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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Montazeri’s revelations and Iran’s crime against humanity
2016-08-20
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] "You [Iranian officials] will be in the future etched in the annals of history as criminals. The greatest crime committed under the Islamic Theocratic Republic, from the beginning of the Revolution until now, which will be condemned by history, is this crime [mass executions] committed by you." Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri warns the Islamic Theocratic Republic ‐ the Judiciary, intelligence, the IRGC and all other officials involved, in an audio disclosed recently.

Montazeri’s son, Ahmad, a moderate holy man, posted the audio on his website but was ordered by the intelligence to remove it.

Born in Esfahan, Iran, Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri was one of the founding fathers of the Islamic Theocratic Republic, a human rights
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Terror Networks
Jail sentence for Iran activist
2010-09-19
[Al Jazeera] An Iranian court has sentenced a prominent human rights activist to six years in prison on various anti-government charges, a semi-official Iranian news agency has reported.

ILNA news agency said on Saturday that Shiva Nazar Ahari was convicted of gathering and plotting to commit crimes against the Iranian state, propaganda against the establishment and waging war against God, a crime punishable by death under the Islamic Theocratic Republic's Sharia law.

Nazar Ahari, the 26-year-old founder of the Committee of Human Rights Reporters in Tehran, was jugged in December on her way to the funeral of Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, the spiritual adviser of the Green movement which opposed the re-election of Mahmoud Short Round Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, last June.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran arrests holy man close to Montazeri
2010-01-16
[Al Arabiya Latest] Iran arrested a cleric close to late dissident Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri and warned opposition supporters against using text and email messages to organize rallies, opposition media and ISNA news agency reported Friday.

Mid-ranking cleric "Hojjatoleslam Mohammad Taghi Khalaji was arrested at his home in the city of Qom on Tuesday," Norooznews said. "The cause of his arrest is not known yet but he had on several occasions backed protests against election results" which saw President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad returned for a second term amid allegations of massive fraud.

Meanwhile, Iran's police chief has warned opposition supporters against using text and email message to stage anti-government protests, ISNA news agency reported. "These people should know where they are sending the SMS and email as these systems are under control. They should not think using proxies will prevent their identification," Esmail Ahmadi Moghaddam said. "If these people continue, their (data) records will be examined and those who organize or issue appeals have committed a worse crime than those who come to the streets," he warned.

Iran's cyber-savvy young opposition supporters have used the Internet effectively since unrest erupted in Iran after the disputed June 12 presidential election to organize demonstrations and spread news and pictures.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Ex-spy chief says Iran government about to collapse
2010-01-04
A former high-ranking intelligence official in Iran has called for his country to form better relations with the United States and Israel and says the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is on the verge of collapse. In an exclusive interview with the Bangkok Post Sunday, Mohammad Reza Madhi, a former officer in Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards' intelligence service, described Mr Ahmadinejad as ''crazy'' and unfit to lead his country.
Mr. Madhi is certainly right about that, but it doesn't follow that Madhi himself is sane and accurate in his predictions.
''He has already destroyed international relationships with many countries and made them enemies of Iran,'' said Mr Madhi, who was forced to flee Iran in 2008 after being jailed for 73 years on what he described as ''trivial'' charges. ''This has cost the Iranian people so much. His ideas are dangerous.''

Iran's opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi said on Friday he was ready to sacrifice his life in defence of the people's right to protest peacefully against the government after the worst unrest since the disputed June presidential election.

Mr Madhi, who says he was once the right-hand man of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and passed on information to respected cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, who died last month, has been in regular contact with the opposition Green Path of Hope group since he left Iran. He said while his country should remain the Islamic Republic of Iran, religion and politics must be separated. ''The good clerics should help the people and the government, while the bad ones should be ousted from government,'' he said.

Mr Madhi said a motivation for Iran improving international relations was the poor economic situation in the country and the need for it to be part of a globalised world economy.

''We cannot close our eyes to the United States and Europe. They are strong political and economic powerhouses. If Iran is to prosper, we need to have good relationships _ both political and economic _ with everyone, including Russia.'' On Israel, he said: ''It is the Iranian government which doesn't recognise its right to exist, but the Iranian people might think differently.

