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Rights and Liberties

Brutal Crackdown in Iran Targeting Key Opposition Figures, Activists, and Journalists

By Sara Farhang, IPS News. Posted June 23, 2009.


Ahmadinejad seems determined to round up anyone who could play a key role in rallying public support for opposition demands.
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TEHRAN, Jun 23 (IPS) - Eleven days after Iran’s disputed Jun. 12 president election, the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad appears determined to round up key members of the opposition, journalists and human rights activists who could play a key role in rallying public support for opposition demands.

The streets of the Iranian capital and other provincial cities Monday witnessed more violence, as protestors clashed with government security forces. Tehran’s Haft-e Tir Square was taken over by military and plain-clothes security, including Basij militiamen on motorcycles, leading to growing speculation among some analysts that a military coup is taking place inside the country.

As alleged infighting among clerics and leading political factions within Iran’s theocratic government intensifies, there now appears to be an unprecedented campaign underway to suppress opposition voices, through the arrest of leading reformist political figures, as well as scores of ordinary people who have participated in the protests.

Severe restrictions on journalists have made it nearly impossible to independently verify incidents of violence and detentions. According to official government sources, 475 people have been arrested so far. The Persian-language Zamaneh Radio, an online media outlet based in the Netherlands, has put that number far higher, at more than 800.

That number, which is based on published reports in the Iranian media, indicates that among those arrested, at least 20 belong to the campaigns of the defeated presidential candidates, former prime minister Mir Hossein Moussavi and former Parliamentary speaker Mehdi Karroubi.

The arrests have also targeted prominent political associates of former reformist President Mohammed Khatami (1997-2005), including his former vice president, Mohammad Ali Abtai, Mostafa Tajzadeh, who oversaw elections for the Interior Ministry during Khatami’s tenure, and Saied Hajjarian, a top Khatami adviser. Hajjarian, who was paralyzed as a result of an assassination attempt in 2000, requires continuous medical attention.

Abdolah Ramezanzadeh, the former governor of Iran’s Kurdistan province, has also reportedly been detained.

In an indication of the extent of the crackdown, 18 members of the Participation Front, the leading reformist party, as well as 20 members of the Freedom Movement, a nationalist party, have also reportedly been arrested.

Beyond the capital, as many as 114 political activists in major cities, including Tabriz and Qazvin, have been picked up, as have some 100 student activists, according to reports here.

The list also includes the names of prominent human rights activists, including Alireza Hashemi, head of the country’s Teacher’s Union; Abdul-Fatah Soltani, a human rights lawyer; and Reza Tajik, a well-known independent journalist.

Keyvan Samimi, the editor of a banned weekly published by the Defenders of Human Rights Center, which is headed by human rights lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, has also been detained.

Soltani, Tajik and Samimi serve on the Committee of Arbitrary Detention established by a number of human rights organizations to monitor the arrests and detention of political and social activists.

"Soltani and Tajik have both been very significant voices in the human rights community and their detention is certainly aimed at preventing their human rights reporting," said Hadi Ghaemi, who works with the New York-based International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.

"Now, with so many people in incommunicado detention, there are serious fears of torture and ill-treatment," he added.

Ebadi and her colleagues had been facing increasing pressure before the elections. Security officials raided and shut down her human rights center in December 2008.

Her group, among others, had been vocal about the need to adopt oversight mechanisms, including active participation by civil society groups, to ensure that the Jun. 12 presidential election was free and fair.

Following the announcement of election results, the center issued a statement calling for a new vote, echoing the demands of the main opposition candidate, Moussavi.

"The government is intent on stopping the free flow of information and news about recent developments," said Reza Moini of Reporters without Borders, a Paris-based international organization that monitors press freedom. "This is why they have expelled international journalists and are imprisoning Iranian journalists."

According to Moini, 26 journalists have been arrested since Jun. 13.

In Tehran, those include Mohammad Ghoochani, the editor of Etemad-e Melli newspaper, as well as independent journalists Ahmad Zeidabadi, Mahsa Amrabadi, Jila Baniyaghboub and Bahman Ahmadi Amoui.

Etemad is associated with Karroubi and Rajab Ali Mazroui, who heads the country’s Association of Journalists.

The wave of arrests is not limited to the capital. Mojtaba Mohsen Pour has been detained in Rasht, Ruhollah Shahsavar in Mashad, and Mashallah Heydarzadeh and Hamideh Maahozi in Bushehr.

