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RFE/RL Iran Report - 02/14/2005

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  • RFE/RL Iran Report - 02/14/2005

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Iran Report
    Vol. 8, No. 7, 14 February 2005

    A Review of Developments in Iran Prepared by the Regional Specialists
    of RFE/RL's Newsline Team

    ************************************************** **********
    HEADLINES:
    * INTELLIGENCE MINISTRY REFORM MAY NOT BE PERMANENT
    * HASHEMI-RAFSANJANI ADDRESSES INTERNATIONAL, DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
    * WOMEN'S STATUS WILL IMPROVE DESPITE SHORT-TERM REVERSALS
    * IRAN COMMEMORATES REVOLUTION'S ANNIVERSARY
    * IRANIAN LEADERS LEVEL TERRORISM ACCUSATIONS AT U.S.
    * ARMENIAN DEFENSE OFFICIALS VISIT TEHRAN
    * TEHRAN CRITICAL OF WASHINGTON'S REGIONAL PLANS
    * IRAN TALKS TOUGH AHEAD OF NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS WITH EUROPE
    * NORWEGIAN BUSINESSMEN BUCK THE TIDE BY VISITING IRAN
    * RADIO FARDA ON DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
    ************************************************** **********

    INTELLIGENCE MINISTRY REFORM MAY NOT BE PERMANENT. Iran's
    Intelligence and Security Ministry earned a reputation for
    persecuting and killing dissidents in Iran and abroad and for
    economic corruption in the first 15 years of its existence (1984-99).
    An apparent purge of the ministry in 1999, after some officials were
    linked with the serial killings of dissidents, apparently helped to
    rehabilitate its reputation. As the reformists' eight years in
    the executive branch wind down, some observers wonder if the reform
    of the ministry will be reversed.
    President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami met with senior
    Intelligence and Security Ministry officials on 1 February and
    expressed his pride and happiness with their performance, the Islamic
    Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported. He noted that the ministry
    contributes to the public's sense of security, and only spies and
    traitors need to fear it.
    Former Iranian parliamentarian Ahmad Salamatian, who now
    lives in Paris, told Radio Farda that Khatami is contrasting the
    ministry's lawful behavior now with its excesses in the past,
    such the serial killings of dissidents and economic corruption. This
    also contrasts the current leadership of Hojatoleslam Ali Yunesi with
    that of Ali-Akbar Fallahian-Khuzestani (1989-97), Salamatian told
    Radio Farda. The big question, Salamatian said, is will the ministry
    resume its old ways when the Khatami presidency ends? Will the
    reforms that Khatami and Yunesi brought about in the ministry remain?
    The big change in perceptions of the Intelligence and
    Security Ministry occurred in 1999, when alleged rogue elements in
    the ministry were arrested for murdering dissidents and
    intellectuals. The minister at the time, Hojatoleslam Qorban Ali
    Dori-Najafabadi, resigned, and many other officials were purged from
    the organization. The former ministry officials allegedly went on to
    create parallel intelligence and security bodies that are affiliated
    with other state institutions, such as the judiciary, or the
    police's Public Establishments Office (Edareh-yi Amaken Omumi).
    The Intelligence and Security Ministry, meanwhile, came to be seen as
    an institution that was apolitical and less corrupt than it had been
    in the past.
    Fighting corruption is a good way to make enemies.
    Intelligence and Security Minister Yunesi said in December that the
    prevalence of competing institutions hindered the fight against
    corruption, "Sharq" reported on 11 December. "The majority of these
    struggles were carried out as a result of political or factional
    considerations or even by personal will. They were surrounded by a
    ballyhoo, and sometimes they got to the point of execution but then
    the struggle would be stopped abruptly." Yunesi described corruption
    as a threat to all institutions, including the Intelligence and
    Security Ministry. He said many of the businesses associated with the
    ministry had been closed down, although this met with a lot of
    resistance and resulted in a loss of revenues. Yunesi said the
    government has compensated for these shortfalls, adding that the
    ministry is now fighting land speculation, a prevalent form of
    corruption in which people trade land that actually belongs to the
    government but which is not accounted for properly.
    More recently, Yunesi dismissed the justifications used to
    close the Imam Khomeini International Airport in spring 2004 (see
    "RFE/RL Iran Report," 19 April and 17 May 2004). Islamic Revolution
    Guards Corps personnel closed the airport on its first day of
    operation, on the grounds that a Turkish firm's role in operating
    the facility posed a security risk. The legislature interpellated
    Roads and Transport Minister Ahmad Khoram after the airport's
    closure for giving the contract to the Turks, and the legislature is
    considering scrapping the contract altogether. The airport still is
    not in use. Yunesi said on 23 January that there are no security
    concerns, IRNA reported, and he referred to the closure as "a mistake
    that will be made up for."
    There was little Iranian hard-liners could do about these
    seemingly contrarian views and actions. But after the 2004
    parliamentary elections conservative domination of the legislature
    resumed, and with it came efforts to regain control of the
    Intelligence and Security Ministry. In November 2004, Ardabil
    Province parliamentarian Hassan Nowi-Aqdam said the legislature is
    considering a bill to separate the Intelligence and Security Ministry
    from the executive branch, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA)
    reported. He said, "The [ministry] has lost its awe and power; the
    ministry is no longer in control of the security units in various
    state departments and other ministries; the intelligence material
    passed to the [ministry] by these units are unreliable; moreover, the
    security units are more loyal to the departments where they work,
    instead of being loyal to the [ministry]."
    This proposal met with a great deal of resistance. Former
    Vice President for Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Hojatoleslam
    Mohammad Ali Abtahi warned on 26 November that approval of the bill
    would eliminate supervision of the Intelligence and Security
    Ministry, ISNA reported. Retaining its status as a ministry under the
    executive branch means that it is supervised by the legislature,
    Abtahi said. He added, "While such decisions are being made parallel
    intelligence bodies are undermining the activities of the
    [Intelligence and Security Ministry]." Tabriz parliamentarian Akbar
    Alami said on 26 November that such a development would turn the
    Intelligence and Security Ministry into a frightening institution,
    ISNA reported. He explained that the ministry cannot turn against the
    people if it is supervised by the elected president and parliament.
    After that initial furor, little came of the plan to make the
    ministry some sort of stand-alone institution. Yet some of the
    initially informal parallel entities have now become more
    institutionalized. "Aftab-i Yazd" reported on 19 December that the
    Department for Social Protection now has a formal charter. Its
    responsibilities are almost identical to those of the Organization
    for the Propagation of Virtue and Prohibition of Vice (Amr be Maruf
    va Nahi az Monker). Its personnel will gather intelligence, an
    Intelligence and Security Ministry responsibility, and also engage in
    activities that are normally the responsibility of the police and the
    Basij.
    President Khatami told a boisterous student audience in a 6
    December speech that the ministry is "the most trustworthy source of
    security in your system," state television reported. From a
    comparative perspective, this may be true. But there is no guarantee
    that this will continue to be the case if a hard-liner wins the June
    2005 presidential election. And even if the ministry continues on its
    current path, the so-called parallel organizations might well
    continue on theirs. (Bill Samii)