''Israel's internal problems are its own affairs, not ours. We shouldn't get involved. It shouldn't concern us. My view is that Israel has the right to exist. We should recognise it.''

Mr Madhi was highly critical of Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, a spiritual adviser to a group of hard-line fundamentalists closely connected to senior leaders in the current Iranian government. ''He is a very crazy man who hates Israel and the United States especially. Unfortunately, President Ahmadinejad is one of his big fans as well.''

The former intelligence officer said that instead of imposing sanctions, western nations should look to supporting opposition groups and not recognise the Ahmadinejad government.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
The Mullahs Strike Back - arrest 1000+; Lash out at West
2009-12-29
Iranian authorities continued arresting hundreds of opposition members and accused the United States and Britain on Tuesday of orchestrating the violent demonstrations that rocked the capital and other cities on Sunday. The sister of Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi was detained on Monday night...Iranian authorities arrested at least a dozen opposition figures on Monday, including former Foreign Minister Ibrahim Yazdi, the human rights activist Emad Baghi and three top aides to the former presidential candidate Mir Hussein Moussavi, Iranian news sites reported.

All told, more than 1,500 people have been arrested nationwide since Sunday, including 1,110 in Tehran and 400 in the central Iranian city of Isfahan, the pro-opposition Jaras Web site reported.A 27-year-old journalist who was reporting on the street clashes on Sunday was reported missing. The reporter, Redha al-Basha, who was working for Dubai TV, has not been heard from, according to a statement issued by Dubai TV. Mr. Basha was last seen surrounded by security forces in Tehran, witnesses said.

The group Human Rights Activists in Iran said that the 1,100 people arrested in Tehran were being held in Evin Prison, the Gooya Web site reported.

Among those arrested in Isfahan was the son of a senior cleric, Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri. Ayatollah Taheri is the former Isfahan representative of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his son Muhammad is married to the granddaughter of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the father of Iran’s 1979 revolution.

Ayatollah Taheri tried last week to lead a memorial service for the dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, who died Dec. 20. The arrest of his son was viewed as an effort by the authorities to pressure the ayatollah.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran police, protesters clash during Shiite rituals
2009-12-27
[Al Arabiya Latest] A reformist website said Iranian riot police fired tear gas to disperse opposition supporters who used a Shiite religious mourning ceremony on Saturday to try to revive anti-government protests in the Islamic Republic.

"Police are firing tear gas to disperse a huge crowd in Imam Hossein square ... but people are resisting and chanting slogans against the government," the Jaras website reported.

The same website earlier on Saturday said security forces "fiercely" confronted opposition backers in different parts of the capital.

"Police sought to disperse about 200 to 300 people who wanted to gather in Enghelab square. They beat up some and detained several people," an AFP correspondent said, adding that demonstrators were shouting "death to the dictator."

Small groups of people also gathered around the nearby Tehran university -- a hotbed of anti-government protests -- with some shouting slogans and at least two people were seen arrested.

"Riot police are fiercely confronting the opposition supporters in different parts of Tehran ... they (the police) are also breaking windows of cars passing the area," Jaras said.

Iran police chief Esmail Ahmadi Moghaddam issued a fresh warning Saturday against attempts to use Shiite processions marking the Ashura rituals as a means to stage fresh protests against the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

"Police will severely crack down on rioters. We will identify and arrest riot leaders," he was quoted as saying by the official ISNA news agency.

Six months after a disputed election plunged Iran into political turmoil, tension has again mounted in the major oil producer after death a week ago of leading dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri at the age of 87.

Montazeri's death occurred in the tense run-up to Ashura on Dec. 27, an important Shiite religious commemoration that offers the opposition another opportunity to show its strength. That day coincides with the seventh day of mourning for Montazeri, when more memorial services are usually held.

On Ashura, Shiite Muslims commemorate the 7th century death of Imam Hossein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad.

Religious ceremonies are also traditionally held across Iran on the day before Ashura, called Tasoua.


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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Reporters attacked in crackdown by Iran militia
2009-12-27
IRAN was braced for more violent clashes today as opposition demonstrators planned further mass rallies, which are expected to lead to fresh confrontations between protesters and security forces.

