Saturday, March 5, 2016

Iran: Salman Rushdie threatened by flames of religious extremism




The American Pen Association has reacted to a recent measure by a group of 40 Iran-linked media outlets. This media group, associated to Hassan Rouhani’s government, announced last week that $600,000 have been added to the $2.8 million already set to carry out the fatwa issued for murdering the Iranian-British writer.
The American Pen Association said in response to this measure that threats against Rushdie will not influence the writer’s will to write, speak out or defend the text written by another individual that is targeted.

A joint statement issued by the American Pen Association, the International Pen Association and the UK Pen Association expresses disappointment of the effort Iranian regime media outlets resort to threaten Rushdie. The new financial award that has been added to this old threat is a vain effort to provoke the flames of religious extremism and hatred, the said.

Iran: army commander concerned of ‘soft war’



Ahmad Reza Pourdastan, commander of the ground forces of the Iranian regime’s army said with concerns, “Currently there are over 30,000 satellites in the atmosphere, and 160 of which are Farsi language channels. In Iran 18,000 channels can be received free of charge.”
“We must take seriously the soft war launched by the enemy, including America, and prepare our families for this matter,” he added on Thursday, March 3rd in a speech in Zahedan, southeast Iran.

The Iranian regime has time and against expressed its concern over people’s access to social media, the Internet and satellite TV which can provide more information and knowledge for the entire society and pave the grounds for protests and popular protests.

90 mines closed, 2,700 miners out of worker, Iran official says



The Statistics Center in Iran issued a report announcing 90 mines were closed from March 2014 to March 2015, leading to 2,700 minters losing their lives.

These numbers were gathered as 170 statistics agents went to around 6,400 mines across the country. The number of mines under work in the abovementioned period saw a decrease of 90 mines in comparison to a similar period the year before. The number of miners also decreased by 2,771.

Iran: 4 women commit suicide in span of few days



A woman working for section 13 of Tehran municipality threw herself off the second floor of the municipality building on Wednesday, March 1st, and unfortunately lost her life.
“This woman, identified with the initial ‘H’, threw herself off the second floor at 7:30 pm at Wednesday, March 2nd, after exiting her manager’s room. The young woman, whose husband also works in the municipality, committed suicide due to problems at work,” state-run media reported.
Furthermore, on Tuesday, March 1st, three single sisters in one home in Tehran’s Nezam Abad district committed suicide by opening a gas hose. They unfortunately lost their lives.

Last week two women and one man in the cities of Tehran, Minudasht and Saghez committed suicide and unfortunately lost their lives. The increasing number of suicides in Iran under the mullahs’ rule is the result of poverty, unemployment and oppression, especially amongst women.

Harassment of political prisoners in Evin



To humiliate the political prisoners, Tavassoli, a chief warden in Evin prison‘s section 7 has mixed them with drug addict inmates. Tavassoli is using fraud and armed robbery prisoners to degrade political prisoners there by calling them as spies or traitors to their country.

Brawl between suppressive Guards and Arab street venders in Ahwaz



A brawl broke out when government forces decided to disperse Iranian Arab citizens who were trying to make their living by peddling in Abdohamid Bazar of Ahwaz, in Iran’s south west county of Khuzestan. Peddlers started fighting back when Security forces used batons against them. Some of the Arab peddlers were arrested,

Most of street venders in Iran are university graduates who cannot find jobs due to Iran’s devastated economy. 

Amnesty International: Iranian Juvenile Offender faces death





Amnesty International reported on March 2nd that an Iranian juvenile offender Amir Amrollahi has been sentenced to death for the second time, after a retrial and following a decade in prison. Amir was 16 years old at the time of the crime in November 2005,
Beside Amir Amrollahi, at least seven other juvenile offenders – Salar Shadizadi, Hamid Ahmadi, Sajad Sanjari, Siavash Mahmoudi, Himan Uraminejad, Amanj Veisee, and Fatemeh Salbehi –have been sentenced to death in Iran.
Fatemeh Salbehi, who was 17 years old at the time of the commission of the crime, was executed in October 2015.

Amnesty International has recorded at least 73 executions of juvenile offenders between 2005 and 2015. According to the UN at least 160 juvenile offenders are now on death row. 

An example of Mullahs MP in his expression


An example of Mullahs MP:
“Parliament is no place for women; it’s a disgrace when they bring their head up”


Nader Qazipoor, a member of Iran’s  parliament

A video put on the local social media by civil activists shows Nader Qazipoor, a member of Iran’s so called parliament, offending women in a speech he made after he was “re-elected”.
Nader Qazipoor An example of Mullahs Member of Parliament
Qazipoor says. ”we did not get this country easy to let any mule or kid get into the parliament. Parliament is not a place for kids, or mules, it’s not a place for women. It’s a place for men. You send women to parliament it is disgraceful when they bring their head up”. Continuing his speech he named women as fox and attribute dsome other hideous words to them.