    EXPEDIENCY COUNCIL CHAIRMAN ADDRESSES INTERNATIONAL, DOMESTIC
    AFFAIRS. In the past month, Expediency Council Chairman and former
    President Ali-Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani has granted a number of
    interviews to Iranian media and another to a U.S. newspaper. As he is
    one of the most powerful and influential individuals in Iran, his
    remarks on topics such as Iran-U.S. relations and the nuclear issue
    are always important.
    His remarks are even more noteworthy now, as observers wonder
    whether Hashemi-Rafsanjani plans to run in the June presidential
    election.
    They also provide an interesting study in contrast between
    comments intended for the Western and those crafted for the Iranian
    media.
    In a 9 February interview with state radio,
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said that Western, and especially
    Washington's, comments about Iran have become more aggressive
    recently. He went on to dismiss this development, saying it
    represents "a need for a tangible enemy and [to] introduce that enemy
    to their nations."
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said on 6 February in an exclusive
    interview with "USA Today" that Tehran is unconcerned over
    Washington's tough recent statements about Iran. He said the
    resumption of Iranian-U.S. dialogue should be preceded by an American
    goodwill gesture, such as the unfreezing of Iranian assets that he
    estimated to be about $8 billion plus interest. He said he is one of
    the people who can restore relations between the two countries and
    indicated that there is no need for continued difficulties. "The mere
    fact that I am sitting here talking to you is an indication that we
    have no differences with the American people. This would not happen
    with an Israeli journalist. We want good relations with the American
    people. There has to be a dialogue between the governments, but what
    can one do when your government has always wronged us?"
    In a 30 January interview with the Iranian Students News
    Agency (ISNA), Hashemi-Rafsanjani's tone was more belligerent.
    "The Americans continue their hostility against us. They have always
    thought about bringing us to our knees in some way, but they have
    always failed." He predicted that the United States will not act
    against Iran, but if it does, "we can do great things.... They are
    wounded and they might engage in foolish actions. But ultimately they
    will be defeated." Hashemi-Rafsanjani said there is nothing new in
    what Washington is saying, "but I evaluate their policy of hostility
    to be serious."
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani told state radio on 9 February that
    Iran's willingness to negotiate with Europe about the nuclear
    issue is a "positive step." "This was a collective step by the system
    and we all agreed and remain in agreement over the issue," he
    explained. He also signaled unhappiness with the Europeans, however,
    saying that they are "not practicing what they said before." He
    warned that killing time will not be effective.
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani sounded a similar note in his interview
    with "USA Today." "I'm not satisfied with the progress of the
    work, but I am happy that the talks are going on," he said, adding,
    "It might have a negative effect if the United States joins."
    In his 30 January interview, Hashemi-Rafsanjani expressed
    confidence that the nuclear issue will be resolved in Iran's
    favor. He said Iran has the technology to create its own nuclear
    fuel. Intensified international oversight, he said, is not a problem.
    "Everything is transparent, and nothing will happen to us," he added.
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani attributed international concern about the nuclear
    issue to a continuous desire to humiliate Iran. "We must try to
    protect our dignity," he said. He went on to say that Iran possesses
    nuclear technology that it can put into action quickly.
    In another interview, which appeared in the 17 January issue
    of "Sharq" newspaper, Hashemi-Rafsanjani stressed the importance of
    diplomatic engagement with the West. He said he advocates
    "ideological realism" and acknowledged that "observing Islam leads to
    some limitations." Hashemi-Rafsanjani also acknowledged the value of
    President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami's "Dialogue of
    Civilizations," saying, "Intellectual interaction is an important
    issue in the life of human beings." He added, "It can be peaceful and
    solve problems."
    On these major foreign policy issues, Hashemi-Rafsanjani
    sounded a fairly similar tone in all interviews. His interview with
    "USA Today" focused more on Iranian-U.S. relations, but that was
    likely a reflection of the interviewer's interests. He was fairly
    consistent throughout the interviews, although the terminology used
    with Iranian media was arguably more aggressive. That could have as
    much to do with the translators as it does with
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani's intentions, however.
    The daily "Aftab-i Yazd" on 9 February criticized
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani's statement about the possibility of renewing
    relations with the United States. Is there any point in negotiating
    with the government that he described as bird-brained, the daily
    asked. Moreover, it continued, would it not have been easier to
    resolve differences between the two countries when Hashemi-Rafsanjani
    was president (1989-97)?
    A commentary in the 9 February "Etemad" said using the media
    to express foreign policy opportunities can have positive results.
    First, this can eliminate the American public's "Iranian taboo"
    and demonstrate Tehran's openness, the paper argued. Such a
    dialogue, it added, shows that a new understanding between the two
    countries is possible.
    Many people wonder whether Hashemi-Rafsanjani intends to be a
    candidate in Iran's next presidential election, which is
    scheduled to take place on 17 June.
    Five individuals have announced that they want to be the main
    conservative candidate -- Tehran Mayor Mahmud Ahmadi-Nejad; Ali
    Larijani, an adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei;
    Expediency Council Secretary Mohsen Rezai; Tehran parliamentary
    representative Ahmad Tavakoli; and another adviser to the supreme
    leader, Ali Akbar Velayati.
    Two individuals have said they would like to be the reformist
    wing's candidate -- former parliamentary speaker Hojatoleslam
    Mehdi Karrubi and former Science, Research, and Technology Minister
    Mustafa Moin. A third person, Supreme National Security Council
    Secretary Hassan Rohani, has been touted as a possible candidate, but
    he said he will not decide until the end of the Iranian year (20
    March).
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said in the 6 January "USA Today" that he
    has not decided on his candidacy yet and that he would prefer that
    someone else be the people's preferred candidate. If no other
    candidate emerges, he said, "I might announce [my candidacy], but we
    have two or three more months."
    He made similar points in the 30 January ISNA interview.
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said his candidacy depends on a popular and
    capable manager coming forward. "Personal capability and support with
    the vote of the people must exist together," he told the agency.
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said his general inclination is against being a
    candidate because he does not want people to think "the regime is
    dependent on only a few people." He conceded that it is too early to
    make his decision and that for this reason he has not thought
    seriously about a program for running the country. Asked which
    candidate he would support if he does not run, Hashemi-Rafsanjani
    said he has not yet made a decision.
    Economic affairs were discussed in three of the interviews.
    Asked by "USA Today" about "the biggest problem facing Iran now,"
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani said there are no major problems. He conceded that
    unemployment and inflation are "chronic conditions" that must be
    resolved. He acknowledged the role of subsidies in reducing the cost
    of living.
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani was perhaps more forthcoming about this
    issue in the ISNA interview. Asked what he would do if elected
    president, he said, "We must do something for the segment under the
    poverty line to have a dignified life." He added that such a goal
    "can be achieved by creating a complete social security and creating
    employment in the country, without harming economic prosperity."
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani bristled when asked if curing Iran's
    "sick economy" is the only reason for relations with industrial
    states, "Sharq" reported on 17 January. He said he does not accept
    that expression, and the problems that existed when he was president
    were minor. "Please say 'economic difficulties' instead of
    sick economy," he said. He agreed that the economy's dependence
    on oil is problematic, but added that "the problem goes away" if
    there is a good 10-year plan incorporating judicious taxation and if
    the people and the country's officials are determined.
    There was no great difference in Hashemi-Rafsanjani's
    interviews on most domestic issues, and he was fairly consistent
    regardless of the interviewer's nationality. Iran suffers from
    double-digit unemployment and inflation, and he tried to understate
    the extent of economic problems in his "USA Today" interview. Such an
    approach could reflect a desire to make the country look good for a
    predominantly foreign audience. (Bill Samii)

