در روز جهانی مبارزه با اعدام بهنود شجاعی نوجوان زیر 18 سال اعدام شد و تلاش فعالان حقوق بشر و مخالفین اعدام بی نتیجه ماند . افسوس

Friday, December 04, 2009

the end is near for the Mullas in Iran!























30 years of absolute tyranny and the most heinous crimes against humanity including; death penalty for children, mass political execution, invasion of privacy and forbidding Iranians from the right of every individuals and fraudulent election among the most sincere revolutionary candidate, Iranian are now unable to choice even the less of the evil as they did with the election of president Khatami. Henceforth, they have nothing to lose, their children have been tortured, raped and some to be executed for voting even in the legal boundaries of Islamic republic regime. While the regime has guns and ammonization, the green movement has the upper hand with their higher moral standards, conviction for freedom and international solidarity among public opinions. We have to keep in mind while extend of the protest have decline since the June election, however, unlike the 1999 student uprising where the unrest lasted for few days this series of 6months of continues anti-regime sentiment and sporadic protest has continued and set a new a record unprecedented in the 30 years history of Islamic republic regime. It is the continuity that counts and that is what democracy is all about, it is a bottom to top approach it started from the spark of vivid images from Neda and her innocent eyes asking for why she died and was passed into millions of people who asked the very same question and are now willing to fight non-violently for a day where there would be no Neda’s being shot for her God given right of freedom of assembly. Every apolitical person who has seen other revolutionary images and the Green movement fight for freedom can tell that this is an Iranian revolution which could come to a conclusion a few months with the collapse of Mullas.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

The Doctor in Charge of Iran’s Auschwitz Commits Suicide پزشک بازداشتگاه کهریزک خودکشی کرد











Norooz News from Iran’s reformist camp reported about the suicide attempt by Dr. Ramin Porandarjani , 26 who was in charge of the medical facility at the Tehran’s concentration camp similar to Auschwitz Concentration Camp known as Kahrizak kahrizak Prison while finishing his army duty,where many of the atrocities including systematic rape, murdering and torture took place by Iran’s Nazi groups Islamic Republic Revolutionary Guard .
UPDATES; New Video just came out from Pourandarjani's Graduation Speech




نوروز: دکتر رامین پوراندرجانی، که دوران خدمت سربازی خود را به عنوان پزشک در بازداشتگاه کهریزک سپری می کرد در پی اتفاقاتی که بعد از آشکار شدن وقایع بازداشتگاه کهریزک به وقوع پیوست خودکشی کرده است.
به گزارش نوروز، این پزشک وظیفه و دانشجوی ممتازی که با رتبه دو رقمی در کنکور سرتاسری قبول شده بود اولین قربانی برگزاری دادگاهی غیرعلنی است که در پی حوادث این بازداشتگاه مورد سئوال و اتهام قرار گرفته بود.

درحالیکه متهمان اصلی ضرب و شتم وحشیانه زندانیان این بازداشتگاه متعلق به نیروی انتظامی تاکنون مورد سئوال قرار نگرفته اند و حتی قاضی مرتضوی با اعمال فشار بر نمایندگان مجلس ازقرائت گزارش کمیته حقیقت یاب مجلس هشتم جلوگیری می کند، رامین پوراندرجانی، پزشک 26 ساله، متهم می شود که در ماجرای شهادت زندانیان کهریزک مرتکب قصور پزشکی شده است و تهدید می گردد که پروانه پزشکی اش لغو و برای 5 سال راهی زندان خواهد شد.

به دنبال آشکار شدن جنایات وحشیانه ای که در بازداشتگاه کهریزک صورت گرفت و حتی به "گوانتاناموی ایرانی" معروف شد، پرونده ای در دادگاه نظامی قضات برای دادستان پیشین تهران و جانشین فرمانده نیروی انتظامی که به صورت مستقیم مسئول حوادث مرتبط با این بازداشتگاه بودند تشکیل می شود و مقامات قضایی هم قول می دهند در سریع ترین زمان ممکن به این پرونده رسیدگی کنند. اما مطابق اکثر پرونده های مربوط به مقامات قضایی و نیروی انتظامی در تمام سال های اخیر نه تنها افراد فوق مورد سئوال و محاکمه قرار نمی گیرند بلکه با امدادهای غیبی اتهامات و متهمان دیگری برای این واقعه تراشیده می شود و پرونده به بیراهه می رود و قربانیان جدیدی برای این پرونده ها دست و پا می شود که آخرین نمونه آن هم یک پزشک وظیفه مسئول در بازداشتگاه کهریزک است.

ادامه مطلب

Monday, November 09, 2009











Saturday, October 10, 2009

Our Laureate: Neda of Iran


Washington Post



The Nobel Committee's decision is especially puzzling given that a better alternative was readily apparent. This year, hundreds of thousands of ordinary people in Iran braved ferocious official violence to demand their right to vote and to speak freely. Dozens were killed, thousands imprisoned. One of those killed was a young woman named Neda Agha-Soltan; her shooting by thugs working for the Islamist theocracy, captured on video, moved the world. A posthumous award for Neda, as the avatar of a democratic movement in Iran, would have recognized the sacrifices that movement has made and encouraged its struggle in a dark hour. Democracy in Iran would not only set a people free, it would also dramatically improve the chances for world peace, since the regime that murdered her is pursuing nuclear weapons in defiance of the international community.


Announcing Friday that he would accept the award, Mr. Obama graciously offered to share it with "the young woman who marches silently in the streets on behalf of her right to be heard even in the face of beatings and bullets." But the mere fact that he avoided mentioning either Neda's name or her country, presumably out of consideration for the Iranian regime with which he is attempting to negotiate, showed the tension that sometimes exists between "diplomacy and cooperation between peoples" on the one hand, and advocacy of human rights on the other. The Nobel Committee could have spared Mr. Obama this dilemma if it had given Neda the award instead of him.


Post Election Protester to Face Execution in Iran

Amnesty Internation is reporting about the eminent execution of a protester from the post election unrest in Iran. this can only mean that the regime in Tehran is willing to stay in power by using more brutal measures, thus there can be more execution sentences in the coming days. the international community has to condemn these crimes, please ask your politicians to do so!

Saturday, May 26, 2007

More from the brutality of The Iranian regime in the recent days دولت مهر ورزي و عدالت اجتماعي









اين جوان ها كه الان زير مشت ولگد اين جنايتكاران جمهوري اسلامي اند همانهايي هستند كه وقتي خواهران ما را در ميدان هفت تيربا ضربات باتوم رژيم خون آلود كردن فقط تما شا كردند و همانهايي كه 18 تير بجاي پشتيباني از دانشجويان آزادي خواه خانه نشين شدند.
تا وقتي من و تو ما نشويم اين رژيم از پا درنخواهد در آمد و بدتر از اين هم سر ما خواهد آورد.
عكسهاي بيشتر


پاينده ايران , نابود باد زنجير استبدادي


The regime in Tehran is getting more and more aggressive every day toward the Iranian people ,as the international pressure in the upcoming June meeting of the UN security counsel on the given deadline to Iran is coming to an end.
more pictures at this link

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Petition For Ahmad Batebi

Free Image Hosting at allyoucanupload.com
To: United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

8-14 Avenue de la Paix 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland


In the summer of 1999, 21 year old film student Ahmad Batebi arrived at a peaceful student protest held in front of his school at University of Tehran. A vigilante mob supported by the special security police had already attacked the protestors injuring several students, arresting numerous others and killing at least one.

Batebi who was trained as an emergency paramedic by the Red Crescent Society of Iran was assisting the injured when he came across a severely injured friend and held his friend's bloody t-shirt above his head to show the cruelty of the attackers. Several journalists and photographers took pictures of his gesture and one

( http://bateby.cjb.net/ ) eventually found its way to the cover of London's prestigious The Economist. Preparing for a movie where he was to play the role of Jesus Christ, Batebi had long hair and a beard at the time, making him an attractive subject for such a dramatic pose. Batebi was arrested on that day and was later brought to trial in front of the special "revolutionary court" in Tehran. His "trial" lasted only a few minutes and he was denied having a lawyer present to defend him. The Economist cover was used as part of the evidence against him and to prove his "counter-revolutionary" activities.

