Baha’i Student Farnod Jahangiri Expelled from Babolsar University

HRANA News Agency – Baha’i student Farnod Jahangiri was expelled from Babolsar University in Mazandaran Province on October 12, 2011.

According to a report by Population of Combat against Education Discrimination (PCED), Farnod Jahangiri is a resident of Hamadan and was studying English Language and Literature at Babolsar University.

During the last few months, a number of Baha’i students have been expelled from universities in Iran.Ruhollah Tashakor, Alborz Norani, Ava Tavakol, Mona Momeni, Arkideh Aghaie, Hananeh Kanaanie, Homan Rahmanian and Malika Vazirzadeh are amongst those students.

Furthermore, Iranian authorities have blocked the entrance of many Baha’i students into universities during the process when students choose their majors and receive the admission papers.Similar to past years, Baha’i students are told that their application files lack all the necessary documents.This excuse is particularly used in order to deny admission to Baha’i graduate students and political and social activists seeking to enter graduate schools.

Copyright © 2009-2011 All Rights Reserved

The U.N. human rights deeply worried of Iran’s cracking down on human rights activists, lawyers and journalists

HRANA News Agency – GENEVA — The UN human rights agency on Tuesday voiced deep concern over the arrest and imprisonment of a number of prominent human rights and political activists, lawyers and journalists in Iran over the past two weeks.

Continue reading “The U.N. human rights deeply worried of Iran’s cracking down on human rights activists, lawyers and journalists”

‘National Internet’ imminent in Iran

HRANA News Agency – The first phase of Iran’s national Internet project has already been launched in the country’s government departments. Activists fear it’s a step toward cutting the population off from the World Wide Web.

In the past few days, several Iranian officials have mentioned the imminent launch of “our own Internet,” or what has previously been described as the “Halal Internet.”

Reza Taghipour, Iran’s information and communications minister, announced last week that the first phase of this nationwide project, which covers governmental institutions in 29 provinces, was set to launch on September 21. Taghipour said all Iranian universities would become part of this network by early 2013, putting Iran a step closer to disconnecting itself entirely from the global Internet.

As the news spread, government officials also announced that Iran was blocking access to Google and Gmail in reaction to the US-made anti-Islam film that has triggered protests across the Muslim world in recent weeks.

Abdolsamad Khoramabadi, an Iranian official from the online censorship department, claimed the decision had been made because of request from the censorship committee.

“We received the written announcement from the Internet censorship committee this morning,” Mohammad, a software engineer living in Tehran, told DW earlier this week. “The committee described it as an act against YouTube, but YouTube was already filtered out several months ago.”

 

Human rights organizations and Internet activists believe the move marks the beginning of the end for digital freedom in Iran. But Iranian officials deny this, insisting the project will work side by side with the global Internet to “improve its speed and quality.”

“Pulling out of the global Internet is like a self-imposed sanction. It’s not logical,” said Mohammad Soleimani, the former communications minister, in an interview with the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) last week.

“There is no clear, detailed information about Iran’s national Internet project,” Amin Sabeti, a London-based Iranian blog researcher, told DW. “But I do not think Iran has the necessary infrastructure to completely cut Iranian Internet users’ access to the Internet.” But, he adds that Iranian censorship authorities can sometimes do the unexpected, such as the decision to block Google and Gmail.

Many of the official statements coming out of Iran have been worrying. Two months ago, the Communications Ministry claimed that “in 95 percent of cases you don’t need a connection to the international network to use the Internet.” Meanwhile, many Iranian officials have said a “Halal Internet” is the best way to protect “religious and national values.”

Nearly 5 million websites, including social media networks such as Facebook and Twitter, are already blocked in Iran, and the country is ranked fourth in a list of the world’s most censored countries compiled by the Committee to Protect Journalists – after Eritrea, North Korea and Syria.

 

 

 

 

 

Student Activist Javad Abuali Sentenced to 1 Year in Prison

HRANA News Agency – Javad Abuali was sentenced to one year in prison and has reported to the authorities to begin serving his term.Javad Abuali is a political and social activist and a student at Azad University in the city of Behbahan, Khuzestan Province.

According to a report by Daneshjoo News, Javad Abuali was arrested in August 2010 by Iran’s Intelligence Agency in Behbahan and held incommunicado for months.The 2nd branch of Revolutionary Court in Mahshahr sentenced Javad Abuali to 12 months in prison, and the 13th branch of Khuzestan Province Appeals Court upheld the verdict.

For propaganda against the regime, Javad Abuali received 6 months in prison and for insulting the Supreme Leader, another 6 months were added to his punishment.