Tension was running high at rallies yesterday in which soldiers of the elite Revolutionary Guard and the paramilitary Basiji used tear gas and pepper spray and fired warning shots into the air to disperse demonstrators chanting anti-government slogans in three areas of central Tehran. They also smashed the windows of cars that were hooting in protest.

The reports by opposition websites could not be independently verified because foreign journalists are banned from covering opposition rallies. But one eyewitness said opposition supporters had gathered in groups along one of the capital’s main streets, with the police out in force to keep them apart.

The opposition Jaras website claimed security forces had attacked a building housing Isna, an Iranian news agency, where it said some demonstrators had sought shelter during the clashes. An eyewitness said at least two people were injured when police chased after protesters into the building.

“They fractured the skull of one Isna person and badly beat up another employee,” the witness said. Isna’s news service appeared to be working normally and it later issued a report on the incident, saying one of its reporters had been injured without specifying who was to blame.

Iran has been marking the first 10 days of the Islamic month of Muharram, a time of mourning for the 7th-century martyrdom of the grandson of the prophet Muhammad. The opposition has used this religious commemoration to revive anti-government protests which have flared sporadically since June’s disputed presidential elections.

Yesterday the opposition urged people to gather again today to mark Ashura, the tense climax of the commemoration which also coincides with the seventh day since the death of Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, Iran’s most senior dissident cleric. The death at 87 of this fierce critic of Iran’s hardline clerical establishment has given new impetus to the protests. Montazeri was an architect of the 1979 Islamic revolution and was named as successor to the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as supreme leader. He fell from grace after criticising the mass execution of prisoners in the late 1980s.

Significantly, the memorials last week for Montazeri attracted not only young urban activists, who filled the ranks of the earlier protests, but also older, more religious Iranians who revered Montazeri on grounds of faith as much as politics. He was the spiritual patron of the movement supporting Mir Hossein Mousavi, the opposition candidate, in the June election.

Esmail Ahmadi Moghaddam, Iran’s police chief, has threatened to take tough action against protesters.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran cleric urges unity during Shiite ceremonies
2009-12-26
Unity .. or else.
TEHRAN, Dec 25, 2009 - A senior hardline cleric Friday urged Iranians not to misuse Ashura ceremonies this weekend to create “disunity”, amid police warnings of a crackdown on illegal gatherings during the solemn Shiite event.

“Our mourning ceremonies for Imam Hussein should not make the enemies of Islam pleased since Imam Hussein is ... the symbol of unity, so the ceremonies should not be used as platform for disunity,” said Ahmad Khatami, addressing a Friday prayer service at Tehran University broadcast live on state radio.

Hardliner Khatami, one of a small group of clerics who deliver the main weekly Friday prayers in Tehran, was appointed by Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He is also member of the Assembly of Experts, which selects the supreme leader and supervises his activities.

The 10-day Ashura ceremonies, which climax on Sunday, commemorate the death of Imam Hussein, one of Shiite Islam’s most revered figures, at the hands of the armies of the Sunni caliph Yazid in 680 AD. The ceremonies are marked in Shiite majority countries such as Iran and Iraq by processions in which mainly young men flagellate their bare backs with chains, as well as by mass gatherings of devotees chanting the praises of Imam Hussein. The rituals gather momentum on Saturday and culminate on Sunday in crowded mourning ceremonies at mosques and in public places.

Deputy police chief General Ahmad Reza Radan said on Wednesday that his forces will crack down on any illegal gatherings during Ashura if they crossed the “red lines,” without specifying what constituted the red lines.

Opponents of hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s controversial June re-election have recently used a series of major public events supported by the authorities to mount protests.

On Monday, hundreds of thousands of people poured onto the streets of the holy city of Qom for the funeral of dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, chanting anti-government slogans and effectively turning the ceremony into an opposition rally, websites said.

