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Posts archive for: 7 March, 2006
  • Iran seeking compensation from IAEA

    By ALI AKBAR DAREINI

    TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called on the U.N. nuclear agency to compensate Iran for suspending its nuclear activities since 2003, state television reported Tuesday.

    Ahmadinejad made the call shortly before the International Atomic Energy Agency began a second day of talks in Vienna that will include Iran's nuclear program.

    ``The IAEA now has to compensate Iran for causing damage to the development of its science, technology and economy'' due to the suspension of nuclear activities, the television quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.

    Under heavy pressure from the West, Iran suspended its enrichment of uranium and related activities in 2003 and began negotiating with the three big European powers to reach an agreed framework for its nuclear development.

    But the talks foundered last year when it became clear Iran was not going to agree to abandon enrichment, a process that can produce material for nuclear power generators or bombs.

    From August through January, Iran resumed in stages elements of its enrichment program - moves that were condemned internationally and led to the IAEA's decision last month to report the country to the Security Council.

    The United States and France have accused Iran of seeking to build an atomic bomb under the guise of a peaceful nuclear program. Iran denies this, insisting that its program is limited to generating electricity.

  • Refugees at Iraqi border will not be resettled in Rweished — UNHCR

    Jordan Times

    AMMAN — About 200 Kurdish Iranian refugees who settled on the Iraqi side of the border with Jordan within the last 14 months, will not be relocated to Rweished, UNHCR officials reiterated during a press conference on Monday.

    The refugees refuse to relocate to the Kawa refugee camp in northern Iraq, UNHCR Amman Bureau Acting Representative Anne-Marie Deutschlander said yesterday — a location that would be assisted by the UN.

    "It was made clear for over a year that they would not be able to enter Jordan, but they are still hoping to be resettled by UNHCR," she explained.

    "They feel that if they wait, they will be transferred to the [UN-assisted] Rweished camp and eventually be resettled in a third country just like the Iranian Kurds at Rweished," she added.

    However, the official said that the border settlement is not considered a real refugee camp like the case of 'no-man's-land,' a refugee camp also located on the Jordan-Iraq border, which has since closed, with all 743 refugees having been transferred to Rweished in May 2005. There are 400 refugees left in the camp awaiting resettlement.

    Located in the northeast of the Kingdom, Rweished — 69km from the Iraqi border — is scheduled to close in September.

    The majority of the refugees at the border settlement are Iranian Kurds, who fled to Iraq in 1979. There, they settled in the Al Tash refugee camp, which officially closed in December 2005.

    Since early last year, these refugees settled on the Jordan-Iraq border because they were denied entry into Jordan, according to Deutschlander.

    UNHCR has no official figures about the border settlement because the site is not officially monitored by the UN.

    Vandana Patel, protection officer at UNHCR's Iraq operations unit in Amman, said the border settlement is not a UNHCR camp and that another NGO had provided tents for the refugees.

    Jordanian authorities reiterated that there is no possibility for the group to be allowed entry into the Kingdom due to fears of a "pull factor" of other potential refugees and oversaturation with other refugees already settled in Jordan, Deutschlander said.

    An agreement was reached in September 2005 between the Kurdistan regional government and UNHCR guaranteeing a site in Kawa for resettlement of all refugees who resided in Al Tash camp. So far, 1,252 refugees have relocated to the newly opened camp in Erbil.

    Deutschlander added that UNHCR called the press conference to address allegations in the media that the border refugees were abandoned by UNHCR.

    She acknowledged that since they are refugees from the former Al Tash camp, the border refugees are still UNHCR clients. But the UNHCR Jordan office's mandate is for Jordanian territory, not outside it, which makes it difficult for UNHCR to assist the refugees, she added.

    According to the UNHCR official, the border refugees' settlement is not officially recognised as a "refugee camp" which makes their appeal for resettlement impossible.

    Due to administrative and security reasons, the UNHCR Jordan office is unable to access the border refugees or guarantee their safety, she explained.

    UNHCR officials visited the area twice to appeal to the group to relocate to Erbil, however the refugees said that they did not want to relocate.

    "Some of them said, 'we're prepared to wait until the end.' So they're ready to have people die to get their message across that they want to be resettled [in a third country outside the region]," Deutschlander told The Jordan Times.

    But Deutschlander said the UNHCR was not setting a deadline nor would they resettle the border refugees against their will.

    According to the UNHCR, there are about 1,000 refugees in Jordan eligible for UN assistance, including 700 from Iraq. Overall, there are 15,000 registered but unrecognised refugees in the Kingdom, according to the international organisation.

  • Soft Europe

    The Wall Street Journal

    Leon De Winter

    After two years of disastrous dialogue, and more of the same in recent days, we can conclude that no diplomatic initiative can stop Iran from getting the bomb. The International Atomic Energy Agency meets again this week to discuss the mullahs' nuclear ambitions, while Russia floats a plan to get Iran to enrich uranium on its soil. But before we got to this point, we had the Europeans in the starring role. The foreign ministers of the leading EU countries -- Britain, France and Germany -- did try for years to persuade Iran to give up its nuclear ambitions, most recently at Friday's meeting in Vienna that ended up in yet another failure. But Iran knew all along that this threesome, formally the "Troika," had no real negotiating authority and would never resort to serious measures.

