Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iranian reformist Karroubi to be released from house arrest, 14 years after leading Arab Spring protests |
2025-03-19 |
[IsrelTimes] Iranian opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi will be released from house arrest today, state media reports, 14 years after he was detained for calling for a rally in support of protests that swept the Arab world in 2011. “My father was told by security agents that his house arrest will end today,” his son Hossein Karroubi tells state news agency IRNA, adding that security agents will remain at the premises until April 8 due to security concerns. The 87-year-old, ailing mid-level cleric has remained defiant, questioning the legitimacy of the clerical establishment in statements published by pro-reform websites. After calling for a rally in solidarity with pro-democracy uprisings, Karroubi – along with ex-prime minister Mirhossein Mousavi and his wife Zahra Rahnavard, a prominent academic – was put under house arrest in February 2011. They have not been put on trial or publicly charged. Former parliament speaker Karroubi and Mousavi ran for election in 2009 and became figureheads for Iranians who staged eight months of mass protests after a vote they believed was rigged to bring back hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Karroubi’s son Hossein tells pro-reform Jamaran news website that his father demands the release of Mousavi. “They told my father that the same process … would be carried out for Mousavi within the next few months and Mousavi too would be released,” the Jamaran website quotes him as saying. Iran’s judiciary makes no comment. Karroubi, like Mousavi and Rahnavard, had been under round-the-clock surveillance by security guards initially living in his home. But conditions improved in past years for Karroubi, with some family and politicians allowed to visit him. Suffering from various medical complications, Karroubi has been taken to hospital several times for heart surgery and treatment. During his election campaign, Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian promised to make an effort for their release. Related: Mehdi Karroubi 12/01/2019 Iranian opposition leader compares Supreme Leader to toppled Shah Mehdi Karroubi 12/02/2018 Iran journalist Hengameh Shahidi gets 12 years for ‘insulting judiciary’ Mehdi Karroubi 07/30/2018 Iran approves release of protest leaders Mousavi, Karroubi: family |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Ahmadinejad: 'Head of anti-Mossad unit - was a Mossad agent' | ||
2024-10-01 | ||
He also claimed that in addition to the head of the unit, twenty Israeli Mossad agents were working with him and were responsible for directing significant intelligence operations inside Iran. Among others, according to Ahmadinejad, the same Mossad agents stole documents about the Iranian nuclear program and killed several Iranian nuclear scientists. He also claimed that all the agents managed to flee Iran before being caught and that they now live in Israel. Sigh of relief: agent SAK is safe! Ahmadinejad made this claim today for the first time, but as of now, no confirmation or, alternatively, a denial has been published by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. In recent years, Ahmadinejad has been far from the helm of power and has tried several times to run again for the position of president of Iran, but was disqualified. The last time he ran an election campaign was after the death of President Ebrahim Raisi in a plane crash.
Related: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 06/10/2024 Iran has named the candidates approved to run in the presidential election scheduled for June 28 Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 01/20/2023 Former Iranian president Rafsanjani’s son freed after seven years in jail Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 01/10/2023 Iran hands ex-president's daughter jail time for 'propaganda': Lawyer | ||
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iran has named the candidates approved to run in the presidential election scheduled for June 28 |
2024-06-10 |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Former Iranian president Rafsanjani’s son freed after seven years in jail |
2023-01-20 |
[IsraelTimes] Mehdi Hashemi Rafsanjani ... the fourth President of Iran. He was a member of the Assembly of Experts until he was eased out in 2011 He continues, for the moment, as Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council. In 2005 he ran for a third term as president, ultimately losing to rival Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in Khamenei's graces back then. In 1980 Rafsanjani survived an assassination attempt, during which he was seriously injured. He has been described as a centrist and a pragmatic conservativewithout all that much reason. He is currently being eased out of any position of actual influence or power and may be dead by the end of 2012... , 53, was convicted in 2015 of fraud, embezzlement and undermining national security, charges that he has previously denounced as ’politically motivated’. A son of former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has been sprung after serving