    WOMEN'S STATUS WILL IMPROVE DESPITE SHORT-TERM REVERSALS. A
    United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights (UNHCHR) rapporteur
    recently concluded a visit to Iran, and at her final news conference
    she spoke out against the shortcomings of that country's legal
    system in terms of gender issues.
    The next few years are likely to prove challenging for those
    who want to change the legal system, but it appears that gender
    politics are in transition and improvements are likely to emerge in
    the long run.
    The UNHCHR's rapporteur on violence against women, Yakin
    Erturk, urged the Iranian government on 6 February to approve the
    Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against
    Women (CEDAW), Radio Farda reported.
    A proposal that Iran join CEDAW is just one of 33 bills
    addressing gender issues that were introduced by female legislators
    in the 6th parliament (2000-04), Ziba Mir-Hosseini wrote in the
    winter 2004 issue of "Middle East Report"
    (http://www.merip.org/mer/mer233/mir-hosseini.html). The Guardians
    Council rejected all of them, but 16 became law after being watered
    down by the Expediency Council. The proposal that Iran join CEDAW --
    along with 16 other bills -- is now up to the conservative-dominated
    7th parliament, Mir-Hosseini wrote.
    Mir-Hosseini went on to suggest that the outlook is not good.
    Ten of 12 female legislators are members of the Zeinab Society, which
    is funded by the Supreme Leader's Office. Moreover, these women
    have criticized their female predecessors for introducing legislation
    that allegedly went against the teachings of Islam. This criticism
    included CEDAW.
    Erturk met with women's groups, nongovernmental
    organizations, scholars, the media, and state representatives during
    her one-week visit to Iran, which began on 30 January.
    Giti Purfazel, a lawyer and women's rights activists in
    Iran, met with Erturk. Purfazel told Radio Farda that the UN official
    appeared to have a genuine interest in learning about the situation
    in Iran. She noted that women have fewer legal rights than men and
    that they face physical violence at home, but there is little they
    can do about this.
    "For example, if a woman goes to court and says, 'I have
    no feelings toward my husband,' or, 'Because of his abuses at
    home, I have no feelings for him and want to separate from him,'
    they will not support this. The woman must really convince the court
    of this and convincing the court is very difficult." Purfazel said.
    "A man, because of Law 1133, can divorce his wife at any time. A
    woman does not have this legal right." Purfazel compared the current
    legal system with one that existed 1,400 years ago, and she said
    people cannot live this way. Addressing the issue of polygamy,
    Purfazel said, "Today's woman cannot think the way a woman
    thought 200 years ago, 300 years ago, therefore she cannot tolerate a
    rival wife."
    Purfazel also told Radio Farda that Erturk wanted to know
    about punishments for women, including stoning. Purfazel referred to
    legal punishments and the physical punishment that women suffer at
    home. She also noted that the blood money (diyeh) one must pay for
    killing a woman is half the amount for killing a man. The same
    principle applies to witnesses. A woman's testimony is only half
    as valid as a man's. In some cases, Purfazel told Radio Farda, a
    woman's testimony is ignored if a man's testimony is not
    available to back it up.
    According to Mir-Hosseini in "Middle East Report," women like
    former Tehran parliamentary representative Fatimeh Haqiqatjoo are
    struggling to change Iran's "patriarchal society." Iranian women
    have inherited a "legacy of pain," she wrote, and they yearn for "an
    elusive freedom." Haqiqatjoo has criticized hard-line excesses in her
    speeches, condemned the president for not appointing female cabinet
    members, and urged government ministers to place women in senior
    positions.
    There were 13 women in the 6th parliament, and they were very
    public figures. Mir-Hosseini argued that they successfully challenged
    existing parliamentary conventions, such as wearing the
    all-encompassing chador, sitting in an area that kept them separate
    from male colleagues, and eating in a curtained off portion of the
    dining hall.
    The next parliamentary elections are not scheduled to take
    place until spring 2008, and conservative domination of the
    legislature indicates that the course of gender issues in Iran
    remains troubled in the short term.
    The impetus of the demographic changes that are taking place
    in the country, however, strongly suggests that the situation will
    improve in the long run. After all, approximately two-thirds of the
    population is under the age of 30, and more than half the
    country's university students are female. If and when they become
    politically active, these educated and youthful women could seek to
    effect substantive legal reforms. (Bill Samii)

    DISSIDENT CLERIC FREED FROM PRISON. Hojatoleslam Hassan
    Yussefi-Eshkevari was released from jail on 6 February, relatives
    told IRNA. The cleric was arrested in August 2000; his seven-year
    sentence included four years for saying that dress codes for women
    are unnecessary in Islam, one year for his participation in the
    spring 2000 conference in Berlin about reform in Iran, and two years
    for disseminating false information. An appeals court reversed the
    death sentence. (Bill Samii)

