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RFE/RL Iran Report - 11/29/2006

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  • RFE/RL Iran Report - 11/29/2006

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Iran Report
    Vol. 9, No. 44, 29 November 2006

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

    ******************************************** ****************
    HEADLINES
    * IRAN WILL PROCEED WITH HEAVY-WATER REACTOR
    * ZIMBABWEAN PRESIDENT VISITS IRAN
    * IRAQI'S VISIT TO TEHRAN POSTPONED
    * TEHRAN DECRIES REFUGEE PRESENCE
    * LABOR LEADER DETAINED IN TEHRAN
    * KURDS IN TEHRAN BARRED FROM CONGREGATIONAL PRAYERS
    * STUDENT KILLED IN FRONT OF FIANCEE
    * COMMEMORATION FOR SLAIN DISSIDENTS BANNED
    * SENIOR CLERIC DIES
    * JOURNALISTS DETAINED AT MEHRABAD AIRPORT
    * PORNOGRAPHERS FACE DEATH IN IRAN
    * DEBATE SHARPENS OVER GENDER SEGREGATION
    * IRAN SOCCER SUSPENDED FOR 'GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE'
    ************************************ ************************

    IRAN WILL PROCEED WITH HEAVY-WATER REACTOR. U.S. Ambassador Gregory
    Schulte said in Vienna on November 23 that Iran's request for
    International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) assistance in completing
    its heavy water reactor in Arak, a city south of Tehran, was waived,
    RFE/RL reported. "The removal of Arak -- an action taken by consensus
    -- reflects the [IAEA] board's continued concern about the nature
    of Iran's nuclear program and the intentions of its leadership.
    Heavy water reactors are well suited to producing significant
    quantities of plutonium, a key ingredient in building nuclear
    weapons."
    Adding that the 40 megawatt reactor could produce enough
    plutonium annually to make two nuclear bombs, Schulte called for
    United Nations sanctions against Iran. "The time has now come to back
    international diplomacy with international sanctions. Meaningful
    measures are needed to convince Iran's leaders to make the right
    choice -- a choice for constructive engagement over continued
    confrontation, a choice for serious negotiation over repeated
    noncompliance."
    IAEA Director-General Muhammad el-Baradei, furthermore,
    encouraged Iran to be more cooperative with the nuclear watchdog.
    The U.S. and many other countries suspect that Iran is trying
    to develop nuclear weapons, a charge that Iran rejects. The Iranian
    government claims its nuclear program has only peaceful applications,
    such as medicine and energy production.
    Developing countries feared that rejection of the Iranian
    request would set a precedent that would retard their nuclear
    programs, "The Washington Post" reported on November 20. According to
    "The Washington Post," the IAEA does not have a legal basis for
    denying Tehran's request.
    The IAEA governing board will not consider assisting the Arak
    project for two more years. Ali Asqar Soltanieh, Iran's envoy to
    the IAEA, tried to portray the IAEA governing board's decision as
    a victory, saying on November 23 that the U.S. failed to prevent
    Iran's submission of a request for assistance, Iranian state
    television reported. Soltanieh said Iran's request was backed by
    the non-aligned countries, the Group of 77, China, and Russia.
    Soltanieh continued, "this is a proof that the Islamic Republic is
    right and that the Islamic Republic's programs are peaceful and
    there is no legal logic in preventing the Islamic Republic from going
    ahead with its nuclear activities."
    Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki had a different take on
    events, telling reporters in Tehran on November 23, "Tehran did not
    ask the IAEA for any assistance in the Arak Project," the Islamic
    Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported. Mottaki said Iran would
    "appreciate" IAEA help, but if it is not forthcoming, "we will do it
    on our own."
    Soltanieh effectively said the same thing on November 21. He
    said Iran intends to build a heavy-water reactor at Arak regardless
    of the level of assistance from the nuclear watchdog, state radio
    reported. "Even if the IAEA rejects Iran's request for
    technological assistance, the project to complete the reactor will
    not stop," Soltanieh said.
    President Ahmadinejad, meanwhile, is continuing his defiant
    stand and promoting the country's nuclear pursuits. He said on
    November 20 in Tehran that the Islamic republic intends to build
    60,000 uranium centrifuges by March 21, the Iranian Students News
    Agency (ISNA) reported. This step is necessary to meet the
    country's nuclear-fuel requirements, he said. (Bill Samii)