more than seven years of a 10-year jail sentence for fraud, Iranian media reported Wednesday. Mehdi Hashemi Rafsanjani, 53, left Tehran’s Evin Prison late Tuesday, his lawyer Vahid Abolmaali said, quoted by the ISNA news agency. State prosecutors said his release was "conditional," ISNA reported. Hashemi Rafsanjani was convicted of fraud, embezzlement and undermining national security in August 2015, charges he had previously denounced as "politically motivated." He had served as a bigwig in Iran’s oil sector in the mid-2000s, a period when Norway’s Statoil and French energy company Total were suspected of paying bribes to obtain access to the Islamic Theocratic Republic’s hydrocarbon reserves. In 2018, a Gay Paree criminal court found Total guilty of "corruption of a foreign public agent" for payments made to Hashemi Rafsanjani for help in securing rights to the huge South Pars offshore gas field which Iran ![]() spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence... shares with Qatar ...an emirate on the east coast of the Arabian Peninsula. It sits on some really productive gas and oil deposits, which produces the highest per capita income in the world. They piss it all away on religion, financing the Moslem Brotherhood and several al-Qaeda affiliates. Home of nutbag holy manYusuf al-Qaradawi... in the Gulf. In 2009, Hashemi Rafsanjani aroused the anger of conservatives by forming a "vote protection committee" for that year’s presidential election. He actively supported reformist candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, whose allegations of large-scale fraud in favor of populist incumbent Mahmoud Short RoundAhmadinejad prompted mass protests. Mehdi’s father, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, served as president from 1989 to 1997 and was regarded as a moderate who supported improving ties with the West. Earlier this month, Rafsanjani’s daughter Faezeh Hashemi was sentenced to five years in prison for "collusion against the security of the country." She was arrested in September and convicted of inciting Tehran residents to join protests over the death in jug of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, who had been arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s strict dress code for women. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iran hands ex-president's daughter jail time for 'propaganda': Lawyer |
2023-01-10 |
[AlAhram] Iranian ... the fourth President of Iran. He was a member of the Assembly of Experts until he was eased out in 2011 He continues, for the moment, as Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council. In 2005 he ran for a third term as president, ultimately losing to rival Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in Khamenei's graces back then. In 1980 Rafsanjani survived an assassination attempt, during which he was seriously injured. He has been described as a centrist and a pragmatic conservativewithout all that much reason. He is currently being eased out of any position of actual influence or power and may be dead by the end of 2012... , has been sentenced to five years over "propaganda" and acts against national security, her lawyer told AFP on Monday. Hashemi was arrested in the capital Tehran on September 27 for encouraging residents to demonstrate amid nationwide protests sparked by Mahsa Amini's death. "My client, Ms Hashemi, was sentenced to five years in prison by the preliminary court," her lawyer Neda Shams said, adding she plans to appeal the verdict. The 60-year-old former politician and women's rights "The decision, which is not final, was communicated to me on Wednesday, and we will appeal it within the time frame allowed by law," added Shams. Hashemi has faced similar charges before, and in 2012 was arrested and sentenced to six months in prison for "propaganda against the Islamic republic". Last October, judiciary front man Massoud Setayeshi said without elaborating she had been sentenced in March "to 15 months in prison and two years of additional punishment including the prohibition of activities on the internet". Hashemi's late father, president between 1989 and 1997 who died in 2017, was considered a moderate and advocated improved ties with the West. Iranian authorities say hundreds of people, including members of the security forces, have been killed and thousands arrested in connection with the protests, which they generally describe as "riots". Four people have been executed, and the judiciary has said 13 others have been sentenced to death over the unrest. Six of these defendants have been granted retrials. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Jihad in Latin America: Illicit activities in the region fund Hezbollah |
2022-10-19 |