Copyright © 2009-2011 All Rights Reserved

Security forces attacked the memorial session of Arash Sadeghi’s mother

HRANA News Agency – Security forces attacked the memorial session of Farahnaz Dargahi, Arash Sadeghi’s mother in “Saraye Ghalam” on Tuesday, October 30, 2012 at 7:00 PM and arrested several activists.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), in this attack, Mahdieh Golru, Ghasem Sho’leh Sa’di, Akbar Amini, Pezhman Zafarmand, Mohamad Parsi, Mehdi Khaz’ali and several attendees were arrested and transferred to an unknown place.

Farahnaz Dargahi, the mother of student activist Arash Sadeghi suffered a stroke after security forces raided his home just days after he was temporarily released from prison. His mother passed away four days later in hospital.

Arash Sadeghi is a member of the central council of the Islamic Association of Allameh Tabataba’i University who was arrested during the aftermath of the fraudulent 2009 presidential election. He was temporarily released after more than eighteen months in prison. His mother suffered a stroke a few days into his release after security forces raided his home at 4 O’clock in the morning without any verbal or written notice prior to the raid.

Sadeghi was sentenced to a six-year jail term and received another three-year suspended prison sentence after being tried in court after the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president. While in prison Sadeghi’s shoulder was dislocated twice and he received a broken tooth during his interrogations.

Sadeghi is a member of the Islamic Iran Participation Front (Mosharekat) and a master’s student in philosophy at Allameh Tabataba’i University.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Now is definitely not the time to stop reading!

E-mail sending Action: Please help save Gholamreza Khosravi and other prisoners sentenced to death in Iran

HRANA News Agency – This is a ‘generalized’ letter to send to the authorities around the world to urge Iranian governors to stop executions of Gholamreza Khosravi Savadjani and other prisoners sentenced to death in Iran.

Subject: Save Gholamreza Khosravi and other prisoners sentenced to death in Iran

To Whom it may concern;

“I beg you, calling on the Iranian authorities, not to execute Gholamreza Khosravi Savadjani, or anyone else sentenced to death and remind them that under international law, the death penalty can only be carried out for “the most serious crimes” which must be “intentional crimes with lethal or other extremely grave consequences. “

“I am expressing extreme concern that Gholamreza Khosravi Savadjani did not receive a fair trial, and urging the authorities to investigate the allegations that he was tortured and to bring to justice anyone found responsible for abuses.”
“Also, I am asking the authorities to make sure Gholamreza Khosravi Savadjani is protected from torture and other ill-treatment, is granted all necessary medical treatment, and is allowed immediate and regular contact with his lawyers and family.”

Sincerely,
Your full name

موضوع: غلامرضا خسروی و دیگر زندانیان محکوم به اعدام را نجات دهید

به مقام مسئول

از شما تمنا داریم از مقامات ایران بخواهید حکم اعدام غلامرضا خسروی سوادجانی و دیگر زندانیان محکوم به اعدام را متوقف کنند. به آنان یاد آور شوید تحت قوانین بین المللی، حکم اعدام تنها مختص “جرایم بسیار خطرناک” می شود که بایستی شامل “جرایم عمدی مرگبار و یا دیگر عواقب بسیار وخیم” باشند.
شدیداً تأکید می کنیم که غلامرضا خسروی سوادجانی از دادگاه صالحه برخوردار نبوده، و مقامات ایران را تحت فشار قرار دهید تا مورد شکنجه شدن تا دادگاه وی را تحت پیگرد قانونی قرار دهند و کسانی که در این پروسه از مسئولیت خود سوء استفاده کرده اند را محاکمه کنند.
همچنین از مسئولین جمهوری اسلامی می خواهیم اطمینان دهند که غلامرضا خسروانی از هر گونه شکنجه و بد رفتاری ها مصون خواهد بود، کمک های پزشکی مورد نیاز را دریافت کرده و اجازه خواهد داشت به طور منظم با وکیل و خانواده اش در تماس باشد.

با احترام
نام کامل

Send E-mail to:

UN Officials and Heads of Government

[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]

Foreign Ministries and the US State Department

[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]

European parliament:

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

Foreign Minister Italy: [email protected]
Austria: [email protected]
Germany: [email protected]
Denmark: [email protected]
Spain: [email protected]
Portugal: [email protected]
Estonia: [email protected], [email protected]
Finland: [email protected]
Hungary: [email protected]
Cyprus: [email protected]
Czech Republic: [email protected]
France Foreign Minister is Laurent Fabius: not official address but his “private” address: [email protected]
Latvia: [email protected]
Lithuania: [email protected]
Poland: [email protected]
United Kingdom: [email protected]
New Zealand: [email protected]

Media:

[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]

Two Thousand Satellite Dishes Confiscated in Tehran

HRANA News Agency – The Commander of Tehran’s Relief Special Unit released the news of a project to collect satellite dishes in the west regions of the capital city and added, “A large number of LNB satellite reception components together with satellite dishes have been discovered and confiscated.”

