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Anti-regime demonstrations ARCHIVES:
ARCHIVES:Featured Iranian Bloggers:Directory of Iranian Weblogs in English Read the State Department's 2007 report on Human Rights abuses in Iran (released March 11, 2008)
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Feb.
6, 2010: Exclusive new photos of Imad Mugniyeh.
Iranian defectors
have provided dramatic new pictures from Iranian intelligence archives
of Imad Fayez Mugniyeh, the star overseas terror operative
of the IRGC Qods Forces. One of the photos shows Mugniyeh in Saudi
Arabia in 1985 some 45 days before he hijacked TWA Flight 847 to
Beirut. View the photos here.Jan. 12, 2010: Former South Carolina Governor Joins FDI Board. Former South Carolina Governor David M. Beasley has been elected to the Board of the Foundation for Democracy in Iran, FDI chairman Nader Afshar announced today. “Governor Beasley brings a wealth of political experience and international contacts to FDI. We are especially pleased that Gov. Beasley has agreed to make room for the people of Iran and their aspirations toward freedom in his busy schedule,” Afshar said. As Governor of South Carolina from 1995-1999, David Beasley was best known for combining Christian ethics with conservative economics. “I look forward to working with FDI on their important mission of empowering the Iranian people to achieve freedom and democracy,” Beasley said. Read more about Gov. Beasley in the full press release.
- The Progressive
American-Iranian Committee is calling on Iranian-Americans to send
letters of encouragement and thanks to Sen. Jon Kyl, for his efforts to
get the Department of Justice to investigate the activities of Trita Parsi and NIAC in supporting the policies of
the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- Mothers holding
a weekly protest to find out information on arrested family
members were themselves arrested last Friday in Laleh park. Some of the
women were beaten by security forces; others were transferred to Evin
prison.
Jan. 11, 2010: More Iranian diplomats seek political asylum. Ali
Akbar Omidmehr, former Islamic Republic ambassador in India, Pakistan,
and Afghanistan, tells Voice of America (VOA) that 29 Iranian diplomats
have sought political asylum in the countries where they are serving
since the stole presidential elections in June. Over the past two
weeks, two Iranian diplomats in Germany, one in France, and one in the
UK have sought asylum with their families, in addition to Mohammad Reza
Heydari, Iran’s Councilor in Norway whose resignation was announced in
the media. (Translation
from Planet-Iran)
Jan. 8,
2010: NIAC - a False Friend of the Green Movement. Hassan
Daioleslam reveals the "sea change" Trita Parsi and his pro-Tehran
lobbying group have undergone since the green movement came on the
scene this year. In Jan. 2008, when an Iranian-American asked him why
NIAC didn't stand up against human rights abuses in Iran, Parsi
demurred, saying 'we
do not have the expertise' in the area... Now, of course, NIAC is
trying to make people believe that they are in the forefront of the
Green movement. Their agenda? Same as before: no U.S. sanctions on
Iran, and no credible military option - just what Tehran wants.
Jan. 7, 2010:
More arrests announced. The American Enterprise Institute's
IranTracker project has identified more arrests of political activists:
Jan. 6,
2010: Another Kurd executed for PJAK affiliation. Early this
morning the regime executed another alleged PJAK activist, Fasih
Yasamani, warning his family they would not be informed of his burial
place for six months. He was arrested along with his father in 2007,
and was the second Kurdish political prisoner executed in the past two
months. 17
more Kurdish political prisoners have been sentenced to death for
anti-regime activities.
- FDI President Kenneth R. Timmerman was on C-SPAN's Washington Journal this
morning to discuss Iran. Watch
the Video
Jan. 5, 2010: Regime bans FDI and other "seditious" Western groups. Iran’s Intelligence Ministry has banned contact with 60 U.S. and international organizations it accuses of inciting a “soft war” against the regime. Banned groups included the National Endowment for Democracy, the Open Society Institute, Human Rights Watch, Freedom House, Yale University, the Carnegie Endowment, the New America Foundation, and FDI. Most foreign-based Farsi-language radios were also banned. (Read the RFE/RL report in English; read the original Farsi, where FDI appears at number 29 in the list.)
Some organizations, such as the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), are conspicuous for their absence from the Iranian regime's black list. Indeed, why would the regime want to ban a group that continues to lobby the Obama administration against imposing "crippling" economic sanctions - the one policy that would appear to strike fear into the heart of key regime leaders since it will cut into their profits and their ability to buy allegiance?
Jan. 2, 2010:
Washington Times warns that MOIS has "infiltrated agents" into
opposition. In a front page story featuring a photo of activist
Amir Abbas Fakhravar, the Washington
Times warns that the regime has "infiltrated agents into the Office
to Consolidate Unity, a student body that led the last widespread
student protests" in July 1999. Fakhravar told the Times he hoped to
create a "revolutionary council" of people inside and outside Iran to
lead the "Iranian Green Revolution." The strength of the Green movement
to date has been the lack of any
identifiable leadership, so any council of this sort that identified
leaders inside Iran would be a free gift to the regime. Fakhravar
claims he left Iran in 2006 while facing a death sentence, but in fact
left the country on a regular flight to Dubai with a freshly-issued
passport in his own name.
Jan. 1, 2010:
New photos show plainclothes security police firing into crowds of
protestors on Ashoura.


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