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RFE/RL Iran Report - 07/12/2006

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  • RFE/RL Iran Report - 07/12/2006

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Iran Report
    Vol. 9, No. 25, 12 July 2006

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

    ******************************************** ****************
    HEADLINES
    * NEW ANTI-ISRAEL CAMPAIGN IN IRAN
    * IRANIAN NUCLEAR DECISION NOT FORTHCOMING
    * IRAN DEVELOPS NEW LINE OF MISSILES
    * ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AND IRAQI SPEAKER OF PARLIAMENT VISIT IRAN
    * IRANIANS AMONG CASUALTIES IN IRAQI SUICIDE BOMBING
    * IRAN ATTACKS KURDS IN IRAQ
    * TEHRAN ATTRIBUTES ETHNIC STRIFE TO FOREIGN INVOLVEMENT
    * IRANIAN MINORITIES EXPERIENCE HOUSING DIFFICULTIES
    * UNPAID WORKERS PROTEST IN NORTHWEST IRAN
    * TRUCK CRASH SHAKES SHIRAZ
    * INTELLECTUAL LABELED U.S. AGENT
    * JOURNALIST THREATENS MASS HUNGER STRIKE TO FREE POLITICAL PRISONERS
    **************************************** ********************

    NEW ANTI-ISRAEL CAMPAIGN IN IRAN. The Students' Justice-Seeking
    Movement and the Students' Headquarters for the Support of
    Palestine will raise funds in Tehran for Israel's annihilation,
    Fars News Agency reported on July 6. The first collection will take
    place after the Friday Prayers on July 7. On July 8, according to
    Fars, "Global Slumber and the Need to Support Palestine" will be
    shown at the Kosar Hall next to the Mellat Bank in Tehran.
    In Isfahan, fundraising has commenced at 80 local Basij
    Resistance Force bases and 92 student Basij bases, provincial
    television reported on July 5. Colonel Moradi, commander of the Basij
    in the town of Shahreza, said he expects the fundraising drive --
    called Labayk Ya Khamenei (We are ready to give a positive response
    to your call O' Khamenei) -- to raise some $55,000.
    A July 5 statement from the Isfahan Province Islamic
    Publicity Coordination Council called on people to participate in
    anti-U.S. and anti-Israel rallies after the July 7 Friday Prayers,
    Isfahan Provincial television reported. According to the statement,
    "Usurper Israel has realized its own futility and worthlessness and,
    supported by criminal America, it has increased the fire of its
    grudge and bloodthirstiness to maximum and is continuing its
    indiscriminate murder of the oppressed people of Palestine." (Bill
    Samii)

    IRANIAN NUCLEAR DECISION NOT FORTHCOMING. The visit to Brussels of
    Iran's top nuclear negotiator, which was scheduled for July 5,
    was postponed for a day for security reasons, according to Iranian
    news agencies. Supreme National Security Council Secretary Ali
    Larijani was scheduled to meet with EU High Representative for Common
    Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana, and an anonymous "informed
    source" said the presence of Israeli assassins in Brussels led to the
    delay, Mehr News Agency reported. An unnamed Iranian "security
    official" said the alleged hit teams were backed by Israel and
    "certain European states," the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA)
    reported. Iranian Speaker of Parliament Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel gave a
    less precise explanation, telling state television, "A technical
    reason, rather than a political issue, has been behind the
    postponement of the visit."
    Larijani attended a dinner with Solana in Brussels on July 6,
    AFP reported. Larijani said Iran will not respond right away to the
    international community's proposal that purportedly calls on Iran
    to suspend its uranium-enrichment activities in exchange for various
    incentives until international inspectors confirm that the
    country's nuclear program has no military applications. Solana
    delivered the proposal to Tehran in early June. Larijani said the
    response would not come either at that evening's dinner or on
    July 11, when talks with officials from the countries behind the
    proposal are scheduled to take place. Tehran has said repeatedly that
    it must consider the proposal carefully, but also has said that the
    proposal is vague in some key areas.
    Tehran's slow response to the international nuclear
    proposal has led to calls for it to act with greater haste.
    International Atomic Energy Agency chief Muhammad el-Baradei said on
    July 6 in Ankara, "We hope that Iran will respond promptly and
    positively, we hope, to the offer that was made by the six
    countries," Radio Farda reported. He added, "we need to get the
    parties to start the negotiations, and the earlier we get the parties
    to the negotiating table the better for everybody.... I hope that
    Iran also understands that the international community is getting
    somewhat impatient, and the earlier they can provide an answer the
    better for everybody."
    French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said on July 6
    in Paris, "We call on the Iranians to give a rapid response to our
    offer. It is important that we receive rapid, concrete answers," AFP
    reported.
    European Commission spokeswoman Emma Udwin said on July 5 in
    Brussels that there is "disappointment" in "Iran's slowness,"
    Radio Farda reported.
    British Prime Minister Tony Blair said on July 4 in London,
    "What I'd like is a response [to the international offer of
    incentives] as soon as possible because I don't really see what
    more there is to talk about," Radio Farda reported. Blair voiced
    concern that Tehran might harbor the false hope that it can "divide
    the international community." (Bill Samii)