    MILITARY OFFICERS DESCRIBE NATIONAL CAPABILITIES. Defense and Armed
    Forces Logistics Minister Admiral Ali Shamkhani said, in the daily
    "Sharq" of 7 February, that "since the first day I took the office, I
    have said that we do not need nuclear arms," IRNA reported. Shamkhani
    said Iran has signed international nonproliferation treaties and its
    nuclear sites are open to international inspectors. Shamkhani also
    said that, before the revolution, Iran depended on foreign advisers
    and foreign sources, but the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War gave Iran the
    opportunity to design and produce its own defensive equipment, state
    radio reported.
    In the same article, Deputy Defense Minister Admiral Mohammad
    Shafii-Rudsari referred to Iran's production of the Shihab-3 and
    other missiles, as well as tanks and armored personnel carriers.
    Shafii-Rudsari added that Iran can design and produce all kinds of
    ships. Brigadier-General Hussein Alai, chairman of the Iranian armed
    forces' Aviation Industry Organization, said Iran manufactures
    unmanned aircraft, can make six types of helicopters, and it is
    trying to build passenger aircraft. (Bill Samii)

    IRAN ACCUSES U.S. OF INTERFERENCE IN IRAQI AFFAIRS... Iranian
    Ambassador to Kuwait Jafar Musavi on 6 February denied that Iran is
    interfering in Iraqi affairs and charged that the United States is at
    fault, IRNA reported. "[It is] the United States that is meddling in
    Iraq's domestic affairs with its occupation. Iran does not even
    have one military personnel [sic] in Iraq," he said. Musavi did not
    say how many Iranian intelligence officers are active in Iraq.
    "Iran's spiritual influence does not mean it is meddling with the
    country's affairs. We are committed to the principle of
    noninterference in the domestic affairs of any country," Musavi said.
    (Bill Samii)

    ...AS IT REFURBISHES HOLY SITES. Iranian construction efforts in the
    holy cities of Al-Najaf and Karbala are continuing, "Siyasat-i Ruz"
    reported on 20 January. The Imam Ali shrine is located in Al-Najaf.
    The shrines of Imam Hussein and his brother, Abbas Alamdar, are
    located in Karbala. Karaj Friday prayer leader and supreme
    leader's representative Hajj Hussein Shadiman, who heads the
    office for repairing the holy sites in Iraq, described laying a water
    pipe on the Karbala road to the holy shrine, which makes this the
    first time it will have piped water. Now there are fire hydrants and
    fire-fighting equipment around the shrine, Shadiman added. Other
    construction projects include a ceremonial hall, as well as a health
    center. A great deal of work was done on cleaning up the Imam Ali
    shrine. Shadiman said individuals wanting to aid the construction
    process can make donations, or if they prefer, the office will design
    projects for individuals or groups that want to contribute
    independently. (Bill Samii)

    IRAN COMMEMORATES REVOLUTION'S ANNIVERSARY. Tehran and other
    Iranian cities hosted rallies on 10 February to mark the anniversary
    of the day in 1979 that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returned to Iran,
    international news agencies reported. In Tehran, people carried
    effigies of U.S. President George W. Bush, U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice, and Uncle Sam (see
    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050210/ids_photos_wl/r
    3002524316.jpg,
    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050210/481/xhs10502101
    201, and
    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&am p;u=/050210/ids_photos_wl/r
    2981135866.jpg). Participants in the Tehran rally issued a resolution
    accusing Israel of fomenting regional instability, expressing support
    for the Palestinian people and, in IRNA's words, "saying the
    Zionist threats stem from the U.S. support for the Israeli crimes."
    Participants also emphasized what they see as Iran's legitimate
    right to use nuclear energy. (Bill Samii)

    LEBANESE SHI'A LEADERS PRAISE IRAN. Naim Qasem, deputy
    secretary-general of Lebanese Hizballah, on 10 February congratulated
    Iran on the 26th anniversary of its Islamic revolution, IRNA
    reported. He said the revolution is rooted in Islamic values and
    justice, and movements relying on these factors are invincible.
    Lebanese Shi'a spiritual leader Sheikh Muhammad Hussein
    Fadlallah said on 6 February that Iran is a target of the U.S.
    government, the Lebanese National News Agency reported. He called for
    unity among the Iranian people so they can confront conspiracies,
    "because the political and security circumstances surrounding Iran at
    this stage are no less dangerous than those that confronted it
    immediately after the victory of the revolution." He said Iran will
    have a bigger regional role in the future. (Bill Samii)

    IRANIAN LEADERS LEVEL TERRORISM ACCUSATIONS AT UNITED STATES. Alleged
    Iranian involvement in international terrorism continues to be a
    major concern for some Western states. Tehran continues to reject
    such accusations, leveling its own counter-accusations in response.
    President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami said, at a 10
    February rally in Tehran, that Iran's revolution is the "target
    of aggression" by Islamic reactionaries and bigots who decapitate
    hostages and assassinate their opponents, state television reported.
    It is also falsely invoked, he suggested, by "those who wage war
    under the pretext of defending freedom, supporting human rights, and
    fighting terrorism." Superficially, it appears that these two
    currents -- "one in America and the other in the [Middle] East" --
    oppose each other, Khatami said. However, he charged, the United
    States nurtured the reactionary terrorists and now they are a tool in
    its hands. The current hue-and-cry over Iran is psychological warfare
    meant to cover up past failures, Khatami alleged. Iran is ready to
    defend itself, he added: "Should they dare to attack, Iran will turn
    into a burning hell for aggressors."
    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Iranian Air Force
    personnel on 7 February that foreign powers do not oppose
    dictatorships, Iranian state radio reported. He said the White House
    has organized terrorist acts, and the CIA "directly or indirectly
    created and supported" the individuals it now names as notorious
    terrorists. He accused the United Stated of training and arming the
    Taliban and Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan so that these organizations could
    weaken Iran. Khamenei said the United States is hostile to Iran
    because the Islamic Republic says "no" to Washington's demands.
    "They expect us to surrender to a global dictatorship," he added.
    Khamenei accused the United States of wanting to eliminate the
    Palestinian people and supporting a "mad dog" that attacks every
    Palestinian. Khamenei predicted that the United States' Middle
    East policy will fail.
    Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi on 8
    February dismissed British allegations of involvement in terrorism,
    IRNA reported. "It certainly does sponsor terrorism," Prime Minister
    Tony Blair told a parliamentary committee about Iran on 8 February,
    AFP reported. "There's no doubt about that at all." Blair said
    Iran has an obligation to help bring about Middle East peace.
    Assefi charged that Blair's comments reflect the
    influence of "the Zionist regime" (an Iranian reference to Israel).
    Assefi claimed that some Western states are terrorist safe-havens and
    that the United Kingdom supports Israel, which he claimed exemplifies
    state terrorism. Said Rajai-Khorasani, a former Iranian
    representative to the United Nations and currently a university
    professor in Tehran, told Radio Farda that Blair's comments were
    a mistake. "We have seen this sort of cooperation between Mr. Blair
    and Mr. Bush before, when they wanted to attack Iraq without any sort
    of legal remit from the United Nations or even the European Union. It
    was in such a political atmosphere that Mr. Blair told the British
    parliament that 'we cannot abandon our confederate.'"
    On the third day of a counterterrorism conference in Riyadh,
    Saudi Arabia, participants tried to focus on practical solutions and
    avoided touchier issues, such as defining terrorism, Radio Farda
    reported on 7 February. Among the practical issues that require
    attention are individuals' economic well being, young people, and
    the emergence of political Islam. Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah also
    called for the creation of an international counterterrorism center.
    An argument between the Iranian and U.S. delegations took
    place on the sidelines of the event, international news agencies
    reported. The Iranians took exception to the definition of Hizballah
    as a terrorist organization, and they reportedly compared the
    perspectives of the United States and Al-Qaeda. Amir Seyyed Iravani,
    head of the Iranian delegation, claimed that Iran is the world's
    biggest victim of terrorism and it has suffered the greatest damage
    as a result of this phenomenon. Iravani also discussed the connection
    between international narcotics trafficking, weapons smuggling, and
    terrorism. Iravani said the "worst form" of terrorism takes place in
    Palestine. (Bill Samii)

