Sunday, April 5, 2015

IRAN: Anti-regime protests held in Ahvaz

Ahvaz residentsprotesting against regime arrested in Ahvaz, 13 March 2015
NCRI - Residents of the Iranian city of Ahvaz expressed their rage and loathing against the suppressive and discriminatory policies of the clerical regime in the southern province of Khuzestan by chanting anti-regime slogans following a soccer match in the city on Friday (3 April 2015).
The courageous people and youth in Ahvaz staged a demonstration inside and outside the stadium, as well as in the Ahwaz-Khorramshahr intersection in the city, after the soccer match between Foulad of Khuzestan and Tehran’s Estqbal teams.
The Iranian regime’s suppressive forces engaged with the protesting people around government institutions. The sound of shots being fired could be heard in these places from a distance.

The truth about Iran nuclear deal

Following the announcement on the framework agreement reached between the Iranian regime and 5+1 countries in Lausanne, Switzerland, on April 2, state-run news outlets in Iran reported that the joint statement delivered by Mohammad-Javad Zarif and the EU's Federica Mogherini is “neither binding nor does it have any legal implications.”
The media note published by the US State Department entitled, “Parameters for a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action Regarding the Islamic Republic of Iran's Nuclear Program,” contains glaring differences with the version released by the Iranian regime entitled “Summary of a collection of understandings related to solutions for a comprehensive joint plan of action.”
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Iran won’t pledge to release American captives as sign of goodwill

Iranian-American pastor Saeed Abedini
The Examiner - April 4, 2015 - As President Obama touted a tentative deal that would lift sanctions on Iran in return for reducing its number of nuclear facilities, left unmentioned were the American citizens currently held captive by the regime.

Maryam Rajavi: Mullahs fearful and pressured

maryam_rajavi
A statement of generalities, without Khamenei’s signature and official approval,
does not block the path to a nuclear bomb.
Continuing talks with religious fascism ruling Iran in the framework of appeasing will not secure the region and world from the threat of nuclear proliferation.
Complying with UN Security Council resolutions is simply the only way to block the mullahs from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Mrs. Maryam Rajavi , the Iranian Resistance’s President-elect, said the following concerning the joint statement between the Iranian regime and the P5+1:
“Decisive Storm” and the regional coalition against the expansion and aggression of the religious fascism ruling Iran in Yemen, the crippling impact of the sanctions and Iranian society’s explosive state as well as successive warnings by the United States Congress that it will confront this regime and will ratchet up the sanctions finally compelled the clerical regime to reluctantly take one more step back after 16 months of talks, which had gone into overtime in Lausanne. A step toward drinking the chalice of nuclear poison, this retreat was prompted by fear and pressure and blatantly contradicts the foundations and guidelines the regime’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei had announced personally two weeks ago.

Maryam Rajavi;Interview with Stuttgarter Nachrichten - Mullahs humiliate women

MARYAMRAJAVI
The Iranian Resistance's President-elect Maryam Rajavi warned the West on their naive rapprochement with the Tehran regime. She says Iran's ruling mullahs are the source of terrorism in the entire region.
Q. Iran has recently been welcomed by the West as a partner in the fight against ISIS. Do they deserve it?
A. No. This is a shortsighted (approach). Remaining silent against the Iranian regime's destructive intervention in Iraq, let alone cooperating with it is against the basic interests of the international community and international peace and security. The Iranian regime is the main source of instability and the financial and state-sponsor of terrorism and fundamentalism and their source of funds. Look at Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.