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RFE/RL Iran Report - 06/05/2006

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  • RFE/RL Iran Report - 06/05/2006

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Iran Report
    Vol. 9, No. 20, 5 June 2006

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

    ******************************************** ****************
    HEADLINES:
    * TEHRAN RESPONDS TO U.S. OFFER OF DIRECT TALKS
    * IRANIAN AUTHORITIES DETAIN STUDENT ACTIVISTS
    * IRANIAN OFFICIALS BLAME FOREIGN POWERS FOR NORTHWESTERN UNREST
    * CARTOON PROTESTS POINT TO GROWING FRUSTRATION AMONG AZERIS
    * AFGHAN PRESIDENT MEETS IRANIAN LEADERS
    * TAJIK OFFICIALS ALLEGE MILITANTS TRAINED IN IRAN
    ********************************************* ***************

    TEHRAN RESPONDS TO U.S. OFFER OF DIRECT TALKS. One day after the
    United States outlined its willingness to participate in talks
    between its EU allies and Iran on the nuclear issue, foreign
    ministers from the so-called 5+1 group (China, France, Russia, the
    United Kingdom, and the United States, plus Germany) on June 1
    decided on a package of "carrots and sticks" for Tehran. The proposal
    is aimed at encouraging Iran to halt the most highly disputed aspects
    of its nuclear program.
    Yet Tehran has declared its disinterest in negotiating with
    Washington, and proposals that it suspend uranium-enrichment and
    reprocessing activities -- on which the United States conditioned its
    participation -- probably will be rejected. Tehran may believe that
    it has made irreversible progress and it can withstand international
    sanctions, but Iranian officials have painted themselves into a
    corner through repeated appeals to nationalism on the nuclear issue.
    If Tehran reverses course now, it will be difficult to explain that
    reversal to the Iranian people.

    American Initiative

    U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on May 31 called on
    Tehran to "immediately" suspend its uranium-enrichment and
    reprocessing activities, cooperate fully with the International
    Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and implement the Additional Protocol of
    the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Rice mentioned greater
    economic cooperation as an incentive, as well as a continuing
    reliance on diplomacy to resolve the issue.
    As soon as Iran fulfills these conditions, Rice said, "the
    United States will come to the table with our EU-3 colleagues and
    meet with Iran's representatives." The U.S. message was conveyed
    to the Iranian government through the Swiss ambassador in Tehran and
    through the Iranian representative at the United Nations.
    Iranian state radio on May 31 described the U.S. overture as
    a victory for Iran, asserting that "Washington is under immense
    pressure by the American elite and other governments to hold
    negotiations with Iran."
    "Although it was difficult for the American authorities to
    shift their policies and they are severely under the influence of the
    Zionist lobby in their decisions, the fact that they agreed to enter
    talks with Iran is a clear sign that their previous allegations
    against Iran were untrue," the broadcaster continued.
    State radio concluded by saying Washington must accept
    Iran's decisive regional role because of Tehran's nuclear
    achievements, its national solidarity, and its economic progress.
    The rapporteur for the legislature's national-security
    and foreign policy committee, Kazem Jalali, called Washington's
    initial impulse a positive development, the Iranian Students News
    Agency (ISNA) reported. But Jalali warned that its preconditions are
    unsuitable, adding that the suspension of enrichment activities is
    out of the question.
    A June 1 headline in "Kayhan," the daily newspaper associated
    with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's office, announced
    the offer as "America's Need Under The Mantle Of A Concession To
    Iran."
    Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki on June 1 rejected
    Rice's proposal as nothing new, according to Radio Farda.
    Describing Rice's statement as "ramblings," Mottaki accused
    Washington of trying "to cover up [U.S.] crimes in Iraq."
    Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi said on
    June 1 that there are no obstacles to such talks if they take place
    without preconditions, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA)
    reported. He added that the U.S. proposal included nothing new and
    fails to respect Iran's rights under the NPT. The spokesman also
    responded to Rice's charge that Iran supports terrorism, saying
    the terrorism issue turns a spotlight on U.S. relations with Israel
    and Washington's reactions to what he called Israeli crimes
    against Palestinians.
    State media remained seemingly unimpressed by the U.S. offer.
    The director of the government's Islamic Republic News Agency,
    Ahmad Khademolmelleh, accused U.S. officials of using their influence
    over global media to "play games" in an effort to divert world public
    opinion from the realities of Iran's peaceful nuclear program. A
    state-television commentator said the U.S. preconditions bespeak a
    lack of seriousness about possible negotiations. Washington, he said,
    is merely "trying to convince others that it has shown flexibility."
    Iranian commentators and political officials are likely to
    formulate their own responses after the Tehran Friday Prayers sermon
    of June 2 clarifies the views of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
    Khamenei. Iranian Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki said in Malaysia
    on May 30 that Iran is ready to resume nuclear negotiations with
    Europe but is not interested in direct talks with the United States.
    He cited what he dubbed "the bad temperament of the Americans,"
    according to AFP. ITAR-TASS quoted Mottaki as saying that Iran is
    willing to hold talks with Washington once the U.S. attitude changes.
    Substitute prayer leader Hojatoleslam Ahmad Khatami said
    during his sermon at the Tehran Friday Prayers on June 2 that
    Washington's proposal to participate in nuclear talks with Iran
    is not very significant, state radio reported. Khatami noted the U.S.
    call for Iran to cease its uranium enrichment and reprocessing
    activities, although he mischaracterized the offer as "the U.S. would
    sit at the negotiating table if Iran were to stop all its nuclear
    activities." Khatami went on to say the abandoning of Iran's
    nuclear activities has been a long-standing U.S. objective. "This has
    been their wish for the past 27 years - a wish that has been
    continuously unfulfilled," he said.