    ARMENIAN DEFENSE OFFICIALS VISIT TEHRAN. Armenian Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian, who also serves as secretary of his country's
    presidential security council, left for Tehran on 7 February, Noyan
    Tapan reported. Sarkisian and his colleagues were invited by Supreme
    National Security Council Secretary Hojatoleslam Hassan Rohani and
    are scheduled to meet with Mehdi Safari, who heads the Iranian
    Foreign Ministry's CIS department, and former Iranian Ambassador
    to Armenia Farhad Koleini. Serzh met regularly with Koleini when
    Koleini was ambassador in Yerevan.
    Sarkisian met with President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami,
    Supreme National Security Council Secretary Hojatoleslam Hassan
    Rohani, and Expediency Council Chairman Ayatollah Ali-Akbar
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani on 8 February, IRNA reported. Khatami told the
    visitor that the two countries should work on developing economic
    cooperation, and he referred to the provision of natural gas.
    Sarkisian mentioned connection of the two countries' railways.
    Rohani said the provision of gas and electrical power is important
    for regional security and economic affairs. Rohani also promoted a
    direct dialogue between Baku and Yerevan to resolve the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. Sarkisian ruled out a phased settlement of
    the issue and called for a grand bargain that would settle all
    related disputes. Hashemi-Rafsanjani said Iran is willing to mediate
    in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.
    The Armenian delegation left Tehran on 9 February. (Bill
    Samii)

    TEHRAN CRITICAL OF WASHINGTON'S REGIONAL PLANS. Supreme National
    Security Council Secretary Hojatoleslam Hassan Rohani said, in a 7
    February interview with Iranian state television, that the White
    House's Greater Middle East Peace plan represents an effort to
    destroy the region's Islamic traditions. The plan is also part of
    an effort to let Israel dominate the region politically and
    economically, Rohani claimed.
    The Greater Middle East Peace Initiative, which encouraged
    Arab and South Asian governments to democratize, was introduced about
    one year ago and immediately caused controversy, according to the
    "Financial Times" of 27 February 2004. Arab observers reportedly
    criticized the initiative for diminishing the Israeli-Palestinian
    conflict. In the face of regional resistance, the plan was scaled
    back by September 2004.
    U.S. President George W. Bush referred to the Middle East
    extensively in his 2 February State of the Union address
    (http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/02/print/20050202-11.ht
    ml). He said the U.S. will continue to work with its regional friends
    "to promote peace and stability in the broader Middle East." He noted
    positive developments in Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Saudi
    Arabia. "To promote peace in the broader Middle East," Bush said, "we
    must confront regimes that continue to harbor terrorists and pursue
    weapons of mass murder." He then referred specifically to Iran's
    purported role as a state sponsor of terrorism. It is not unlikely
    that this reference is what really annoyed Rohani. (Bill Samii)

    IRAN BUYS AUSTRIAN SNIPER RIFLES. Austrian arms manufacturer
    Steyr-Mannlicher has exported 800 sniper rifles to Iran, ORF
    television, AFP, and "Wirtshaftblatt" reported on 9 February. The
    Austrian Interior Ministry issued an export permit for the .50
    caliber rifles, which have a 1,500-meter range, and depending on the
    type of ammunition, can penetrate armored vehicles. "We asked the
    Iranians to give us a certificate stating that the end user of the
    weapons would be the Iranian police, who would use it to protect the
    country's borders and to combat drug trafficking," said Austrian
    Interior Ministry spokesman Rudolf Golilla, AFP reported. According
    to "Wirtshaftblatt," the Defense Industries Organization and the Drug
    Control Headquarters are listed as recipients of the rifles. The
    former organization is part of the Defense and Armed Forces Logistics
    Ministry. Austria's Social Democrat Party has reportedly asked
    the foreign minister and the interior minister to come to the
    legislature to discuss the issue behind closed doors. (Bill Samii)

    IRAN'S NUCLEAR SECTOR CAN RECOVER QUICKLY FROM ATTACK. Vice
    President for Atomic Energy Qolam Reza Aqazadeh-Khoi, who heads the
    Iranian Atomic Energy Organization, said in a 6 February interview
    with state television that Iran can recover fairly quickly from an
    attack on the Bushehr nuclear facility. There would be economic
    damage, he acknowledged, but Iran's know-how, designs, and
    capability would not be damaged. Even the physical damage could be
    repaired, he said, because of the lessons learned in the 1980-88
    Iran-Iraq War.
    Turning to Iran's mastery of the nuclear-fuel cycle and
    ability to produce uranium hexafluoride (UF6), Aqazadeh-Khoi said
    there are only seven or eight factories in the world that can make
    UF2, UF6, uranium oxide, and uranium metal. He did not mention the
    location of the Iranian factories. (Bill Samii)