Qazipoor is supposed to represent the city of Oroomieh, North West of Iran. People of Oroomieh, who are of Azeri ethnic minority, have set up several anti-government protests and demonstrations in recent months for their deprived rights. People of Oroomieh are also protesting for the water mullahs have stolen from Lake Oroomieh to irrigate their own private farms. Many of the youths who were arrested in those demonstrations are now in jails.  Lake Oroomieh has now dried and become an environmental health hazard.

Iran: marriages of the girls under 10 years of age




Deputy to President Rouhani:
“There are many marriages of the girls under 10 years of age”
 Speaking to Iran’s ISNA state news agency, Molaverdi, President Rouhani’s deputy for women, confessed, “There is a worrying number of girls who have got married before getting to their legal age. We have even seen girls ‘marriage before they become 10”.
This example simply demonstrations the Mullahs mentality to the women rights.

On the eve of International Women Rights hopping for Iranian women to access their rights.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Iran – Arrests continue in Kurdistan


Kordpa News Agency reported that on Thursday Feb. 25th suppressive IRGC forces in Mahabad, in the Iranian Kurdistan, attacked the home of Arash Mokri, a student at Tabriz University.  Security forces arrested Arash and took him to an unknown location.

IRGC intelligence has charged Arash Mokri of cooperating with one of the Kurdish antigovernment parties.

Suppressive forces spread in parts of Tehran for fear of mass protests



 Reports coming out of Iran indicate that on Tuesday march 1st, government security forces occupied key points of the capital Tehran to prevent people forming protests and uprisings.

Locations such as Vanak square, Karim Khan Blvd., Enghelab and Fatemi streets, all in the center of Tehran, which were scenes of previous uprisings, were full of special units with their motorbikes and cars on.

Iran – University professor detained for publishing a caricature



 
IRGC suppressive guards arrested a member of the academic board of Sistan & Baluchistan University, southeast of Iran, for publishing a caricature of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.

This caricature, which was put on Telegram by a group of academicians in that university, received publicity among students.

Tehran is the main base of antagonism to the Supreme Leader”.



Tehran remains the main threat to the Supreme Leader

 After Khamenei’s severe defeat in last week sham elections, Shojooni, a clergy close to Khamenei, said on Feb. 29th,” Tehran is the main base of antagonism to the revolution and the Supreme Leader”.

Experts say the Feb. 26 elections was a defeat for the whole system of rule in Iran as the entire “Islamic Republic of Iran” is formed and based on the Supreme Leader ‘s authority which is now being challenged from within.  

Iran: Calamity and Poverty, Babies for Rent and sale


 
Iran: Babies are being rented to the price of $5 a day and sold to $600 

Wealth & palaces for Mullahs: Destitute & “Carton sleeping” for Iranian people
 Farhanaz Rafe, an official in the state Red Crescent, revealed speaking, on Monday Feb. 29th to Iran’s state Tansim news Agency that “Some women Carton sleepers rent or sell their babies to street beggars. The rate for rent is 15 thousands Tomans (Less than $5) a day and two million Tomans (approximately $600) for sale.
Carton Sleepers is a new phrase introduced into Iranian culture after Mullahs grasped power. It means the homeless who have nothing but a piece of carton to sleep on.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Voice of Free Iran (VOFI): Iran: Prison Visitor detained

Voice of Free Iran (VOFI): Iran: Prison Visitor detained: Peyman Kooshkbaghi, was arrested himself when he went to visit his wife in jail. According to Campaign to Defend Civil and Political ...

Iran: Prison Visitor detained

Peyman Kooshkbaghi, was arrested himself when he went to visit his wife in jail.

According to Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran
 The couple, who belong to the Baha’i sect, were once arrested fin June 2012 when government security forces attacked a Baha’i education center.

 Penman’s wife, Azita Rafi Zadeh, founder of Baha’is ‘center for high education, is doing a five year term in Evin Prison.

No freedom of religion in Iran under Mullahs


Just at the time, Ayatollahs are pretending that they have had an election, many Iranian citizens, of religious minorities, are spending their times in prison for their beliefs.

Demolition of a shrine of “Ahle Hagh” by Government agents

Plain cloths followers of Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, attacked a shrine belonging to “Ahle Hagh” religious minority in Islam Abad, west of Iran, and savagely destroyed parts of the building and its facilities.
Ahle Hagh followers, who protested to this hideous act, were beaten and dispersed by security forces.