    'Carrots And Sticks'

    In Vienna, meanwhile, the 5+1 group has agreed on a package
    of "carrots and sticks" intended to persuade Iran to halt uranium
    enrichment. British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said on June 1
    that the parties to the agreement "believe [the proposals] offer Iran
    the chance to reach a negotiated agreement based on cooperation,"
    according to Reuters.
    Beckett went on to say that efforts to bring punitive action
    against Iran in the UN Security Council will be suspended if Tehran
    complies with IAEA demands that it suspend its uranium enrichment and
    reprocessing activities. On the other hand, she warned, "further
    steps" will be taken if Iran fails to take the desired steps.
    Possible sanctions described by AFP on May 30 include an embargo on
    goods relating to Iran's nuclear and missile programs, travel
    restrictions for associated individuals, and a ban on Iranians
    studying these fields. There also could be travel freezes for Iranian
    officials and the blocking of assets belonging to the regime and its
    officials.
    Iranian officials have repeatedly asserted that they will not
    forego uranium enrichment. Foreign Ministry spokesman Assefi said on
    May 30 that the six countries meeting in Vienna on June 1 should not
    expect Iran to do anything beyond that which is required by the NPT.
    He said Iran will not suspend its nuclear research -- which is how
    Iran defines its relatively limited uranium-enrichment activities.
    Iran currently has a cascade of 164 centrifuges, and Assefi noted
    that in some cases 3,000 centrifuges are used for research. Assefi
    also noted that Iran does not recognize international limits on the
    percentage to which it may enrich uranium.
    Supreme Leader Khamenei told legislators in a May 28 speech
    that Iranian scientists' accomplishments in the nuclear field
    have guaranteed the country's energy supplies. Any reversals in
    this field will be a complete loss for Iran, he said, as he praised
    the legislature's approval of a bill to halt voluntary suspension
    of enrichment activities if Iran is referred to the UN Security
    Council.
    In a June 3 speech at the tomb of Ayatollah Ruhollah
    Khomeini, father of Iran's Islamic revolution, President Mahmud
    Ahmadinejad said UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan asked him to take
    his time and not publicize details on the proposal, state television
    reported. Ahmadinejad said Iran will reveal all the details
    eventually, and it also "will record all the talks word for word" to
    keep people apprised.
    Iran's ultimate decision, Ahmadinejad continued, will be
    based on the national interest. Iran is willing to negotiate, but it
    consider its "nuclear rights - the use of the technology of nuclear
    fuel production and nuclear technology for peaceful purposes - to be
    part of our self-evident and legal rights and we will not negotiate
    about our self-evident rights with anyone." Possible topics for
    negotiation, he continued, are "mutual concerns," world peace, and
    the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. (Bill Samii)