    IRAN TALKS TOUGH AHEAD OF NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS WITH EUROPE.
    Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Hassan Rohani warned on 6
    February of "retaliation" and an acceleration of Tehran's efforts
    to master nuclear technology if the United States or Israel attacks
    its atomic facilities. Iran says its enrichment of nuclear material
    is only for peaceful purposes allowed under its international treaty
    obligations. But Washington fears that Iran is enriching nuclear
    material to build nuclear weapons. U.S. officials say all options
    remain open, but military strikes against Iran are not on
    Washington's agenda for now. The United States is backing an
    initiative by European negotiators due to meet with Rohani in Geneva
    in the second week of February. European diplomats say they want
    Tehran to suspend all uranium enrichment as a guarantee it is not
    trying to build nuclear weapons.
    Rohani's tough words to the U.S. and Israel follow
    criticisms by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice against what
    she called Tehran's "loathed regime of unelected mullahs."
    Rohani's warnings also follow a suggestion last month by U.S.
    Vice President Dick Cheney that Israel could launch pre-emptive
    strikes against Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities if it feels
    threatened by them. Israel, thought to be the only nuclear-armed
    state in the Middle East, has not said it will attack.
    Rohani told Reuters on 6 February that Tehran will
    "definitely have greater motivation" to accelerate the enrichment of
    nuclear material if Iran is attacked by the United States or Israel:
    "I do not think America itself will take such a risk because America
    knows very well that we will strongly answer such an attack. The
    Americans are very well aware of our capabilities. They know our
    capabilities for retaliating against such attacks."
    Cheney said on 6 February that the United States backs a
    diplomatic effort by three leading EU states (Britain, France, and
    Germany) aimed at persuading Iran to abandon nuclear enrichment. But
    Cheney says Washington is not ruling out a military option in the
    future or other alternatives to diplomacy.
    Rice, on a week-long tour of Europe and the Middle East, has
    been communicating the same message to leaders in those regions.
    Speaking in a widely quoted BBC interview that aired on 6 February,
    Rice said the United States remains focused on diplomatic efforts
    with Iran: "We believe that this is a time for diplomacy. This is a
    time to muster our considerable influence -- we the alliance -- our
    considerable influence, our considerable 'soft power' if you
    will, to bring great changes in the world."
    Analysts say Washington still appears to be far from making a
    decision on military strikes. That's because the European
    diplomatic initiative is still underway with a new round of
    negotiations scheduled to start in Geneva on 8 February.
    European diplomats in Vienna say they want Iran to suspend
    all uranium enrichment programs -- even those for peaceful use of
    nuclear energy -- as a guarantee that Tehran is not seeking nuclear
    weapons.
    Alex Standish, editor of the London-based weekly journal
    "Jane's Intelligence Digest," told RFE/RL: "The diplomacy that is
    going on at the moment from the European Union -- particularly from
    the United Kingdom, France, Germany -- is to persuade the Iranians
    that this is not in their interest. And that it makes them a
    potential target, possibly, for an attack in the future, even if it
    is not currently on the agenda, from either Israel or the United
    States." On the other hand, Standish concludes that the U.S.-led
    invasion of Iraq and the diplomacy over North Korea's nuclear
    programs have convinced many Iranian officials that the only way to
    thwart military strikes by Israel or the United States is to become a
    nuclear-capable country as soon as possible.
    U.S. officials and independent experts say that, at its
    current pace, Iran probably will not be able to produce a nuclear
    weapon for at least another three years.
    Remi Leveau, a professor emeritus at the Institute of
    Political Studies in Paris, notes that the United States has so far
    refused to be involved in direct negotiations with authorities from
    Iran's conservative Islamist regime. "Obviously, Iran wants to
    discuss [these issues] seriously [and] directly with the United
    States. If there is no direct involvement of the United States in
    terms of recognition [of Iran and the] prospects of a common vision
    on the future of the Middle East -- and especially in relationship
    with Iraq or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- the Iranians will
    just keep talking with the Europeans. But, I think, without really
    wanting to come to a significant agreement.
    In his 6 February interview, Rohani called for "equal
    negotiations" between Iran and the United States, saying that
    agreement could be reached with Washington if talks are conducted, in
    his words, "as two equal countries with equal rights."
    Rohani also suggested that any breakdown in its talks in
    Geneva will be the result of U.S. pressure on the EU diplomats.
    "Basically, America and Europe, regarding Iran's nuclear issue,
    have some common aims and some united views. In regard to some other
    goals, they have different views and think differently. Since the
    beginning, the Europeans have adopted a policy based on talks and
    negotiations with Iran. The basis for America's dealing with Iran
    was threats. But at the same time, we are in talks with the
    Europeans. And we hope the Americans, by pressuring the Europeans,
    are not going to destroy the talks and cause their failure."
    In Tehran on 7 February, Iranian Vice President and Atomic
    Energy chief Gholamreza Aqazadeh-Khoi told Iranian state television
    that the negotiations with British, French and German diplomats will
    enter a crucial phase when they begin the next day. Aqazadeh-Khoi
    said the conclusion of three months of nuclear negotiations is close.
    But he said European negotiators need to be clearer about their
    plans. (Ron Synovitz)

    TEHRAN COMPLAINS ABOUT U.S.-EU NUCLEAR APPROACH. Minister of Defense
    and Armed Forces Logistics Admiral Ali Shamkhani said, in a 10
    February speech in the central Iranian city of Yazd, that Europe and
    the United States are using a "good cop, bad cop" approach in dealing
    with Iran's nuclear program, IRNA reported. Two days earlier,
    negotiators from France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Iran began
    closed-door discussions in Geneva. The talks were scheduled to last
    three days.
    Supreme National Security Council Secretary Hojatoleslam
    Hassan Rohani said on 9 February in Mashhad that Tehran will decide
    if continuing the discussions is worthwhile after it has determined
    the Europeans' level of commitment, IRNA reported. Rohani also
    said the United States is trying to make the Iran-EU talks fail, IRNA
    reported.
    In her statements on the issue, U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice has not conveyed the impression that she wants the
    Iran-EU talks to fail. She said in Brussels on 9 February, "The
    Iranians have to be held to their international obligations. We
    haven't set any timetables. We continue to be in completely close
    consultation with the Europeans about how it is going, about whether
    progress is being made." Rice said at a news conference in Paris on 8
    February, "The Iranians know precisely what they need to do, and I do
    want to say we are appreciative of the efforts that the EU-3 are
    making with the Iranians to give them a path back to the
    international community because they clearly are engaged in
    activities that make everyone suspicious about what they are doing."
    U.S. President George W. Bush sounded a similar note on 9
    February in Washington when he said, "I look forward to going over to
    Europe to continue discussing this issue [Iran's nuclear program]
    with our allies. It's important we speak with one voice." He also
    said, "The Iranians just need to know that the free world is working
    together to send a very clear message, you know: don't develop a
    nuclear weapon. And the reason we're sending that message is
    because Iran with a nuclear weapon would be a very destabilizing
    force in the world." (Bill Samii)