    IRAN DEVELOPS NEW LINE OF MISSILES. Defense and Armed Forces
    Logistics Minister Mohammad Mustafa Najjar said on June 28 in Tehran
    that Iran is among the top six countries in the production of
    armor-piercing missiles, IRNA reported. He went on to say that
    country's defense industries are part of national development
    plans for the next two decades. (Bill Samii)

    ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AND IRAQI SPEAKER OF PARLIAMENT VISIT IRAN.
    Armenian President Robert Kocharian on July 6 concluded a two-day
    visit to Iran during which he met with his counterpart, President
    Mahmud Ahmadinejad, international news agencies reported. Kocharian
    was accompanied by Energy Minister Armen Movsisian, Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian, and Deputy Foreign Minister Armen Kirakosian. The
    Iranian and Armenian sides signed seven memorandums of understanding;
    most related to energy issues, but several dealt with legal matters
    and cultural preservation. Noyan Tapan and the Armenian "Lragir"
    newspaper reported on July 6 that the most important topic of
    discussion was the construction of a natural-gas pipeline connecting
    the two countries. RFE/RL's Armenian Service reported on July 6
    that another important topic was connection of the two countries'
    electricity grids.
    Mahmud al-Mashhadani, speaker of the Iraqi parliament, met
    with Ayatollah Abbas Vaez-Tabasi, head of the Imam Reza Shrine
    Foundation and the provincial representative of Iran's Supreme
    Leader, during a visit to the western Iranian city of Mashhad on July
    6, IRNA reported. During the meeting, al-Mashhadani said the United
    States is occupying Iraq because it wants to create a "Greater
    Israel," IRNA reported. Al-Mashhadani added that the United States
    and Israel are working against stability in Iraq, and he attributed
    the rule of the former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to the United
    States, saying, "Saddam was appointed in Iraq by the United States
    itself to help it materialize its arrogant goals." Al-Mashhadani
    called for a greater Iranian role in his country's
    reconstruction. Al-Mashhadani arrived in Iran on July 3 at the
    invitation of his Iranian counterpart, Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel. (Bill
    Samii)

    IRANIANS AMONG CASUALTIES IN IRAQI SUICIDE BOMBING. Thirteen people
    were killed and another 41 were wounded on 6 July when a suicide
    bomber's vehicle exploded between two buses carrying Iranian
    pilgrims in the city of Al-Kufah, which is north of Al-Najaf,
    Al-Sharqiyah Television and Reuters reported. Munther al-Athari, the
    head of Najaf's health service, said eight of the dead were
    Iranians, Reuters reported. Islamic Republic of Iran News Network
    Television reported that five Iranian pilgrims lost their lives and
    22 others were wounded.
    Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi
    condemned the incident and blamed the U.S., Islamic Republic of Iran
    News Network Television reported. He described this as a barbaric act
    that only benefits Iraq's enemies. He added, "The wrong policy of
    the American occupiers and their refusal to accept responsibility in
    Iraq have led to the growth of terrorism and ruthless behavior in
    that country; and the terrorists by counting on America's
    erroneous approach, continue their crimes." (Bill Samii)

    IRAN ATTACKS KURDS IN IRAQ. An Iranian army spokesman announced on
    July 1 that Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) forces sustained heavy
    losses when Iranians attacked their positions in the northern Iraqi
    town of Sidikan, Iran's Arabic-language Al-Alam television
    reported. The spokesman said the attack was in response to PKK
    activities near the Iranian city of Salmas. The next day, a statement
    from the PKK-affiliated People's Defense Forces (HPG) said
    Iranian and Turkish armed forces suffered great losses during clashes
    with the HPG, Roj Television reported. The HPG statement claimed that
    18 Iranian soldiers and two local militiamen were killed near the
    Iranian towns of Marivan and Baneh on June 28. Turkish personnel
    reportedly were killed on June 29. Two HPG members lost their lives
    as well, it claimed. (Bill Samii)