    IRANIAN AUTHORITIES DETAIN STUDENT ACTIVISTS. As unrest among ethnic
    Azeris in Iran settles down, disturbances involving university
    students are picking up. In the past week several student leaders
    have been detained by plainclothes security personnel and are being
    held at unknown locations. Such incidents follow protests triggered
    by the Iranian government's increasing interference in campus
    affairs. There are roughly 2.4 million university students in Iran,
    and student affairs will therefore have an impact on national
    politics for some time.

    Plainclothes And Disappearances

    The Iranian government's involvement in university
    affairs includes dismissing popular professors, appointing
    unqualified individuals to administrative positions, and manipulating
    student elections. The most recent incidents involve the detention of
    student activists by security forces. Much is made of these forces
    being in plainclothes -- rather than in uniform -- because this makes
    it difficult to determine the security institution with which they
    are affiliated. Similarly, the detainees are frequently held
    incommunicado at unknown locations.
    Student activists told Radio Farda that on the morning of May
    31 plainclothes security forces detained Abdullah Momeni, spokesman
    of the majority wing of the Office for Strengthening Unity (Daftar-i
    Tahkim-i Vahdat, DTV). Reza Delbari, another DTV member, told Radio
    Farda that the security forces have been after the organization's
    members for some time. The security forces, he continued, see no need
    to operate within a legal framework because any action on the part of
    the students prompts a disproportionate reaction.
    On the same day, students at the Amir Kabir University of
    Technology in Tehran held a lunchtime rally to protest the detention
    of two classmates, ISNA reported. Yashar Qajar, the head of the
    Islamic Students Union at Amir Kabir University, and blogger Abed
    Tavancheh, who wrote about recent campus protests on his weblog, were
    detained the previous week.
    Student Abbas Hakimzadeh told Radio Farda on May 30 that
    there is no news of Qajar's whereabouts and no one answers calls
    to his mobile telephone. The authorities told Tavancheh's family
    that he would be released after answering a few questions, Hakimzadeh
    said, but that was days ago. Hakimzadeh claims that the University
    Basij wants to bring the hard-line pressure group Ansar-i Hizbullah
    onto the campus. Hakimzadeh predicted that the situation will quiet
    down with the approach of exams and the summer holiday.