    NORWEGIAN BUSINESSMEN BUCK THE TIDE BY VISITING IRAN. Representatives
    from 24 Norwegian businesses will accompany Norwegian Interior
    Minister Borge Brende when he visits Iran in the second week of
    February, "Aftenposten" reported on 8 February. So far, almost 50
    firms have done preliminary studies on working in Iran or are already
    active there. According to the Norwegian daily, the delegation
    includes firms involved in shipping, energy, law, and education.
    This development occurs as many Western firms are
    reconsidering their activities in Iran (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," 1
    and 7 February 2005). Companies that have decided to forego future
    business with Iran include BP, Thyssen-Krupp, and General Electric.
    The assumption has been that firms are giving in to U.S.
    pressure, but the 8 February "Wall Street Journal" reports that the
    business climate in Iran is not very inviting and refers to the
    legislature's revision of a contract with a Turkish mobile phone
    company and its intervention in a contract with a Turkish-Austrian
    consortium to operate the new Imam Khomeini International Airport.
    (Bill Samii)

    IRAN'S NEW AIRPORT TO REOPEN IN APRIL. Roads and Transport
    Minister Mohammad Rahmati said on 8 February that Imam Khomeini
    International Airport will be opened in April, IRNA reported. He said
    the airport will initially have one foreign flight a day, and this
    amount will gradually increase. Keeping the airport closed is not
    economical, Rahmati said.
    Islamic Revolution Guards Corps personnel closed the airport
    on its first day of operation in the spring of 2004 on the grounds
    that a Turkish firm's role in operating the facility posed a
    security risk (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," 19 April and 17 May 2004).
    The legislature interpellated Roads and Transport Minister Ahmad
    Khoram after the airport's closure for giving the contract to the
    Turkish company, and the legislature is considering scrapping the
    contract altogether, IRNA reported on 23 January. No decisions have
    been made on who will operate the airport. (Bill Samii)

    RADIO FARDA ON DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS. A roundtable discussion on
    Radio Farda, moderated by Radio Farda broadcaster Mariam Ahmadi,
    examined the state of political prisoners under two regimes with
    participants Reza Moini of the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders
    (RSF), Dr. Nemat Ahmadi, a jurist and lawyer in Tehran, former
    political prisoner Majid Derabeigi and Dr. Mohammad Maleki, a former
    head of Tehran University. Audio and a Persian transcript of the
    roundtable, titled "Political Prisoners and Political Offences:
    Experts Examine the State of Political Prisoners under Two Regimes,"
    can be found on the Radio Farda website at
    http://www.radiofarda.org/weekly_article/2005/2/68783ad6-6f5b-40d8-b7
    06-d035d8ddb40f.htm.

    Mariam Ahmadi (MA): 22 Bahman 1357 [11 February 1979] is
    recorded in history as the date of the victory of the Iranian
    revolution. Like other revolutions, that revolution had its slogans,
    which in the days leading to 22 Bahman were distilled into three
    principal demands for independence, freedom and an Islamic Republic,
    but which had previously included, in the marches and demonstrations
    of autumn 1978, calls for social justice and an end to corruption.
    There was talk of the freedom of speech, a free press and the release
    of political prisoners. Indeed, demonstrators' demands for the
    release of political prisoners became reality before the 11 February
    victory of the revolution. People went to prisons with flowers,
    pastry and cakes and opened their gates. How long did that freedom
    last? What happened to the promises to turn prisons into museums;
    what indeed has become of the idea of political prisoners and
    political offences in Iran's political culture? Reza Moini of the
    Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said:

    Reza Moini (RM): Political prisoners have been an issue in
    our society for more than six decades. Going back, we see that
    prisons in the modern sense were instituted from about 1300 [1920s],
    naturally giving rise to the issue of political prisoners.
    Specifically the law known as the black law, passed in 1310 [1921]
    under Reza Khan, provides the basis for the present-day law utilized
    by the Islamic Republic, as the law dealing with internal and
    external countersecurity offences. Article 498 of that law
    essentially seeks to disperse or prevent the formation of any group,
    and fight organized movements in Iran. The political prison has
    gained in scope at every historical stage.

    MA: How many political prisoners did we have in the years
    from 1977 to 1979, and which political groups did they belong to?

    RM: Sadly there has been little work in Iran on figures and
    statistics in that regard, and from what I have seen I can say that
    the figures they have given indicate a group of political prisoners
    numbering between 2,500 and 3,000 for those years. These were mostly
    concentrated in Tehran, in the Qasr prison, and then the Evin prison.
    >From late 56 [late 1977 to early 1978], and as a result of American
    pressures for greater liberties, a number of prisoners were released,
    but the very issue of political prisoners was one mentioned by the
    opposition both inside and outside the country.

    MA: I asked Dr. Nemat Ahmadi, a jurist and lawyer in Tehran,
    what he thought of the erstwhile revolutionary slogan, "The Political
    Prisoner Must be Freed," 26 years after the revolution. Ahmadi said:

    Nehmat Ahmadi (NA): The people they arrest, who are famous
    political figures, like Mr. Ezzatollah Sahabi or Mr. [Nasser]
    Zarafshan are political personalities. Their actions are political,
    and these people remain in prison on charges all society and people
    know are political in nature. But adding insult to injury, judiciary
    officials state that as political offences have not yet been defined,
    we cannot consider these people political offenders for now. I think
    that at the very least, we have moved backward.

    MA: But was there a definition of political offenses under the Shah?

    NA: Unfortunately we did not have one then either. The
    difference then was that we had military courts separate from the
    judicial system, and the people they said had acted against national
    security were tried in military courts. Reviews and appeals were
    appealed to the highest ranking person in the country.