Three persons of the same trend of belief have set themselves on fire in recent years in Iran protesting the discriminatory behavior of the government

Tehran - contract employees of Azadi Stadium on strike



Contract workers of Tehran’s Azadi Stadium went at 9 on strike on Monday, February 29th as their paychecks have been delayed for a long time now. Workers of contract companies related to the stadium management were also on strike in this coordinated protest.

A portion of these workers’ demands were to be paid in leases, and the remaining to be deposited in the spring of 2016, according to a protester. However, the stadium management and officials have not lived up to their words, leaving them empty handed before the Iranian calendar New Year on March 20th. Azadi Stadium contract workers have not received their paychecks for the past 4 months.

Oil refinery workers revolt in southern Iran




Over 7,000 workers and employees of the Bandar Abbas Oil Refinery Company revolted on Saturday, February 28th, according to reports obtained from the city of Bandar Abbas in southern Iran. Angry workers literally trashed the oil refinery dormitory and broke all the trailers belonging to the security personnel. Agents and security teams chose to flee the scene, knowing they had no chance to quell the raging mob.
The revolting workers, demanding their overdue paychecks, also attacked the refinery buffet, fruit and ice cream stores. Finally, the refinery officials were forced to succumb to their demands, promising to deposit 3 months of their salaries. These workers had not been paid for the past 5 months.

With the Iranian calendar New Year just around the corner (March 20th), these workers are now more than ever in need of their paychecks to provide for their families’ needs.

Young Iranian hangs himself in Tehran


Horrific scene of young Iranian man hanging himself in Tehran
A young man in the Shahriar district of Tehran hanged himself, state-run media in Iran reported on Sunday, February 28th.

According to this report this 28-year-old man hanged himself from a residential building’s balcony while his hand and feet were in chains.

Iran: street vendor commits sets himself ablaze in protest

Street vendor in Tehran sets himself ablaze

A hardworking Iranian selling goods on Tehran’s Jomhouri Avenue was viciously attacked by state police, based on a report and video footage posted on the Internet.
This street vendor, by the name of Amir, set himself ablaze afterwards as a sign of protest.
People at the scene were shocked of this tragedy and began putting out the flames. Amir was taken to Tehran’s Mottahari Hospital. There is no information on the conditions of this man and this incident has taken place on the verge of the Iranian calendar year.

A growing number of poor and deprived people in Iran are resorting to selling goods on the street, hoping to make a small amount of money to barely make ends meet for their families.

Iran: state agents continue acid attacks against women


Acid attacks in Iran

According to reports wired by the state-run Fars news agency, affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards, on Saturday, February 27th two young women in the city of Semnan, northern Iran, were acid attacked when exiting a women’s hair salon.
These two young women suffered serious injuries in their faces and other parts of their body and one was transferred to a hospital outside of Semnan Prison.

Acid attacks are an inhumane method used by Ali Khamenei’s plainclothes and Bassij agents against women and girls that have been carried out mainly in the cities of Isfahan and Tehran. The perpetrators of these crimes have never been identified or punished. In fact, they have been indirectly supported by officials of the Islamic state.

Iran: municipality actually claims beggars in Tehran are rich!


Poverty in Iran

At a time when more than half of the Iranian people are living in poverty due to the Islamic state’s corrupt and warmongering policies in Iran, a Tehran municipality official by the name of Farzad Hoshiyar in atrocious remarks actually claimed more than 50% of Tehran’s beggars are rich.

Sunday, February 28, 2016

Did “elections” change anything?



Reports and pictures taken from last Friday’s elections in Iran negate that it was really an election day. Many polling stations were seen empty at different hours of the day. No long queues were formed.  It was just another Friday in Tehran and other cities. As it was expected these elections did not stir much in the Iranian people, leaving many polling stations close to empty. Ayatollahs’ threatening words did not work this time. Just a few days before the “elections”  Khamenei's religious decrees (fatwas) to say that participating in elections is a religious obligation, blank ballots violate Sharia law, meant that boycotting the elections could bring severe  consequences. Nevertheless the turnout was very low.

Regime bans activist from leaving Iran for medical treatment



Dr. Mohammad Malaki, first Tehran University dean after 1979 revolution
Tehran, February 25th – Former Tehran University dean Dr. Mohammad Malaki has continued his efforts to gain a passport to exit Iran for medical treatment. However, he has been told he is banned from departing Iran.

After Dr. Malaki’s follow-ups he was finally told the Revolutionary Guards has banned him from leaving the country. According to Dr. Malaki’s friends no specific government body is providing any answers on why he has been banned from leaving the country. The Ministry of Intelligence (MOIS/VEVAK) is depriving this human rights activist from receiving any medical care.