    ZIMBABWEAN PRESIDENT VISITS IRAN. Robert Mugabe, the president of
    Zimbabwe, arrived in Tehran on November 20 for a four-day visit,
    Radio Farda reported.
    Zimbabwe is currently experiencing hyperinflation and has
    massive food shortages in some parts of the country. The 82-year-old
    Mugabe -- whom South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu has called a
    "caricature of an African dictator" -- has ruled since 1980. The
    African Union's Executive Council has criticized Mugabe's
    government for the arrest and torture of opposition members of
    parliament and human rights lawyers, arresting journalists, the
    preventing freedom of expression while stifling other civil
    liberties. Mugabe and many members of his government are banned from
    traveling to the European Union.
    Mugabe and President Mahmud Ahmadinejad discussed political
    and economic cooperation.
    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei used a meeting with
    Mugabe on November 21 to denounce alleged Western efforts to dominate
    other countries, IRNA reported. "However, it is witnessed that the
    resistance of world nations and independent countries can lead to
    constant failure of the world arrogance -- particularly the U.S. --
    in Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon, Afghanistan, and other regions,"
    Khamenei said. He also praised the confiscation of white farmers'
    land in Zimbabwe.
    Iranian Energy Minister Parviz Fattah said in the November 23
    edition of Harare's "The Financial Gazette" that, in a meeting
    with his counterpart, Mike Nyambuya, the Islamic Republic was asked
    to build a 1,600 megawatt power station on the Zambezi River. There
    also are plans to build a 600 megawatt thermal power plant, to
    conduct a feasibility study for an oil refinery, and to erect a
    hospital. Iran will accept minerals as payment, the newspaper
    reported.
    Mugabe, his wife Grace, and Zimbabwean officials returned to
    Harare on November 23, ZBC Radio Zimbabwe reported. (Pete
    Baumgartner, Bill Samii)

    IRAQI'S VISIT TO TEHRAN POSTPONED. Iraqi President Jalal
    Talabani, who was scheduled to arrive in Iran on November 26, has
    postponed his visit because of a curfew in Baghdad and the
    airport's closure, Reuters reported. Tehran had invited Syrian
    President Bashar al-Assad to join Talabani and President Mahmud
    Ahmadinejad for a trilateral summit, Reuters reported on November 21.
    U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey said on November 20
    that such an event would be welcome because Iraq should have good
    relations with all its neighbors, RFE/RL reported. "While there have
    been positive statements from the Iranian government about wishing to
    a play a positive role in Iraq, those statements haven't been
    backed up by actions," Casey said. "And so very much what we'd
    like to see the Iranian government do is desist, first and foremost,
    from negative actions it's taken in Iraq." (Bill Samii)

    TEHRAN DECRIES REFUGEE PRESENCE. Deputy Interior Minister and Bureau
    for Aliens and Foreign Immigrants Affairs chief Ahmad Husseini said
    in the West Azerbaijan Province city of Urumiyeh on November 20 that
    more than 1 million Afghans reside in Iran illegally, IRNA reported.
    Husseini said 950,000 Afghans and 60,000 Iraqis are documented
    residents. Some 250,000 Afghans were arrested this year as they tried
    to enter the country illegally, he added, while 10,000 Afghans,
    Bangladeshis, and Pakistanis were arrested as they tried to leave
    Iran and illegally enter Turkey. Afghans resist leaving, he said,
    because of violence, poverty, and unemployment in their home country.
    On October 31, a labor organization official said in Isfahan
    Province that 238,000 people are unemployed there, provincial
    television reported. He said the problem could be resolved by getting
    rid of foreign workers who do not have permits. A law enforcement
    official in the governor-general's office urged employers to
    reconsider hiring Afghans over Iranians.
    In Geneva in October, Iranian Interior Minister Hojatoleslam
    Mustafa Pur-Mohammadi expressed concern that Afghans are not
    returning home as rapidly as desired (see "RFE/RL Iran Report,"
    October 17, 2006). (Bill Samii)

