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IRGC offers to contain BP oil spill

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Mon Jun 21, 2010 1:45PM
A commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) offers the help of experts from Khatam al-Anbiya headquarters to contain the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Brig. Gen. Rostam Qasemi said the failure of US officials to curb the leak had increased concerns about the possibility of an environmental disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

“It is a cause for shame that the US and UK … are still unable to contain the oil spill two months have passed since the oil rig was destroyed.”

Qasemi went on to say that if the US and UK believe they are unable to contain the spill, “they can formally ask Iran for assistance” and Tehran will “send experts from Khatam al-Anbiya headquarters to help end the major crisis and an environmental disaster.”

“Iranian experience in managing oil leaks in certain Persian Gulf littoral states such as Kuwait is a proof of their capability.”

Khatam al-Anbiya is among the 15 Iranian companies which were targeted in the latest round of UN Security Council sanctions imposed against Tehran on June 9.

Despite the recent sanctions, the IRGC is ready to fulfill its humanitarian mission by sending its forces to the Gulf of Mexico, Qasemi added.

MYA/HGH

Bail Set at $100,000 for Dr. Hesam Firouzi

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16 , June , 2010

Bail has been set at $100,000 for Hesam Firouzi.

RAHANA – Judicial authorities set bail at $100,000 for the detained human rights activist, Dr. Hesam Firouzi.
Firouzi was arrested and taken to ward 209 of Evin on March 3, during a wave of arrests that targeted human rights activists across Iran. On May 10, it was reported that he was being held in Ward2A, a section of Evin Prison which is controlled by the IRGC.

http://www.rhairan.in/en/?p=4458

Third Anniversary of Gaza Under Hamas Control

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14.06.10

June 14, 2010, marks the third anniversary of the day the Gaza Strip  fell to Hamas. [1] In June 2007, a masked Hamas fighter sitting at the desk of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, declared an end to the western-backed authority in the Gaza Strip. From that moment, Hamas took complete control of Gaza. [2] Today, Palestinian society is fragmented due to an internal political impasse, reducing the credibility of Palestinian political leaders in the public eye. [3]

In December 2009, Hamas approved a $540 million budget for 2010, the biggest share of which was from Iran. Mahmoud Abbas confirmed that in 2009 Iran gave Hamas $250 million and said Hamas could receive up to $500 million a year from the Islamic Republic: “As far as I know, Hamas receives $250 million. [Maybe] every six months, [maybe] every year. Hamas is funded by Iran. It claims it is financed by donations, but the donations are nothing like what it receives from Iran. It doesn’t amount to one fourth, one fifth, or even one percent of what [Hamas] gets from Iran.” [4]

Iran’s Ties To Hamas

As Davoud Hermidas Bavand, professor for political science in Tehran, notes: “There is no doubt that Iran is morally, politically and financially supporting Hamas.” [5] The relations between the Islamic Republic and the terrorist organization represent a strategic alliance across what was considered the great Islamic divide between a Sunni group and a Shiite regional power. [6]

Iran has financed Hamas for years with millions of dollars. Without this support from the Islamic Republic, Hamas’s network could not exist. Furthermore, Hamas fighters are being trained and instructed by commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). [7] Iran is delivering weapons in single components to the Sinai, paying the Sinai Bedouins for transferring these weapons through the Gaza tunnels. [8]

Hamas, the main Islamist movement in the Palestinian territories – and particularly strong in Gaza – was born soon after the 1987 Palestinian uprising or intifada erupted in 1987. During the 1990’s, Iran adopted the Palestinian Islamic Jihad organization– but not Hamas. Hamas was still linked to Sunni Arab states, mainly Saudi Arabia but also to Syria, which hosted the Hamas leadership- in-exile in the 1990’s and continues to do so. [9]

Iran replaced Saudi Arabia as Hamas’s main benefactor because of pressure from both the West and from the Palestinian Authority but mostly because Saudi Arabia viewed Hamas as an offshoot of radical elements such as Al Qaeda which the Saudi regime considers a threat.

Iran supplies Hamas with military and financial aid much the same it did with Hizballah in Lebanon, which it turned into an effective military force, as was illustrated in the war with Israel in Summer 2006. [10]

The blockade imposed on Gaza and the suspension of European financial aid to the Palestinian government after Hamas won the 2006 elections, represented a great opportunity for Iran to reinforce its regional influence. [11]

http://www.realite-eu.org/

Labor Activist Alireza Akhavan Detained in Infamous Ward 209 of Evin

6 , June , 2010

On June 4, labor activist, Alireza Akhavan, was arrested by intelligence agents, and moved to the infamous ward 209 of Evin Prison.

