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Posts archive for: 29 March, 2006
  • Blogs Now Under Attack by Iran's Hard-line Regime

    The Associated Press
    Lara Suktian

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- On his last visit to Iran, Canadian-based blogger Hossein Derakhshan was detained and interrogated, then forced to sign a letter of apology for his blog writings before being allowed to leave the country.

    Compared to others, Derakhshan is lucky.

    Dozens of Iranian bloggers have faced harassment by the government, been arrested for voicing opposing views, and fled the country in fear of prosecution over the past two years. (Blog: http://blogs.usatoday.com/ondeadline/2006/03/censorship_thre.html| Related item: http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-06-12-iran-election-internet_x.htm

    In the conservative Islamic Republic, where the government has vast control over newspapers and the airwaves, weblogs are one of the last bastions of free expression, where people can speak openly about everything from sex to the nuclear controversy.

    But increasingly, they are coming under threat of censorship.

    The Iranian blogging community, known as Weblogistan, is relatively new. It sprang to life in 2001 after hard-liners — fighting back against a reformist president — shut down more than 100 newspapers and magazines and detained writers. At the time, Derakhshan posted instructions on the Internet in Farsi on how to set up a weblog.

    Since then, the community has grown dramatically. Although exact figures are not known, experts estimate there are between 70,000 and 100,000 active weblogs in Iran. The vast majority are in Farsi but a few are in English.

    Overall, the percentage of Iranians now blogging is "gigantic," said Curt Hopkins, director of an online group called the Committee to Protect Bloggers, who lives in Seattle.

    "They are a talking people, very intellectual, social, and have a lot to say. And they are up against a small group (in the government) that are trying to shut everyone up," said Hopkins.

    To bolster its campaign, the Iranian government has one of the most extensive and sophisticated operations to censor and filter Internet content of any country in the world — second only to China, Hopkins said.

    It also is one of a growing number of Mideast countries that rely on U.S. commercial software to do the filtering, according to a 2004 study by a group called the OpenNet Initiative. The software that Iran uses blocks both internationally hosted sites in English and local sites in Farsi, the study found.

    The filtering process is backed by laws that force individuals who subscribe to Internet service providers to sign a promise not to access non-Islamic sites. The same laws also force the providers to install filtering mechanisms.

    The filtering "is systematically getting worse," said Derakhshan, who was detained and questioned during a visit to Iran last spring, just before the election of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    But is the government threatened because the tens of thousands of Iranian blogs are all throwing insults at it, or calling for revolution? Not quite.

    The debates on Iranian weblogs are rarely political. The most common issues are cultural, social and sexual. Blogs also are a good place to chat in a society where young men and women cannot openly date. There are blogs that discuss women's issues, and ones that deal with art and photography.

    But in Iran, activists say all debates are equally perceived as a threat by the authorities. Bloggers living in Iran understand that better than anyone else.

    "I am very careful. Every blogger in Iran who writes in his/her name must be careful. I know the red lines and I never go beyond them," said Parastoo Dokouhaki, 25, who runs one of Iran's most popular blogs. "And these days, the red lines are getting tighter."

    Dokouhaki doesn't directly write about politics. She sticks mostly to social issues, but in Iran, that is also a taboo subject.

    "I write about the social consequences of government decisions and they don't like it, because they can't control it," said Dokouhaki.

    Outright political bloggers have an even tougher time.

    Hanif Mazroui was arrested in 1994 and charged with acting against the Islamic system through his writings. He was jailed for 66 days and then acquitted.

    "It's normal for authorities to summon and threaten bloggers," said Mazroui. The government continued to harass him and three months ago, he was summoned once again by the authorities and told never to write about the nuclear issue. Soon after his release, he shut down his weblog.

    "They kept pressuring me," he said.

    Arash Sigarchi, an Iranian journalist and blogger, was arrested and charged with insulting the country's leader, collaborating with the enemy, writing propaganda against the Islamic state and encouraging people to jeopardize national security.