He received a death sentence but internal and international pressure, finally caused the authorities to reduce his sentence to 15 years. Ahmad Batebi has been subjected to solitary confinement, physical and mental torture during his captivity so far and will be a 36 year old man when and if released at the end of his sentence. All for a bloody t-shirt and a picture. We, the undersigned, appeal for your involvement on Batebi's behalf based on principals of Universal Declaration of Human Rights

(http://www.unhchr.ch/udhr/lang/eng.htm ), to which Iran is a signatory. His arrest, trial and detention are clear violations of Articles 9, 10, 11, 18, 19 and 20 of this significant document adopted and proclaimed by the General Assembly of the United Nations in December of 1948 and as such mandates your immediate intervention. Furthermore, we call upon the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran to meet its international obligations and free all political prisoners and others held based on their religious or ideological opinion and belief.
Sincerely,


The Undersigned

CLICK HERE TO SIGN THE PETITION


Sunday, August 06, 2006

My plea to All the Freedom Fighters

With the recent atrocity of the Iran’s regime on the mistreatment and the possibly murdering of one of the beloved student political prisoner Akbar Mohammadi which was also reported by the Human Right Watch (Link) and Amnesty International (Link) has once again raised our attention to the horribly situation of the political prisoners in Iran. Akbar died a about a week ago but his spirit is with us and all the freedom fighters in Iran.

Akbar makes us proud to be an Iranian. An Iranian who doesn’t fight with weapon , and fights for democracy and against the fascist regime of Iran.
So my plea to the blogger is to stand by the rest of the political prisoner in Iran; with Ahmad Batebi

Ahmad Betibi Ahmad Betibi a student activist who got arrested for showing the bloody shirt of his college roommates during the attack of the July 9 1999 attack on the student dormitory of Tehran by the security forces of Iranian regime because of the pro democracy protest that the student had on the same day has not been; again arrested and been sent to the Evin_Prison .He announced that since the time of his arrested he will be on hunger strike. His family has also been supportive to him and they plan a hunger strike plan in front of the UN office in Tehran in the following days.

I ask you goys to Please call your congress/ parliament and your president/ prime minister and your medias and ask them to please take this atrocities of the Islamic regime into account and not only condemn it but also purpose a UN resolution.

Please do this as soon as possibly any moment counts. We need to bring this to an end ; enough is enough the international community has to pay more attention to the human right abuse of this regime.


Free Image Hosting at allyoucanupload.com
خواهشمندم براي پشتيباني از اكبر روي عكس كليك و كود عكس را در وبلاگتان بگذاريد



    Free Image Hosting at allyoucanupload.com
    PLEASE CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO GET THE HTML CODE AND ADD IT TO YOUR BLOG IN SUPPORT OF HIM

      Sunday, July 23, 2006

      Iran: Arbitrary arrest/prisoner of conscience/ fear of torture and ill-treatment: Mohammad Majzadeh Ghaemmaghami (m)

      Mohammad Majzadeh Ghaemmaghami is in EVIN prison political ward 209 after being arrested Monday for participating in a labor demonstration and pro-democracy demonstration. He is a physics major at the University of Tehran. Thus far he has been arrested 3 other times for his political activities. His mother has pledged 10 million tomans ($10,000) for his release.

      We hope that he will be in jail for long, or until an agreement has been reached. However, we need the help of the general public.

      You can read (in Farsi) about his situation at:
      http://www.komitegozareshgar.blogfa.com/ OR http://www.sharghnewspaper.com/850427/html/polit.htm

      The more public we can make his case the more Mohammad will have a chance. Please sign this petion and send it out to as many people as you can. There are over 30,000 political prisoners in Iran right now- wrongfully arrested for speaking out against the brutal and repressive regime.

      Please Sign the PETITION

      Original Article

      Friday, June 30, 2006

      JULY 8TH 1998 (18 of tir in persian calender)قيام ملي ۱۸ تير

      Tuesday, June 27, 2006

      RECENT WOMEN PROTEST IN IRAN COUGH ON TAPE تظاهرات زنان17 خرداد ميدان 7 تير

      Tuesday, June 13, 2006

      PUNISHMEN FOR FREEDOM
















      Picture by Nasiri Photos from the Women’s right protest in Iran yesterday , a women on the right running with out her headscarf something that is illegal with the possibly punishment of 60 lashes in Iran or worse.

      Monday, June 12, 2006

      FEMALE ISLAMCI REPUBLIC AGENTS BEATING UP WOMEN FREEDOM FIGHTERS




      Women’s Right Protest in Iran Men came out to help the women freedom fighters!

















      A Man who was trying to support the women movement got arrested!

















      Islamic Republic's female agent beating up her follow women who was chanting freedom!















      More man gettign beat up in suppprt of the women movement














      Islamic Republic's female agent trying to beat up the female freedom fighters!

      Monday, May 29, 2006

      BREAKING NEWS: Another Iranian Blogger has been Arrested
      خبر فوري: از عابد توانچه خبري نيست


      خبرنامه امير كبير


      دو روز است که از یکی از دانشجویان دانشگاه صنعتی امیرکبیر هیچ خبری نیست.
      عابد توانچه
      یکی از دانشجویان دانشگاه امیرکبیر در دو روز گذشته هیچ خبری نیست. شایعاتی مبنی بر دستگیری وی وجود دارد
      .


      Abed Tavanche Click Here to see his blog An Iranian dissident blogger in Iran has supposedly been arrested. According to Amir Kabir News Agency inside of Iran, it is been two days that has been heard about Abed who was really involve in recent protest against the regime and also in updating the people on the news inside of Iran by providing details and pictures.

      We should all pray for Abed !

      Please contact Amnesty International in
      UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Telephone +1 212 807 8400
      Fax number +1 212 463 9193\1 212 627 1451
      E-mail admin-us@aiusa.org

      Reporters WithOut borders
      Middle-East desk : middle-east@rsf.org
      Americas desk: americas@rsf.org

      Human rights watch

      New YorkPress Desk Tel: 1 212 216 1832 hrwpress@hrw.org
      Minky WordenMedia Director Tel: 1 212 216 1250
      Emma DalyPress Director Tel: 1 212 216 1835
      Lance LattigMedia Editor Tel: 1 212 216 1252

      Saturday, May 27, 2006


      اعلام همبستگي با هموطنان آذري
      We Support The Iranian Azaries




      We the Persians,lors.Kurds and Baluchs along with other ethnicities condem the Iran state run news paper on insulting the Iranian Azaries and we all call for unity along with all the ethnic backgounds in Iran and hope for a democratic Iran.
      Blogs In Support Of Democracy For Iran
      Please upload this article on your blog to show your support!
      ما ايرانيان فارس و لر و کرد و بلوچ با هموطنان آذري اعلام همبستگي كرده وضمن محكوم كردن روزنامه دولتي ايران اعلام ميداريم كه ما هم پشتيبان شما عزيزان هستيم . حكومت مستبد جمهوري اسلامي به همه ما ظلم كرده و همه ما بايد با اتحاد به آزادي ايران و تشكيل يك حكومت سكولار و دموكرات بينديشيم . همه ایرانی هستند و به ایرانی بودن خود افتخار می‌کنند.

      بلاگهايه پشتيبان دمكراسي براي ايران
      خواشمندم براي اعلام پشتيباني اين بيانيه را در وبلاگ خود قرار دهيد

      Thursday, May 18, 2006

      Iranian Police Terrorizing Women

      By:
      ijna-ir

      Iran Justice? WARNING GRAPHIC FOOTAGE - Not for all viewers.



      Clip of a video smuggled out of iran. Showing how thiefs are punnished(without trials), by cutting off hand and WARNING GRAPHIC FOOTAGE - Not for all viewers.