    TEHRAN ATTRIBUTES ETHNIC STRIFE TO FOREIGN INVOLVEMENT. Minister of
    Intelligence and Security Hojatoleslam Gholam-Hussein Mohseni-Ejei
    said on July 2 in Tehran that his agency has countered many
    conspiracies by Iran's enemies over the last 10 months, state
    television reported. He said the United States has the greatest
    motivation to act against Iran, Mehr News Agency reported, and he
    indicated that the U.S. intervention is motivated by Iran's gains
    in military power. Mohseni-Ejei also mentioned the funds for
    democracy legislation requested by U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice in February, and added that, in fact, much more
    money than that has been spent by Washington to destabilize Iran.
    Mohseni-Ejei claimed that the United States has dispatched many spies
    to Iran since the election of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad in June
    2005. Referring to the continuing ethnic disturbances in the
    northwest, southwest, and southeastern parts of Iran, Mohseni-Ejei
    said ethnic groups in these areas deserve more attention because the
    United States is trying to exploit them.
    On July 1, in Mahabad, legislator Alaedin Borujerdi said
    government investigations show that the United States and Britain are
    behind unrest in the Khuzestan and Sistan va Baluchistan provinces,
    IRNA reported. (Bill Samii)

    IRANIAN MINORITIES EXPERIENCE HOUSING DIFFICULTIES. UN special
    rapporteur Miloon Kothari released a report on housing on June 29,
    and part of that document focused on Iran. According to the report,
    Kothari visited neighborhoods in and around Tehran, as well as the
    Boyerahmad va Kohkiluyeh, Fars, Kerman, Kermanshah, and Khuzestan
    provinces, and he heard testimony relating to Ilam and Sistan va
    Baluchistan provinces. Rural land is being expropriated and its
    inhabitants evacuated to make way for agricultural and petrochemical
    projects, the report notes. "In some regions, these expropriations
    seem to have targeted disproportionately property and land of
    religious and ethnic minorities, such as Baha'i cemeteries, but
    also houses" -- some 640 Baha'i properties, including cemeteries
    and shrines, have been confiscated since 1980. People are not fairly
    compensated. There are "allegations of procedural irregularities and
    bias against ethnic and religious minorities" in cases of
    expropriation. Minorities face "disproportionately poor living
    conditions" -- for example, Arabs, Kurds, and Muslim Sufis have
    "extremely unsatisfactory" living conditions in Kermanshah and
    Khuzestan. Laws relating to inheritance are harmful to minorities,
    according to the report, and favor Muslims. (Bill Samii)

    UNPAID WORKERS PROTEST IN NORTHWEST IRAN. Employees of a china and
    porcelain factory in the northwestern city of Tabriz staged a protest
    on June 27 against five-months of wage arrears, the Iranian Labor
    News Agency (ILNA) reported. During that time, workers told ILNA,
    they only received a onetime payment of 500,000 rials (roughly $57).
    The factory's managing director told ILNA he would pay the
    employees as soon as he can, but there has been a slump in demand for
    the products. (Bill Samii)

    TRUCK CRASH SHAKES SHIRAZ. A truck carrying 8,000 liters of gasoline
    crashed into a high-voltage electricity pole in the city of Shiraz on
    June 26, and fuel that leaked into the sewage system exploded, state
    radio reported. Gholam-Hussein Monshi, an official with the city
    sanitation department, stressed that the underground sewage system
    was not damaged because the gas leaked into surface canals only, IRNA
    reported. Fars Province Governor-General Ebrahim Azizi said the blast
    killed one person and injured four others, IRNA reported. More than
    20 cars were reported damaged. The Shiraz emergency hospital reported
    that six people who fell into the canal received immediate medical
    treatment.
    In eastern Iran on June 26, 22 people lost their lives when a
    bus and a truck crashed head-on, Reuters reported. The accident took
    place on the highway connecting Birjand and Nahbandan. (Bill Samii)

    INTELLECTUAL LABELED U.S. AGENT. Minister of Intelligence and
    Security Hojatoleslam Gholam-Hussein Mohseni-Ejei discussed the cases
    of jailed intellectual Ramin Jahanbegloo and former Tehran
    parliamentary representative and student activist Ali Akbar
    Musavi-Khoeni on July 2, Radio Farda reported. Mohseni-Ejei said
    Jahanbegloo was trying, at U.S. instigation, to bring about a
    nonviolent, "Velvet-type" revolution in Iran. The investigation into
    Jahanbegloo's case is continuing, Mohseni-Ejei added, and he
    claimed that the United States is training members of NGOs at
    overseas locations. Turning to Musavi-Khoeni, Mohseni-Ejei said the
    former legislator's participation in a women's rights rally
    on June 12 was illegal and that is why he was arrested, Radio Farda
    reported. Most other people arrested then have been released, but
    Mohseni-Ejei did not explain this inconsistency. (Bill Samii)

