeinist regime, 25 of them since Ahmadinejad’s election.

Last month, Al-Waizeen was sentenced to 16 months in jail for “undermining the regime” and insulting Ahmadinejad. Al-Waizeen joins at least 34 journalists currently known to be in prison in Iran, some in solitary confinement, some at the ghastly Evin prison, all for merely doing their jobs. Around the same time that Al-Waizeen was being carted off to jail, Iranian film-maker Jafar Panahi was being sentenced to six years in jail and barred from directing and producing movies for the next 20 years for the crime of “making propaganda against the regime,” and Iranian transport workers were risking arrest by demonstrating in front of Evin prison. They were there to demand the immediate release of their leaders, including Mansour Osanloo and Reza Shahabi. Osanloo, serving a five-year sentence, is in the prison hospital. Shahabi has just ended a 60-day hunger strike protesting his illegal arrest.

Our friend Mehdi Kouhestaninejad reports that the economic circumstances into which Iranian workers are being turfed, even before you calculate the impact of sanctions, are rapidly deteriorating, owing to Ahmedinejad’s anti-worker policies: “It is expected that the labor movement objects to these policies, but the government wishes to suppress any type of opposition.”

It is a heartbreaking struggle, largely unaided and ignored by all but a few principled trade unionists in the rich countries of the world. But the Iranian workers carry on (for a fine overview of Iran’s freedom struggle, see Young Lions of the Green Movement). Estimates are that roughly two million Iranian workers have bolted government-run boss unions to form independent trade unions in recent years. “The stage is being set for a showdown between Iran’s workers and the Khomeinist establishment. The outside world, including the international media, had better pay more attention.”

Mewling about American imperialism and gibbering about Zionist conspiracies is for idiots and scabs. In Golestan province alone, the regime has failed to pay miners’ wages in 21 of the province’s 42 coal mines. Thousands of miners are on strike. There is only one question that counts: Which side are you on?

National Post

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Urgent News: Jafar Kazemi on the verge of execution

January 6, 2011

Recent reports indicating that Jafar Kazemi’s death sentence has been upheld has extremely worried his family.
Jafar Kazemi’s family had referred to various organizations such as the Revolutionary Court, Security force base, and the prosecutor to obtain information on his case whom all refused to provide at the time.
Meanwhile, the Islamic Revolutionary Court based in Evin prison has told Kazemi’s family that “Jafar Kazemi’s death sentence has been referred to the execution branch of the Revolutionary Court and is awaiting confirmation.”
Jafar Kazemi, was arrested on September 18 2009 by Intelligence ministry agents and was transferred to ward 209 of Evin prison’s solitary confinement after being brutally beaten. He was kept in solitaryconfinement for 74 days.

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Khamenei Launches a 10-Day Assault on the Green Movement

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January 6, 2011

The website of Iran’s supreme leader ayatollah Ali Khamenei announced that for 10 days it would be publishing the leader’s remarks and directives on the post-election events in Iran under the title, “Thoughts and Lessons” as a way to commemorate the violent and bloody crackdown of post-election protestors that took place last year, which it proclaims as the victory over the seditionists, the term officials use to describe the Green Movement and pro-reform supporters.  The  occasion is known as the Dey 9 event in Iranian official parlance and fell on December 30th in 2010 (Dey is the tenth month of the Iranian calendar and the number 9 stands for the 9th day of that month).

Supporters of ayatollah Khamenei and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proclaimed December 30, 2010 to be the response to the disrespectful actions and demonstrations that protesters engaged in on Ashura – the day Shiites commemorate the death of imam Hussein, the grandson of prophet Mohammad 1400 years ago in the town of Kerbala – in 2009. The government’s response to the anti-government demonstrations came in the form of a violent crackdown, which the government now calls “a victory” and celebrates. Demonstrations were held in Tehran and other Iranian cities on December 30, 2010 by government supporters.

In the course of street demonstrations by pro-reform supporters, known as the Green movement, on Ashura of 2009 – December 27, 2009 – government agents and official militia violently attacked and disrupted the demonstrations.

Security and judiciary officials of Iran, including ayatollah Khamenei himself, contend that on that day in 2009 protestors attacked mourners of the martyred imam and prayer givers, and therefore desanctified the Shiite’s third imam. Supporters of the Green Movement on the other hand have published abundant video clips and photographs on the Internet and satellite television stations to show that while they were peacefully mourning the death of the imam, security forces attacked them with lethal and non-lethal weapons.

Following that crackdown, the accepted leader of the Green movement Mir-Hossein Mousavi called the attack a “barbarian” act while labeling the victims of the attacks “God loving people,” who had poured into the street to attain their rightful rights.

Soon after the anti-government protests, ayatollah Khamenei called the demonstrations acts that ended the regime’s tolerance of the protestors. But during the annual celebrations in February when the Islamic republic celebrates is revolutionary victory over the monarchy that fell in 1979, he again said that the regime’s tolerance of the protestors had ended.

Till now, four chapters of the speeches by the ayatollah have been posted on the website for this project. The first chapter is titled, “Encouraging the Enemy,” the second, “Division within the Nation,” the third, “The Strange Goal of the Seditionists,” and the fourth, “are the actual speeches and lectures of the leader during his visit of the Basij militiamen in Qom,” in which the “principal goals of the enemy and elements of the soft war aimed at distorting reality” are explained.

Prior to this, Tehran’s temporary Friday prayer leader and a hardline supporter of the ruling establishment seyed Ahmad Khatami, who is also a member of the Experts Assembly on Leadership,  had said that the reason for the supreme leader’s repeated exposes of the “seditionists” was because “the leaders of the sedition had not relented and retreated from their position during the last 18 months.”