    MA: I asked Majid Darabeigi, who was a prisoner in both
    regimes, why he was sent to jail:

    Majid Derabeigi (MD): We were a group of students under the
    Shah, involved more in democracy activities, in various areas, and
    did political or professional related work. Because of that, one or
    two of our friends were denounced for another reason, and they were
    tortured, and that led to our being tortured so we would admit to
    acting against the state. Because we did not respond to that charge,
    they made other charges against us, like taking part in student
    demonstrations and reading banned books. I was given a three-year
    jail sentence in a court, though that was reduced to one year as I
    had did not have a criminal record. The second time, under the
    Islamic Republic, somebody reported me and I was arrested, and they
    grabbed me firmly in the street and accused me of being a member of
    some organization. As I denied being a member or supporter of that
    organization, I was for about 16 to 17 months subjected to
    interrogation and torture intended to extract some form of
    information from me. They did obtain a lot of information from me,
    and one of my accusers then was this Mr. Said Hajjarian, who is now
    one of the reformist leaders inside the governing system. He went to
    the place where I worked and compiled a little dossier for me, to the
    effect that I was engaged in propaganda against the Islamic Republic.
    I will not go into details as they are peripheral to the issue.

    MA: One of the demands of political prisoners these days is a
    separation and categorization of political prisoners. I asked Nemat
    Ahmadi about the categorization of political prisoners under the
    Shah.

    NA: We had independent wings in those years. There was an
    unwritten law and unwritten method whereby for example, Wing Three of
    the Qasr prison was for political detainees. Political prisoners were
    familiar figures in those days. Ayatollah [Hussein Ali] Montazeri was
    a prisoner, Ayatollah [Mahmud] Taleqani was a prisoner, so was Mr.
    [Akbar] Hashemi-Rafsanjani. The [present supreme] leader [Ali
    Khamenei] was a prisoner. There was a very large range of student
    prisoners, a large group of Marxists, the Mujahedin Khalq
    Organization, and [left-wing] Fadai guerrillas had supporters, and
    they were well-known for their factional affiliations. There was a
    certain order in prisons at the time, and the former regime kept
    these groups in particular wings, and it was rare to bring people
    into public prisons. When they did take political prisoners into
    public wings as a punishment, that created a lot of trouble. People
    found it unacceptable that some young or elderly people or clerics
    should go to jail, and when this happened, it always backfired, and
    even the ordinary prisoners realized that these were good people and
    could not be offenders. After the revolution, Evin became the place
    for keeping prisoners from [political] groups and the like, and after
    76 [1997-98] when effectively lawyers began to visit prisons, there
    were less dissident prisoners. The difference was that
    communications, radio and television, and newspapers broadcast their
    voices to a wide audience inside the country and abroad. Today, as
    soon as there is a hunger strike for example, most news agencies find
    out about it, whereas in the past we see how Mrs. Ashraf Dehqani, who
    was sentenced to die, escaped prison without the foreign media
    reporting it.

    MA: Although political offences were not defined in the
    Pahlavi period, military courts would investigate charges of a
    political nature.

    NA: Now Article 5 of the Law on the Formation of the Public
    and Revolutionary Courts has given the task of categorization to the
    revolutionary court, which deals with security and related offences.
    But we see many cases like those of Abbas Abdi and Akbar Ganji who
    did not have dossiers with the revolutionary court, but were taken to
    ordinary courts that dealt with their cases.

    MD: In certain respects you could not compare prison under
    the Shah with the Islamic Republic, because the composition of prison
    in each period changes. There was a time when only political
    opponents were in prison under the Shah. In the Islamic Republic, at
    one time there was a mass of mostly youngsters under 20 in prison.
    Times changed and there was a very high concentration of detainees in
    prison in the Islamic Republic, and we did not have that
    concentration under the Shah. The same goes for the various forms of
    torture. Both regimes used harsh, exhaustive tortures, but when the
    atmosphere improved, they would turn to psychological torments. For
    example we may compare the prisons of the Islamic Republic to the
    last years of the Shah, when police bodies had penetrated everywhere
    and if they caught someone, they caught them with plenty of evidence.
    Physical torture under the Shah was much harsher than in the Islamic
    Republic, but the psychological torments of the Islamic Republic are
    far worse, and the unsuitable prison conditions.

    MA: I ask Reza Moini what happened to the prisoners who were
    released at the outset of the revolution:

    RM: Naturally, after the revolution many former prisoners
    became the principal organizers in the political scene until the
    suppression of that sector when they were arrested generally and in
    large numbers. I would make an essential observation about these
    arrests, as an example for society today and tomorrow, which is that
    some of those prisoners who were now in government became torturers
    in the Evin prison. Their names are numerous and there are many types
    among them. Some of the best known include the Evin prison butcher
    Mr. [Asadollah] Lajevardi, and then there are the types who were
    occasional interrogators, like Mr. Karbaschi the former Tehran mayor.
    He has admitted in his writings that they would sometimes call him
    and he would go to Evin and speak to former political prisoners and
    guide them, as it were. The bitter question remains, how could
    prisoners turn to torturers? Among the prisoners of the Shah who were
    well-known and were later executed under the Islamic Republic, we can
    cite Shokrollah Paknezhad, Ali Shokuhi, Alireza Tashayyod, Mehran
    Shahabeddin, Enayat Sultanzadeh, Said Sultanpur and Manuchehr
    Sarhadi.

    MA: Ayatollah Khomeini said, in a speech at the Behesht-i
    Zahra [cemetery], that graveyards had flourished under the Shah, in
    an allusion to the execution of political prisoners. Dr. Mohammad
    Maleki, a former head of Tehran University and member of a welcoming
    committee for Ayatollah Khomeini [returning from Paris] in 1979,
    said:

    Mohammad Maleki: Yes, he said that the Shah came and made
    sure cemeteries flourished, because the Shah had martyred a number of
    dissidents and tortured them, and they said these things because of
    goings-on in prisons. Our generation perhaps never imagined that the
    events of the 60s [1980s] would happen in Iran, that the horrific
    event of 67 [1988] would happen in Iran where thousands of men and
    women were martyred, so that not only was there no more room for
    bodies in other parts of the Behesht-i Zahra, but they had to go
    elsewhere, the old Tehran cemetery they called Kufr Abad [City of
    Lies] and other particular names I do not wish to repeat, and throw
    the youngsters and bury them with bulldozers. That is when we saw who
    really made the cemeteries prosper, more than the Shah, and who
    destroyed the country. (Translation by Vahid Sepehri)

    ************************************************** *******
    Copyright (c) 2005. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

    The "RFE/RL Iran Report" is a weekly prepared by A. William Samii on
    the basis of materials from RFE/RL broadcast services, RFE/RL
    Newsline, and other news services. It is distributed every Monday.

    Direct comments to A. William Samii at [email protected].
    For information on reprints, see:
    http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
    Back issues are online at http://www.rferl.org/reports/iran-report/
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