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RFE/RL Iran Report - 04/03/2006

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  • RFE/RL Iran Report - 04/03/2006

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Iran Report
    Vol. 9, No. 12, 3 April 2006

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

    ******************************************** ****************
    HEADLINES:
    * U.S. TALKS UNLIKELY TO END TEHRAN'S 'SOFT POWER' IN IRAQ
    * IRAQI PRESIDENT MEETS WITH IRANIAN ENVOY
    * IRAN IS IRAQ'S NO. 1 TRADING PARTNER
    * AHMADINEJAD MEETS WITH TURKISH ENVOY, REJECTS U.A.E. CLAIMS TO ISLANDS
    * IRAN TO HOLD GULF NAVAL MANEUVERS
    * IS IRAN CLOSER TO URANIUM ENRICHMENT THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT?
    * AHMADINEJAD SAYS IRAN IS FEARLESS ABOUT NUCLEAR PROGRAM
    * UN SECURITY COUNCIL GIVES IRAN 30 DAYS TO END NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES
    * RUSSIA SENDS MIXED MESSAGES ON IRAN
    * IRAN REITERATES CLAIM ITS NUCLEAR PROGRAM IS ONLY PEACEFUL
    * FOREIGN MINISTER CRITICIZES 'HASTY' MOVES ON IRAN DOSSIER
    * 'ENEMIES' ALLEGEDLY SEEK TO BREAK IRAN THROUGH PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE
    * SUPREME LEADER PRAISES IRAN'S VIGILANCE AGAINST WEST
    * DEFENSE MINISTER SAYS IRAN AIMING FOR 'INTELLIGENT' WEAPONRY
    * OFFICIAL SAYS IRAN MAY CURB FUEL CONSUMPTION
    * JUDICIARY HEAD CRITICIZES CORRUPTION WITHIN STATE SECTOR
    * HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER TO GO ON TRIAL
    * POOR IRANIAN REPORTEDLY KILLS HIS FAMILY, HANGS HIMSELF
    * RIGHTS GROUP CONCERNED ABOUT IRANIANS FACING EXECUTION
    * POWERFUL EARTHQUAKE HITS WESTERN IRAN
    ********************************************* ***************

    U.S. TALKS UNLIKELY TO END TEHRAN'S 'SOFT POWER' IN IRAQ.
    The much-heralded Iran-U.S. talks on Iraq, to which Tehran agreed in
    mid-March, may result in an end to direct Iranian involvement in
    Iraqi affairs. But even if Iran ends its use of direct means -- such
    as the provision of arms and money to militias -- its use of indirect
    means, or "soft power," to influence Iraqi affairs seems likely to
    continue.
    The Iran-U.S. talks have not begun yet but already they seem
    to be dead in the water. One reason for this is that all Iraqis do
    not support the talks. They were called for by the leader of one of
    the country's main Shi'ite parties -- Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim of
    the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the
    United Iraqi Alliance -- but another Shi'ite leader, Muqtada
    al-Sadr, has spoken out against them. In addition, Iraqi Sunnis
    oppose the talks because they resent marginalization in their
    country's affairs and fear that official Iranian involvement will
    contribute to this process.
    "The Guardian" commented from London on March 27 that
    following complaints from Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, the talks
    must wait. The Iraqis are demanding that representatives from their
    government participate, and this cannot happen until a new Iraqi
    government is formed. It has been more than three months since
    Iraq's parliamentary elections, but the various factions have so
    far been unable to come up with a broadly acceptable government list.
    A particular sticking point is whether Prime Minister Ibrahim
    al-Ja'fari, a Shi'ite, should continue in office.
    When U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice first called
    for U.S.-Iran talks on Iraq in October 2005, she made it clear that
    the objective was to discuss alleged Iranian interference in Iraqi
    affairs. U.S. officials since then have charged repeatedly that this
    interference has not subsided.
    "Iran seeks a Shi'a-dominated and unified Iraq but also
    wants the U.S. to experience continued setbacks in our efforts to
    promote democracy and stability," U.S. National Intelligence Director
    John Negroponte said in late February in Congressional testimony.
    "Accordingly, Iran provides guidance and training to select Iraqi
    Shi'ite political groups and weapons and training to Shi'ite
    militant groups to enable anti-coalition attacks."
    The same day, U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency Director
    Lieutenant General Michael D. Maples said: "Money, weapons, and
    foreign fighters supporting terrorism move into Iraq, primarily
    through Syria and Iran. We believe Iran has provided lethal aid to
    Iraqi Shi'ite insurgents
    Tehran rejects such accusations and attributes violence in
    Iraq to U.S.-led coalition forces. After the late February bombing of
    the Golden Mosque in Samarra, for example, Iranian Supreme Leader
    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the occupation forces and "the Zionists
    deployed in Iraq" are responsible.
    The next week, Expediency Council Chairman Ali Akbar
    Hashemi-Rafsanjani delivered a sermon about the bombers' desires.