Since then Tehran has clamped down on memorial services for the cleric, leading to clashes and arrests when mourners attempted to meet at a mosque for a service in the city of Isfahan on Wednesday, opposition websites reported.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran warns opposition of fierce confrontation
2009-12-24
[Al Arabiya Latest] Iran police chief said on Wednesday the opposition would face a "fierce" confrontation if its "illegal" activities continued, the semi-official Fars news agency reported, following anti-government rallies in some cities.

"We advise this movement to end their activities. Otherwise those who violate the order will be fiercely confronted, based on the law," Fars quoted police chief Esmail Ahmadi-Moqadam as saying.

A reformist website earlier reported that security forces have arrested at least 50 opposition supporters in the central city of Isfahan.

"Over 50 protesters, including four Iranian journalists have been arrested in Isfahan during clashes with the security forces," Parlemannews website said.

The website said that security forces clashed with supporters of late dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri in at least two cities, including his birthplace.

"Sporadic clashes started from Tuesday night in Najafabad and still continued. The situation is tense in the city. People are chanting anti-government slogans," the Jaras website reported.

It also said "many" demonstrators were injured during clashes with the security forces in the central city of Isfahan.

"Security forces clashed with pro-reform protesters ... who gathered to commemorate ... Montazeri's demise," Jaras said.

"Police fired teargas to disperse people ... many people were injured ... some arrested."


In Isfahan, plainclothes security agents surrounded the house of a leading pro-reform cleric Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri, Jaras reported.

The reported incidents took place two days after huge crowds turned out in the Shiite holy city of Qom for the funeral of Montazeri, and many chanted anti-government slogans, websites reported.

The reports from the two cities could not be verified independently because foreign media are banned from reporting directly on protests.

Iran's government supporters staged counter rallies in Qom on Tuesday, official Iranian media reported.

Montazeri, who died on Saturday at the age of 87, was an architect of the 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-backed shah and was once named to succeed Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as supreme leader of the Islamic state. But Montazeri fell from grace after criticizing the mass execution of prisoners.

The June 12 presidential election, which the opposition leaders say was rigged to secure President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election, has plunged the Islamic Republic into a crisis of legitimacy.

Supporters of the opposition, who have seized occasions marked in the Islamic revolutionary calendar to raise their voices, staged fresh anti-government rallies in Iran after Montazeri's death.

Iranian authorities deny any vote-rigging.

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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
New wave of opposition protests in Isfahan
2009-12-24
Iranian security forces violently suppressed opposition supporters in the city of Isfahan yesterday as tensions increased before nationwide demonstrations planned for this weekend.

Two days after massive demonstrations in the holy city of Qom, clashes erupted in Isfahan, Iran’s third city, as thousands of mourners gathered for a memorial service for Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, the opposition’s spiritual leader, who died at the weekend. Opposition websites said riot police and Basij militiamen surrounded the Seyed mosque from early in the morning, and then attacked the mourners with batons, teargas and pepper gas.

Many were injured and dozens were arrested, including four journalists and a cleric, Masoud Abid, who was to deliver the sermon. Reformist website Parlemannews reported that more than 50 people were detained.

“Montazeri mourners shouted slogans against the top authorities,” another website, Rahesabz, reported. “They are beating protesters, including women and children, with batons, chains and stones.” Farid Salavati, an Isfahan resident who tried to attend the memorial, said that tens of thousands gathered outside the mosque but were savagely attacked by security forces. He saw baton-wielding riot police clubbing people around the head and kicking men and women, injuring dozens. “I saw at least two people with blood pouring down their face,” he said.

Security forces also sealed off the home of Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri, who organised the service and used to lead Friday prayers in Isfahan until he resigned in 2002 in protest at the regime’s growing authoritarianism. “I tried six different ways to get to the mosque, but they were all blocked,” Parlemannews quoted him as saying. “Treating people this way at a memor-ial service is deplorable.”

Mohammad Khatami, the reformist former President, condemned the violence in Isfahan, which is 200 miles southeast of Tehran: “Imam Khomeini [Iran’s revolutionary leader] believed that the Islamic Republic was based on two pillars — freedom and independence.

“If these pillars become shaky . . . we will have tyranny again,” he said. “Calling anyone who raises his voice a traitor, despite him believing in the [Islamic] system, is a major deviation.”