    And yet Britain's Jack Straw, France's Philippe Douste-Blazy (and his predecessor, Dominique de Villepin) and Germany's Joschka Fischer (and his successor, Frank-Walter Steinmeier) talked on, clinging to a post-modern European belief in a world in which any conflict can be resolved with enough reason and mutual understanding. The Troika offered the mullahs economic carrots and alternative sources of nuclear power -- as if energy had anything to do with it -- while Iran did what any football team does when it's ahead: It played for time. This it used very well to push ahead with its clandestine nuclear program.

    Did the Troika know that Iran knew that Europe was weak? Of course. Europe's posturing was empty from the start. The only weapon that the EU was willing to consider, as a last result, was an economic boycott that would harm Europe's commercial interests more than Iran's.

    The mullahs also knew that the Troika couldn't back up its threat of an economic boycott with the threat of military action. If the EU couldn't muster the will to fight in its own backyard in the Balkans without America leading the way, it surely wouldn't put any lives at risk beyond the frontiers of the Continent.

    By contrast, Iran, ostensibly a democracy but in reality a religious tyranny, possesses a character trait that is almost non-existent in modern Europe: Iranians, almost exclusively Shiite, are willing to suffer. This quality is deeply rooted in their religion. Ashura, one of the central Shiite rituals that marks the death of Imam Hussain at the Battle of Karbala in 680, celebrates flagellation, blood, pain. As Steven Vincent, the remarkable American journalist who tragically was murdered last August in Iraq, observed in his book "In the Red Zone": "Eight-foot long white silk flags depicting crossed sword, the blades oozing with blood... pictures of severed hands, severed heads,... a fountain in front of Meshed Ali spraying geysers of blood-red liquid... bloody swords flashing over the heads of milling crowds... men with blood-soaked bandages wrapped around their heads to stanch the bleeding from self-inflicted wounds... endless posters of the slaughtered innocents. This is an orgy of death imagery, I thought."

    Can Europe grasp this commitment to voluntary suffering? For casualties to be acceptable on the battlefield, people need collective ideals and values that transform their society into a sacred entity. In European eyes, Shiites have ritualized this to the point of absurdity, with most Westerners finding it bizarre.

    * * *

    After the horrors of World War Two, Western Europe turned to new ideals of radical pacifism and post-nationalism. The Continent had been devastated by war twice in three decades. In the 1950s, the desire to avoid more war led it to a new ideology, permeating society and politics, that viewed national interests and cultural traditions as relative. As a result, people started to believe that peaceful coexistence with communist Eastern Europe was better than emphasizing the differences between East and West.

    The largest demonstration ever in my own country, the Netherlands, was held in 1983 against the stationing of U.S. cruise missiles on Dutch soil. Anti-American sentiments were popular then as well, since America was a country that was prepared to oppose the Soviets with force, while the demonstrators categorically rejected any use of violence in favor of other means. What these means were remained vague for most people, but that was unimportant as long as the central issue was the growing threat of war implied by the stationing of U.S. missiles.

    Little has changed in recent decades. Europe became wealthier and more convinced of its idea that world peace can be achieved by talk alone. Even the West European countries in the American-led coalition in Iraq, apart from the British, are only participating symbolically in order not to offend its main ally. In the Netherlands, the authorities speak of "peace missions" when discussing Dutch military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, avoiding terms like "war" and "violence."

    If the threat were limited to the Middle East, the European reluctance to act now that Iran has de facto begun developing nuclear weapons might be almost understandable. But it is clear that the Iranian theocracy has set its sights far beyond its region. The rhetoric of the Iranian regime has been clear for years. As with Germany in the 1930s, anti-Semitism plays a key role in modern Iranian politics. If Iran succeeds, its nuclear weapons will be controlled by people who believe that they should bring the End of Days closer -- a notion not dissimilar to Hitler's Apocalyptic visions. An Iranian bomb threatens the very existence of Western civilization.

    But what does Western civilization mean in and to Europe? In the European welfare state, the system ensures that each individual can rely on maximum social security. Without doubt, the welfare state is the ultimate achievement of European civilization. But it did not come without a philosophy: the welfare state gave birth to a post-modern cultural relativism that underpins the tolerant, liberal, pacifistic and secular European societies of today.

    Only the earth is still a planet on which opposing forces collide. The welfare state, based on its provision of social services and the participation of reasonably acting civilians, is unable to respond to globalization or mass immigration. Its structures work as long as the system is closed. But because of vast changes in demographics and economics, the welfare state has become too expensive. All over Europe its fundaments are cracking.

    This crisis is serious enough. The European political establishment is too preoccupied with its internal problems to even contemplate problems beyond its shores. Its philosophy holds that "soft power" alone can be brought to bear in any conflict between power blocs or ideologies or civilizations. That explains Europe's inability or unwillingness to defend the freedom of speech in one of the smallest EU member states, Denmark, during the Cartoon War. That's why there is near silence in Europe about the daily anti-Semitic provocations from Iran, which says that it'll hit Jews worldwide if Israel tries to destroy the Iranian nuclear program.