[JPost] The presence of jihadist groups in Latin America could grow due the region's tilt to the left. Jihadist groups currently have a broad presence in Latin America, where they find benefits that are crucial to their survival and operations, according to John Marulanda, author of the book Yihad en Latinoamérica (Jihad in Latin America). Marulanda is a defense and security consultant for multinational energy companies that have a presence on the continent. He is a retired colonel who held several senior positions in the Colombian military, including founder and commander of the 25th Aviation Brigade, founder and first director of the School of Civil-Military Relations, and commander of the Revéis Pizarro Mechanized Cavalry Group on the border with Venezuela. Iran’s presence in Latin America grew with the political alliance – some would say “bromance” – between then-Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez and his contemporaneous Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. They both led large oil-producing countries at the time. This political liaison allowed Iran to create a strong presence in Latin America and it was this Iranian prominence that facilitated the spread of Hezbollah cells across the continent. 'A BREWING PRESENCE OF ISLAMIC FIGHTERS' “We believe that there is a brewing presence of Islamic fighters scattered over the Latin American region,” he said. In the region, says Marulanda, we can see the presence of two jihadist actors, Iran and Hezbollah, with the latter subordinate to the former. Iran is the main sponsor of jihad all over the world, while Hezbollah is in this case the representative or the one who carries the name of jihad in Latin America, he adds. Marulanda notes that jihadist groups do not represent an imminent risk for Latin America – at least for now. “But it is important to point out that jihadists that belonged to Hezbollah were the ones who carried out the terror attack on the Israeli Embassy and later on the AMIA [Jewish center] in 1994 in Buenos Aires, Argentina,” says Marulanda. “These are the two most severe terrorist attacks in Latin America that emerged from Islamist extremism,” he says. However, Marulanda notes that as jihad has in the past represented an immediate risk of terrorist attacks in Latin America, today its presence has a different connotation. He explains that these groups have two main objectives in the region. The first one, according to Marulanda, is to collect intelligence on soft targets that Israel or the United States have in Latin America, a region where most people follow the Catholic faith. The second, he says, is to be involved in all illicit activities in the region, such as smuggling, drug trafficking, falsification of documents and money laundering. These illicit activities, he says, take place in areas such as the tripartite border between Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay, the border between Colombia and Venezuela close to the city of Maicao, or even in the Chetumal region between Mexico and Belize. “These are suitable regions to be the focus of groups such as Hezbollah and other jihadist organizations, to proliferate or finance themselves,” he explains. HEZBOLLAH LINKS TO DRUG TRAFFICKING ACROSS AMERICA Hezbollah launders money that comes from drug trafficking in these territories through banks banned by the American and other world governments, which nonetheless still operate in Latin America. Marulanda notes that while Iran permanently finances Hezbollah, the current economic woes of the Islamic Republic have had an impact on that funding. “It is important to remember that Hezbollah is a legal party in Lebanon, but part of the organization is illegal [in much of the world], and after the Middle East, its second-largest center of operations is in Latin America. The money that it earns from illegal activities [there] finances about 60% or 70%” of its operations, he said. He says that the US government transfers money in a legal and legitimate manner through the United Nations to Palestinian groups in Latin America, which rely on the help of the international community. But, according to Marulanda, “many times, that money is redirected to Hezbollah.” HEZBOLLAH EMBOLDENED DUE TO IRANIAN PRESENCE Furthermore, Marulanda says, Hezbollah has a strong support system in Latin America that is heavily bolstered by Iranian diplomatic missions in the region. The jihadist organizations in Latin America are also associated with guerrilla groups such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). “We have information of how in Venezuela, drug trafficking and terrorist groups such as ELN [the National Liberation Army, a Marxist-Leninist guerrilla group in Colombia] and FARC have maintained permanent contact and joint training with Hezbollah.” Besides the Iranian diplomatic representation and local terror organizations, Marulanda says that the Venezuelan government also supports Hezbollah. He singles out Venezuelan Petroleum and Industries and National Production Minister Tareck El Aissami, a former vice president of the country. El Aissami is of Lebanese descent and has fully supported Iran and Hezbollah over the years, he says. According to Marulanda, Hezbollah even has training centers and many other facilities in Venezuela that they do not have in the rest of Latin America. However, he adds, that the new political tilt to the left in Latin America makes it likely that more countries will strengthen their ties to Iran, something that would create a political climate favorable to the operations of Hezbollah cells in the region. Marulanda says Hezbollah could target communities and institutions related to Israel, Jews and the United States, which should all be aware of the