    A Week Of Unrest

    The detentions in Tehran follow violent demonstrations at
    Tehran University and Amir Kabir University on May 22-23.
    Demonstrating students at Tehran University objected to "the
    prevalence of a police atmosphere at the university," "Mardom Salari"
    reported on May 23. This has been a concern for some time. Last
    November there were accusations of universities becoming "garrisons"
    if the personnel responsible for physical security of the facilities
    were given more extensive powers that might relate to
    intelligence-gathering. More recently, students objected to plans to
    bury veterans of the Iran-Iraq war on campuses.
    Tehran police chief Morteza Talai said on May 24 that some
    20-30 people were behind the previous night's unrest at Tehran
    University, and he estimated that some of these people were not
    students, IRNA reported. Eyewitnesses reported some injuries and
    damage to parked vehicles, and Talai said 40 police were hurt.
    Students told Radio Farda that some students are missing and others
    were injured when police and paramilitaries attacked them.
    Tehran police spokesman Mohammad Turang said on May 26 that
    eight people were arrested for damaging dormitories. Turang referred
    to "thugs" who make trouble, and added that foreigners are involved:
    "Investigations show that a current from outside the university was
    involved in the recent turmoil in the Tehran University dormitory. It
    seems that these people are related to foreign sources."
    Tehran was not the only place where disturbances involving
    university students occurred during the last week in May. Students at
    Chamran University in Ahvaz and at Kermanshah University complained
    of interference in campus elections. The ones in Ahvaz also
    complained that university authorities would not allow outside
    speakers who were critical of the government, ISNA reported on May
    23. Kermanshah University students also complained that the
    university authorities refused to permit a seminar at which
    pro-reform politicians would discuss the economic situation, "Aftab-i
    Yazd" reported on May 23.
    In other incidents, students in Kerman reported cases of
    harassment, students in Zanjan and other places demonstrated over the
    publication of the "cockroach" cartoon deemed insulting to Azeris,
    and those in Shiraz reported restrictions on their activities.
    The protests continued in the last days of the month.
    Students at the Iran University of Medical Sciences staged a sit-in
    on May 29 to protest against the refusal of the chancellor's
    office to permit elections for the Islamic Students Union. Students
    Union head Mustafa Vafai said efforts to hold the election began
    seven months ago. He added that on May 28 the union was advised that
    it cannot hold elections until its activities conform with "the
    regulations regarding Islamic organizations." Vafai said the union
    was told at an earlier meeting that its Student Day rallies, its
    statements on the 2005 presidential election, and its publications
    are objectionable.

    Anger Over Election Interference

    The main concern at Amir Kabir University related to
    elections in the DTV, which now has two wings -- the more radical
    majority in the Neshast-i Allameh and the more traditional minority
    in the Neshast-i Shiraz (on student politics in Iran, see "Youth
    Movement Has Untapped Potential").
    Members of the two DTV wings got in a brawl at Amir Kabir
    University on May 22, state television reported. The next day, the
    conservative "Kayhan" newspaper reported that the Allameh wing was
    trying to hold an illegal election and its members attacked another
    student group.
    The Shiraz wing of the DTV at Amir Kabir University submitted
    a letter to the Ministry of Science, Research, and Technology in
    which it claimed that the other wing is trying to dominate the
    student organization, "Kayhan" reported on May 23. It accused the
    rival group of "denying the Islamic nature of Islamic associations
    and questioning the principles of the Islamic Revolution and the
    religion of Islam." It added that the Allameh wing has "been taking
    positions in conflict with the Iranian nation's national
    interests and in accordance with the country's foreign enemies at
    different junctures and during the country's political crises."
    The letter added, "they invite foreigners to interfere and meddle in
    Iran's internal affairs."
    Two University of Tehran students who were members of the DTV
    central council explained in a letter to university Chancellor
    Ayatollah Abbas Ali Amid-Zanjani that because neither wing of the DTV
    could gain a majority in campus elections in spring 2005, they signed
    an agreement in which five of the traditionalists and four of the
    reformers would serve on the student council. Since that time,
    however, the traditionalists have squeezed out the reformers, "Sharq"
    reported on May 30. (Bill Samii)

