Wednesday, July 1, 2015

IRAN - The conference live on www.iranfreedom.org



Featured guest: Mehdi Abrishamchi

Chairman, Peace Committee of the National Council of 

Resistance of Iran

Wednesday, 1 July 2015

Time : 19:00 (Local time in Paris), 13:00 EST

You can watch the conference live on www.iranfreedom.org

Please pose questions via Twitter using the account 

@4freedominiran and the hashtags #Iran #IranFreedom

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

IRAN: PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE, MOHAMMAD ALI TAHERI, SENTENCED TO DEATH BY MULLAHS’ REGIME

Ali Taheri
The Iranian regime has sentenced prisoner of conscience Mohammad Ali Taheri to execution. He is the leader and founder of a spiritual group called Erfan-e-Halgheh (Mystical Ring). He was sentenced to death on the charges of “spreading corruption on earth” via “diverting people.”
Amnesty International issued an urgent action in May calling for immediate release of this political prisoner.
Mohammad Ali Taheri was first arrested in 2010 on charges of “acting against national security” but was released after 67 days of solitary confinement.
He was subsequently rearrested on May 4, 2011 and sentenced to 5 years imprisonment on the charges of blasphemy, 74 lashes for unlawful act (contact with the wrist of female patients during treatment), and 900M Tomans fine for intervention in medical treatment, acquiring illegitimate property, illegal distribution of audiovisual works and using scientific titles.

Monday, June 29, 2015

IRAN- June 30th deadline & Iranian regime’s plan to acquire nuclear bomb

Mohammad Mohaddessin

In an online Q&A session on Monday, Mohammad Mohaddessin, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), addressed the current nuclear stalemate in Vienna and the broader nuclear negotiations between the Iranian regime and the world powers.
“It is now obvious to everyone that the [June 30] deadline will be missed. But what shocked the other negotiators during this round of talks was the fact that the Iranian regime rejected many of the parameters it had agreed to in Lausanne on April 2”, Mr Mohaddessin said.

IRAN- Iran imprisonment marks grim milestone

Saeed Abedini
American Pastor Saeed Abedini has now spent 1,000 days in captivity in Iran – nearly three years suffering in prison – separated from his wife, Naghmeh, and their two young children.
No one could have imagined that he would be imprisoned this long when he was taken into custody by Iranian regime in 2012 simply because of his Christian faith.  Pastor Saeed was in Iran working on an orphanage when he was unexpectedly taken into custody by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.
In January 2013, Pastor Saeed was convicted of undermining the national security of Iran for gathering with Christians in private homes from 2000 to 2005.  He was sentenced to 8-years in prison.
Pastor Saeed has endured much in the past 1,000 days. He still suffers from physical injuries that require much-needed medical attention – injuries received from past beatings by prison guards. He also faces psychological torture and as recently as a couple of weeks ago – he received another round of beatings.

iran - mashhad- Iran regime amputates hands of two prisoners



NCRI - The Iranian regime on Sunday amputated the hands of two prisoners in the central prison of Mashhad, northeast Iran.
One of the victims, identified only by the initials M. E., was a 26-year-old resident of Mashhad, the state-run daily Khorasan wrote on Monday. The second victim was not identified; the report simply stated that this young man was transferred from Khorasan Jonubi province to the same prison in Mashhad where the sentence was carried out.
State media claimed that the two men had been convicted of theft.
Last month, a high ranking Iranian cleric, who is the representative of the regime’s Supreme Leader in Hormozgan province (southern Iran), called for more inhumane punishments of hand amputations to be carried out.