danger posed to them by the group’s presence in the region. “If the relationship between the US and Iran deteriorates in the event that negotiations over the [Iran] nuclear deal fail, it could cause an escalation” in terrorist activity, he warns. “These targets could be attacked to weaken the US presence in Latin America.” According to Marulanda, the US and the Israeli governments are the most concerned about the Hezbollah presence and activities in the region. “They have their own information methods, their own intelligence channels and bring the situation to the attention of the Latin American governments,” he says. In fact, he says, the Israeli government “has helped us a lot” with tracking everything that may be happening with Hezbollah in real-time. Today, there is not one country in Latin America that does not have a presence of Hezbollah cells of varying sizes, Marulanda says, but clarifies that this is not the only jihadist group in the region. Other than Hezbollah, Latin America once had the presence of al-Qaeda and now groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood and other smaller organizations are attempting to establish themselves in the region as well, he warns. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
IranYouth: Nothing Left to Lose |
2022-10-03 |
[TheAtlantic] In Iran, Raw Fury Is in the Air. If the demonstrations have one theme, it seems to be sheer hatred of the regime. “After Mahsa, everything is hanging by a hair.” Those words, spray-painted in red on a Tehran wall last week, sum up the atmosphere of rage and defiance that has consumed Iran since the death of Mahsa Amini, a young woman who died in police custody in mid-September after being arrested for failing to properly veil her hair. Rallies have turned progressively more violent. Videos captured on cellphone cameras show nightly scenes of terrifying bravery: women tearing off their veils and screaming at advancing lines of riot police. Dozens of protesters have been killed, and in some cities they have struck back, burning down police stations and killing the paramilitary thugs sent to suppress them. The Islamic Republic is not about to fall. But something is different this time. In 2009, I reported on the protests that shook the country after the disputed reelection of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Back then, reform was the ostensible goal. Demonstrators flooded the streets in support of a presidential candidate—Mir-Hossein Mousavi—who was himself a product of the Iranian system. This time, raw fury is in the air, a sense that protesters are girding themselves for war rather than liberation. Their chants suggest a new spirit of intransigence: “We will fight, we will die, we will get Iran back.” The protesters don’t seem to have illusions about their country blooming into democracy; this is not an Iranian spring. They are not inclined toward politics as a vehicle for change, and that in itself is a troubling sign. If the protests have one theme, it seems to be sheer hatred of the Iranian regime. The protests may be remembered as a defining experience for Iran’s Generation Z. One Iranian journalist friend told me he saw teenagers fighting armed Basij militias using methods learned from Clash of Clans, a popular video game. (The government blocked the game’s website soon afterward, he said.) “When you talk to middle-aged people, they tell you that these protests have changed their view of the generation born after 2000,” the journalist said. “They thought these kids were just into video games and music, but they have proved their bravery, their willingness to fight for liberty.” At the same time, the government’s own methods in recent days—hiding police in ambulances to infiltrate protest crowds—have deepened the public’s mistrust, he said. (The journalist asked not to be identified for fear of reprisal, citing the recent arrests of those who reported on the protests.) Although Amini’s death provided the spark for these protests, this revolt rises from a broader well of anger among a younger generation of Iranians who feel that they have nothing left to lose. By the time Amini walked out of a subway station in Tehran on September 15, the stage was already set for a confrontation. |
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Olde Tyme Religion | |
Daughter of Iran’s ex-president charged with propaganda, blasphemy | |
2022-07-06 | |
[IsraelTimes] Faezeh Hashemi indicted for reportedly saying demand to remove IRGC from US terror list is ’damaging’ to Tehran’s interests, referring to Mohammed’s daughter as a ’businesswoman’ The daughter of Iran’s former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani ... the fourth President of Iran. He was a member of the Assembly of Experts until he was eased out in 2011 He continues, for the moment, as Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council. In 2005 he ran for a third term as president, ultimately losing to rival Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in Khamenei's graces back then. In 1980 Rafsanjani survived an assassination attempt, during which he was seriously injured. He has been described as a centrist and a pragmatic conservativewithout all that much reason. He is currently