    "Perhaps their most important aim is to weaken the solidarity
    that is gradually shaping in the world of Islam," Hashemi-Rafsanjani
    said. "Because the Muslims feel that global arrogance, America in
    particular, intends to create problems for the Muslims by promoting a
    Greater Middle East plan.... The main objective of the Greater Middle
    East plan is to create a rift among Muslims, weaken the Islamic
    world, and force it to surrender."
    Some outside observers disbelieve U.S. statements and doubt
    media reports of Iranian interference in Iraqi affairs. Some Iraqis
    also reject claims of an Iranian hand in the violence. Abd al-Aziz
    al-Hakim, for example, told CNN on January 26 that such claims are
    unsubstantiated.
    "They always accuse Iran of such things, and they told us
    about such things even from the first month that we've been here
    until now," he said. "And we were always asking for evidence, but
    nobody came with evidence."
    It is difficult to verify most of the accusations,
    counteraccusations, and denials. However, one significant aspect of
    Iran's effort to influence Iraqi affairs is information
    operations using broadcast media, and this can be verified by anybody
    with satellite television reception. Two Iranian Arabic-language
    television stations can be viewed in Iraq terrestrially and by
    satellite -- Al-Alam and Al-Kawthar.
    Al-Alam is an official Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting
    channel that went on the air in March 2003. It portrays U.S.-led
    coalition forces and their activities in a negative light, comparing
    them to Israeli activities in Palestine. It is an important means by
    which Iranian views are conveyed to the Iraqi people. Al-Kawthar is
    the new name for Al-Sahar, another official Iranian station that went
    on the air in 1997. Al-Kawthar's news reporting is fairly neutral
    on Iraqi affairs, but it is as hostile to Israel as Al-Alam is,
    referring to Israel as "the usurping entity" and discussing "the
    Palestinians' usurped rights." Al-Kawthar's programming on
    the United States is negative, too, and it is supportive of Lebanese
    Hizballah and Hamas.
    The Iran-U.S. talks on Iraq may eventually get under way, and
    there is a remote possibility that direct Iranian involvement in
    Iraqi politics will end. However, it is very unlikely that Iran will
    end its effort to influence Iraqi affairs through broadcasting and
    other applications of "soft power." Tehran's interest in shaping
    developments to its west and its desire to undermine the United
    States indirectly and at a relatively low cost to itself preclude it
    from adopting a disinterested approach to what happens in Iraq. (Bill
    Samii)

    IRAQI PRESIDENT MEETS WITH IRANIAN ENVOY. Iranian Foreign Minister
    Manuchehr Mottaki said in Geneva on March 30 that "we have accepted
    the proposal of Iraqi officials for talks" between Iran and the U.S.
    concerning Iraq, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported.
    "These talks will only be about Iraq," he said.
    Separately, Jalal Talabani met on March 30 with Iran's
    charge d'affaires in Baghdad, Hassan Kazemi-Qomi, who asked for
    the release of hundreds of Iranian detainees in Iraq, IRNA reported.
    The two discussed bilateral ties, and Talabani thanked Iran for the
    support it has given to Iraq's political process. Kazemi said
    Iran is ready to participate in Iraq's reconstruction and general
    development, and respects Iraqi elections and their results, hoping
    they will help bring peace to Iraq. He asked for the release of
    "about 250 Iranian nationals who are mostly pilgrims" to Iraq's
    Muslim Shi'a shrines, "arrested for allegedly entering Iraq
    illegally." Talabani said he hopes they will be released after
    relevant coordination between Iraq's justice and interior
    ministries. (Vahid Sepehri)

    IRAN IS IRAQ'S NO. 1 TRADING PARTNER. Iran is now Iraq's No.
    1 trading partner, according to Industry and Minerals Minister Usama
    al-Najafi, azzaman.com reported on March 24. Al-Najafi said that
    while other regional states are weary of engaging with Iraq because
    of the insurgency, Iran has pressed ahead to expand bilateral trade
    ties. Iran has become the biggest exporter to Iraq and has recently
    provided financial incentives to set up large-scale heavy industries,
    he added, saying some $60 billion is needed to revive the industrial
    sector. Al-Najafi claimed that much of the foreign aid for the sector
    has been diverted to security. (Kathleen Ridolfo)