IRAN- Revolutionary Guards target Internet activists


Reporters Without Borders reiterates its condemnation of the Iranian regime’s persecution of journalists and bloggers after a wave of arrests of Internet users in recent days as a result of Revolutionary Guard monitoring of online social networks.
…The victims of the latest Revolutionary Guard-orchestrated round-up include Mahmud Moussavifar and Shayan AkbarPour, two Internet activists who ran the Rahian Facebook page and a blog called Rahi, which cannot currently be accessed
After plainclothes men arrested them at their Tehran home on 31 May, their families reported them missing because they still do not know why they were arrested or where they were taken.
Two years of President Hassan Rouhani
In the two years since the moderate conservative Hassan Rouhani was installed as president in June 2013, around 100 Internet activists have been arrested and given long jail terms, in most cases on information provided by the Revolutionary Guards.
This persecution of news and information providers is just the continuation of the unprecedented crackdown that began immediately after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s disputed reelection in June 2009, when at least 300 journalists and Internet activists were arrested arbitrarily, tortured and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment.
Several journalists and Internet activists who were convicted in 2009 and 2010 by rigged revolutionary courts have since been released on completing their sentences but many others are still in prison, where they are often subjected to appalling conditions.
They include Said Razavi Faghih, Saraj Mirdamadi, Masoud Bastani, Reza Entesari, Said Madani, Said Matinpour and Alireza Rajai. Unfortunately there has been no improvement in the inhuman treatment reserved for prisoners of conscience in Iran, especially in Tehran’s Evin prison and in Raja’i Shahr prison.
…One of them, Shirazi, managed to flee the country after being released provisionally and has described the terrifying experience of being held in Section 2A and pressured by interrogators. Her account constitutes yet further hard evidence of the systematic mistreatment of detainees in Iran by security and judicial officials.
Aged 31, Shahi Savandi Shirazi, was transferred to Evin prison’s Section 2A after her arrest by Revolutionary Guards in January 2013 in the southeastern city of Kerman.
“The nightmare began as soon as I arrived,” she told Reporters Without Borders. “Locked up in a very small cell, I could hear the cries of a prisoner being interrogated. I trembled all the time during the first few weeks and couldn’t even hold a pen in my hand (...)
“They knew everything about my online chats and my emails. All my online correspondence had been intercepted. Several of my friends had been arrested a few months before me and I now realized I’d been under close surveillance since then. The interrogators asked us to write about each other. They didn’t just want us to confess to the crimes of which were accused. They also wanted to know all about our personal relations and whether we’d had immoral relations. During interrogation, they made sexist jokes to intimidate us. Once they even threatened me with rape and simulated doing it (...)
“All these confessions were used to incriminate us when our trial finally got under way before Mohammad Moghiseh, the president of the 28th chamber of the Tehran revolutionary court (...) After my provisional release pending the appeal court’s ruling, my husband, with whom relations were not simple, questioned what had happened in prison and didn’t want us to continue living together.
“So I returned to my family’s home in Kerman. But the insulting and contemptuous phone calls continued. The interrogators kept calling me in order to threaten me or to summon me to Tehran for further interrogation (...) Under pressure, I finally decided to leave my country.”



  

IRAN - Nuclear mullahs and the Iranian people

Mohammad Mohaddessin
By Mohammad Mohaddessin, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Council of Restance of Iran (NCRI)
Published in Arabic in Saudi Arabian daily Al-Watan on 27 June 2015
The closer we come to the June 30 deadline in the negotiations between the Iranian regime and the P5+1 countries, the more the real intentions of the mullahs in their nuclear projects and the deadlocks they face become clear. In a speech on June 23 to officials of the regime, the mullahs’ Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei strongly rejected "inspection of military facilities and interviews with Iranian scientists." He said: "Contrary to US statements, we do not accept long term restrictions of 10 or 12 years [on Research and Development]." He added: "The economic, financial and banking sanctions, whether set by the Security Council or the US Congress or the US administration, must be lifted the moment an agreement is signed ... the lifting of sanctions must not be conditional upon Iran implementing its obligations."

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Iran -300 acid attacks in 1 year in Iran


Abolfazl Abu-Torabi, a member of the Legal and Judiciary Commission in Iran’s so-called parliament referred to 300 cases of acid attacks in 1 year and said, “There have been no declines in the punishment of acid attacks.”
“The punishment of acid attacks, if it is intended to inflict a blow to the state or with ‘moharebe’ (enmity against God) intentions, is death. However, acid attacks for other reasons are punished by ‘qisas’ (retribution in kind), ‘diyeh’ (blood money) and jail time,” he added.

IRAN - Nuclear talks would not change nature or conduct of Iran regime

Elisabetta Zamparutti
Elisabetta Zamparutti is an official of Hands Off Cane, and a former member of the Italian Parliament
The sun was just creeping up over the desert sand one early morning in September 2013, a small encampment of Iranian refugees  in Iraq, Camp Ashraf, was fast asleep, but things changed in an instant. Iraqi soldiers, acting at the behest of the Iranian regime during the tenure of former Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki,  gathered the unarmed Iranians who fled persecution in their homeland seeking safe heaven, lined them up and executed them, extinguishing their lives.
This horrific incident,  was the indirect work of an Iran regime flexing its muscle across the region by sewing the seeds of chaos and despair. The  52 victims, members of the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran, the principal Iranian opposition movement, couldn’t fight, or speak up, like their brethren in Iran and those is most of the Middle East. On Sunday of June 13th however, Iranians spoke up and spread their message loudly and clearly: regime change in Iran. 

Saturday, June 27, 2015

IRAN - Church Times: 100,000 activists call for overthrow of Iran’s regime

The article quoted Mrs. Rajavi as telling Western leaders: "If you do not want a nuclear-armed fundamentalist regime, stop appeasing it. Do not bargain over the human rights of the Iranian people, and recognise their organised resistance which is striving for freedom."
The following is the full text of the report in the CHURCH TIMES (No. 7945):
Iran close to nuclear deal
WITH two weeks to go until the deadline for a nuclear deal between Iran and the Western powers, 100,000 activists met in Paris earlier this month to call for the overthrow of the current regime.

#iran   #maryamrajavi   #iranfreedom