Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

India-Pakistan
Iran, Pakistan to establish four security border posts
2013-03-01
Bonus coverage below:
Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik said today that Iran and Paklistan will establish four security stations on the borders between the two countries.

Malik also said that Iran's Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar will soon be visiting Pakistan to sign the joint agreement. Pakistani official also said that a free trade zone between the countries will be established near the security posts at the border.
And here's the bonus:
Speaking on other issues, the minister noted that starting from March 8th, no one would be able to cross Afghan-Pakistani border without visa.

"Despite numerous requests from Pakistan, Afghanistan did not set control over the illegal border crossing from its side," Malik said. "Thus the Pakistani government has decided to take it under precise control to stop the drug smuggling into the country."
Because we all know the biggest problem Pakistain faces is drug smuggling from Afghanistan...
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Candidates Register for Iran Legislative Elections
2011-12-25
[An Nahar] Candidates started registering Saturday to stand in Iran's March legislative elections in a process vetted by the Guardian's Council, the Islamic republic's electoral watchdog.

"We recommend to candidates to come forward to serve the people and to keep the success of the Islamic revolution in mind," the ministry's website quoted Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar as saying.

Registration was to continue to December 30, but the interior ministry urged would-be candidates to not wait until the last day.

The Guardians Council, made up of holy mans and jurists, determines which applicants can be candidates in the election for the 290-seat parliament. It is also responsible for endorsing the final results of the March 2, 2012 poll.

Candidates are required to be Iranian citizens aged 30-75 who are loyal to the constitution, including its recognition of the absolute authority of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamanei.

Iran's current legislature is dominated by conservatives, with only around 60 reformists in the house.

The parliamentary speaker, Ali Larijani, has repeatedly criticized the policies of President Mahmoud Short Round Ahmadinejad, especially on the economy.

The March poll will be the first since the 2009 presidential election which saw Ahmadinejad announced the winner over opposition claims the vote was rigged, triggering widespread mass protests.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran sets March 2012 for parliamentary election
2011-04-18
TEHRAN, Iran - Iran’s official news agency says parliamentary elections have been set for next March. The report Sunday by IRNA quotes Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar as saying the voting will take place March 2, 2012.

Plans for the election could be a springboard for protests by Iran’s opposition after facing a relentless crackdown since unrest following the disputed 2009 re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

But it also may be a test of strength for Ahmadinejad, who has been challenged by the current parliament.
Predictions --

1) Short Round and the Mad Mullahs™ will use as much violence as required to crush the opposition.

2) Obama won't care.
The last parliamentary election was in 2008 when Islamic religious fanatics conservatives won a majority of seats in the 275-seat chamber.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran MPs Rage against Opposition as Obama Encourages Protesters
2011-02-16
Furious Iranian politicians on Tuesday demanded the hanging of opposition leaders who called anti-government protests which left two people dead, saying they had been "misled" by Iran's arch-foes.

But in one of his most direct reactions to events in Iran, U.S. President Barack B.O. Obama offered encouragement to protesters, saying he hoped they would have the "courage" to keep expressing their "yearning for greater freedoms."

MPs singled out Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, who had called for protests in Tehran on Monday in support of Arab uprisings that quickly turned into anti-government demonstrations and ended in festivities with police in which several people were also hurt, including nine security force members.

Mohammad Khatami, former reformist president, also came under fire from conservatives for openly backing the opposition movement since disputed presidential elections in June 2009.

"Mousavi and Karroubi should be executed! Death to Mousavi, Karroubi and Khatami!" the politicians shouted in the house, state news agency IRNA reported.

They said the United States, Britain and Israel had orchestrated Monday's protests through the opposition leaders, who, according to parliament speaker Ali Larijani, were being "misled" by Iran's arch-foes.

"The parliament condemns the Zionists, American, anti-revolutionary and anti-national action of the misled seditionists," a visibly angry Larijani told the parliament.

"How did the gentlemen (Mousavi and Karroubi) ... fall into the orchestrated trap of America?" he asked.

"Should they not have been cautious given the support, pleasure and joy of America and Israel as well as monarchists and Monafeghin?" Larijani added, referring to the outlawed People's Mujahedeen of Iran (PMOI).