being eased out of any position of actual influence or power and may be dead by the end of 2012... was charged with carrying out propaganda activity against the country and blasphemy ...the act of insulting or showing contempt or lack of reverence to a deity, or sacred objects, or toward something considered sacred or inviolable. Some religions consider it to be a crime. In Pakistain you can commit blasphemy by looking cross-eyed at a Koran... in social media comments, the judiciary said Sunday. "The indictment... has been issued and referred to the court on the charges of propaganda activity against the system of the Islamic Theocratic Republicof Iran ![]() and blasphemy," Tehran’s chief prosecutor Ali Salehi said, according to the judiciary’s website Mizan Online. The charges are connected to comments reportedly made by Faezeh Hashemi, 59, a former politician and a women’s rights Hashemi is reported to have said that Iran’s demand for the Revolutionary Guards — the ideological arm of the country’s military — to be removed from a US terror list was "damaging" to the country’s "national interests," according to local media. Removal of the terror designation of the Guards is a key sticking point in negotiations over restoring Tehran’s frayed 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. Hashemi also made separate comments concerning Khadija, the wife of the Prophet Mohammed. She is reported to have called Khadija a "businesswoman," showing that women can also engage in economic activity, and whose money the prophet spent. She later said the comments had been a "joke... without any intention of causing insult," state news agency IRNA reported. Hashemi’s late father was a relative moderate who advocated improved ties with the West and the United States.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Visiting Israel, Iranian anti-regime activists see another 2009 moment, seek support |
2022-06-03 |
[IsraelTimes] With Iranians’ anger at the ayatollahs again erupting into protests, the international community has a chance to atone for its failure 13 years ago — and every interest in doing so. The international community will take note, and having noted will move on. America’s Democratic presidency desperately wants to be friends with the Ayatollahs, which for some reason they see as the future. In June of 2009, millions of Iranians joined protests nationwide in the wake of the "reelection" of Mahmoud Short RoundAhmadinejad as president, in a vote widely recognized as rigged. The regime resorted to heavy violence to put down the demonstrations, attacking and arresting protesters and killing dozens of them — most resonantly Neda Agha-Solton, a philosophy student whose shooting by a gunman from the Basij paramilitary group was captured on film and broadcast worldwide. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iranian rights activist’s husband says she was sentenced to prison, lashes |
2022-01-26 |
[IsraelTimes] Narges Mohammadi was arrested in November after she attended memorial for victim of Iran ![]() has sentenced a prominent human rights ...which are often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless... activist to more than eight years in prison, according to her husband. Gay Paree-based Taghi Rahmani tweeted on Sunday that his wife, Narges Mohammadi, was tried in five minutes and sentenced to prison and 70 lashes. He has said she is prohibited from communicating and has no access to lawyers. Last week, she was sent to Gharchak prison near Tehran. Authorities arrested Mohammadi in November after she attended a memorial for a victim of ...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. Fifteen of the nineteen WTC hijackers were Saudis, and most major jihadi commanders were Saudis, to include Osama bin Laden. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman quietly folded that tent in 2016, doing terrible things to the guys running it, and has since been dragging the kingdom into the current century... Mohammadi has a long history of imprisonment, harsh sentences and international calls for reviews of her case. In May, the European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... called on Iran to reconsider her sentence of 30 months in prison and 80 lashes on charges of protesting the killing of protesters during the country’s 2019 unrest. Mohammadi confirmed her sentence at the time in an Instagram post, saying she does not "accept any of these sentences." In the post, Mohammadi said one of the charges against her is having a party and dancing in jail. She was released from jail in October 2020, after serving eight and a half years in prison, after her initial, 10-year sentence was commuted. In that case, she was sentenced in Tehran’s Revolutionary Court on charges including planning crimes to harm the security of Iran, spreading propaganda against the government and forming and managing an illegal group. Before imprisonment, Mohammadi was vice president of the banned Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran. Mohammadi has been close to Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, who founded the center. Ebadi left Iran after the disputed re-election of then-president Mahmoud Short RoundAhmadinejad in 2009, which touched off unprecedented protests and harsh crackdowns by authorities. In 2018, Mohammadi, an engineer, was awarded the 2018 Andrei Sakharov Prize. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iran opposition group reveals alleged drone command centers, manufacturing sites |