According to a report by ISNA News Agency, Colonel Ardeshir Motahari announced the implementation of a project to collect various satellite equipment in the west of capital city on Thursday, May 19, 2011, and added, “There were thirteen operation units each consisting of eight agents who operated within the area enclosed by Ferdowsi Blvd., Marzdaran St. and Alborz St.”

 

Colonel Ardeshir Motahari reported, “In this project, 2,732 satellite dishes, 4,018 LNB satellite reception components, 39 rotating engines and 92 switches were confiscated.”

 

HRW: Proposed Penal Code Deeply Flawed in Iran

HRANA News Agency – (Beirut) – Proposed amendments to Iran’s penal code would violate the rights of accused people and criminal defendants, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today.  Iranian authorities should suspend enactment of the proposed amendments and undertake a major overhaul of the country’s abusive penal laws.

The48-page report, “Codifying Repression: An Assessment of Iran’s New Penal Code,” says that many problematic provisions of the current penal code remain unaddressed in the proposed amendments. Some of the amendments would weaken further the rights of criminal defendants and convicts and allow judges wide discretion to issue punishments that violate the rights of the accused. Lawmakers and judiciary officials have cited the amendments as a serious attempt to comply with Iran’s international human rights obligations.

“These amendments do little to address penal code provisions that allow the government to jail, torture, and execute people who criticize the government,” saidJoe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “If Iran wants to comply with its human rights obligations, it should completely and categorically ban deplorable practices like child executions, limb amputations, and stoning.”

In January 2012 the Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 religious jurists charged with vetting all legislation to ensure its compatibility with Iran’s constitution and Sharia, or Islamic law, approved the final text of an amended penal code. Parliament and other supervisory bodies have approved and finalized the text of the amendments, but President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has not yet signed the amended code into law. Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani, who is the head of Iran’s judiciary, has ordered Iran’s courts to apply the old penal code until  Ahmadinejad signs the new amendments into law, which could happen at any time.

Iran’s Islamic Penal Code, which went into effect in 1991, reflects the ruling clerics’ interpretation of Sharia law, based on the Jafari or Twelver Shia school of jurisprudence. It includes discretionary (ta’zir) punishments not specifically laid out in Sharia law that apply to most of Iran’s national security laws, under which political dissidents are convicted and sentenced in revolutionary courts.

The latest amendments address changes in three types of punishments specified in Sharia law:hadd – crimes against God, such as adultery and drinking alcohol,  for which Sharia law assigns fixed and specific punishments);qesas– retributive justice, often reserved for murder; anddiyeh – compensation to victims in the form of “blood money.”

The most serious problems with the new provisions include their retention of the death penalty for child offenders and for crimes that are not considered serious under international law, Human Rights Watch said. The amendments also fail to define clearly and set out in the code several crimes that carry serious punishments, including capital punishment.

They also include broad or vaguely worded national security-related laws criminalizing the exercise of fundamental rights. And they would permit the continued use of punishments that amount to torture or cruel and degrading treatment, such as stoning, flogging, and amputation.

The amendments also reinforce previously discriminatory provisions against women and religious minorities.

Contrary to official assertions that the amendments will prohibit the execution of people less than 18 years of age, the new law retains the death penalty for children in certain circumstances. Children convicted ofta’ziror discretionary crimes such as drug-related offenses may no longer be sentenced to death but instead to correctional and rehabilitation programs.

But the new code explicitly pegs the age of criminal responsibility to the age of maturity or puberty under Sharia law, which in Iranian jurisprudence is 9 years for girls and 15 years for boys. A judge may, therefore, still sentence to death a girl as young as 9 or a boy as young as 15 convicted of a “crime against God” orqesascrime such as sodomy or murder if he determines that the child understood the nature and consequences of the crime.

Iran remains the world leader in executing people convicted of committing an offense while under the age of 18. The government maintains that Iran does not execute children because authorities wait for child offenders to reach 18 before executing them. In 2011 at least143 child offenderswere on death row in Iranian prisons, the vast majority for alleged crimes such as rape and murder. Death sentences for those crimes would not be affected by the amendments.