He also urged that a committee be formed to probe and "confront" the opposition movement.

But Obama defended the protesters and criticized the Iranian authorities, saying that unlike Egypt, Iran's response to protests has been "to shoot people and beat people and arrest people."

"And, you know, my hope and expectation is that we're going to continue to see the people of Iran have the courage to be able to express their yearning for greater freedoms and a more representative government," Obama said.

However,
The infamous However...
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei criticized the West during a meeting with visiting Turkish President Abdullah Gul, IRNA reported.

"The West has always humiliated the world of Islam, and any government that wants to go against this humiliation and show its power will face their (Western) opposition," he told Gul.

Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, a hardline holy man who often leads Friday prayers in Tehran, applauded the MPs and accused Mousavi and Karroubi of being "mohareb," or enemies of God, adding that they deserved the harshest of punishment.

"The chiefs of the sedition have reached the end of the road and it is time for (the authorities) to do their duty and judge and punish" them, he said in a statement carried by Fars.

Despite a strict ban on the rally, a heavy security presence and Mousavi and Karroubi being placed under de facto house arrest, thousands of opposition supporters took to Tehran's streets on Monday.

Riot police fired tear gas and paintballs at them in violent festivities, witnesses and websites said.

Kazem Jalali, member of the parliamentary commission of national security and foreign policy, told ISNA news agency two people were killed.

"In today's session that the commission held with the interior minister (Mostafa Mohammad Najjar), he told us that a number of popular and revolutionary forces were maimed by gunshot and two persons were martyred," Jalali said.

Iran's deputy police chief Ahmad Reza Radan had earlier said that one person was killed, shot by members of an outlawed group. He also reported "some" people maimed, including nine security force members.

The anti-government protests were the first in Tehran since February 11, 2010.

Mousavi and Karroubi allege Ahmadinejad's re-election in June 2009 was massively rigged and in the months after the results called for protests which drew tens of thousands onto the streets -- shaking the foundations of the Islamic republic and angering its leaders.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran accuses CIA as scientist killed
2010-11-30
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Twin blasts in Iran's capital killed a top nuclear scientist and maimed another today, with Tehran swiftly blaming the CIA and Mossad for the attacks apparently carried out by men on cycle of violences.

Slain scientist Majid Shahriari and Fereydoon Abbasi Davani, who survived the attack, were senior figures in Iran's nuclear programme, which the West suspects of having military aims. Tehran denies the charge.

Tehran police chief Hossein Sajedi-nia said men on cycle of violences attached bombs to the windows of the scientists' cars in different parts of the capital as they made their way to work. The bombs went kaboom! seconds later.

"Dr Shahriari was killed and his wife and driver were maimed. Dr Abbasi and his wife have been injured," he was quoted as saying in media reports.

Iranian leaders accused the US and Israeli intelligence services, the CIA and Mossad, of killing the two who were also professors at Tehran's prestigious Shahid Beheshti University.

"One can undoubtedly see the hands of Israel and Western governments in the liquidation which unfortunately took place," President Mahmoud Short Round Ahmadinejad told a news conference.

Mr Ahmadinejad's office said in an earlier statement that "the Zionist regime this time shed the blood of university professor Dr Majid Shahriari to curb Iran's progress."

Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said the "Mossad and the CIA are the enemies of Iranians" whose "desperate terrorist act against the two academics shows their weakness and inferiority."
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iranian government minister blames CIA, Mossad for scientist killing
2010-11-29
IRAN'S interior government minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar tonight accused the US and Israeli intelligence services - the CIA and Mossad - of killing a prominent nuclear scientist.

"Mossad and the CIA are the enemies of Iranians and always seek to hurt this nation. They particularly want to stop our scientific progress," he said, after state media reported one Iranian nuclear scientist was killed and another wounded in separate attacks in the capital.

"The desperate terrorist act against the two academics shows their weakness and inferiority," he said of today's attacks, in which assailants on motorbikes reportedly attached bombs to the scientists' cars on their way to work.

Iran was quick to blame Israel following the twin blasts.