    JOURNALIST THREATENS MASS HUNGER STRIKE TO FREE POLITICAL PRISONERS.
    Dissident Iranian journalist Akbar Ganji has threatened to organize a
    hunger-strike "movement" in several Western cities if the government
    does not release three Iranian political prisoners as soon as
    possible and unconditionally. The most prominent of the three is
    noted scholar and author Ramin Jahanbegloo, who is accused of working
    with the United States to bring down Iran's Islamic regime
    through a nonviolent revolution. Former reformist legislator and the
    head of the alumni association of Iran's main reformist student
    group, Ali Akbar Musavi-Khoeni, and bus-driver union leader Mansur
    Osanlu are the others.
    Akbar Ganji reiterated his call for Iranian officials to
    release Ramin Jahanbegloo, Mansur Osanlu, and Ali Akbar Musavi-Khoeni
    during an interview with Radio Farda on June 30 while he was in
    Germany.
    Ganji said that Osanlu and Musavi-Khoeni represent Iran's
    intellectual, workers', and student movements whose members, he
    says, have been under pressure.
    He said they should be freed and he has called on all
    freedom-loving Iranians and human rights defenders to join him.
    "We've called on the regime to free these three prisoners
    immediately," he said. "If they will not be freed soon, I have
    planned with some friends a hunger strike against the Iranian regime
    in England, in France, in Germany, in the U.S. and across the world
    to bring the world's attention to the vast human rights
    violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran."
    Ganji -- one of Iran's most prominent investigative
    journalists -- was freed in March after spending more than five years
    in prison because of his critical articles.
    During his jail term he remained defiant and on at least two
    occasions he went on a long hunger strike to protest his conditions.
    Ganji has been on a European tour for the last month and has
    condemned human rights abuses in Iran wherever he speaks.
    "Iran's Islamic regime is continuing its political
    repression and human rights violations like before," he said. "One of
    the tools for political repression is arbitrary and illegal arrests.
    They arrest people because of their opinions and because of dissent."

    Ganji noted that many human rights activists and
    intellectuals have called for the release of Jahanbegloo,
    Musavi-Khoeni, and Osanlu.
    He added that since Iranian authorities have not paid
    attention to these calls, a general hunger strike seems to be the
    only way to press for their release.
    In recent weeks several separate statements have been issued
    by activists and intellectuals in protest of the detentions of the
    three men.
    In the case of Jahanbegloo, personalities such as Nobel Peace
    Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Literature Prize winner J.M.
    Coetzee, acclaimed Italian writer Umberto Eco, and prominent
    historian and author Timothy Garton Ash have joined the call for his
    release.
    Jahanbegloo is a well-known philosopher who has published
    several books in French, English, and Persian on issues as ranging as
    intellectual thought in Iran and Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi and his
    nonviolent resistance.
    He has been detained since April 27 without access to a
    lawyer.
    Minister of Intelligence and Security Hojatoleslam
    Gholam-Hussein Mohseni-Ejei said on July 2 that Jahanbegloo is one of
    the people who was arrested "in line with the U.S. effort to
    instigate a velvet [or] soft revolution in Iran."
    Some of Jahanbegloo's colleagues and friends have
    expressed concern that he could be under pressure to make forced
    confessions.
    This method has been used -- though largely unsuccessfully --
    by Iran in the past to discredit critics.
    There is also growing concern about Musavi-Khoeni, who was
    arrested in Tehran during a June 12 women's rights gathering.
    Seventy men and women were arrested for attending the protest
    against legal gender discrimination. All have been freed except for
    Musavi-Khoeni.
    Former legislator Fatemeh Haghighatjoo tells RFE/RL that
    Musavi-Khoeni's case is being reviewed by the hard-line
    revolutionary court.
    "This is a matter of concern because it is possible that they
    will bring new charges against him such as espionage or toppling the
    regime," he said. "During his term in the parliament he worked hard
    for the closure of secret and illegal prisons; he also defended the
    rights of political prisoners. These are among issues that can lead
    to new cases against him especially because he has been a defender of
    student rights and also the rights of women and workers."
    Human rights activists are also worried about the fate
    Osanlu, the president of the Syndicate of Workers of the Tehran Bus
    Company.
    He has been in jail since last December on unspecified
    charges. He reportedly helped organize demonstrations against bus
    drivers' work conditions.
    On June 30, the student website advarnews.com reported that
    student leader Abdullah Momeni welcomes Ganji's call for the
    release of Osanlu and other prisoners.
    Momeni is quoted as saying that Ganji's resistance while
    imprisoned provides a lesson for all Iranians who are longing for a
    change.
    He added: "I think students and those close to the students
    have the capacity to express their readiness for a protest."
    Iran's most prominent living poet, Simin Behbehani, has
    also expressed support for Ganji's initiative.
    Behbehani told Radio Farda that any action that would lead to
    the release of Iran's political prisoners is "necessary." (By
    Golnaz Esfandiari; Radio Farda correspondent Nazi Azima contributed
    to this report.)

    **************************************** *****************
    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/
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