    LABOR LEADER DETAINED IN TEHRAN. Mansur Osanlu, head of the Tehran
    bus drivers syndicate, was detained by plainclothes security
    personnel on November 19, ISNA and the Iranian Labor News Agency
    (ILNA) reported. Ebrahim Madadi, deputy head of the syndicate, told
    Radio Farda that he was with Osanlu when they stopped to buy a
    newspaper at around 9 a.m. Intelligence and Security Ministry
    personnel detained Osanlu, according to Madadi, and one of them
    pulled out a handgun when Osanlu's companions objected. Madadi
    said the security officer fired his weapon into the air to get the
    crowd to disperse. Madadi added that Osanlu had received a summons
    the previous day to appear in court on November 20. Osanlu was
    arrested in December 2005 and held for approximately eight months
    (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," January 9, 2006). (Bill Samii)

    KURDS IN TEHRAN BARRED FROM CONGREGATIONAL PRAYERS. Jalal
    Jalalizadeh, who represented the predominantly Kurdish city of
    Sanandaj in the Iranian parliament from 2000 to 2004, said on
    November 19 that Sunni Muslims in Tehran have not been allowed to
    hold congregational prayers for two weeks, ILNA reported. Jalalizadeh
    noted the absence of a Sunni mosque in Tehran and explained that
    Sunnis therefore gathered at the Pakistani Embassy's school.
    "But, as of two weeks ago, as a result of the pressures exerted on
    the embassy, they closed the school and moved it elsewhere, where it
    is not possible to hold the prayers," Jalalizadeh said. Given the
    lack of options, Sunnis gathered in Mellat Park to pray on November
    17. Police and plainclothes agents broke up the crowd. Some 9 percent
    of Iran's population is Sunni, while 89 percent is Shi'a.
    Shi'a Islam is the state religion. (Bill Samii)

    STUDENT KILLED IN FRONT OF FIANCEE. Students gathered outside the
    Teachers Training College in the city of Sabzevar on November 19 to
    protest the reported killing of a student the previous day, ILNA
    reported. Tohid Ghafarzadeh, a student at the city's Islamic Azad
    University, was stabbed to death by a member of the student Basij at
    the Teachers Training College on November 18, Radio Farda reported.
    Mustafa Sedaqatju, a former member of the student union, told
    Radio Farda that this was not a political incident. Ghafarzadeh was
    standing in front of the Teachers Training College talking to his
    fiancee when the Basij member inquired about their relationship. The
    two argued and Ghafarzadeh was killed.
    Sedaqatju noted that the authorities have done nothing about
    this incident and have remained silent, but they have been very
    critical about an event at the University of California-Los Angeles
    earlier in the week. In that incident, 23-year-old Iranian-American
    Mustafa Tabatabainejad was tasered by police when he refused to
    provide his identification or leave the library, the "Daily Bruin"
    reported on November 15. A bystander videotaped Tabatabainejad
    accusing the police of abusing their authority while he resisted
    them. (Bill Samii)

    COMMEMORATION FOR SLAIN DISSIDENTS BANNED. The children of two
    Iranian dissidents who were murdered eight years ago invited their
    compatriots to commemorate the anniversary of the killings, Radio
    Farda reported on November 20, citing ISNA and ILNA. Parastu and Arsh
    Foruhar, the daughter and son, respectively, of Hezb-i Mellat-i Iran
    leaders Dariush and Parvaneh Foruhar, said the event will take place
    on November 22.
    The Foruhars -- as well as poet Mohammad Mokhtari and
    writer-translator Mohammad Jafar Puyandeh -- were allegedly killed by
    so-called "rogue elements" in the Ministry of Intelligence and
    Security. The reputed ringleader of the crimes reportedly committed
    suicide before his trial, and the killers were sentenced in January
    2001 after a trial that failed to establish who actually ordered the
    murders.
    In August 2001, the Supreme Court reduced the original death
    sentences to served time, and in January 2003 those sentences were
    reduced again (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," January 29 and August 27,
    2001, and February 3, 2003). Parastu Foruhar said the authorities
    have yet to respond to their request for a permit to hold a public
    gathering, so the event will take place at their home.
    On the day the commemoration was scheduled to take place, the
    authorities prevented any sort of gathering. Parastu Foruhar said,
    "Since this morning, law enforcement personnel have closed off the
    two ends of the street on which the Foruhar house is located and they
    are even preventing the entry of close relatives," ISNA reported.
    (Bill Samii)