RAHANA – Alireza Akhavan, who is a labor activist and a member of the Center for Defense of Labor Rights, was arrested at 4 am, on Friday, June 4.
The arresting Intelligence Ministry agents also seized all of Akhavan’s personal belongings including his computer and his books.
Akhavan is currently held in ward 209 of Tehran’s Evin Prison.

http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=4182

Human rights group publishes “Men of Violence,” list of 15 leading perpetrators of the violent crackdown in Iran

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June 3, 2010

On the anniversary of the disputed June 2009 election and one year of unprecedented violence and repression in Iran, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran yesterday released a 36-page report “Men of Violence: Perpetrators of the Post Election Crackdown” naming 15 leading officials responsible for carrying out the brutal repression against peaceful protestors and civil society activists. Part of this report is quoted here:

1. Hossein Taeb, Commander of the Basij Forces during the time of June elections. Forces under his command participated in mass beatings, murder, detention and torture of peaceful protestors.

2. Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, Minister of Intelligence at the time of election and the country’s current General Prosecutor. Intelligence agents under his command were responsible of detention, torture, and extraction of false confessions under duress from hundreds of activists, journalists, dissidents, and reformist politicians.

3. Ismail Ahmadi Moghadam, Head of the Iranian Police. Forces under Moghadam’s command led brutal attacks on peaceful protests, attacks on and destruction of private property, and a violent night time attack on the dormitories of Tehran University.

4. Saeed Mortazavi, Tehran’s prosecutor General at the time of June election. He issued a blanket order used for detention of hundreds of activists, journalists, and students. In some instances, the blanket arrest warrant bearing his signature was dated two days before the 12 June elections. He is also responsible for sending detained street protestors to the Kahrizak Detention Center where they were tortured and ill-treated, resulting in four deaths.

5. Sadeq Mahsouli, Minister of the Interior of the Islamic Republic of Iran at the time election. As Interior Minister, Mahsouli had authority over all police forces, interior ministry security agents, and plainclothes agents. His forces were responsible for attacks on the dormitories of Tehran University on 15 June 2009.

6. Abolghassem Salavati, presiding judge of Branch 15 of the Islamic Revolutionary Courts. During the post election show trials, Salavati is one of the only three judges in charge of post-election cases. He has sentenced more than a hundred political prisoners, human rights activists, and peaceful demonstrators to lengthy prison sentences as well as at least nine execution sentences, earning the moniker, “The Judge of Death.”

7. Seyed Hassan Firouzabadi, Chief of Staff of the Joint Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the highest military organization responsible for directing all military divisions and policies, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and police. Forces under his command carried out brutal repression of peaceful protestors as well as mass detentions.

8. Mohammad Ali Jafari, Commander of the IRGC. Forces under his command were directly responsible for a significant part of post-elections violence and arrests of reformist political figures, activists, and journalists.

9. Mohammad Moghisseh, Head of Branch 28 of the Islamic Revolutionary Courts. He has been in charge of the cases of many activists and protesters arrested after the June 2009 election. He has not only issued long prison sentences based on unfounded charges, he has also issued at least three death sentences for the protesters.

10. Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, Secretary General of the Guardian Council. Since the 12 June presidential election, Jannati has unabashedly incited violence, demanded death sentences for election protestors, and coordinated his rhetoric with the IRGC and security forces. He has repeatedly called protestors “corruptors on earth,” a charge that carries the death penalty. Jannati has continuously demanded execution sentences from the Iranian Judiciary, and supported the implementation of such sentences.

11. Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, is the head of the Khomeini Education and Research Institute in Qom and a member of the Assembly of Experts. Over the past decade, he has become known as “the theoretician of violence,” for his unabashed promotion and defense of state-sponsored violence against dissidents. Through his inflammatory statements, he has been a leading figure in instigating violence against peaceful protestors objecting to election results and human rights violations.

12. Yadollah Javani, Head of the IRGC Political Office. He has repeatedly supported the use of violence and harsh interrogation tactics against post-election protesters. Javani’s statements have become the basis for indictments against protestors and have resulted in the IRGC’s takeover of interrogations.