    AHMADINEJAD MEETS WITH TURKISH ENVOY, REJECTS U.A.E. CLAIMS TO
    ISLANDS. President Mahmud Ahmadinejad told Hasanu Gurkan, the new
    Turkish ambassador in Tehran, on March 28 that Iran and Turkey must
    rely on "the Islamic world's immense, latent power" to work
    together and play a more active international role, and criticized
    the "imposition of incorrect conditions" on Turkey for entry into the
    EU, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) reported on March 29.
    These conditions are a "denigration of [Turkish] culture and
    customs," and "Turkey must maintain its power and dignity," he said.
    Ahmadinejad welcomed Turkey's "new approach" in playing a
    "greater role" in Islamic world affairs, and said Iran will place its
    "advances" at the service of neighbors, including Turkey.
    The same day in Tehran, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza
    Assefi rejected claims by the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.) to three
    islands in the Persian Gulf held by Iran, ISNA reported on March 29.
    At a summit in Khartoum on March 29, foreign ministers of the Arab
    League affirmed the sovereignty of the U.A.E. over the islands of
    Greater and Lesser Tunbs and Abu Musa. Assefi said the islands are an
    "inseparable" part of Iran, and dismissed the resolution as meddling
    in Iran's internal affairs. He added that the "irresponsible
    interference of other parties" in Iran's ongoing talks with the
    U.A.E. on the matter "will not help this process," ISNA reported.
    (Vahid Sepehri)

    IRAN TO HOLD GULF NAVAL MANEUVERS. Iran is to hold large-scale naval
    maneuvers in the Persian Gulf and the Oman Sea from March 31, IRNA
    quoted navy chief Morteza Saffari-Natanzi as saying in Tehran on
    March 29. Saffari said naval forces of the Islamic Revolution Guards
    Corps (IRGC) will carry out the maneuvers together with the regular
    navy and air force, unspecified "air and missile forces," the
    IRGC-affiliated Basij militia, and the police. The exercises will
    involve more than 17,000 personnel, and about 1,500 vessels. The war
    games, to be carried out along the coast from "the northern Persian
    Gulf to Chabahar," an Iranian port close to Pakistan, and as far as
    40 kilometers from the coast, are designed to raise defensive
    capacities, test weaponry produced in Iran, enhance the experience of
    military personnel, and show Iran's defensive capacity, but also
    to "send a message of peace and friendship" to neighboring states,
    Saffari said. They are to last until April 6, he added. (Vahid
    Sepehri)

    IS IRAN CLOSER TO URANIUM ENRICHMENT THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT?
    Unidentified diplomats from UN Security Council member states have
    told the "Los Angeles Times" that Iran is closer than previously
    thought to enriching uranium, the paper reported on March 27. The
    initial estimate was that it would take Iran five to 10 years to
    produce enough highly enriched uranium to build a nuclear bomb;
    officials now believe that Iran could build a bomb within three
    years, said the diplomats, who were recently briefed by the
    International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The diplomats said Iran
    has bypassed the usual testing periods for centrifuges in an attempt
    to assemble as many as possible, as quickly as possible. (Kathleen
    Ridolfo)

    AHMADINEJAD SAYS IRAN IS FEARLESS ABOUT NUCLEAR PROGRAM. President
    Mahmud Ahmadinejad told a crowd on March 27 in the town of Gachsaran
    in the southwestern province of Kohkiluyeh va Boir Ahmad that Iran is
    a peaceful country but will not be deterred from its nuclear program
    by Western "psychological warfare," ISNA reported the same day. "They
    do not know that the right to use peaceful nuclear technology is the
    wish of the entire Iranian nation," and Iranians will defend this
    right "in unison." He was presumably referring to the United States
    and to EU states, which fear Iran's program may be used to
    develop bombs. "They think that by holding meetings, making
    statements, and issuing resolutions, they can prevent our
    people's progress," ISNA quoted him as saying. Iranians and their
    government will not "retreat one bit" over the nuclear program, he
    stated.
    Separately, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi said
    in Tehran the same day that Iran has agreed to talk to U.S. officials
    about Iraqi affairs because of "our increasing concern over
    America's mistaken conduct in Iraq," ISNA reported. While "we
    distrust America's motives," discussions are intended to help
    bring security to Iraq, he said. (Vahid Sepehri)