      Clip of a video smuggled out of iran. Showing how thiefs are punnished(without trials), by cutting off hand and foot or accused thief. ... (more) (less)

      MASOUR OSANLO AFTER HIS TORURE BY THE IRAN'S REGIME



      Masour Osanlo the leader of the bus workers union on strike in iran after toture by iran's regime

      IRAN: AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CALLS FOR RELEASE OF BUS WORKERS



      ikna.blogspot.com : این فیلم در سال ۱۳۸۴ بعد از حمله عوامل حکومتی به سندیکای کارگران شرکت واحد تهیه شده است . در آن زمان طبق صلاح دید شخص آقای اصانلو و دوستان ایشان انتشار این فیلم به زمان مناسب تری موکول شد . اما اکنون که نزدیک به یک سال از آن زمان میگذرد جنبش مظلوم کارگری ایران نه تنها به به حد اقل های استاندارد حقوق طبیعی خود نرسیده بلکه روز به روز از آنچه تا بحال داشته محروم تر میشود .

      Sunday, May 14, 2006

      Amnesty International: URGENT ACTIONS

      05/05/2006 - Iran: Arbitrary arrest/ incommunicado detention/ torture and ill-treatment: Mostafa Evezpoor (m), aged 25, member of the Azeri Turk minority community :Link

      05/05/2006 - Iran: incommunicado detention/ fear for safety/possible prisoner of conscience: Ramin Jahanbegloo (m), academic, joint Canadian/Iranian national :Link

      04/05/2006 - Iran: Further information on fear for safety/fear of torture or ill-treatment/possible prisoner of conscience: Hojjatoleslam Ezimi Qedimi :Link

      03/05/2006 - Iran: Further information on medical concern/ possible prisoners of conscience/ Fear of torture and ill-treatment :Link

      03/05/2006 - Iran: Saleh Malla Abbasi (m) :Link

      02/05/2006 - Iran: Further information on Incommunicado detention/ Fear of torture and ill-treatment/ Possible prisoners of conscience :Link

      25/04/2006 - Iran: Fear for safety/torture and ill-treatment/incommunicado detentio: Mohammad Suwaidi (m), aged 18 Link

      20/04/2006 - Iran: Further information on fear of imminent execution/fear of flogging Leyla Mafi, (f)Link

      Gathered by Human Rights News From Iran From Amnesty International

      Monday, May 08, 2006

      An Iranian Student Got Expelled for his Political views


      See the Article In Persianديدن مقاله به پارسي

      advar news a student organizations in Iran reported on Peyman Aref A Student Political activist in Iran has been expelled from the University of Tehran for his polticla views.

      Peyman who was apolitical science major has been an advocate of human right and democracy for Iran.
      Ramin Jahanbegloo Iranian-Canadian Philosopher who was arrested few days ago was also one of Peyanmn’s professor.

      Peyman has also made an announcemen in respond to his expultion from the university of Tehran “ I will continue my hunger strike untill the university would change his mind about my expultion and Ramin Jahanbegloo gets freed and Osamlo(transit bus driver leader who is in jail) gets freed”

      Says Peyman on his letter to the Iranian people.
      Peyman is eager to continue on his hunger strike an he would go an sit in from of the office of Tehran University in complain of his expulsion .
      Many Islamic regime militants known as Basij also tried to attack Peyman but where unsuccessful following the students supports for Peyman.
      Peyman is eager to continue his strike and “will not break his hunger strike untill his demands has been made” says Peyman.

      Related Links

      More About Peyman Aref From Radio Free Europe

      The Prices that the People of Iran are paying to get their Freedom Back


      Saturday, May 06, 2006

      Iranian-Canadian Philosopher Ramin Jahanbegloo Aressted

      posted by sheernejad at http://blogersinjail.blogspot.com/

      The Islamic Republic of Iran has arrested prominent philosopher Ramani Jahanbegloo.
      He has dual Iranian and Canadadian citizenship and has been accused of spying. In my opinion, the Islamic Republic of Iran would charge Mother Teresa and the Pope of spying if they could get the slightest benefit for it. This could happen to any Iranian that sets foot outside of Iran.

      The following quote of anti-Nazi pastor Martin Niemoller comes to mind:

      "First they came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up, because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time there was no one left to speak up for me."


      read Reuters article on this topic

      read about the Canadian government's response

      Friday, May 05, 2006

      Nazanin On CNN

      Great interviewwith Nazanin Afshin Jan an Iranian borned miss Canada who is standing for defending to right of a women accusing of being a murders for defending her self in order not to be raped.

      About Nazanin from Amnesty International

      Article About Nazanin from National Review

      Click Here to Sign the Petition for Nazanin

      Click Here if you Would Like to Join our Campain for Nazanin

      Saturday, April 08, 2006

      By: IRANIAN BLOGGERS IN JAIL



      Please Join the Campaign to Save Nazanin!

      Nazanin who is only 18 and her only crime was the self defense against her self and her 16-year-old niece against three men who were trying to rape them is about to be hanged in Iran, not surprisingly always the victims get convicted in Iran, like the attack of the security forces to the dormitory of the University of Tehran and the conviction of Ahmad Betebi.

      “(Reuters) Ahmad Batebi, the Iranian student jailed four years ago for displaying the bloody shirt of a friend wounded in clashes with the Islamic republic
      Batebi was arrested after his Jesus Christ-looking picture displaying the blood stained T-shirt over his head was printed on the cover page of the influential British weekly "The Economist", convicted of endangering national security.”

      Nazanin’s death is on the Islamic Republic’s hand and our hand. We the Iranian and Americans and other nationalities need to pressure the regime and talk to our politicians and the human right organizations to make the regime to stop her execution. The regime has showed its weaknes in the cases of
      Akbar Ganji and others that when we all come together in solidarity with the victims of this regime they ought to give up.

      So I am asking every one to put the following logo on their blog which is the link to the petition to save Nazanin. Please spread the world as quickly as possibly we the blogers once again need to make a difference specially once it comes to saving some bodies life.

      So far the following blogs have expresses their support by puting this logo on their blog( put you blog's name in the coments if you like to be added to this list:


      Price of the Freedom , Love America First , Documents on Islamic Republic's Crimes ,Causes of Interest , Support Ganji ,Freedom in Pictures , My Newz 'n Ideas ,قیمت آزادی , Testing Human Rights Knickerbocker News , Cyrous the Great ,Amber , Iranians for Human Rights and Democracy , regime change iran

      Remember This NameOne Nazanin for another


      Reported by:
      Regime Change Iran

      From
      National Review


      Nazanin Afshin-Jam is not just another pretty face. This former Miss World Canada — 2003 runner-up to the Miss World pageant — who will have her first album out this summer, has much more on her mind than her music and her cosmetics bag. Nazanin is a native of Iran. She recently heard about a young woman — with whom she shares both a nativeland and a name — who has been sentenced to death in Iran for killing a man in self-defense when she and her niece were being assaulted (the men were trying to rape them). Nazanin has since adopted the cause of her namesake.

      Nazanin recently spoke to National Review Online editor Kathryn Lopez about young Nazanin — who Lopez wrote about here — and the plight of the Iranian people, as well as Ms. Afshin-Jam's career and Persian roots. Click Here to Read More

      Sign the Petition for Nazanin

      Wednesday, April 05, 2006

      Iran: Further information on Imminent execution, Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh

      Save Nazanin

      On January 3, 2006, 18-year-old Nazanin was sentenced to death for murder by court in Iran after she reportedly admitted fatally stabbing one of three men who attempted to rape her and her 16-year-old niece in a park in Karaj (a suburb of Tehran) in March 2005.

      She was seventeen at the time. Her sentence is subject to review by the Court of Appeal, and if upheld, to confirmation by the Supreme Court. According to reports in the Iranian newspaper E’temaad, Nazanin told the court that three men had approached her and her niece, forced them to the ground and attempted to rape them.

      Seeking to defend her niece and herself, Nazanin stabbed one man in the hand with a knife that she possessed. As the men continued their attack, she stabbed another of the men in the chest, which eventually caused his death. She reportedly told the court “I wanted to defend myself and my niece.

      Nevertheless, Amnesty International has recorded 18 executions of child offenders in Iran since 1990. In 2005 alone, at least eight executions of child offenders were recorded. Nazanin was 17 years old at the time of commission of the offense and therefore Iran is in breach. We urge that the death sentence imposed on Nazanin be commuted immediately; We urge the authorities to carry out a thorough review of the case, in particular the limits of self-defense as detailed in the Iranian Penal Code; We urge the authorities to ensure that the victim’s family is made aware of its right, under Islamic law, to request a pardon of the condemned; We appeal to the Islamic Republic of Iran to honor its commitment to the ICCPR and ICC, to which they are a state party.

