Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
New judicial police launched in Iran capital | ||
2006-09-01 | ||
![]() The JSP was set up by the judiciary in coordination with the State Security Forces (SSF), Irans paramilitary police. However, in late 2005 Majlis refused to approve a law granting it authority to carry out its work. Among senior judicial officials who attended its inauguration at the Imam Khomeini Judicial Centre in the Iranian capital was Tehrans chief prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi who gained infamy after it was discovered that he may have been personally responsible for the murder of Canadian-Iranian photo-journalist Zahra Kazemi in Tehrans notorious Evin Prison in 2003. These people will be based in JSP units in police precincts and are tasked with carrying out the orders issued by judiciary officials, Mortazavi said.
The JSP was originally set up in the early days of the 1979 Islamic Revolution but it was dismantled 10 years later and its forces distributed among the judiciary and the SSF, with officials citing an overlap of its activities and that of Irans other security agencies as the reason for its closure. In recent years, the judiciary under the control of Ayatollah Mahmoud Shahroudi had been pushing hard for it to resurface as a fully-functioning force capable of arresting those on its watch-list and placing them straight into its designated prison cells. It argued that this method would by far lead to the fastest prosecutions and sentences for offenders.
The deployment of the new judicial paramilitary force will likely add to the already repressive atmosphere in the streets of Tehran and may bring about a backlash of social dissent. | ||
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