    UN SECURITY COUNCIL GIVES IRAN 30 DAYS TO END NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES. The
    highest body in the United Nations late on March 29 unanimously
    approved a statement calling on Iran to fully suspend all
    uranium-enrichment activities. The statement requests that the
    UN's nuclear watchdog agency, the International Atomic Energy
    Agency, report back in 30 days on Iran's compliance with demands
    to stop enriching uranium, a process that can lead to the development
    of a nuclear weapon. The statement offers no indication of what the
    Security Council might do if Iran fails to halt such work. John
    Bolton, the U.S. ambassador to the UN, told reporters the
    council's statement sends a clear message to Iran that "we want a
    response from the government of Iran. And the response we want is
    full compliance with the obligations it voluntarily undertook under
    the [Nuclear] Nonproliferation Treaty." Iran's UN ambassador,
    Javad Zarif, who was denied a chance to address the Security Council,
    told reporters that Iran is not seeking nuclear weapons but will not
    abandon its right to nuclear energy and will "not accept pressure or
    intimidation." (Vahid Sepehri)

    RUSSIA SENDS MIXED MESSAGES ON IRAN. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
    said in Berlin on March 30 that his country insists on a diplomatic
    solution to the Iranian nuclear dispute, news agencies reported. He
    added that "there is no doubt that [the problem should be resolved]
    exclusively by political and diplomatic means, as many of our
    European colleagues and our Chinese friends have said many times. Any
    ideas of resolving the matter by compulsion and force are extremely
    counterproductive and cannot be supported." Lavrov argued that "the
    last report of the [International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA)]
    says that it cannot assert that there is a military aspect to the
    Iranian nuclear program. So, before we call any situation a threat,
    we need facts, especially in the region like the Middle East, where
    so many things are happening." But in Moscow, the Foreign Ministry
    issued a statement calling on Tehran to "heed with great attention
    the common opinion of the UN Security Council members." Teheran
    should "ensure full-fledged cooperation with the IAEA on all
    remaining issues," the statement added. (Patrick Moore)

    IRAN REITERATES CLAIM ITS NUCLEAR PROGRAM IS ONLY PEACEFUL.
    Iran's ranking nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani told the French
    weekly "Le Point" on March 27 in Tehran that Iran is pursuing an
    "entirely clear" and peaceful nuclear program and has done nothing to
    deserve referral to the UN Security Council, IRNA reported on March
    30. He said Iran wants two things: to pursue nuclear technology
    research, and to assure a supply of fuel for the power stations it
    intends to build. Larijani said Western powers have not honored
    commitments they made to Iran's pre-1979, pro-Western regime,
    which also had a nuclear program. Larijani suggested the formation of
    a multinational consortium in Iran to enrich uranium, with partners
    such as France, Germany, or Russia.
    He dismissed a suggestion that Iran would use its know-how to
    carry out secret enrichment work elsewhere in Iran, but also deplored
    as a breach of confidence reports -- apparently sent by sources close
    to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) -- that Iran will
    soon operate a cascade of 164 centrifuges at its Natanz plant. These
    operate as part of the uranium-enrichment process, he said, and
    added: "We have done nothing against international norms and laws to
    deserve [referral to] the Security Council. In my opinion, the
    referral of Iran's dossier from the [IAEA] governing board to the
    Security Council is a professional embarrassment for the agency,
    showing how politics dominate [its] professional work," IRNA
    reported. (Vahid Sepehri)

    FOREIGN MINISTER CRITICIZES 'HASTY' MOVES ON IRAN DOSSIER.
    Manuchehr Mottaki said in Geneva on March 30 that "reporting
    Iran's dossier to the Security Council was a mistaken move," and
    he expressed the hope that the issue will be solved through
    "negotiation and dialogue" at the IAEA, IRNA reported. Giving Iran a
    30-day deadline to suspend its enrichment activities indicates "hasty
    decisions," he said, though unspecified parties "are seeking
    pretexts, and have openly said they are pursuing other aims." Mottaki
    said after the Conference on Disarmament that the situation will only
    become more complicated "if certain other people are pursuing other
    aims." He said he does not believe sanctions are a likely option "for
    now," and dismissed the possibility of Israeli strikes on Iranian
    installations, adding that Iran has readied itself for "different
    conditions." Iran prefers "finding an agreement, but we have in the
    past increased our potential and capabilities in various areas" as
    the country came to terms with "existing sanctions," IRNA reported.
    (Vahid Sepehri)