      Sincerely,
      The Undersigned

      CLICK HERE TO SIGN OUR PETITION

      Friday, March 24, 2006



      Iran: Sentenced to Death for Drinking Alcohol


      Amnesty International


      IRAN Karim Fahimi, also known as Karim Shalo (m)Karim Fahimi was sentenced to death in June. The sentence has now been upheld by the Supreme Court, and he could be executed at any time.

      Karim Fahimi, a Kurd, who is married with two young children, was reportedly sentenced to death for drinking alcohol, by a court in the city of Sardasht, western Iran.

      It was at least the third time he had been convicted of the offence: under article 174 of the Iranian Penal Code, the penalty for consuming any intoxicant is 100 lashes; under article 179, this penalty may be handed down twice, but a third conviction carries the death penalty.

      BACKGROUND INFORMATION

      Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment, in violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The organization has recorded 72 executions in Iran so far this year, although the true figure may be much higher.

      Thursday, March 23, 2006


      Iran: Political Prisoner at Risk of Execution



      (New York, March 16, 2006) – Prison officials in Iran have repeatedly threatened to execute a sympathizer of an armed opposition group during the Persian New Year holidays that begin on March 21, Human Rights Watch said today.

      Contribute to Human Rights WatchValiollah Feyz Mahdavi is a 28-year-old sympathizer of the MKO, which the government has outlawed. The authorities arrested him in 2001 and charged him with the crime of “armed resistance against the state.” Mahdavi’s trial did not meet international standards for fair trial because he was denied access to a lawyer. The court sentenced him to death, and he is now being held in Gohardasht prison in Karaj.

      Monday, March 13, 2006

      More Pictures on Women’s Day Protest In Iran

      CRACK DOWN ON IRANIAN TRADITIONS BY ISLAMIC REPUBLIC ’S REGIME















      State run news channel in Iran IRINN Reports on arrest of 69 people who were preparing to celebrate the Iranian traditional ceremony called chahar shanbe sori the people “those people will be on temporary arrest for 3 week “ said the news channel.
      Chahar shabe sori is part of the Iranian tradition which is also known as the fire festival and has came fron the first monotheistic religion in the world Zorositan which was the first religion to believe in one God way before all the Abraham religions.

      RELATED ARTICLES:

      Friday, March 10, 2006

      Videos From the Brutality of the Islamic Republic Regime on March8th

      See the Article in Persian ديدن مقاله به فارسي















      A bloger inside of Iran risks her like to video taped the attack of the Iran’s military forces on the men and women who were gatherd on Mrahc 8 demonstration (the Women’s Day) (Part 1 ) At first the forces wanted the demonstrators to be spreader out and then they were confronted with the complain of the protestors ( part 2 ) At first most fo the cameras were taken by the police and many arrested also many of the Islamic militias Basij started to break the demonstration. The first hit of the batons were answered by animals animals animals from the demonstrators ( part 3 ) after this the forces got more aggravated and started beating every one ( part 4 ) meanwhile many got arrested.


      Click Here For More on Islamic Republic's Crimes Against the Iranian People

      Thursday, March 09, 2006

      Human Rights Watch/Iran: Police Attack Women’s Day Celebration
















      (New York, March 9, 2006) – Iranian police and plainclothes agents yesterday charged a peaceful assembly of women’s rights activists in Tehran and beat hundreds of women and men who had gathered to commemorate International Women’s Day, Human Rights Watch said today.


      The attack took place shortly after participants in the celebration assembled at Tehran’s Daneshjoo Park at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, March 8. “The Iranian authorities marked International Women’s Day by attacking hundreds of people who had peacefully assembled to honor women’s rights,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Once again, Iran’s government has signaled that it is ready to use violence to suppress peaceful public assembly of any sort.”
      Eyewitnesses told Human Rights Watch that plainclothes agents, anti-riot police and Revolutionary Guards surrounded the park where hundreds of activists gathered to mark International
      “This was a completely peaceful gathering with no political overtones or slogans,” one participant told Human Rights Watch. “We just held up signs in solidarity with the international women’s rights movement.”

      Within minutes, after agents photographed and videotaped the gathering, the police told the crowd to disperse. In response, the participants staged a sit-in and started to sing the anthem of the women’s rights movement, one participant told Human Rights Watch.
      The security forces then dumped cans of garbage on the heads of women who were seated before charging into the group and beating them with batons to compel them to leave the park.

      Related Links
      ___________________________________

      Sunday, March 05, 2006


      Women Were Again Forced to Leave a Stadium in 2006 Gymnastic World Cup in Iran

      See the Article In Persian ديدن مقاله به فارسي


      peyke iran reports from an Iran base source that the Iran’s forces made many women including the Persian interpreters for the international teams to leave the stadium. Many women complained about this and gathered outside of the stadium also many international teams took pictures of this event which was shocking to many of them to see how this regime is treating the women.


      An Iranian Refuge decided to Put Him Self on Fire in Germany Rather Than Forcibly to Go Back to Iran

      See the Article In Persian ديدن مقاله به فارسي

      Radio Frada reports that a 34 year old Behzad Samadi who is been in Germany for 4 years was forced to leave the country because of his refuge demand was denied put him self on fire and Germany’s court sentenced him to 6 months in jail for doing so .
      Authorities in Germany also said that he has to leave the country once the sentence is finished.9 Keeping in mind this is not the first time that European country is cooperating with the terrorist regime of Iran in returning the political activist to Iran simple because of the many oil contracts that they have with Iran’s regime.

      Related Article:

      A Woman Getting Beat up In Iran for Demanding to Watch a Soccer Game

      Thursday, March 02, 2006

      A Woman Getting Beat up In Iran for Demanding to Watch a Soccer Game

      See The Article In Persian ديدن مقاله به فارسي

      BY: Ax Nevesht
      Reported By :For Freedom In Pictures

      An iranian soldire in front of Azadi complex sport hit a girl who wants to enter for watching Iran and Costa Rica football in Tehran on Wednesday March, 1, 2006(Yalda Moayeri/sarmayeh photo)



















































      More Pictures on Freedom Movements in Iran

      Friday, February 17, 2006

      A bloger Imprisoned for Reporting the Arrest of Three other Blogers!














      Mojtaba SamieNejad, 25 year old blogger and student, was first arrested on November 1, 2004 for reporting the arrests of three other bloggers. He was held in custody for almost three months. Following his temporary release on January 27, 2005, he started a new blog to reflect his thoughts and beliefs. This resulted in a second unlawful arrest which has lasted to this day.

      Mojtaba is kept in Ghezel Hesar prison amongst inmates convicted of murder and other serious offences. Mojtaba was sentenced to 2 years imprisonment on June 2, 2005. This sentence was issued by Judge Saadat of Revolutionary Court 13.

      It is ours' and all human rights activists' duty to take a stand against the injustice of imprisonment for voicing one’s opinion. We ask all bloggers, human rights organizations and free people of the world to help Mojtaba by voicing their objection to his sentencing and demand his immediate and unconditional release.


      More Info About Mojtaba on his personal blog before his arrest

      In general About Iranian Blogers in Jail


      Another Journalist Has Been Killed by Iran’s Regime












      See The article In persian ديدن مقاله به فارسي
      Today Iran’s regime added another yet another case to its criminal records, a journalist name Elham Afrotan on the weekly Tamadone Hormozgan who has been imprisoned since January 23 according to reporters without border has been killed supposedly committed suicide (link)

      many believe that is what the regime is saying to get away from the criminal charges since this is not the first time this is happening to a reporter. We all remember Canadian -Iranian reported Zahra Kazimi who was stabbed by regime’s agents (link)

      this is regime is by far the worse regime that we have seen in the face of the earth.