Clashes also erupted in nearby Najafabad, Montazeri’s home town, on Tuesday night and continued yesterday. “The situation is tense in the city. People are chanting anti-government slogans,” Jaras, another opposition website reported. The regime appears to be moving aggressively against the opposition ahead of the emotionally charged holiday of Ashura this weekend, when millions of Shias take to the streets to mourn the 7th-century martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, at the hands of the Sunni caliph Yazid.

The so-called Green movement, which has grown adept at hijacking public events that the regime cannot cancel, is planning to turn the day into another massive demonstration. Montazeri’s death will raise the temperature even further, as Sunday will be the seventh day since his death — an important date in Shia mourning ritual.

On Tuesday the regime dismissed Mir Hossein Mousavi, the de facto opposition leader whom Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defeated in June’s hotly disputed presidential election, from his position as head of Iran’s Academy of Arts — a post he held for ten years. Dariush Ghanbari, a prominent reformist MP, called his dismissal “a political decision stemming from electoral grudges”, and many of the academy’s members were said to be threatening to resign.

Hundreds of Basiji were reported to have attacked the offices in Qom of Grand Ayatollah Yusuf Sanei, the reformist cleric who is expected to replace Montazeri as the conscience of the nation and chief clerical scourge of the regime. They broke windows and beat his staff, according to opposition website Norooznews.

Government supporters also staged counter rallies in Qom on Tuesday and yesterday. “This is the last time that something like that will happen in Qom. This is not a place for hypocrites,” Grand Ayatollah Hossein Nouri Hamedani told them.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran militia attack pro-reform cleric's home in Qom
2009-12-23
The home of a senior pro-reform cleric Ayatollah Yousaf Sanei was attacked by members of an Islamic militia and "plainclothes men" in the holy city of Qom on Tuesday, a reformist website said.

The Norooz site said attackers insulted Sanei, beat up some of his associates and broke windows. There was no immediate official comment. The reported incident took place a day after the funeral procession of Iran's leading dissident cleric, Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri. It said the people gathered at the funeral were chanting anti-government slogans. Earlier on Tuesday, the semi-official Fars News Agency said pro-government theology students had staged a rally in Qom to protest "the insult against sanctities" during Montazeri's funeral procession. The news agency said the demonstration ended outside Sanei's home but it was not clear whether it was linked to the attack on Sanei's house as reported by Norooz.

The demonstrators chanted, "The city of Qom is no city for hypocrites," and signed a statement calling for Sanei to be defrocked, Fars reported. One of the signatories, cleric Ahmad Panahian, said: "The trenches of the hypocrites in Qom must be destroyed."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Clashes at Montazeri funeral
2009-12-22
[Al Arabiya Latest] Hard-line vigilantes clashed with mourners at the funeral of Iran's top dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri in the city of Qom on Monday, opposition websites reported.

"The present crowd in the procession has been estimated at hundreds of thousands of people and they were also shouting slogans in his support, and also in support of (opposition leader) Mirhossein Mousavi," Jaras website reported.

The report could not be independently verified as foreign media have been banned from travelling to Qom for the event.

" The present crowd in the procession has been estimated at hundreds of thousands of people and they were also shouting slogans in his support, and also in support of Mirhossein Mousavi "
Quote from Jaras website
Kaleme also reported Mousavi has arrived in the holy city of Qom earlier to take part in the funeral but that Iranian security forces stopped a bus carrying opposition supporters on their way to the funeral.

Mousavi and another opposition leader urged their supporters on Sunday to attend the funeral and announced a day of national mourning for Montazeri, the same reformist website reported earlier.

The official IRNA news agency, in its first report on the funeral procession, said mourners carrying the coffin "calmly" entered Qom's main religious shrine where prayers would be held. It did not give any details on the size of the crowd.

Fars, a semi-official news agency, later said Montazeri had been buried at the shrine.

Hard-line and pro-government "Ansar Hezbollah groups entered the crowd and wanted to derail the slogans and disrupt the ceremony. They went away after clashing with some people," another reformist website said.

The authorities have slowed Internet connections down to a crawl, as has been the case whenever opposition demonstrations are anticipated.
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