13. Rouhollah Hosseinian, Member of Parliament. He has continuously incited violence and demanded death sentences against protestors. He led a group of 36 parliamentarians in introducing an urgent bill in Parliament that would reduce the appeals period for persons charged with moharebeh (enmity against God) and sentenced to execution to only five days. The bill was justified as a means to expedite the implementation of death sentences issued for post-election protestors.

14. Ali Saeedi, Representative of the Supreme Leader in the IRGC. Saeedi vehemently defended the role of IRGC forces in post-election crackdowns and their use of violence on citizens, becoming one of the highest ranking Islamic Republic authorities to sanction the actions of security apparatuses.

15. Hossein Shariatmadari, Managing editor of Kayhan Newspaper, is one of the individuals who first accused reformist presidential candidates of a velvet revolution during the vote count after the June presidential elections and promoted violence against protestors. Shariatmadari’s definition of a “velvet revolution” soon became the dominant literature used by the IRGC, Ministry of Intelligence, Basij, and police forces for cracking down on the post-elections protesters.

http://features.kodoom.com/

Journalist Azam Vismeh Arrested

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http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=4100

2 , June , 2010

The reporter of parliament news Azam Vaysameh was arrested on Monday night, May 31 at her house in Tehran.

RAHANA- Azam Vaysameh was arrested on the prosecutor’s warrant at midnight on May 31 and was transferred to Evin prison. The reason of her arrest is not known yet. Vaysameh is an experienced parliamentary correspondent and was not permitted to enter the parliament during the past one and a half year.Parliament news, the official organization of  Imam’s Path  Fraction, consists of 70 reformist  representative of parliament and is filtered despite following the defined contexts and rubrics. The arrest of Vaysameh at the anniversary of June presidential election is considered as a means to increase pressures on this reformist  agency. Efforts to investigate the reasons of this arrest started on Tuesday morning.

Student Activists Detained as Ahmadinejad Arrived in Kerman

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http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=3894

27 , May , 2010

In the morning of Ahmadinejad’s arrival in Kerman, 17 student activists of Kerman’s Shahid Bahonar University were detained.

RAHANA – Following the arrest of 17 student activists in the morning of Ahmadinejad’s visit to Kerman, the security authorities threatened 30 other students with prosecution in case they enter the university or attend Ahmadinjad’s welcoming ceremony.There were plans for on campus protests upon Ahmadinejad’s arrival.

The detained students have been taken to unknown locations and there is no information as to their condition.

A number of student activists were detained after they ignored the threats and  entered the university.

The students of Kerman’s Shahid Bahonar University have been very active in supporting the green movement. They have been involved in activities such as inviting “green movement” poets and organizing a debate between Sadegh Ziba Kalam and Abbas Salami Namin.

Earlier this week, Ahmadinejad’s speech in Khorramshahr was marred by citizens demanding jobs.


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Azarbaijani Teacher and Poet Arrested

27 , May , 2010

Bahman Nasirzadeh, a teacher and poet was arrested by security forces at his home in the city of Maku in Western Azarbaijan province on Saturday, May 22.

RAHANA- Security forces arrested Bahman Nasirzadeh on Saturday May 22, at 2 a.m., without presenting any warrant. They inspected his house after his arrest, and confiscated his camcorder, CDs, books, and manuscripts.According to Savalan Sesi portal, judicial and security officials, have not accepted the responsibility of his arrest, and disavowed any knowledge of his detention place.

http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=3869

Iranian Authorities Responsible for Health & Safety of Tavakoli & Ronaghi-Maleki, 2 Prisoners of Conscience on Hunger Strike

http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=3822

25 , May , 2010

In a press release on Tuesday, May 25, Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran expressed grave concerns over the well being of Majid Tavakoli and Hossein Ronaghi-Maleki, and called for their immediate release.