"In a criminal terrorist act, the agents of the Zionist regime attacked two prominent university professors who were on their way to work," the website of Iran's state television network reported earlier Monday, referring to arch-foe Israel.

"Dr Majid Shahriari was killed and his wife was injured. Dr Fereydoon Abbasi and his wife were injured," the report said.

Fars news agency said the scientists were targeted in two different locations by men on motorcycles who approached their vehicles and attached bombs to their cars.

Shahriari was a member of the nuclear engineering department of Shahid Beheshti University in northern Tehran, according to the official IRNA news agency.

Abbasi held a PhD in nuclear physics and did nuclear research at the defense ministry, the hardline news website Mashreghnews said.

The website said Abbasi, 52, was "one of the few specialists who can separate isotopes" and was a "member of the Revolutionary Guards since the revolution" in 1979.

The reported attacks came a day after the top US military officer said the United States, which is suspicious of Iran's nuclear drive, was weighing military options in the face of Tehran's announcement it had a nuclear power plant up and running.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran can deter attacks on nuclear sites: minister
2010-03-10
DOHA (AFP) — Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar warned Tuesday that Tehran has "great means of deterrence" to face any possible attack over its nuclear programme.

"We are highly confident about our capacities, and our great means of deterrence," he said during a visit to Doha, where he signed a security agreement between Iran and Qatar -- a major regional US ally. "We do not feel in danger... If someone tries to endanger our national security, we will retaliate and make him regret his action," he added.

Israel has not ruled out striking Iran's nuclear sites.

Najjar said on Tuesday that Iran was working on strengthening relations with its Arab neighbours in the oil-rich Gulf region to "ensure security and stability in the region."

His country's security agreement with Qatar focuses mainly on the issue of combating crime, drug trafficking and money laundering, as well as the protection of borders. Qatar, which maintains good relations with Iran, hosts the US Al-Udeid air base and As-Sailiyah camp, which is the headquarters of the US Central Command since 2002.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Jundallah arrest proves timely for Iran
2010-02-26
If the snow-covered Elbruz mountains rising just north of Tehran took on an extra glint in the bright wintry sunshine on Wednesday, there was good reason. It was the morning after the dramatic capture of the 31-year-old leader of the dreaded Pakistan-based terrorist group Jundallah, Abdulmalik Rigi, in a stunning operation by Iranian intelligence.

The Soureh Cinema Institute in Tehran and Iran's Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance are already contemplating making a movie about the capture of Rigi, who headed Jundallah (Soldiers of God), a Sunni insurgent group that operates mostly in Iran's southeastern province of Sistan-Balochistan against the Shi'ite regime.

The operation had all the ingredients of a thriller. From available details, Iranian intelligence, which has been stalking Rigi for months, grabbed him while he was on a flight from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Kyrgyzstan. The aircraft was forced to land in Bandar Abbas, in southern Iran, where Rigi and an accomplice were forcibly deplaned.

However, Rigi's capture has wider ramifications going well beyond the stuff of high drama. For one thing, the Iranian public was dazzled by the intelligence operation and it has provided a morale boost at a critical juncture when the West is besieging Iran over its nuclear program and the political class in Tehran is more polarized than at any time in the three decades of the Islamic Republic.

Ironically, the Iranian performance stands out in sharp contrast with the fallout from the Israeli intelligence operation in Dubai in the UAE to assassinate prominent Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh on January 19. (See Dubai hit exposes Hamas' weaknesses, Asia Times Online, February 23) Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar made this clear when he said, "Such an operation by the Islamic Republic's security forces indicates that the country's intelligence and security have the upper hand in the region."

No doubt, Iranian public opinion will identify with this mood of self-confidence, no matter the political persuasions of various factions at this current juncture as regards the ruling establishment.

In turn, that would have implications for the United States-Iran standoff. But that is only one aspect. The fact is that Tehran has put Washington on the back foot at a critical juncture. Rigi is bound to spill the beans - he may already have begun - and much is going to surface about the covert activities by the US forces based in Afghanistan to subvert Iran by hobnobbing with Jundallah, which, incidentally, is also known to have links with al-Qaeda.