As is usual in the Iranian perspective, ayatollah Khamenei’s website writes, “What is necessary in order to understand the issue is to see what goals is the enemy pursuing. One of these, which is among its soft war elements, is to distort reality and the events in the country, while presenting a pessimistic picture of the country, along with an image of its disintegration and at a state of dead end.”

In another part of the postings, the site claims that people rose against those it calls “seditionists” and on December 30, 2009 completely on their own and gave a hard slap to the protestors.

In yet another part of the site, the general message is that the leaders of the protestors made a big mistake in encouraging the enemy and giving them hope, which it calls “sinful.”

Sedition or Coup?

The two individuals who are generally associated with the “sedition”, i.e., the protests against the electoral fraud committed during the 2009 presidential election, are Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi, both of whom have held senior posts in the Islamic republic, one being a long-time Prime Minister and the other the Speaker of the Majlis, Iran’s parliament. Also mentioned is former president Mohammad Khatami to be among the opposition leaders.  Ahmadinejad and his supporters have publicly made it clear that they believe that Hashemi Rafsanjani, also a two-time president and the Speaker of the Majlis, is behind the massive protests.

The leaders of the Green movement on their part accuse the ruling establishment of engaging in massive fraud in the tenth presidential elections in June 2009, and then of attacking political parties, newspapers, universities,  and arresting hundreds of political and social activists, all of which are in fact the coup d’état of the hardliners.

With this state of affairs, imminent trials of the leaders of the Green movement have been announced on several occasions, but in the words of Iran’s attorney general Mohseni Ejei, the conditions are not year ripe for such a prosecution.

In response to this, Mousavi and Karoubi have both publicly said that they will continue their struggle for the attainment of the goals of the Green movement which are free elections, freedom of the press, and release of political prisoners, among others.

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Iranian nuclear scientist ‘tortured on suspicion of revealing state secrets’

January 4, 2011

After being welcomed home as a hero last year, Shahram Amiri (pictured holding son Amir Hossein) has been held and tortured in Iran, according to a US-based website. Photograph: Vahid Salemi/AP

An Iranian nuclear scientist who claimed to have been abducted by the CIA and who returned to a hero’s welcome in Tehran in July has been imprisoned and tortured on suspicion of giving away state secrets, according to an opposition website.

Iranbriefing.net – run by a US-based group that normally reports on political prisoners and the activities of Iran‘s revolutionary guard – said the scientist, Shahram Amiri, had been interrogated intensively for three months in Tehran before spending two months in solitary confinement, where his treatment left him hospitalised for a week.

The Tehran authorities would not confirm or deny the account. Asked to comment, a spokesman for Iran’s judiciary said: “I haven’t heard anything about this [his arrest] and I don’t have any information regarding this matter.”

Amiri has not been seen in public in the six months since his much-publicised homecoming from America, where he claimed to have been held against his will. State media portrayed him at the time as a daring patriot who had escaped from his alleged CIA captors with critical information about US covert operations against Iran.

US officials, surprised by Amiri’s unexpected return to Iran, insisted he had gone to the US willingly. However, there was concern in US intelligence circles that his original “defection” in Saudi Arabia in 2009 could have been a trap to embarrass the CIA and trick its officials into revealing how much the US knows about the Iranian nuclear programme.

The evidence is contradictory. During his time in the US, Amiri appeared to have made three videos – one saying he had decided to continue his studies in the US, another saying he was being held captive and a third claiming to be on the run from the CIA. He then presented himself to the Iranian interest section at the Pakistani embassy in Washington, asking to go home.

Independent but unverified reports from inside Iran said Amiri’s family had been stripped of their passports and placed under close scrutiny after the scientist went missing on his pilgrimage to Mecca.

Western observers said his disappearance from public view since last summer strengthened their view that he had been forced to return by threats to his relatives. It is not yet clear whether a planned Iranian television drama based on the official version of his story will be aired as scheduled this year.

Amid the conflicting reports, it is clear that the struggle over Amiri is just one more battle in an increasingly ferocious secret war over Iran’s nuclear programme that has seen two other Iranian scientists assassinated and a third injured in bomb attacks last year.

Iran has blamed western and Israeli intelligence for the attacks, and for a computer worm, known as Stuxnet, that caused centrifuges to malfunction at its uranium enrichment plant in Natanz.

Tehran also claimed last week that General Ali Reza Asgari, a former revolutionary guard commander and deputy defence minister who disappeared in Istanbul just over four years ago, was being held in an Israeli prison. Mohammad Raouf Sheybani, a deputy foreign minister, called for an international inquiry into Asgari’s fate.

Covert operations against Iran’s nuclear programme appear to have had some success in slowing it down. The main enrichment plant in Natanz stopped processing uranium altogether for a few days in November. But diplomatic efforts to persuade Tehran to suspend its programme in return for foreign technical and financial assistance have so far failed.

Talks in December between Iran and six major powers in Geneva led only to an agreement to meet again, in Turkey later this month. Tehran has invited selected foreign diplomats to tour some of its nuclear facilities ahead of the meeting. But the US, which is not invited, has dismissed the invitation as a propaganda ploy.

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Mullahs threaten Saremi family: ‘Grave stone should be ordinary’

January 4, 2011

NCRI – Fearful of the growing influence of the courageous story of resistance by executed political prisoner Ali Saremi among people and especially youths in Iran, the Iranian regime has threatened his family not to include moving poems or statements about his ideals and thoughts against injustice and tyranny on his grave stone.

According to obtained reports from Iran, agents of the notorious Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) have contacted the Saremi family, warning that the writing on his grave stone should be simple and ordinary.

Ali Saremi was executed last week on December 28, after spending a total of 24 years in prison both during the Shah and clerical dictatorships. He was last arrested in September 2007 after visiting his son in Camp Ashraf, where 3,400 members of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), reside.

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