    IRANIAN OFFICIALS BLAME FOREIGN POWERS FOR NORTHWESTERN UNREST. As
    unrest among ethnic Azeris in Iran continues for the third week
    following the publication in the official "Iran" newspaper of a
    cartoon showing an Azeri-speaking cockroach, Iranian officials are
    accusing foreign powers of fomenting the unrest. Government spokesman
    Gholam Hussein Elham said on May 29 that foreigners are encouraging
    ethnic differences in an effort to undermine national security, state
    radio reported. Such efforts will fail, he continued, because "Iran
    has been able to create a united Islamic identity and culture by
    respecting the ethnic identities, values, cultures and languages."
    Elham added, "The people in this country are united, especially in
    Azerbaijan."
    Ali Nikzad, governor of Ardabil Province, also said on May 29
    that foreigners are behind the unrest, Fars News Agency reported.
    Many residents of Ardabil are ethnic Azeris and, Nikzad added, "Some
    people arrested after recent disturbances were neither from the city
    of Ardabil nor from the province. They were unknown people supported
    by foreign [intelligence] services."
    President Ahmadinejad told the cabinet in Tehran on May 28
    that Iran's enemies are trying to incite ethnic unrest because
    Iran will not back down on the nuclear issue, the Iranian Labor News
    Agency (ILNA) reported.
    Supreme Leader Khamenei made a similar accusation in a speech
    to legislators on May 28, state television reported. He said, "The
    last arrow in the quiver of the enemy against the Iranian nation and
    the Islamic Republic is to sow tension and stir ethnic and religious
    unrest."
    Interior Minister Mustafa Pur-Mohammadi told a May 30 seminar
    of provincial governors-general that the United States is behind
    recent incidents of unrest in northwestern Iran, ISNA reported. "With
    information available to us," Pur-Mohammadi said, "Americans would
    leave no stone unturned in order to create division in the country."
    Pur-Mohammadi charged that "our enemies have plans for every small or
    major incident in the country," adding, "The American government is
    trying to exert more pressure on Iran and create more obstacles and
    predicaments for the country."
    In the Republic of Azerbaijan, meanwhile, four organizations
    -- the Movement for the National Revival of Southern Azerbaijan,
    "Whole Azerbaijan," and both wings of the World Congress of
    Azerbaijanis -- have formed a committee to support ethnic Azeris in
    Iran, day.az reported on June 1. Opposition politicians from several
    political parties attended the meeting; National Democratic Party
    Chairman Iskander Hamidov advocated sending a parliament delegation
    to Iran to assess the situation there. (Bill Samii, Liz Fuller)

    CARTOON PROTESTS POINT TO GROWING FRUSTRATION AMONG AZERIS. The past
    few days have seen a string of deadly protests in predominantly Azeri
    northwestern Iran. What officially triggered the turmoil was the
    publication in the May 19 weekly supplement to the Tehran-based
    "Iran" newspaper of a controversial cartoon showing an Azeri-speaking
    cockroach. Although "Iran" is a government-owned periodical,
    authorities blame alleged "enemies of the country" -- a term
    generally used to describe the United States, Israel, and Britain --
    for the ethnic unrest. But regional observers believe the
    controversial cartoon served as a catalyst for Iran's Azeris to
    press anew for social, economic, and political demands.
    The publication of the controversial cartoon prompted a swift
    response from Iran's central authorities.
    Cabinet ministers condemned the caricature, describing it as
    "an offense to the Iranian people as a whole."

    A Foreign Plot?

    On May 23 -- the day after the first protests broke out in
    Tabriz -- the country's judiciary ordered the indefinite closure
    of "Iran" and the arrest of its editor in chief and its cartoonist.
    But this did not help defuse tensions in the northwest.
    As new protests were reported, President Mahmud Ahmadinejad
    alleged in a May 25 television address that the unrest was part of a
    foreign plot aimed at disrupting Tehran's efforts to acquire
    "peaceful nuclear technology."
    On May 28, it was the turn of the country's supreme
    leader to enter the fray.
    In an address to Iran's parliament, Ayatollah Ali
    Khamenei suggested a link between developments in the northwest and a
    recent announcement that U.S. President George W. Bush's
    administration is seeking a multimillion-dollar bill in Congress to
    promote democracy in Iran.
    "This tumult -- these ethnic and religious instigations --
    are the last arrow left in the quiver of the enemies of the
    People's Islamic Republic of Iran," he said. "They are wrong when
    they plan to spend money with a view to stirring ethnic groups,
    social classes, and the youth. As a rule their plans are based on a
    wrong assessment of the situation. And now they've decided to
    turn to Azerbaijan."