    SENIOR CLERIC DIES. Grand Ayatollah Mirza Javad Tabrizi has died in
    Qom, Fars News Agency reported on November 21. The funeral procession
    took place in Qom on November 22. The Iranian government declared a
    day of national mourning for Tabrizi, who was in his early 80s. (Bill
    Samii)

    JOURNALISTS DETAINED AT MEHRABAD AIRPORT. The Iranian
    journalists' guild on November 21 denounced the detention of
    correspondents who had just arrived at Tehran's Mehrabad airport
    after undergoing training in Holland, Radio Farda reported. The
    journalists were interrogated for several hours. A hard-line
    newspaper, "Siyasat-i Ruz," earlier denounced the journalists, and
    the Aftab website argued that the timing of the arrests signals a new
    wave of media repression. (Bill Samii)

    PORNOGRAPHERS FACE DEATH IN IRAN. Tehran prosecutor and press-court
    Judge Said Mortazavi warned on November 21 that producers of
    pornographic videos will be put to death and their distributors will
    be punished severely, state radio reported. An uproar followed news
    that a video purporting to show intimate scenes of an Iranian
    television star and her boyfriend is currently available on the
    Internet (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," November 21, 2006). (Bill Samii)

    DEBATE SHARPENS OVER GENDER SEGREGATION. Conservative elements in
    Iran are pushing to increase the segregation of men and women in
    public.A new park for women is due to open in the capital, Tehran,
    and reports say plans are under way for single-sex hospitals and
    women-only public transport. Supporters claim the effect will be a
    more moral and Islamic society, but activists warn that the moves are
    aimed at curbing women's participation in public life.
    The separation of men and women has arguably been part of
    Iranian culture for longer than its Islamic-based government. But
    gender-based segregation in public life was institutionalized
    following the establishment of the Islamic republic in 1979.
    Some fundamentalists consider it a solution to prevent social
    interaction that they regard as a potential source of evil.
    Iran's schools are already segregated to some extent.
    Young men and women sit in separate rows in university classes. All
    metro trains in the capital have distinct compartments for women, and
    women and men must sit in separate sections on public buses.
    In the past 27 years, there have been attempts to introduce
    segregation in other pubic places -- including health institutions
    and parks. So far, those attempts have failed in part due to
    impracticality, but also because of efforts by vociferous opponents.
    Since former hard-line Tehran Mayor Mahmud Ahmadinejad
    assumed the presidency, the segregation efforts appear to have gained
    momentum. As mayor, Ahmadinejad reportedly imposed a system of
    segregated elevators.
    The recent moves to further separate the sexes are backed by
    some senior clerics and legislators.
    Former reformist legislator Fatemeh Rakei tells RFE/RL that
    she thinks the new push for segregation is unlikely to succeed.
    "In the early years of the revolution, some people wanted to
    do the same in the universities and, as far as I know, the late Imam
    [Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini] opposed it," Rakei says. "But currently
    there are some strange radical views, which also exist in the Islamic
    world -- unfortunately -- but I don't think they can implement
    these views."
    Despite such criticism, advocates of segregation appear
    determined to enforce gender segregation in public arenas.
    In one of the latest initiatives, a senior official within
    Iran's Social Welfare Organization, Abbas Maleki, ordered that
    gender segregation be implemented in that organization's offices
    as soon as possible.
    In mid-November, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's
    representative to universities, Hojatoleslam Mohammad Mohamadian,
    called for segregated classes and said boys and girls can currently
    mingle more easily in universities than in parks.
    Conservatives say such measures would lead to a healthy
    Islamic society. But critics reject it and say gender segregation has
    neither a religious basis nor scientific support.
    Ex-lawmaker Rakei says clerics and open-minded Islamic
    scholars should speak out against the push.
    "I speak as someone who is deeply religious -- the
    segregation of men and women is not essential to a moral life," Rakei
    says. "Instead of such physical measures, they should explain
    teachings by different religions on issues such as morality and
    spirituality."
    Azadeh Kian, a lecturer in political science and an Iran
    researcher at France's National Center for Scientific Research
    (CNRS), says she thinks it is difficult to enforce segregation laws
    beyond some government offices.
    "How do they want to apply segregation, for example, on all
    public transportation?" Kian asks. "How do they want to segregate
    parks, hospitals, and streets? Women would have to walk on this side
    of the street and men on the other side. Currently women who are
    close to the government are on the city councils -- what do they want
    to do about that? For example, how would they have meetings of
    Tehran's city council? They would have to put women in one room
    and men in another."
    Some backers of segregation have conceded that it is
    impossible to implement such a policy in all public places. But they
    have said men and women should be separated where possible if it does
    not hinder the workflow.
    A member of the parliament's education committee,
    Mussalreza Servati, recently told the semi-official ILNA news agency
    that it would be good -- if possible -- to implement segregation in
    universities like that in schools.
    Servati also expressed support for segregation in workplaces
    and said it would liberate workers from certain obligations. He cited
    as an example the danger of women in mixed workplaces falling in love
    with colleagues and leaving their husbands.
    One female legislator, Efat Shariati, was quoted as saying
    recently that segregation in the office would lead to increased
    efficiency and commitment.
    Former legislator Rakei warns that the new push for gender
    segregation could prompt a backlash.
    "Those who have such views and do such things should know
    that by stepping up such measures, they will have negative results,"
    Rakei says. "People will escape from the religion [that those people]
    advocate."
    There have been conspicuous public calls for women to return
    to their traditional roles as housewives in recent months.
    Kian tells RFE/RL that support for gender segregation is the
    result of a patriarchal view in which women should be confined to the
    home, housework, and satisfying the desires of their husbands.
    "Instead of bringing up the issue of gender segregation, I
    think the current government should express the depth of its view --
    and that is that women should not be active in public spheres, with
    the exception of those who hold the same view as the government,"
    Kian says.
    Ahmadinejad said in October that women should devote more
    time to their main mission of raising children. He suggested that
    women can work part-time on full-time salaries. The comments were
    denounced by activists as an attempt to isolate women.
    One senior cleric, Grand Ayatollah Safi Golpayegani, recently
    described mountain hiking by women as shameful, and said there is no
    honor in women being elected to city councils. He instead praised
    housekeeping as a "holy" job.
    Kian says the new measures will meet resistance from women
    who now compose about two-thirds of new university students.
    "These attempts will fail, because today women in Iran have a
    very high level of knowledge," Kian says. "They are very active in
    public spheres, and they can't -- through public segregation --
    force women to return and stay in their homes." (Golnaz Esfandiari)