      Sunday, February 12, 2006

      Iran’s Military Forces Beaten up a Reporter in Tehran



      Reported by Freedom in Pictures
      From: Press law



      Saturday, February 04, 2006

      IRAN: AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CALLS FOR RELEASE OF BUS WORKERS

      Amnesty International

      Amnesty International is calling on the Iranian authorities to release immediately hundreds of Tehran bus workers who were detained last week apparently to pre-empt threatened strike action. Although some of the workers have been released, hundreds are reported still to be detained without charge or trial at Tehran’s Evin Prison.
      The arrests began after the executive committee of the Union of Workers of the Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, which represents workers employed by the United Bus Company of Tehran (Sharekat-e Vahed), called for a strike on 28 January in support of various union demands. These included the release of the union’s leader, Mansour Ossanlu, who has been detained without charge or trial since 22 December 2005, the introduction of collective bargaining and for the bus company, which is run by the Tehran local authority, to grant a pay increase.
      According to reports, leaflets announcing the strike were widely distributed in Tehran on 24 January 2006 and one member of the union’s executive, Hosseini Tabar, was detained for about four hours while helping with this. Next day, six other members of the union’s executive committee - Ebrahim Madadi, Mansour Hayat Ghaybi, Seyed Davoud Razavi, Sa’id Torabian, Ali Zad Hossein and Gholamreza Mirza’i - were summoned to appear at the Public Prosecutor’s Office in Tehran.
      When they did so on 26 January, they were arrested when they refused to call off the strike and taken to Evin Prison. Interviewed by the official IRNA news agency, the Mayor of Tehran reportedly described the union as illegal and said that the authorities would not permit the strike to go ahead. The United Bus Company’s management threatened workers who supported the strike call with the loss of their jobs.The authorities then carried out mass arrests of union members on 27 January, the eve of the threatened strike, detaining some workers as they completed their shifts and others at their homes. Those detained included the wives of Mansour Hayat Ghaybi and Seyed Davoud Razavi, and a third union leader, Yaghub Salimi.
      Security forces raided Yaghub Salimi’s home after he was interviewed by a Berlin-based radio station but he was absent at the time. However, his wife and their children were beaten and detained. Mahdiye Salimi, aged 12, described her ordeal later in a radio interview. She said that three women and five children had been arrested, that they had been beaten and that her two-year-old sister had been injured when she was pushed roughly into a security forces vehicle, and that her mother had been kicked in the chest.
      Mahdiye Salimi was released, together with her mother and young sister, when Yaghub Salimi gave himself up to the security forces. The other children and women who were detained are also now reported to have been released. Hundreds more union members are reported to have been arrested on the day of the strike, 28 January, with most of these also being taken to Evin Prison.
      Workers were reportedly beaten with batons, punched, kicked and threatened to force them to work, including by members of the volunteer Basij force who had apparently been brought in replace striking workers, and security forces reportedly used tear gas and fired shots into the air.
      Further arrests were reported on 29 and 30 January. Currently, only some 30 to 50 of those detained are reported to have been released, apparently after they agreed under duress to sign guarantees that they would not participate in strikes or other protest actions. As many as 500 others are believed still to be held at Evin Prison without access to lawyers or family.
      Some are reported to have started a hunger strike on 29 January to protest their detention. Another strike has been called for 2 February 2006. Amnesty International is concerned that those detained are being held solely on account of their peaceful activities as trade unionists and as such are prisoners of conscience who should be released immediately and unconditionally.
      The right to form and join trade unions is well-established in international law, notably under Article 22 of the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and Article 8 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).
      Iran is a state party to both of these treaties.Iran is also a member of the International Labour Organization and bound by its requirements, including the ILO Committee on Freedom of Association’s ruling that it is not legitimate for states to restrict the right to strike during disputes concerning workers’ occupational and economic interests.
      States can restrict the right to strike only in cases of acute national emergency (and then for a limited period only), which is clearly not the situation which prevails in Tehran. Freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining are core principles of the ILO’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, which requires all state parties “to respect, to promote and to realize, in good faith and in accordance with the Constitution, the principles [of the Declaration].”
      Background InformationThe union representing Tehran’s bus workers was banned after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, then reactivated in 2004 although it is not legally-recognized. On 22 December 2005, police arrested 12 of the union’s leaders at their homes but quickly released four of them. Further union members were arrested on 25 December while staging a bus strike in Tehran to call for the release of their colleagues but they and all those arrested earlier were released in the following days with the exception of Mansour Ossanlu.
      He continues to be detained and to be denied access to a lawyer, and is said possibly to be facing serious charges of having contact with exiled opposition groups and instigating armed revolt.Seven union members, including Mansour Hayat Ghaybi; Ebrahim Madadi; Reza Tarazi; Gholamreza Mirza’i; Abbas Najand Kouhi and Ali Zad Hossein, were reportedly summoned to appear before a Revolutionary Court in Tehran on 1 January 2006 to face public order charges but their trial was postponed when other union members protested outside the court.On 7 January, five drivers were reportedly detained when bus company workers staged another strike but later freed.
      For further information please see Urgent Action AI Index MDE 13/002/2006 which can be found at More INfo

      Friday, February 03, 2006

      امروز فقط سندیکا










      سندیکای اتوبوس رانی

      هزاران نفر از کارگران شرکت واحد تنها به خاطر خواستن حقوق اولیه خود یعنی حق داشتن سندیکای مستقل و حق اعتراض کردن در زندان به سر می برند همسران و فرزندان اینان در بدترین شرایط معیشتی قرار دارند. رسانه های رسمی و حکومتی حتی یک کلمه در این رابطه نمی گویند . ما وبلاگ نویسان بنا به رسالت خبررسانی و حس انسانی خود باید این خلا را پر کنیم. بدین منظور امروز جمعه ۱۴ بهمن در یک حرکت نمادین تمام مطالب خود را به سندیکا اختصاص می دهیم و وبلاگ های خود را به نام سندیکا و با لوگوی آن آپ می کنیم.
      خواست ما:

      ۱-آزدای بی قید و شرط و سریع تمامی بازداشت شدگان
      ۲- به رسمیت شناخته شدن حق سندیکا و اعتراض برای کارگران

      Saturday, January 28, 2006

      بیایید از اعتصاب سندیکا حمایت کنیم








      سندیکای اتوبوس رانی

      پیشنهاد مشخص است. مثل بار قبل بیایید از اعتصاب سندیکا و خواست آزادی سریع و بی قید و شرط منصور اسانلو حمایت کنیم.

      بدین منظور از تمامی دوستان وبلاگ نویس می خواهیم که روز شنبه ۸ بهمن برای نشان دادن حمایت از اعتصاب سراسری و نا محدود سندیکا و کارگران و رانندگان شرکت واحد اتوبوس رانی پست وبلاگشان را به نام سندیکا و با آرم سندیکا آپ کنند و اخبار سندیکا را انعکاس دهند . در ضمن تمام مشاهدات خود و عکس های خود را از اعتصاب و بازخورد ان در سطح شهر انعکاس دهند . ما نیاز داریم که یک اطلاع رسانی مستقل از این حرکت سندیکا انجام دهیم.
      پس فردا ما وبلاگ هایمان را برای حمایت از سندیکا و اعتصاب و اطلاع رسانی درست و مستقل آماده می کنیم.
      لطفا به تمام دوستان خود این موضوع را اطلاع دهید

      Saturday, January 07, 2006

      A Teenage Girl to be Hanged in Iran !












      According to Peyke Iran ,Organization for defending the rights of the women in Iran announced that A teenage girl who was defending her self against 3 sex offenders by a knife and killed one of them has been convicted for capital punishment with the verdict of criminal court of 71 the convict's name is Nazanin who is only 17.

      According to the Islamic laws of Iran if a women would defend her self against the sex offenders she will hanged and if she would not resist she will be stoned to death. According to this website the offenders were a member of paramilitary of the Islamic regime called Basij.

      The following is the countries with the most executions According to wikipedia
      China , Iran , Vietnam , United States , Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

      So once again if some industrial nations want to set example for other third world countries they to have to be Civilized by changing their laws on capital punishment and murdering people who might have murdered others but only God has the right to take our life since he is the one who gave us life .

      Saturday, December 17, 2005

      Iran: Top Ministers Implicated in Serious Abuses







      (New York, December 15, 2005) – Iran’s new Minister of Interior is implicated in grave human rights violations over the past two decades, possibly including crimes against humanity in connection with the massacre of thousands of political prisoners, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper released today.