RAHANA – Press Release
May 25, 2010
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran express their deepest concern over the inhumane detention conditions of Iranian political prisoners and prisoners of conscience, including Majid Tavakoli and Hassan Ronaghi-Maleki. Iranian authorities and the Judiciary in particular have full responsibility for the safety and well beings of Tavakoli and Ronaghi-Maleki, 2 political prisoners who have gone on hunger strike to protest their detention conditions and the ongoing violations of their rights.
Long periods of solitary confinement combined with torture and other illegal types of pressure, various illnesses and lack of medical treatment have put lives of many prisoners at grave danger.
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran urge the Iranian authorities to address the prisoner situation in a speedy and urgent manner.
Majid Tavakoli, a university student, was arrested on December 7, 2009, and subjected to unlawful treatment throughout his detention. He has been placed in solitary confinement for a total of 125 days, and has gone on hunger strike on several occasions to demand his legal rights. Tavakoli has been sentenced to 8 years in prison, during a trial which was held without the presence of a lawyer or a jury. In recent days, Tavakoli started a new hunger strike after being illegally moved back to solitary confinement. His family remains extremely concerned for his well being and believe that his hunger strike has put him in grave danger.
Hossein Ronaghi-Maleki, who blogged under the name Babak Khorramdin, is another prisoner of conscience to have gone on hunger strike to protest the harsh conditions of his detention and unlawful actions of the intelligence and judicial authorities. Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran have learnt that, Ronaghi-Maleki has suffered a number of physical conditions as result of his 6-month detention in the notorious ward 2A of Evin, which is managed by the IRGC. During a recent short phone call to his family, Ronaghi-Maleki was unable to carry a normal conversation as a result of his physical condition.
Ronaghi-Maleki was arrested on December 13, 2009, but under pressure exerted by intelligence agents, his family and his friends had been forced to keep the news of his arrest secret. Throughout his detention, Ronaghi-Maleki, has been subjected to excruciating physical and psychological torture techniques by his interrogators who want him to participate in televised confessions.
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran hold the Iranian authorities directly responsible for the situation that has led to Tavakoli and Ronaghi-Maleki’s hunger strikes, and calls for the immediate release of all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience across Iran.
The ongoing repression in Iran has made it urgent for a trip to Iran by the UNHRC Commissioner and the UN special rapporteur to address the critical and alarming situation of human rights in the country. The silence of the UNHRC Commissioner will only result in further repression of Iranian citizens.

Iranian Authorities Responsible for Health & Safety of Tavakoli & Ronaghi-Maleki, 2 Prisoners of Conscience on Hunger Strike

http://www.rahana.org/en/?p=3822

25 , May , 2010

In a press release on Tuesday, May 25, Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran expressed grave concerns over the well being of Majid Tavakoli and Hossein Ronaghi-Maleki, and called for their immediate release.

RAHANA – Press Release
May 25, 2010
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran express their deepest concern over the inhumane detention conditions of Iranian political prisoners and prisoners of conscience, including Majid Tavakoli and Hassan Ronaghi-Maleki. Iranian authorities and the Judiciary in particular have full responsibility for the safety and well beings of Tavakoli and Ronaghi-Maleki, 2 political prisoners who have gone on hunger strike to protest their detention conditions and the ongoing violations of their rights.
Long periods of solitary confinement combined with torture and other illegal types of pressure, various illnesses and lack of medical treatment have put lives of many prisoners at grave danger.
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran urge the Iranian authorities to address the prisoner situation in a speedy and urgent manner.
Majid Tavakoli, a university student, was arrested on December 7, 2009, and subjected to unlawful treatment throughout his detention. He has been placed in solitary confinement for a total of 125 days, and has gone on hunger strike on several occasions to demand his legal rights. Tavakoli has been sentenced to 8 years in prison, during a trial which was held without the presence of a lawyer or a jury. In recent days, Tavakoli started a new hunger strike after being illegally moved back to solitary confinement. His family remains extremely concerned for his well being and believe that his hunger strike has put him in grave danger.
Hossein Ronaghi-Maleki, who blogged under the name Babak Khorramdin, is another prisoner of conscience to have gone on hunger strike to protest the harsh conditions of his detention and unlawful actions of the intelligence and judicial authorities. Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran have learnt that, Ronaghi-Maleki has suffered a number of physical conditions as result of his 6-month detention in the notorious ward 2A of Evin, which is managed by the IRGC. During a recent short phone call to his family, Ronaghi-Maleki was unable to carry a normal conversation as a result of his physical condition.
Ronaghi-Maleki was arrested on December 13, 2009, but under pressure exerted by intelligence agents, his family and his friends had been forced to keep the news of his arrest secret. Throughout his detention, Ronaghi-Maleki, has been subjected to excruciating physical and psychological torture techniques by his interrogators who want him to participate in televised confessions.
Reporters and Human Rights Activists of Iran hold the Iranian authorities directly responsible for the situation that has led to Tavakoli and Ronaghi-Maleki’s hunger strikes, and calls for the immediate release of all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience across Iran.
The ongoing repression in Iran has made it urgent for a trip to Iran by the UNHRC Commissioner and the UN special rapporteur to address the critical and alarming situation of human rights in the country. The silence of the UNHRC Commissioner will only result in further repression of Iranian citizens.