    He had been in jail for 60 days when he was sentenced to 14 years in prison. He appealed, and was released on bail. Although his sentence has been reduced to three years, he still faces charges of insulting the leader and writing propaganda.

    Another, Mojtaba Saminejad, has been in prison since February 2005. He was first arrested in November 2004 for speaking out against the arrest of three colleagues. According to the Committee to Protect Bloggers, Saminejad's website was hacked into by people linked to the Iranian Hezbollah movement.

    After his release, he launched his blog at a new address, which led to his second arrest in February 2005. He was sentenced to two years in prison, and then given an extra 10 months for inciting "immorality."

    Despite the crackdown, most Iranian bloggers say the government is not interested in eliminating blogging. Instead, they believe authorities want to use blogging to further their own goals.

    Farid Pouya, a Belgian-based Iranian blogger, notes the government has just launched a competition for the best four blogs. The subjects: the Islamic revolution and the Quran.

    "The government has observed carefully and learned that blogs are important ... and they want to capitalize on that," she said. "They want to lead the movement, they want to control it."

    http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techinnovations/2006-03-28-iranian-bloggers_x.htm

  • Iran: Imminent Execution of Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh

    March 28, 2006
    Amnesty International
    Urgent Action

    The stay of execution granted to Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh on 12 October 2004 has been rescinded by the Supreme Court. Her execution is reportedly scheduled to take place on or before 1 April 2006.

    Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh was sentenced to death for the murder of her husband. She alleged that her husband was a drug addict who had tried to rape her daughter from a previous marriage, who was 15 years old at the time. Apparently he had previously told her that he had lost the girl in a gambling match. Amnesty International does not know when she was arrested, but she may have been tried in 2002.

    The Head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, had stayed Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh's execution after reading a letter written to him by her daughter, entitled "Don’t render my hopes hopeless", in which she appealed for clemency for her mother. Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh was then held in Evin prison in the capital, Tehran, whilst her case was sent to the second Division of the Supreme Court for review. According to a report in the Iranian newspaper Hamshahri on 15 March 2006, the Court has confirmed the death sentence against Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh and has reportedly approved the execution. Her lawyer was reported to be intending to ask the Head of the Judiciary to use his powers to issue another stay of execution.

    BACKGROUND INFORMATION

    Amnesty International opposes the death penalty as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment, in violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Iran is a state party. Article 6 of the ICCPR states: In countries which have not abolished the death penalty, sentence of death may be imposed only for the most serious crimes.

    In 2005, Amnesty International recorded at least 94 executions in Iran, although the true figure may be considerably higher.

    RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, English, French or your own language:

    - stating that Amnesty International recognizes the rights and responsibilities of governments to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offences, but strongly opposes the death penalty as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment and violation of the right to life;

    - expressing concern that the stay of execution granted to Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh has been rescinded after almost 18 months;

    - urging that the death sentence imposed on Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh be commuted immediately;

    - urging the authorities to ensure that the victim’s family is made aware of its right, under Islamic law, to pardon the condemned;

    - reminding the Iranian authorities of their commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in particular Article 3: Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.

    APPEALS TO:

    Leader of the Islamic Republic
    His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei,
    The Office of the Supreme Leader
    Shoahada Street, Qom, Islamic Republic of Iran
    Fax: + 98 251 7 774 2228 (mark "FAO the Office of His Excellency, Ayatollah al Udhma Khamenei") (please keep trying)
    Email: info@leader.ir
    istiftaa@wilayah.org
    Salutation: Your Excellency

    Head of the Judiciary
    His Excellency Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
    Ministry of Justice, Park-e Shahr, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
    Email: irjpr@iranjudiciary.org (mark "Please forward to His Excellency Ayatollah Shahroudi") This email address can be unreliable. If it does not work, please send your appeal via the judiciary website: www.iranjudiciary.org/feedback_en.html
    Salutation: Your Excellency

    COPIES TO:
    President
    His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
    The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
    Fax: + 98 21 6 649 5880
    Email: dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir
    (Or via website) http://www.president.ir/email

    and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

    PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 1 April 2006.

    http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE130312006

  • Two Swedes jailed in Iran

    AFP- Two Swedish nationals have been jailed in Iran, the Swedish foreign ministry said Wednesday amid newspaper reports that the pair were arrested for illegally photographing naval facilities.