    Stirring Up Arabs And Kurds, Too

    This is not the first time Iranian authorities have blamed
    domestic unrest on foreign countries.
    Tehran accused Britain last year of instigating bomb attacks
    in the southwestern Khuzestan Province, a region with a large Arab
    population. It also blamed the United States for allegedly stoking
    unrest among ethnic Kurds.
    Touraj Atabaki teaches at the International Institute of
    Social History in Amsterdam. This expert on Iran's Azeri minority
    says there might be some truth behind Iran's claims of a foreign
    plot. Yet, he tells RFE/RL he believes responsibility for the unrest
    lies first and foremost with the central government.
    "Of course one cannot confirm that foreign agencies or
    [individuals] from [neighboring] Azerbaijan or Turkey, or from the
    U.S., are involved," he said. "This is very difficult to [make such
    accusations]. There might be some foreign involvement. But one can
    neither confirm nor deny this. Yet, the [approach] of the Iranian
    [authorities] toward social protests is very security-oriented and
    based on conspiracy theories. They immediately come to the conclusion
    that protests are instigated by foreign powers and they don't
    want to see the social, local [reasons] of these protests."
    Ever since Tehran quelled the short-lived autonomous
    government of Tabriz in 1946, Azeris -- who make up to one quarter of
    the country's population -- have been demanding more rights in
    line with Iran's Constitution.
    In the late 1990s, President Mohammad Khatami introduced
    reforms aimed at giving ethnic minorities more control of their
    respective regions' political life. But Atabaki says Ahmadinejad,
    who took office in August of last year, is in the process of
    reversing this policy.

    Ahmadinejad Reverses Policy

    "What Khatami did was to try to bring more local people into
    the political establishment. Governors, mayors, and local officers
    were elected or appointed from [amongst] various ethnic groups and
    that was a trend that started some eight years ago. But now, [under]
    the presidency of Ahmadinejad, we see that those officials who were
    appointed [over] the past eight years [are being] replaced with
    people coming from [other] geographic areas. Those are mostly people
    who have links with the Revolutionary Guard."
    Ali Hamed-Iman is the director of "Shams-e Tabrizi," a
    reformist electronic newspaper that has its office in the capital of
    East Azerbaijan Province. He tells Radio Farda the controversial
    cartoon served as a catalyst for the country's Azeris.
    "This caricature became an excuse for Turkic-speaking
    students and people all across Iran," Hamed-Iman said. "It was a
    spark that blew up the gunpowder of the Azerbaijani national
    movement. It was like a knife stuck in the back of the [Azeri]
    people, or to put it differently, in the back of the Azerbaijani
    national movement."
    That Azeri protests are going beyond the cartoon controversy
    is confirmed by reports from Tehran.
    As Khamenei was preparing to address the legislature on May
    28, dozens of Azeris marched on the parliament before being dispersed
    by police. Iran's student news agency (ISNA) said they were
    demanding that their language be taught in Iranian schools and that
    an Azeri-language television channel be established.
    Difficult To Determine Meanwhile, what really happened in
    Iran's northwest remains shrouded in secrecy.
    Authorities initially said the protests were limited to
    Tabriz and that one person was wounded and another 54 people arrested
    during the unrest.
    Subsequent reports, however, suggest the disturbances were on
    a much broader scale.
    On May 28, the top security officer of West Azerbaijan
    Province, General Hassan Karami, said four people were killed in the
    town of Naqadeh, some 150 kilometers southeast of Tabriz.
    Various Accounts Offered This official death toll pales in
    comparison to that given by the Southern Azerbaijan National
    Awakening Movement (Guney Azerbaycan Milli Oyanis Harekati -- or
    GAMOH).
    The Baku-based GAMOH advocates unification of Azeris living
    on both sides of the Araxes River, which separates Iran from
    Azerbaijan.
    The group says unrest spread across Iran's north and that
    deadly clashes in Tabriz, Urumiyeh, Ardabil, Maragheh, Zanjan, Khoy,
    Bukan, and other towns left at least 20 dead and scores of wounded.
    It also claims security forces made hundreds of arrests and sustained
    a few casualties at the hands of protesters.
    The World Azeri Congress last week released a list of
    casualties that indicated that some of the deadliest clashes took
    place in Sulduz (Fesanduz, in Persian), a town GAMOH claims fell
    briefly into the hands of insurgents.
    Given the political agenda of those two organizations,
    independent observers may find it hard to give credence to their
    claims.
    Yet, Atabaki -- who has just returned from Iran -- says the
    protest movement "is spreading everywhere" and has reached Farsabad,
    near the border with Azerbaijan. He also says the government seems
    unable -- or unwilling -- to respond to the unrest other than through
    coercion.
    "They have mobilized mobs against the crowds that took to the
    streets," Atabaki said. "They also started mass repression, [with]
    arrests and imprisonments. They think this is the best way to tackle
    the crisis. The point is that the government did not expect such a
    [protest] movement, [that it would develop] on such a scale."
    (Jean-Christophe Peuch)