2021-10-07 |
[IsraelTimes] The Quds Force of the elite Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), responsible for Iran’s controversial operations abroad, is increasingly using drones as the main means for carrying out ![]() KABOOM!... s and supplying proxies, an exiled opposition group says. The National Council of Resistance® of Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate (NCRI) says that the drones are being manufactured at eight plants in Iran, sometimes using materials smuggled from abroad, and then sent to countries like Iraq and Syria where they are assembled and then deployed. The NCRI, the political wing of the People’s Mujahedin (MEK), which is banned in Iran, says it based its findings on reports from the network of supporters the MEK claims to maintain inside the country. It supplies images that it claims are of drone production plants but it isn’t immediately possible to independently verify the claims. The Quds Force, which was led by commander Qassem Soleimani ![]() ...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of... and seeking to strike Western targets. The NCRI says the Quds Force is "chiefly using various unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for its terrorist operations as well as for supplying its proxies in the region." "To an extent, the regime is trying to compensate for its outdated and decrepit air force with this technology," it adds. It says that to produce the drones Iran has been smuggling some of the main parts, such as engines and electronic components from China as well as raw materials from ...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire... and South Korea. It says there is now a specialized UAV Command among the five command units of the IRGC Aerospace Force. The UAV Command has several groups that are stationed at various bases across Iran.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iranian official apologises after leaked video shows prison abuse |
2021-08-25 |
[RUDAW.NET] The head of Iran’s prison authority on Tuesday apologized for “unacceptable” behavior after leaked video showed abuses in one of the country’s notorious prisons. Mohammad Mahdi Hajmohammadi said they are “accepting responsibility for these unacceptable behaviors and committing to trying not to repeat such tragic events and dealing seriously with wrongdoers.” The video leaked to the Associated Press shows prisoners and guards in Tehran’s Evin prison, including a man smashing a bathroom mirror to try to cut his arm, guards hitting prisoners, and guards fighting among themselves. “I apologize to God Almighty, our dear leader, the noble nation and the honorable prison guards, whose efforts, of course, will not be ignored under the influence of these mistakes,” said Hajmohammadi. Iran’s deputy chief justice told reporters on Tuesday that the issue is under investigation. “The judiciary is determined to deal severely with those who disrupt the security of society and play with the lives of the people and disrupt the well-being of the people,” Iranian state media quoted Mohammad Mossadegh Kahnemoui as saying. Human rights monitors frequently raise concerns about poor conditions, abuse of prisoners, and use of torture in Iran’s penal system, especially in wards of Evin prison that are controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). “Prison conditions were harsh and life threatening due to food shortages, gross overcrowding, physical abuse, and inadequate sanitary conditions and medical care,” the US State Department said in its annual human rights report. Evin prison facility is the target of both US and EU sanctions for human rights abuses. After Iran cracked down on protesters following the disputed 2009 re-election of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, many of the arrested protesters ended up in Evin. International monitors are concerned that human rights could further erode in Iran under new President Ebrahim Raisi, a hardline judge with a record of human rights abuses who played a role in a 1988 prison massacre. Raisi has defended his record. “All that I have done through my years of service has always been towards defending human rights,” he said after the June election. Related: IRGC: 2021-08-24 Afghanistan trade with Pakistan increases by 50% after Taliban takeover IRGC: 2021-08-22 Iran says it is expanding defense beyond borders, will continue missile program IRGC: 2021-08-20 'US, NATO have clear obligation to compensate in Afghanistan' Related: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: 2021-06-19 Ayatolloah's protege wins Iran presidency in questionable election Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: 2021-05-14 Ahmadinejad Is Back: Iranian Firebrand Announces Bid For Presidency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: 2021-05-13 Iran's Former Hardline President "Short Round" Ahmadinejad to Run Again |
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