    The Swedish embassy in Iran was "working intensively" to secure their release, ministry spokeswoman Petra Hansson told AFP.

    She would neither disclose when the two Swedes were detained nor what they were doing in the country.

    But Swedish daily Aftonbladet reported that the men, aged between 30 and 40 and from western Sweden, are construction workers who have been held for a month.

    Iranian authorities have accused them of illegally photographing naval installations on the island of Qeshm off southern Iran.

    Sweden's charge d'affaires in Tehran, Soeren Lundvall, told Aftonbladet that he had spoken to the men, who are being held in a prison in Bandar-e Abbas, and that they were being treated well.

    "They didn't realize the severity of the photo ban," Lundvall said, adding that such offences carry tough sentences in Iran.

    He said the Iranian authorities' investigation would continue throughout the year, possibly longer, and that the men would remain in jail for the duration.

  • Iran political activist in danger of imminent execution

    Iran Focus

    London, Mar. 29 – An Iranian opposition activist is in danger of imminent execution, Iran Focus has learnt.

    Valiollah Feyz-Mahdavi, a 28-year-old member of Iran’s main opposition group, the People’s Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI), has been officially informed that his execution sentence will be carried out on May 6, according to his relatives in Iran.

    Feyz-Mahdavi was notified of his impending execution on March 24.

    He was arrested in 2001 for membership in the PMOI and has endured torture in Gohardasht Prison in Karaj, west of Tehran.

    His execution would be the second such known political execution in the past two months. Another PMOI member, Hojjat Zamani, who had been a political prisoner in Iran since 2001, was hanged in Gohardasht Prison on February 7. Zamani, 31 at the time he was hanged, had undergone severe physical and psychological torture to break his morale and compel him to express remorse and surrender.

    Feyz-Mahdavi and Zamani along with another Mojahedin political prisoner, Jaafar Aghdami, wrote a letter to the United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan on January 24, 2005, calling on him to set up a special fact-finding mission to “investigate the plight” of political prisoners.

    In February, the human rights group Amnesty International announced that it had “grave concern” about the “alarming rate” of executions in Iran, in particular highlighting the cases of a number of political prisoners, several of whom are on death row.

    “Hojjat Zamani’s execution has fuelled fears that other political prisoners may be at risk of imminent execution”, Amnesty said.

    The rights group said that there had been reports circulating since the start of February that “a number of political and other prisoners who are under sentence of death have been told by prison officials that they would be executed if Iran should be referred to the UN Security Council over the resumption of its nuclear programme”.

    “These are said to have included other members of the PMOI”, it said, adding, “It was the PMOI that was the source of evidence in 2002 revealing Iran’s nuclear programme to the outside world”.

    Among those feared to be at risk were Saeed Masouri, a PMOI member who has been held in solitary confinement in Section 209 of Evin Prison since late 2004; Khaled Hardani, Farhang Pour Mansouri, and Shahram Pour Mansouri; Gholamhossein Kalbi and Valiollah Feyz Mahdavi, both PMOI members; and Alireza Karami Khairabadi, Amnesty said.

  • Three Revolutionary Guards killed in north-west Iran

    Iran Focus– Three agents of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps were killed in a gun-battle in the north-west town of Salmas, the state-run news agency ISNA reported on Wednesday.

    The IRGC agents were from the towns of Khoy, Maku, and Marand, the report said.

    Salmas, close to the Turkish border, is situated in the province of West Azerbaijan.

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Dr Abdul Rahman Qassemlou
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