    AFGHAN PRESIDENT MEETS IRANIAN LEADERS. Afghan President Hamid Karzai
    visited Tehran from May 27-28, Iranian news agencies reported. The
    Afghan delegation included national security adviser Zalmay Rasul,
    Agriculture Minister Obaidullah Ramin, acting Culture and Information
    Minister Sayyed Makhdum Rahin, acting Economy Minister Amin Farhang,
    Energy, Water, and Power Minister Mohammad Ismail Khan, Foreign
    Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta, Interior Minister Moqbal Zarar, Public
    Works Minister Surab Ali Safari, and Transportation Minister
    Enayatullah Qasemi, IRNA reported. Governors from Farah, Herat, and
    Nimroz provinces, which border Iran, were also in the delegation.
    After his first meting with President Mahmud Ahmadinejad,
    Karzai said Afghanistan would like to expand its trade and economic
    relations with Iran, IRNA reported, and he noted Iranian
    contributions to his country's reconstruction.
    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Karzai that
    American and European interference in Afghan affairs is harmful to
    Afghan progress, Fars news Agency reported. Khamenei also referred to
    the flow of narcotics from Afghanistan, the world's biggest opium
    producer, and the continuing dispute over the quantity of water from
    Afghanistan's Helmand River that flows into Iran's Sistan va
    Baluchistan Province.
    Karzai also met with parliament speaker Gholam Ali
    Haddad-Adel and Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki.
    Also during the visit, agreements and memorandums regarding
    prisoner exchanges and criminal extraditions, railway construction,
    and cooperation in other fields were signed. (Bill Samii)

    TAJIK OFFICIALS ALLEGE MILITANTS TRAINED IN IRAN. Zokir Nazarov,
    deputy prosecutor of Sughd Province, told a meeting of provincial
    security officials on May 27 that terrorists trained in Iran are
    threatening Tajikistan's security, RFE/RL's Tajik Service
    reported. "In the course of investigating the murder of the Nov
    (Spitamen) District head, the security services identified a large,
    centralized group of terrorists," Nazarov said. He added that group
    members "polished their terrorist skills in military schools in Qom,
    Iran. Apart from the individuals who have been detained, there are
    more than 400 other individuals from the group trained in Qom with
    various specializations who are active in Sughd Province."
    Akipress.org reported that Tajik officials believe Islamic Movement
    of Uzbekistan (IMU) members from this group were responsible for the
    recent incursion by armed militants from Tajikistan into Kyrgyzstan.
    (Daniel Kimmage)

    **************************************** *****************
    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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