    'ENEMIES' ALLEGEDLY SEEK TO BREAK IRAN THROUGH PSYCHOLOGICAL
    WARFARE. Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad said on March 26 that
    the enemies of Iran are trying to gain concessions through a program
    of psychological warfare and misinformation, IRNA reported the same
    day. "Our nation will respond to the enemies and the mischievous ones
    resolutely," Ahmadinejad said in a public address in the province of
    Kohkiluyeh va Boir Ahmad. The president called on Iran's enemies
    to apologize for accusing his country of "warmongering," calling such
    accusations a huge insult to the Islamic republic. Ahmadinejad said
    that Iran will continue its path to acquiring nuclear energy, adding
    that Iran will seek reparations for the 2 1/2-year delay in carrying
    out its nuclear activities; he did not say from whom he would seek
    the reparations.
    Ahmadinejad claimed in a March 25 meeting with Syrian Vice
    President Faruq al-Shar'a that the United States intends to
    create discord among Muslim countries in order to control them and
    make them dependent on it, the Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA)
    reported the same day. Ahmadinejad claimed that the United States and
    the West are facing a crisis in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine and
    "therefore are trying to transmit their problems to others through
    creating discord and division." Regarding possible talks with the
    United States on Iraq, Ahmadinejad said that though Iran does not
    trust the United States, it cannot ignore requests by Iraqi officials
    that a meeting be held. (Kathleen Ridolfo)

    SUPREME LEADER PRAISES IRAN'S VIGILANCE AGAINST WEST. Supreme
    Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised the Iranian nation in a March
    26 speech for its vigilance against the enemies of Iran, saying the
    country's resilience has earned it the respect of both its
    friends and enemies, the Iranian state television channel Voice and
    Vision of the Islamic Republic reported. Speaking about the ongoing
    nuclear standoff between Iran and the West, Khamenei told a gathering
    of thousands of Basij militia in Tehran: "There is a possibility that
    these threats [from the West] will be realized, in which case only a
    nation that can stand up to its enemy without retreating from its
    position will maintain its respect, greatness, identity, and
    interests." Calling the United States and Israel Iran's greatest
    enemies, Khamenei said the West is trying to create a global
    consensus against Iran. He maintained that the true global consensus
    is against "America's arrogance and its warmongering...and not
    against the Iranian nation."
    Basij Resistance Force commander Mohammad Hejazi told the
    same gathering that the Basij plans to expand its military and
    defense capabilities this year in order to fulfill its revolutionary
    and religious duties to defend national interests, the state-run
    television reported. (Kathleen Ridolfo)

    DEFENSE MINISTER SAYS IRAN AIMING FOR 'INTELLIGENT' WEAPONRY.
    Defense Minister Mustafa Mohammad Najjar told a gathering of officers
    in the Basij militia in the Kohkiluyeh va Boir Ahmad province on 27
    March that the Defense Ministry will seek to make defense-industry
    equipment "intelligent," and raise the quality of products in the new
    Persian year, which runs until March 2007. This would be one of a
    series of moves to raise defensive capabilities, assure "greater
    flexibility," and use "advanced technologies," ISNA reported the same
    day. Najjar said Iran has made "very good" progress in "the
    production of electronic technologies" that will help raise the
    intelligence of defensive equipment. "We are now able to produce
    intelligent weaponry to precisely identify and target the aims of the
    enemy," he said. "We shall expand this advanced technology in the
    armored, air, aerospace, marine, automobile, missile, and other
    determined industries," he said. He added that, "as we have declared
    many times," the armed forces' response to any enemy aggression
    will be "decisive and crushing, so the enemy will regret its move,"
    ISNA reported. (Vahid Sepehri)

    OFFICIAL SAYS IRAN MAY CURB FUEL CONSUMPTION. The head of the
    Management and Planning Organization, Farhad Rahbar, said Iran may
    restrict the use of car fuel for a six-month period before March 2007
    to cut costly fuel imports caused by Iranians' excessive fuel
    consumption, RFE/RL's Radio Farda reported on March 28. Economist
    Fereidun Khavand says Iran spent about $4.5 billion importing about
    30 million liters of gasoline in the Persian year ending in March
    2006. Rahbar's reported comment, he said, is a response to the
    fact that parliament has allocated no more than $2.5 billion to cover
    fuel imports in the Persian year ending in March 2007. ISNA quoted
    the head of the National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution
    Company, Hassan Zia-Kashani, as saying on March 18 that Iranians used
    66.9 million liters of gasoline in the year to March 2006, and are
    expected to use about 74 million liters in the year ahead. He said
    the government has not yet issued directives restricting fuel, ISNA
    added. (Vahid Sepehri)