Rigi apparently had a meeting with his US mentors in an American base just a day before his journey to the UAE. It seems he was traveling with a fake Afghan passport provided by the Americans. A lot of highly embarrassing details are trickling in already that will be eagerly lapped up by the so-called "Arab street" and which will make the entire American position on the situation around Iran look rather weak.

The American doublespeak on terrorism comes out all too starkly. The big question is whether Pakistan played a helpful role in Rigi's capture. Iranian officials flatly insist that Rigi's capture was "fully carried out" by Iranian agencies, including its "management, operation and planning" and the credit goes "solely to our country's security and task forces".

Iranian Intelligence Minister Hojjatoleslam Heydar Moslehi, who is also an influential clerical figure, has stated categorically that "no other country had a share in this success".

But Persian is a highly nuanced language. What is significant is that while Iranian officials have unhesitatingly pointed their finger at the US as Rigi's top mentor, there has not been a single reference direct or implied about Pakistan that could be construed as critical or unfriendly. This must be noted as on several occasions in recent months Iranian officials publicly expressed their anguish that Pakistani intelligence was involved with Jundallah in one way or another, and that Islamabad was not doing enough to live up to its claims of being a friendly neighbor.

Tehran repeatedly passed on intelligence and urged Islamabad to extradite Rigi following the deadly attack by Jundallah in Sistan-Balochistan province in October, which resulted in the killing of 42 people, including several high-ranking Iranian military commanders.

On balance, Islamabad seems to have implied that it did cooperate with Tehran on Rigi's capture. The Pakistani ambassador in Tehran, Mohammad Baksh Abbasi, took the unusual step of "underlining Islamabad's support" for Rigi's arrest. Abbasi held a press conference to affirm, "Rigi's arrest showed that there is no place for Iran's enemies in Pakistan." Shorn of diplomatese, Abbasi claimed a share of the credit that Tehran was bent on exclusively hogging. But Maslehi was plainly dismissive about any Pakistani role.

If there was a Pakistani role in Rigi's capture there would be deep implications for regional security. Most certainly, Islamabad could claim reciprocal "goodwill" from Iran, such as accommodating its own interests in Afghanistan. On the other hand, Iranian officials have made it clear that Tehran is not indebted to anyone, including Pakistan.

Tehran remains deeply concerned about the US strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan's role in it. In the Iranian estimation, the US strategy aims at consolidating a long-term North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) presence in Afghanistan and Central Asia. Equally, Pakistan's growing ties with NATO as the alliance's South Asian "pillar" have not escaped Iranian attention. There is no denying the fact that NATO-Pakistan ties are fast assuming a strategic character and have exceeded the immediate requirements of practical cooperation in Afghanistan.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Execution threats
2010-01-06
Iran's interior minister warned opposition activists on Tuesday they risk execution as enemies of God if they continue anti-government demonstrations, and the foreign ministry said arrested foreigners face punishment.

Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar made the latest threat after the Intelligence Ministry said on Monday several foreigners engaged in a "psychological war" against the Islamic Republic were arrested on Dec. 27 in the bloodiest unrest since the aftermath of a disputed June 12 presidential poll.

The opposition says the vote was rigged to secure President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election. The authorities deny the accusations, which they say were part of a Western-orchestrated plot to overthrow the Islamic system.

Eight people were killed in clashes between security forces and supporters of opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi on the Shi'ite mourning day of Ashura. More than 40 leading reformists, including four advisers to Mousavi, have since been arrested.

"After Ashura, anyone who takes part in riots will be considered as 'mohareb' (waging war on God) and an opponent of national security," Najjar said, according to the official IRNA news agency.

Despite such warnings, the opposition has shown no inclination to back down and street protests have continued sporadically in the six months since the vote.
Link


India-Pakistan
Pakistan arrests three suspects in Iran bombing
2009-11-06
[Al Arabiya Latest] Pakistani security forces on Thursday arrested three Iranians suspected of planning a suicide attack in Iran's southeastern region last month which killed 42 people, officials said.

Mainly Shiite Iran says the Sunni rebel group Jundollah (God's Soldiers), which has claimed responsibility for the Oct. 18 attack, operates from across the border in Pakistan.

The attack in Iran's Sistan-Baluchestan province killed 15 Iranian Revolutionary Guards, including six senior commanders, and 27 others.