      Human Rights Watch also said that the new Minister of Information should be investigated for his possible involvement in a dissident’s killing.

      The briefing paper, Ministers of Murder: Iran’s New Security Cabinet, details credible allegations that Minister of Interior Mustafa Pour-Mohammadi and Minister of Information Gholamhussein Mohseni Ezhei were involved in extremely serious and systematic human rights violations over the past two decades.

      “It’s completely unacceptable that men with such records would be serving in Iran’s government,” said Joe Stork deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “They should be removed from their posts and investigated for these terrible crimes.”

      Iran’s cabinet is now dominated by former security and intelligence officials, Human Rights Watch said, raising fears that President Ahmadinejad’s government will readily resort to violence to suppress dissidents and punish critics.

      During Pour-Mohammadi’s tenure as top deputy of the Ministry of Information from 1987 to 1999, agents of the ministry systematically engaged in extrajudicial killings of opposition figures, political activists, and intellectuals.

      In 1988, the Iranian government executed thousands of political prisoners held inside Iranian jails. The deliberate and systematic manner in which these extrajudicial executions took place may constitute a crime against humanity under international law, Human Rights Watch said. Mustafa Pour-Mohammadi was a member of the three-person committee that ordered prisoners held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison to their summary executions.

      From 1990 to 1999, Pour-Mohammadi was director of foreign intelligence operations in the Ministry of Information. During this period, dozens of opposition figures were assassinated abroad. In some of these cases the hand of the Iranian government has been well established, while in others there are credible allegations of government involvement. Pour-Mohammadi is at the center of strong allegations of direct involvement in orchestrating these assassinations.

      In 1998, agents of the Ministry of Information killed five prominent activist intellectuals in Tehran. An Iranian source with first-hand knowledge of the investigation told Human Rights Watch that Pour-Mohammadi was implicated by investigators in those killings and even that an arrest warrant was about to be issued for him. “But instead it was arranged that he leave his post in the Ministry of Information,” this source said.

      Gholamhussein Mohseni Ezhei, the new Minister of Information, served as prosecutor general of the Special Court for the Clergy and in this position spearheaded the prosecution of prominent reformist clerics. He has also been a key figure in suppressing press freedoms, resulting in the closure of more than 100 newspapers since 2000. Several journalists and activists have alleged that Mohseni Ezhei ordered the kidnap and killing of Pirouz Davani, a dissident and political activist, in 1998.

      Human Rights Watch called on President Ahmadinejad to relieve Pour-Mohammadi and Mohseni Ezhei of their duties immediately and to establish an independent mechanism to conduct a thorough and impartial investigation into their alleged crimes.

      If President Ahmadinejad fails to remove Pour-Mohammadi and Mohseni Ezhei from his cabinet, the Parliament should call for a vote of no-confidence and initiate its own independent investigation, Human Rights Watch said.

      “It’s downright dangerous to have men like this in charge of key ministries,” said Stork. “The international community must make clear that it holds the government of President Ahmadinejad responsible for the safety of Iranian political activists and dissidents.”

      SEE THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE

      Thursday, November 24, 2005

      Black month for Iran’s journalists







      Reporters Without Borders today condemned a wave of summonses being issued to journalists at the intelligence ministry’s behest as well as other press freedom violations in the course of a month that has been especially tough for the Iranian media.

      “We call on the intelligence ministry to stop harassing and intimidating journalists with all these summonses,” the press freedom organisation said. “It is unacceptable that a country’s intelligence agencies take it upon themselves to try to dictate what journalists must write.”

      At least 10 journalists have been summoned for questioning, in the course of which they have been advised not to criticise the new government headed by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. They have also been “asked” not to write articles on sensitive issues such as Iran’s nuclear programme.

      Reporters Without Borders today also called for the immediate release of Madh Amadi and Masoud Bastani, who have been imprisoned since the summer on trumped-up charges, and condemned the beating which sports photographer Heshmatollah Bahadory received from a policeman on 14 November

      “The detention of Amadi and Bastani is utterly arbitrary,” the organisation said. “It is time for the Iranian courts to stop systematically targetting journalists.”

      A freelance journalist who works for several news media, Amadi was arrested on 28 July in the Sarvabad border area after visiting the Kurdish part of neighbouring Irak. He was sentenced by a court in Marivan, in Iran’s Kurdish-dominated northwestern region, to a year in prison and 50 lashes for “leaving the country illegally.”

      Countinue Reading the Article

      Monday, November 21, 2005

      پتيشن حمايت از شهيدان راه آزادي پروانه و داريوش فروهر



      PERSIAN PETITION








      مردم ايران


      پرستو فروهر از مخالفت شوراي تامين استان تهران با برگزاري مراسم سالگرد درگذشت فروهرها خبر داد.
      دختر مرحوم داريوش فروهر گفت: مصوبه شوراي تامين استان به من ابلاغ شد كه در آن تاكيد شده است نمي‌‏شود مراسم بزرگداشت داريوش و پروانه فروهر را برگزار كرد.

      وي افزود: بنده نيز اعتراض رسمي خود را به صورت يك نامه به استانداري فرستاده و در آن پرسيده‌‏ام كه چرا برگزاري بزرگداشت اين دو شهيد، مخالف امنيت ملي است.

      وي گفت: مراسم بزرگداشت مرحوم فروهر از ساعت 30/4 دقيقه عصر روز سه‌‏شنبه، يكم آذر ماه در منزل آن مرحوم برگزار مي‌‏شود

      Sunday, November 20, 2005

      A Reporter got beaten up by Police In Iran














      A reported for a sport news paper name Piroze got beaten by Iranian police( More Picture)because he was taking pictures during the match between Perspolice and Malavan.
      This is not the first incident of its kind that is happening in Iran in fact this time the reporter got lucky that he didn’t get killed at the time unlike Zahra Kazemi a Canadian Iranian reporter who was talking picture from the demonstration by political activist in front of Evin prison.

      Some believe the reason behind this is not just the police but the system of violent and terror against the Iranian citizens in which the police and military is been train for in Iran's regime unlike the fact that the military and police in democratic nations would protect the people at least that is what its been trained for.

      Many people also remember 18 Tir(17 July) When the Iran’s secret police attacked the Student dormitory and killed many student simply because the student had a pro democracy demonstration on the same day Pictures from the student uprising against the regime In fact there are many more instances of human right violation in Iran been reported by human rights activist .


      Korosh

      Saturday, November 19, 2005

      U.N. Worries About Human Rights in Iran














      By NICK WADHAMS,
      Associated Press Writer

      UNITED NATIONS - A U.N. committee passed a resolution Friday expressing concern about human rights violations in Iran,The resolution, proposed by Canada, demands Iran stop executing people under 18, discriminating against ethnic and religious minorities, and intimidating defense lawyers, journalists and the opposition.

      It passed by a vote of 77 to 51, with 46 nations abstaining.
      "The government of Iran should be singled out and a strong message should be sent that their human rights record and practices are unacceptable," Canada's U.N. Ambassador Alan Rock said after the vote.

      The resolution passed after extensive debate in the U.N. General Assembly's Third Committee, which deals with social and humanitarian issues. The committee rejected an Iranian attempt to block the vote through a procedural motion.

      Among a list of violations, it deplored discrimination against women and "the continuing use of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment such as flogging and amputations."

      Several nations, mostly from the developing world, argued that singling out Iran would only harden Tehran's stance and set a double standard because rich nations are rarely treated the same way.

      "Naming and shaming member states has not been productive in our efforts to promote human rights," Malaysia's representative to the committee said.

      Other nations, including Cuba, Belarus, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Venezuela, also opposed the resolution. It had 45 co-sponsors, including the United States and Australia.

      Iran tried to block the resolution through a procedural motion that would have killed discussion of it during this session of the General Assembly, which lasts through next summer. But that motion was defeated 70 to 77, with 23 abstentions.

      Wednesday, November 16, 2005

      Iran: Death Penalty for Drinking Alcohol




      IRAN Karim Fahimi, also known as Karim Shalo (m)

      Karim Fahimi was sentenced to death in June.
      The sentence has now been upheldby the Supreme Court,
      and he could be executed at any time.