    JUDICIARY HEAD CRITICIZES CORRUPTION WITHIN STATE SECTOR. Ayatollah
    Mahmud Hashemi-Shahrudi, the head of Iran's judiciary, told
    members of northeastern Khorasan Province's chamber of commerce
    on March 28 that "judicial officials today see support for the
    country's economic progress as one of their main duties," ISNA
    reported. He said that "those who have doubts over the private sector
    should know that most cases of corruption and abuse are in the state
    sector, and one must trust the private sector." He said Iran's
    economy had suffered due to the distrust between the state and
    private sectors in the past, and the private sector should consider
    itself part of the state apparatus -- since it shares the aim of
    making Iran prosperous -- "and help the government in its executive
    activities," ISNA reported. He urged the formation of a central body
    that would include representatives of the private sector, government
    officials, and members of the judiciary to discuss related issues and
    maintain dialogue. He dismissed the idea that Iran's polity
    opposes private enterprise: "All this comes from enemy propaganda,
    which wants to create divisions among social institutions." (Vahid
    Sepehri)

    HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER TO GO ON TRIAL. Abdolfattah Soltani, a lawyer
    released in early March after seven months in detention, is to be
    tried on April 5 by a Revolutionary Court in Tehran, Radio Farda
    reported on March 28. Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, one of a team of lawyers
    representing Soltani, told Radio Farda that "the sum of his charges
    indicates some form of political crime." Soltani, he added, is to be
    tried in a court specially formed for this case, and "there is no
    sign of any jury, and so far we do not know if it will be an open
    trial or not." Dadkhah told Radio Farda that Soltani is charged with
    disclosing nuclear secrets, apparently while defending suspects
    charged with nuclear espionage. Dadkhah added, however, that one of
    the interrogators who will be involved in the trial believes the
    dossier and the evidence available do not warrant the charges brought
    against Soltani. Dadkhah argued that, in any case, neither legal
    officials nor attorneys have access to top-secret material in trials.
    (Vahid Sepehri)

    POOR IRANIAN REPORTEDLY KILLS HIS FAMILY, HANGS HIMSELF. A man
    reportedly killed his six children and wife before killing himself
    because he could no longer pay the rent for his apartment in Tabriz,
    northwestern Iran, RFE/RL's Radio Farda reported on March 29,
    citing neighbors and local journalist Payman Pakmehr. The rent was a
    little over $50 a month, Pakmehr told Radio Farda. Neighbors told
    Pakmehr the man left a note saying he could no longer afford living
    expenses and rent, and that the family had been evicted before for
    not paying rent. It is not clear when the killings happened.
    Neighbors called in the police when alerted by the stench of
    decomposed bodies, Pakmehr said. Police are investigating, Radio
    Farda reported. (Vahid Sepehri)

    RIGHTS GROUP CONCERNED ABOUT IRANIANS FACING EXECUTION. Amnesty
    International (AI) has expressed concern over the imminent execution
    of 28-year-old Valiollah Feyz Mahdavi, currently in prison in Karaj,
    near Tehran, RFE/RL's Radio Farda reported on March 30. AI stated
    on its website on March 29 that prison authorities forced Mahdavi,
    reportedly a supporter of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization, an armed
    opposition group based in Iraq, to sign a paper on March 24 stating
    May 16 as the date of his execution. Amnesty said Iran executed
    another man at that prison in February 2005 after informing him of
    his execution in a similar manner. Mahdavi was tried in a
    revolutionary court without a defense attorney, Amnesty stated. AI
    also reported on March 28 that Iran is to execute Fatemeh
    Haqiqat-Pajuh, who was convicted of murdering her husband, by April
    1. The Supreme Court has cancelled a stay of execution granted her
    last October. (Vahid Sepehri)

    POWERFUL EARTHQUAKE HITS WESTERN IRAN. Three earthquakes rocked
    western Iran early on March 31, killing dozens and injuring more than
    1,000 others, international media reported. The quake's epicenter
    was in Luristan Province. The hardest hit areas are villages between
    the towns of Dorud and Borujerd. Hospitals in those two towns are
    full to capacity with the wounded. Emergency officials have put out
    an urgent call for medical supplies and assistance.

    ************************************* ********************
    Copyright (c) 2006. 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.as p
    Back issues are online at http://www.rferl.org/reports/iran-report/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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