    IRAN SOCCER SUSPENDED FOR 'GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE.' FIFA, world
    soccer's governing body, has suspended Iran from all
    international competition.
    In an interview with RFE/RL, FIFA spokesman Pekka Odriozola
    said the decision was made on November 22 and that it was due to
    Iranian government interference in soccer matters.
    "The FIFA Emergency Committee took this decision after
    determining that the Iran Football Federation was not adhering to the
    principles of the FIFA statutes regarding the independence of member
    associations, the independence of the decision-making process of the
    football governing body in each country, and the way in which changes
    in the leadership of associations are brought about," Odriozola said.
    Earlier this year, Mohammad Dadgan, the Iranian
    federation's elected president, and his board were forced out of
    office by Iranian authorities.
    Odriozola said the Iranian federation then failed to meet a
    FIFA deadline of November 15 to reinstate Dadgan and his board and to
    comply with FIFA rules.
    "In this respect, FIFA and the AFC [Asian Football
    Confederation] adopted the clear position that Dr. Dadgan and the
    members of his board remained the recognized and legitimate president
    and leadership of the Iran football federation," Odriozola said.
    "This deadline was not met by the Iran Football Federation."
    Iran took part in the 2006 World Cup in Germany and last week
    beat South Korea 2-0 to qualify for next year's Asian Cup.
    To play in that cup and other events, FIFA said in a
    statement that the Iranian federation must meet a "road map" of
    conditions, including drafting new statutes based on FIFA rules and
    holding elections to appoint a new president and board under the
    supervision of FIFA and the AFC.
    The Zurich-based FIFA also called on the Iranian federation
    to set up a "normalization committee." Its members would be appointed
    by FIFA and the AFC to oversee Iran's full compliance and
    implementation of the road map.
    Iran is the second country to face recent FIFA sanctions.
    Last month, Kenya was also suspended for failing to respect signed
    agreements and for recurrent problems in its federation. (Jeffrey
    Donovan)

    ******************************* **************************
    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].
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    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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