      Karim Fahimi, a Kurd, who is married with two young children,
      was reportedlysentenced to death for drinking alcohol,
      by a court in the city of Sardasht,western Iran.

      It was at least the third time he had been convicted of the
      offence: under article 174 of the Iranian Penal Code, the
      penalty for consumingany intoxicant is 100 lashes; under
      article 179, this penalty may be handeddown twice, but a
      third conviction carries the death penalty.

      BACKGROUND INFORMATION

      Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in
      all cases as the ultimatecruel, inhuman and degrading
      punishment, in violation of the Universal Declaration
      of Human Rights. The organization has recorded 72
      executions in Iran so far this year, although the true
      figure may be much higher.

      Monday, October 17, 2005

      Iranian adultress sentenced to death by stoning



      Reuters


      TEHRAN (Reuters) - An Iranian woman has been sentenced to death by stoning for adultery, local media reported on Saturday, although Tehran maintains it no longer executes women in this way.

      The woman, named only as Soghra, was found guilty of having an affair with her husband's friend, the Etemad daily reported. She was also given a separate 15-year jail sentence for helping her lover kill her husband.

      Iran has met international criticism for handing out stoning sentences for adultery. The penalty involves victims being buried up to their midriffs and then pelted to death with stones that are not big enough to kill instantly.

      Judiciary officials say no woman has been executed by stoning for several years and that stoning sentences are routinely changed to other forms of execution, such as hanging, or lighter sentences.

      "The Islamic code obliges the judge to issue the stoning sentence in adultery cases, however the head of the judiciary may change the final sentence," a judiciary official, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.



      Sunday, October 16, 2005

      Young man killed by head of Karaj militia



      A young man was killed, on Friday evening, by several bullets shot to his head and neck area by the head of the local militia in a suburb city of the Greater Tehran. This new murder, by an Islamic regime's agent, took place in the Town of Karaj which is located at 40 KM of the center of the Capital.The victim's name has been reported as "Majid" and his murderer is the brutal Militia's Colonel "Atta-ie".
      Karaj's youth is well known for having opposed the Islamic regime at several occasion, and the area, especially the Fardis district, is one of the bastions of resistance to the Islamic regime.The situation is at a level that the regime's security forces have increased the application of public intimidation of all kind, such as, stopping and questioning the residents or to parade arrested young Karajis in order to humiliate them.
      As an example, a high dosage of morphine was injected to the young "Akbar Samavati" and he was paraded in the city earlier on Friday. A pacifier was put in his mouth while his hands were tied up to a stick in the shape of a cross and several water pots were hanged around his neck.He was officially accused of "creating social trouble".It's believed that Majid's death is the result of the expression of his anger due to disgust from witnessing the "Mao/Chinese Cultural Revolution Style" of humiliating parade forced to Akbar.
      Indeed many residents were seen, on Friday, denouncing the repressive show and even some insulting openly the militiamen.What was supposed to be also a way to increase public fear and to help "pacify" the area turned, in reality, against the Islamic regime itself and helped increase the already existing tension.


      Sunday, October 09, 2005

      URGENT ACTION


      Amnesty International





      Imminent execution
      IRAN
      Abu Baker Mirza'i Qaderi (m)
      Othman Mirza'i Qaderi (m)
      Qader Ahmadi (m)
      Jahangir Badouzadeh (m
      IRAN The four Kurdish men named above are
      all reportedly facing imminent execution.
      They are held in Oromiye Prison, in western Iran.

      The four Kurdish men named above are all reportedly facing imminent execution. They are held in OromiyePrison, in western Iran. The first three men, from Bokan in West Azerbaijan province, are apparently accused of working for a Kurdish opposition group, the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI).
      They are thought to have been part of a group of Iranian soldiers who were captured by the KDPI in 1984 and later released because they were Kurds. They went into hiding shortly afterwards, but apparently returned to their home town of Bokan earlier this year. The fact that the KDPI released them is said to have raised the authorities’ suspicions that they had become involved with the organization, and has now led, 21 years later, to their arrest.
      There are unconfirmed reports that a fourth Kurd held in Oromiye Prison, Jahangir Badouzadeh, is also be facing imminent execution. It is not known what he has been convicted of.
      BACKGROUND INFORMATION
      The KDPI seeks the "establishment of a democratic federal Iran and the attainment of Kurdish national rights in Iranian Kurdistan", and states that it rejects all acts of terrorism and...planting bombs in public places. Unrest broke out in the Kurdish areas of Iran following the July 2005 killing of a Kurdish opposition activist, Shivan Qaderi. It has led to scores of deaths, and mass arrests of Kurds, including human rights defenders. On 3 September, Esma’il Mohammadi, a Kurd accused of activities on behalf of a banned Kurdish political party, Komala, was executed in Oromiye Prison (for details see UA 236/03, MDE 13/028/03, 8 August 2003 and follow-ups). Another Kurd, Mohammad Panjavini, was also reportedly executed at the same time, apparently for his activities on behalf of another Kurdish group called Agri Soor.
      Amnesty International fears that the Iranian authorities may be stepping up the execution of imprisoned Kurdish opposition activists in response to the recent unrest.
      SEE THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE

      OMCT - - Lawyer Abdolfattah Soltani detained incommunicado since two months

      Iran Testimony


      Geneva-Paris, September 30, 2005. The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint programme of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), and the League for the Defence of Human Rights in Iran (LDDHI) reiterate their deepest concern about the situation of Mr. Abdolfattah Soltani, lawyer at the Bar of Tehran and a founding member of the Defenders of Human Rights Centre (DHRC), who has been detained in solitary confinement since July 30, 2005, at the prison of Evin, Tehran.

      Mr. Abdolfattah Soltani was arrested while he was taking part in a sit-in at the Bar of Tehran in order to protest against an arrest warrant issued against him by Mr. Saïd Mortazavi, Tehran Prosecutor, three days before, as well as against the search and seizure of his personal and professional belongings*.

      Mr. Soltani was accused of “espionage”, without any other precisions. Since the beginning of his detention, he has been denied the right to have access to a lawyer and to receive the visit of his family.

      The Observatory and the LDDHI believe that his arrest is linked to the role played by Mr. Soltani in Ms. Zahra Kazemi’s trial, an Iranian-Canadian photographer who died in July 2003 from torture and ill-treatment during her detention in Iranian custody, and brought before Tehran Court of Appeal to establish the circumstances of her death and the responsible parties. On July 25, 2005, during a hearing in camera of the Court of Appeal, Mr. Soltani, lawyer of Ms. Zahra Kazemi’s family, put into question the independence and fairness of the trial, pointing out that the main officials allegedly involved in the case had not been indicted by the court, including Mr. Saïd Mortazavi.

      The Observatory and the LDDHI recall that in October 2003, the Article 90 Commission of the Majlis (Iranian Parliament) released its report of enquiry into Mrs Kazemi's death, which concluded that Prosecutor Mortazavi and other members of the judiciary were directly involved in her death, as a result of violent interrogation in Evin prison.
      The Observatory and the LDDHI are deeply concerned about Mr. Soltani’s arbitrary detention, which is part of a general repressive movement against human rights lawyers by Iranian authorities. In this regard, the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and Expression, after his visit in Iran in November 2003, expressed concern regarding the fact that “lawyers do not benefit from immunity from prosecution with regard to what they say in court in defence of their clients or for statements they make on a case”.

      Moreover, in July 2002, Mr. Soltani had already been convicted for having underlined in his defence pleadings the fact that his clients had been subjected to ill-treatment during their interrogation. He was sentenced to four months in jail by the Court of Tehran and released in June 2003 (See Observatory Annual Report 2003).

      The Observatory and the LDDHI consider that the detention of Mr. Soltani blatantly violates the provisions of the Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 9, 1998, in particular article 1 which stipulates that “everyone has the right, individually or in association with others, to promote and to strive for the protection an realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and international level”, and article 9.3(c), which provides that everyone has the right “to offer and provide professionally qualified legal assistance or other relevant advice and assistance in defending human rights and fundamental freedoms”.
      Because detained in solitary confinement, the Observatory and the LDDHI fear that Mr. Soltani faces increased risks of being subject to ill-treatment and acts of torture.