“The absolute prohibition on the execution of child offenders convicted of discretionary crimes such as drug trafficking is long overdue,” Stork said. “But it is of little consolation to the dozens of child offenders currently on death row for other crimes, and their families.”

The new amendments continue to allow the death penalty for activities that should not constitute crimes at all – certain types of consensual sexual relations outside of marriage – or that are not among the “most serious” crimes (typically those that cause the death of a victim) under international law. Other crimes that carry the death penalty under the new provisions include insulting the Prophet Mohammad and possessing or selling illicit drugs.

The revised penal code allows judges to rely on religious sources, including Sharia law andfatwasissued by high-ranking Shia clerics, to convict a person of apostasy or sentence a defendant convicted of adultery to stoning. This remains the case even though there is no crime of apostasy under the penal code, and stoning as a form of punishment for adultery has been removed from the new provisions.

The new provisions also expand upon broad or vaguely defined national security crimes that punish people for exercising their right to freedom of expression, association, or assembly. One troubling amendment concerns article 287, which defines the crime ofefsad-e fel arz, or “sowing corruption on earth.” Legislators have expanded the definition ofefsad-e fel arz, a previously ill-definedhaddcrime closely related tomoharebeh(enmity against God) that had been used to sentence to death political dissidents who allegedly engaged in armed activities or affiliated with “terrorist organizations.” The new definition also includes clearly nonviolent activities such as “publish[ing] lies,” “operat[ing] or manag[ing] centers of corruption or prostitution,” or “damage[ing] the economy of the country” if these actions “seriously disturb the public order and security of the nation.”

Under the current penal code, authorities have executedat least 30 peoplesince January 2010 on the charge of “enmity against God” or “sowing corruption on earth” for their alleged ties to armed or terrorist groups.At least 28 Kurdish prisonersare known to be awaiting execution on national security charges, including “enmity against God.” Human Rights Watch hasdocumentedthat in a number of these cases, the evidence suggests that Iran’s judicial authorities convicted, sentenced, and executed people simply because they were political dissidents, and not because they had committed terrorist acts.

Human Rights Watch opposes the death penalty in all circumstances because it is unique in its cruelty and finality, and is plagued with arbitrariness, prejudice, and error. In addition, Iranian trials involving capital crimes have been replete withserious violationsof due process rights and international fair trial standards.

The Iranian authorities should abolish punishments retained or permitted under the new penal code that amount to torture or cruel and inhuman treatment, such as flogging, amputation, and stoning, Human Rights Watch said.

“These penal code amendments are nothing but a continuation of Iran’s reprehensible track record when it comes to administering justice in the courts,” Stork said. “Real criminal reform in Iran requires a wholesale suspension and overhaul of the Iranian penal code that has been a tool of systematic repression in the hands of the authorities, including the judiciary.”

Students Protest in Shahrekord University

HRANA News Agency – On Tuesday, October 4, 2011, students at Shahrekord University demonstrated against the quality and price of food available at the university’s self-service cafeteria.The protest was sparked by the news of a worm having been found in school cafeteria food.Iran’s semi-secret police tasked to monitor all educational institutes, Herasat, violently confronted student protestors and eventually quelled the demonstration.Shahrekord University is located in southwestern part of Iran in Chahrmahal and Bakhtiari Province.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), as the new school year began in Iran, an increase in the cost of food available at Shahrekord University had caused discontent and anger amongst students.Following a report indicating that a warm was found in school cafeteria food, students began to gather demanding better food at reasonable prices.

In an interview with HRANA, one of the demonstrators said, “The majority of students are experiencing financial problems, and when the cost of food went up at the beginning of the new school year, students were very unhappy.What happened yesterday was only a spark among students who were already dissatisfied with the situation.”

During these demonstrations, students demanded school cafeteria officials to be reprimanded and a guild council to be formed again in Shahrekord University.Some of the slogans shouted by the protestors were:

Students die but accept no misery!
Chivalrous students, Support, Support!
Have no fear; have no fear; we’re all united!

Yesterday’s demonstrations lasted an hour during which students were violently confronted by Herasat agents.

 

Negar Haeri, daughter of political prisoner Mashallah Haeri was arrested

HRANA News Agency – Negar Haeri, daughter of political prisoner Mashallah Haeri was arrested by security forces in Iran.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), during last week, Negar Haeri was arrested by security forces for following the case of his father and his bad health situation in Rajai Shar Prison. She also had been detained for this reason last year.

Continue reading “Negar Haeri, daughter of political prisoner Mashallah Haeri was arrested”