    The EU does not know why it should ever sacrifice its sons in military conflict. What sacred values are worth defending at such a high cost? The EU isn't prepared to enter a conflict with Iran, with all its potentially devastating human casualties and economic hardships.

    * * *

    So for years the Troika continued talking, maintaining the illusion that Tehran was playing by the rules as equal partners and denying the reality that the Mullahs will gain great economic and military leverage over Europe in the very near future.

    Europe could have suppressed the Iranian threat if it had convinced the mullahs two years ago that it was willing to contemplate military options. Only Europe lacks core values that it holds sacrosanct and that it's willing to defend at the highest cost. It will continue to operate on the diplomatic field and cling to soft power even though this is the path of certain defeat when confronted with power players burning with geopolitical and religious ambitions.

    Thanks to European illusions about soft power, the free world has two options left on Iran: disaster or catastrophe. America and Israel will bleed for Europe's lack of conviction.

    Mr. de Winter is a Dutch novelist and adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute.

  • Fighting Tehran from afar

    NCRI – Marcus Dysch of the TIMES of Edgwar and Mill Hill in north London did a story on the life of Iranians in exile and sympathisers of the Iranian Resistance on Monday. The interesting report is brought to your attention below:

    "Even here I do not feel safe. Something can happen at any time," says Iranian exile Marzieh, speaking at a secret location in East Barnet.

    Marzieh has spent the past 20 years looking over her shoulder since fleeing from her home town in northern Iran, and is too scared to tell us her surname.

    As a member of the People's Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI), she was opposed to the Islamist regime headed by Ayatollah Khomeini, making her a target for the Revolutionary Guards loyal to him.

    "There was a lot of support in my home town for the PMOI because people were more open-minded," she said.

    "In June 1981, the Revolutionary Guards raided many homes, including those of my parents, cousins and friends. They were arrested and some friends were executed. It was as quick as overnight it was horrible."

    Marzieh, 45, recalls the events in stuttering English, shaking as she speaks.
    "I was lucky I was not at home that night otherwise my fate would have been something different," she said.

    She fled to Britain in 1985 to claim political asylum and since then has studied events in the Middle East with interest. Recently she has become increasingly concerned as Tehran has resumed a uranium enrichment programme, which the West fear could lead to Iran developing nuclear weapons.

    Together with friends who sympathise with Iranians opposed to the regime, she set up the Anglo-Iranian Society (AIS) in Barnet last year, a group which aims to educate the people of Britain and give a voice to the millions of Iranians who cannot speak out in their home country.

    Thomas Darby, chairman of AIS, said the group supports the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), effectively a government-in-waiting, based in France. The NCRI has an elected leader, Maryam Rajavi, who would be proposed as the new national leader should President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's regime be toppled. Mr Darby said: "We support their call for a change in Iran that will hopefully lead to the downfall in some way of the current regime."

    Georgina Oliver, as a volunteer for AIS, approaches churches in the borough to discuss the situation with clergymen, who can then share the information with people in their communities. Mrs Oliver said: "It is slow work, but it is happening. We are also contacting libraries to give out our information and we are going to have a DVD available to people who wish to look into things a bit further."

    She plans to send information to universities and aims to arrange fundraising events to allow the group to expand.

    Since Mr Ahmadinejad came to power in June, relations between Iran and the governments of the Western world have deteriorated further. In October, he was criticised after calling for the destruction of Israel. Marzieh believes people have a misguided view of the Iranian people because of the president's outbursts.

    "One of our objectives is to combat fundamentalism," she said. "The regime says Israel should be wiped off the map, but we are totally against that and we need to educate people to make them see that is not how all Iranians think. It is not what the Iranian people want, it is only the fundamentalist regime which thinks like this."

    Marzieh said her resistance to Mr Ahmadinejad's regime was influenced by several factors.

    "Women are treated as second-class citizens," she said. "Discrimination is written into the law and women cannot be judges or leaders. I am a Muslim and I wear my headscarf through choice, I do not want someone to force me to wear a hijab."

    She continued: "Since the events of September 11, the Madrid bombing and the London bombings in July, I realise that fundamentalism is increasing rapidly and being exported to other countries by Iran. The root of fundamentalism is in Iran.

    "Every day we see suicide bombers in Iraq many of them have been trained in Iran. Although the London bombers were English, their thinking was from Iran. Even in Pakistan, where the London bombers were trained, that ideology comes from Iran.

    "The security of the world is threatened because of this Islamic fundamentalism."

    The group believes the international community now has three options to deal with Iran. They do not favour two of them, appeasement and military intervention, but, they say, the NCRI could bring about a revolution if supported by countries such as Britain and America.

    Mrs Oliver said: "The Western countries have decided to appease Iran, but you cannot appease people who are hell-bent on domination through Islamic fundamentalism."

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