      The Observatory and the LDDHI therefore urge the Iranian authorities to ensure the immediate and unconditional release of Mr. Abdolfattah Soltani.

      The Observatory and the LDDHI also urge them to conform with the provisions of the Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, and more generally, with the provisions of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other regional and international human rights instruments to which Iran is a party .


      *See Observatory Urgent Appeals IRN 002/0705/OBS 055, dated July 28, 2005 and IRN 002/0705/OBS 055.1, dated August 4, 2005.



      For more information, please contact:
      FIDH: 00 33 1 43 55 25 18
      OMCT: 00 41 22 809 49 39
      LDDHI : 00 33 1 40 94 14 50


      Saturday, October 08, 2005

      Canada to approach UN on Iran's human rights record


      Iran testimony
      Toronto: Canada plans to table a resolution in the United Nations condemning Iran for its poor human rights record, Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew announced Wednesday.Following the torture death of a Canadian photojournalist in a Tehran prison, Canada has continued a campaign to shed light on that country's rights issues."Given that Canada has seen no credible evidence of any improvement in the human rights situation in Iran, for the third year in a row, we will table a resolution on Iran's record on human rights," said Pettigrew.

      He added, "A membership at the United Nations is a privilege as well as a responsibility. In that regard, by virtue of its membership of the UN General Assembly, a country acknowledges that it must address concerns from the global community. Iran has not lived up to its international human rights obligations and has not conformed with past UN resolutions on this matter. We believe this must change.
      "Although the resolution welcomed Iran's announcement of a ban on torture and the country's cooperation with the UN in developing human rights programs, it highlighted serious concerns with regard to Iran's human rights record. The resolution called upon the Iranian government to abide by its international human rights obligations, to cooperate with the UN special procedures that address human rights requirements, to implement the UN's recommendations and to set a date for a visit by the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.
      The resolution further called upon Iran to fully implement the ban on torture, to end amputation and flogging, to abolish execution by stoning and to expedite the creation of offices of the prosecutor in all provinces, among other things.
      In 2003 and 2004, Canada worked with other members of the international community to present a resolution at the UN General Assembly on the human rights situation in Iran. The General Assembly adopted the 2004 resolution on December 20 with 71 votes in favour, 54 against and 55 abstentions.

      Friday, October 07, 2005

      Beatings, torture and threats of execution to political prisoners


      Iran Press News

      Behrooz Javid-Tehrani has written a letter of complaint about the beatings, torture and threats of execution while under interrogation. In the letter he has specified that during the inquisition-style question and answer sessions in Evin prison's ward 209 (the solitary ward famous for it's horrors) the ribs on the right side of his body were broken and he sustained long-term head injuries. He said: "With this letter I am lodging a formal complaint against my interrogators."

      Javid-Tehran who is presently being detained at Rejaiishahr prison in the Tehran suburb of Karadj, has been suffering from dizziness and incremental loss of vision due to the head injury. The prison doctor has also attributed Javid-Tehrani's headaches and blurred vision to those very blows to his head.It is important to mention that at present his case has been referred to the medical examiner and with corroborating evidence to his file which also contains an X-ray of his ribs, taken in the prison infirmary, has implicated the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) and his team of interrogators.

      Strangely his interrogators, during the course of the grilling were trying to force him to admit to being a sympathizer of the Mojehedeen Khalq (also known as MEK, MKO or National Council of Resistance).
      Behrooz Javid-Tehrani has written a letter of complaint about the beatings, torture and threats of execution while under interrogation. In the letter he has specified that during the inquisition-style question and answer sessions in Evin prison's ward 209 (the solitary ward famous for it's horrors) the ribs on the right side of his body were broken and he sustained long-term head injuries. He said: "With this letter I am lodging a formal complaint against my interrogators."

      Javid-Tehran who is presently being detained at Rejaiishahr prison in the Tehran suburb of Karadj, has been suffering from dizziness and incremental loss of vision due to the head injury. The prison doctor has also attributed Javid-Tehrani's headaches and blurred vision to those very blows to his head.It is important to mention that at present his case has been referred to the medical examiner and with corroborating evidence to his file which also contains an X-ray of his ribs, taken in the prison infirmary, has implicated the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) and his team of interrogators.

      Strangely his interrogators, during the course of the grilling were trying to force him to admit to being a sympathizer of the Mojehedeen Khalq (also known as MEK, MKO or National Council of Resistance).

      Tuesday, August 09, 2005










      MORE SHOCKING PICTURES FROM IRAN







      Iran: Torture/ill-treatment/prisoner of conscience - Akbar Ganji,


      Iran: Further information on Imminent execution


      Prisoners of conscience/fear of torture or ill-treatment


      Disappearance"/ Possible forcible return/Incommunicado detention/


      POLITICAL EXECUTIONS


      CHILDREN AND THE DEATH PENALTY


      1989 REPORT


      1987-1990 REPORT


      Report About Iran from January to December 2000


      Report about Iran from January to December 2001


      Report About Iran from January - December 2002


      Report About Iran from January - December 2003


      Dead penalty 2003









      Torture, Detention, and the Crushing of Dissent in Iran









      Iran: Government Report Acknowledges Torture In Prisons


      Annual Report 2004By:
      Iranian Human Rights Activists Groups
      includes the information officially
      reported by the media in Iran



      INFORMATION ABOUT ZAHRA
      KASEMI AN IRANINA CANADIAN JURNALIST WHO GOT
      KILLED IN IRAN BY THE REGIME FO RTALKING
      PICTURES FROM THE POLITICAL PRISONERS


      AN IMPORTANT DOCUMENT IN PERSIAN ABOUT THE RULE
      OF AHMADI NEJAD IN KILLING THOUSAND OF
      IRANIANS



      My Gratitude to Iran Testimony Group which helped
      in gathering a lot of these information
      ____________________________
    • BLOG IN SPANISH
    • BLOG IN GERMAN
    • BLOG IN FRENCH
    • BLOG IN PORTUGUESE
    • BLOG IN ITALIAN
    • ______________________________ ARTICLES WRITTEN BY THE INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS ABOUT OPPRESSION OF IRAN'S REGIME TOWARD ITS OWN PEOPLE _________________________
    • Children And The Death Penalty
    • Political Executions
    • Torture of Dissent in Iran
    • Iran: Death Penalty for Drinking Alcohol
    • Tortur Of Prisoner Akbar Ganji,
    • Imminent Execution In Iran
    • Iranian adultress sentenced to death by stoning
    • Young man killed by head of Karaj militia
    • 1989 REPORT
    • 1987-1990 REPORT
    • Report About Iran from January to December 2000
    • Report about Iran from January to December 2001
    • Report About Iran from January - December 2002
    • Report About Iran from January - December 2003
    • Annual Report 2004By: Iranian Human Rights Activists Groupsincludes the information officiallyreported by the media in Iran
    • Information About Zahra Kasemi An Iranian Canadian Jurnalist Who Got Killed In Iran By The Regime's Agents
    • Beatings, Torture And Threats Of Execution To Political Prisoners
    • Iran: Government Report Acknowledges Torture In Prisons
    • An Important Document In Persian About The Rule Of Ahmadi Nejad In Killing Thusand Of Iranians
    • ______________________________ Pictures And Videos _________________________
    • Shocking Pictures From Iran
    • Watch A Documentary About Forbidden Iran From PBS ________________________
    • Blogs In Support Of Democracy For Iran †
    • View my complete profile
    • 300 the movie _________________________
    • Iranian Blogers in Jail
    • Amnesty International
    • Iran Testimony
    • Human Rights In Iran
    • Committee To Protect Bloggers
    • Gooya
    • Support Ganji
    • Blogers In Jail
    • Cyrus The Great
    • Freedom
    • Student Movements
    • Daneshjoo
    • activist chat
    • love america first
    • My Newz n Ideas
    • knicker bocker news
    • Regime Chnage Iran
    • komitedefaŒ

    • Join the Blue Ribbon Online Free Speech Campaign

    • View my complete profile
    • Technorati Profile

      Powered by Blogger