Iran: 1 million engineers outside of work cycle in mullahs’ regime


Skyrocketing unemployment in Iran

Saturday, February 27th: The Statistics Center in Iran admitted more than 1 million graduated engineers in Iran are not present in the country’s active engineering population. 233,000 people are unemployed amongst the active engineering population.
The reason behind such conditions is the fact that the Revolutionary Guards has monopolized all construction projects, said Bahram Ghaffari, an advisor at Iran’s Engineering Organization.

3,000 prisoners in southeast Iran prison boycott Islamic state’s election


Zahedan Central Prison

Despite many threats and incentives by officials of the Islamic republic against inmates in Zahedan Central Prison aimed at forcing prisoners to vote in the sham twin elections, 3,000 inmates in this jail boycotted the polls and refused to cast their votes, the Human Rights & Democracy Advocates in Iran reported.

Iran: executed all adult men in one village

Human rights groups condemned the executions
Important News


The entire adult male population of a village in southern Iran has been executed for drug offences, according to Iran’s vice-president for women and family affairs.
The matter came to light earlier this week after Shahindokht Molaverdi revealed it during an interview with the semi-official Mehr news agency in rare comments from a senior government official highlighting the country’s high rate of executions of drug traffickers.
“We have a village in Sistan and Baluchestan province where every single man has been executed,” she said, without naming the place or clarifying whether the executions took place at the same time or over a longer period. “Their children are potential drug traffickers as they would want to seek revenge and provide money for their families. There is no support for these people.”
According to Amnesty International, Iran remains a prolific executioner, second only to China. In 2014, at least 753 people were hanged in Iran, of whom more than half were drug offenders. In 2015, Amnesty said it had recorded “a staggering execution rate” in the Islamic republic, “with nearly 700 people put to death in the first half of the year alone”. 

Iran: Story of “Elections for God, not for people”


Ridiculous method ballot of vote counting in present Iran

Iran, in which “elections” has no meanings, held twin elections, on Feb. 26th, to decide members of the next parliament and the “assembly of experts”. “Well, what is wrong with that?” One might say. “Election is a democratic process used in every country”.
The mistake here is that Iran is not a democratic country. It rather has the most vicious dictatorship of our present time. “Elections” If it was used in its real meanings, would be illegal in Iran and anybody participating in voting would be charged with “conspiracy against the state “and “enmity against God”. Elections”, generally, means that people choose their government from multiple candidates. Iran’s government officials, of different fractions, have repeatedly said that the people are not eligible to choose who can be the “Supreme Leader”.

Thirty seven years ago, when the “Islamic Republic of Iran” was established by Ayatollah Roohollah Khomeini, people who had a perception of the word “fundamentalism” were rare. The events of the recent years, in France, England, Australia, United states, Nigeria, . . . ,  and, particularly, the Middle East region gave people opportunities to have a glimpse of that kind of “Islam” Iranian Ayatollahs are representing. During this period of time terrorist organizations have grown, ideologically, nurtured by the existence of the only fundamentalist state power, the “Islamic Republic of Iran”.  
The kind of Islam used by Mullahs in Iran is known as the “regime of the Supreme Leader”. Based on a one man rule, Iran’s “Supreme Leader” is one of the worst dictatorial systems man has ever seen. Exalt of this “one man” to a Saint that is representing God, on our filthy earth, makes his opponents eligible to the worst punishments, including death. This is how the “elections” loving Mullahs have maintained their power in the past 37 years. This reality makes the Feb, 26 elections, somehow, exceptional.
The position of this “one man”, “the main pillar of the state”, the “supreme leader” is at stake. Mullahs have frequently defined their system as,” if eighty million population of Iran say one thing and the supreme Leader says another, the word of the supreme leader is accepted as true.” This shows that “elections” which means decision made by the people is a sin and against God’s will. Khamenei controls Iran's judiciary, armed forces, the Guardian Council that vets laws and election candidates, public broadcasters and also enjoys the loyalty of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards, which suppressed mass protests that followed the 2009 presidential election.

While Ayatollahs consider the “Supreme Leader” as God’s representative on earth, the Islam and the holy book of Quran, however, give the position of God’s representative to every human being and call him God’s noble creature. So where did this election stand for this government that does not bear any sort of democracy at home?

What we are talking about, concerning Feb. 26, is in fact a stalemate, an unsuccessful program, or in fact a failed strategy. The augmented crises in this regime are acting like a typhoon shaking the seat of the “Supreme Leader”. With all the country’s Power and all the economic key points in the hands of Khamenei but he has not been able to eradicate the opposition to his rule. His opposition and those who they call them foes, are stronger than ever and infuriation among the people is more than ever. This is now a turning point for the entire regime, a big defeat for Khamenei, the Supreme Leader.

No matter what will come out of the February elections for both parliament and the “assembly of experts”, but it will be a step down for the whole system. Just in the heat of mass protests, the “one man” is now being shaken, from within.