The ethnic Baluch men were arrested by the paramilitary Frontier Constabulary troops in a raid on Thursday in Turbat, a district in Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan province on the Iranian border, intelligence and paramilitary officials said.

"They are Iranian Baluch and are suspected to be involved in the planning of the suicide bombing in Iran last month," an intelligence official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. He gave no further details.

The arrests came two weeks after Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar visited Pakistan to demand it hand over Abdolmalik Rigi, the militant group's leader.

Pakistan has condemned the bombing and vowed to help Iran track down those responsible, but says Rigi is in Afghanistan, according to their information.

After the attack, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and his Iranian counterpart, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, spoke on the telephone and stressed the need for cooperation in confronting and eradicating "criminal terrorists".

Pakistan launched a long-awaited offensive against militants in its northwest on Oct. 17 after a string of bomb and suicide attacks rocked the country, including one on the army's headquarters early that month.

Iran-Pakistan ties have generally been good recently, but tension has risen since Iran said the October attack would affect relations and some Revolutionary Guard commanders have said they should be able to pursue Jundollah in Pakistan.

Iran accuses the United States and Britain of backing Jundollah and has suggested it has links with Pakistani intelligence. Washington, London and Islamabad have all denied involvement.

Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran, Pakistan agree on joint anti-terrorism mechanism
2009-10-25
In the wake of the bloody attack in southeastern Iran carried out by the the Pakistan-based Jundallah terrorist group, Tehran and Islamabad have agreed to adopt joint measures to fight terrorism.

"A golden era will open in strategic cooperation between the two countries through the eradication of terrorism," Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said in a meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Saturday.

At least 41 people, including seven senior commanders of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps, were killed in a bombing on October 18 during a gathering of Shia and Sunni tribal leaders in the town of Pishin on the Iran-Pakistan border. Jundallah claimed responsibility for the deadly attack.

Najjar called his talks with Pakistani authorities on efforts to arrest Jundallah members constructive, adding, "The two countries reached promising agreements."

Gilani stated that Pakistan would not allow terrorists to use its territory as a base.

Tehran and Islamabad should boost security on their border as soon as possible, the Pakistani prime minister added.

The Jundallah ring, led by Abdolmalik Rigi, has staged a torrent of terrorist attacks in Iran.

In a recent interview with Press TV, Rigi's brother, Abdulhamid, confirmed that the Jundallah leader had established links with US agents.

Abdulhamid Rigi said that at just one of his meetings with the US operatives, Rigi had received $100,000 to foment sectarian strife in Iran.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran cracks down on Jundallah inside Pakistan
2009-10-24
Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar will visit Pakistan on Friday to discuss ways of cracking down on a Sunni rebel group behind a deadly attack on the elite Revolutionary Guards.

State television reported late on Thursday that Najjar will head a large security delegation to Islamabad for talks with his Pakistani counterpart and other top officials on means of fighting Jundallah.

"Mostafa Mohammad Najjar will meet Pakistani officials, namely the interior minister, about the recent terrorist attack and ways of fighting against the terrorist group," an interior ministry spokesman, Mehdi Azar Makan, said.

Iran on Tuesday turned up the heat on Pakistan saying that Jundallah (Soldiers of God) which claimed responsibility for the Oct. 18 suicide bombing, is based on its territory. Islamabad denied the allegations.

Top commanders of the Revolutionary Guards were among 42 people killed in the attack -- the deadliest assault in recent years on Iran's prestigious military force which was set up after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Tehran says that Jundallah chief Abdolmalek Rigi is based in Pakistan and has asked Islamabad to hand him over.

However, Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit has denied that Rigi is in the country and said the attack was aimed at undermining ties between Islamabad and Tehran.

"We don't know the whereabouts of Rigi," Basit said. "As Interior Minister Rehman Malik said, Rigi is not in Pakistan."

A Jundallah statement on the Internet said the aim of Sunday's operation was to avenge "the wounds of the Baluch people which have been bleeding for years without end."

Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan province, which shares a border with both Iran and Afghanistan, is also rife with Islamist militancy, Sunni-Shiite sectarian violence and a regional Baluch insurgency.

Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More