Maziar Bahari, an Iranian-Canadian journalist working with Newsweek, who was in the country covering the elections, has also been arrested.

"According to reports, some of these journalists are under severe pressure in prison and their situation is worrisome," said Moini.

"Officials at the judiciary and at Evin prison are not accountable and have not provided families with information on the situation of these individuals. This trend is extremely worrisome," he added.

Many of the arrests have been made by security officials whose connections to Iran’s security agencies remain unclear. In many cases, arrest warrants are not presented. Court and prison officials are slow to provide explanations or even take responsibility for the arrests. Many people have had their homes searched and their personal property, such as computers, seized.

"The fact that there is no judicial process, access to lawyers and no contacts with families, demonstrates that an extra-judicial process is underway that can lead to disastrous human rights violations," said Ghaemi.

Fatemeh Haghighatjoo, a former reformist member of the Iranian Parliament, who is currently based outside of the country, told IPS that political and human rights activists are being arrested for two main reasons.

"First they are being arrested because they are viewed as the main organizers of these protests. With their arrests, security officials hope that the protests will die down," said Haghighatjoo.

"The other reason for their arrests is to pressure them into admitting that they have been acting as agents of foreign powers intent on overthrowing the Islamic government," she added.

Indeed, in recent days, some analysts have also speculated that those detained may be coerced into confessing – in front of a camera – that they have acted as foreign agents, working to overthrow the Iranian system.

The accusations of foreign interference were made last week by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in his speech at Friday prayers at Tehran University. Similar allegations have been made by Iran’s state-run television and by officials associated with Ahmadinejad’s government.

But opposition activists and some prominent members of the clerical establishment have vehemently denied the claims, calling them an insult to the protestors on the streets.

"How unjust are those who allow their trivial goals to call the miracle of the Islamic Revolution a plot conceived and devised by foreigners and a ‘velvet revolution’," said Mir Hossein Mousavi, in a recent statement.

Faezeh Hashemi, the daughter of one of Iran’s revolutionary political figures, Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, was also briefly detained and released, along with four other family members.

The elder Rafsanjani, a former president who heads the country’s powerful Assembly of Experts, as well as the Expediency Council, is reportedly in Iran’s religious center, Qom, in an attempt to build support within the body to question Khamenei’s leadership, as well as his biased support for Ahmadinejad.

The 86-member clerical assembly selects Iran’s Supreme Leader, and in theory, has the power to remove and replace him.

According to Haghighatjoo, the arrest of Rafsanjani’s daughter was different.

"While other arrests are intent on preventing the organization of protests and dissent, this arrest was a warning to Hashemi Rafsanjani," she said.


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See more stories tagged with: iran, mahmoud ahmadinejad, iran election, mir hossein moussavi, zamaneh radio, mehdi karroubi, mohammed khatami, mohammad ali abtai, mostafa tajzadeh, saied hajjarian, alireza hashemi, abdul-fatah soltani, reza tajik

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The arrest of Rafsanjani would be welcome.
Posted by: RedAaron on Jun 24, 2009 2:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While many of the demonstrators in the streets surely have good intentions, Rafsanjani is just a corrupt billionaire who wants to open Iran to imperialism and neoliberal "reforms".

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Not surprised
Posted by: bonapartist on Jun 24, 2009 3:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ok, Iran cracks down on the unrest. For a coutnry of 70 million few thousands are rather small number. I don't think anybody, myself included, was deluded to think that Iran's authoritarian power structure wouldn't do it.

However I would like to know what would happen to rioters that throw stones, burn vehicles and smash glass in any other coutnry in the world. Listening to the medias gasping one would think that int he US they would be showered with rose petals and taken for a coffee? You know, like during Los Angeles Riots of 1992. Only 53 confirmed dead in that one and all that in the land of the free.

I would say most likely not.

This "Green Revolution" stinks to high heaven, has a support of US, UK & Israel and that makes it more likely than not a foreign attempt to destabilize Iran. The crackdown is regrettable but unavoidable.

The current economic crisis showed that large part of the word is the need of political, social and economic reform. Iran is no exception. What most of the world doesn't need, again Iran included, is more neocolonial ventures to fill the pockets of rulling top 10% in the West.

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THE ONLY GOOD NEWS THAT I CAN THINK OF IS THAT I HAVE NO REASON TO SUSPECT THAT
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jun 24, 2009 4:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the United States is interfering. At least I hope it is true. It often takes 20 years to find anything out about the CIA.

At least a part of the problem in Iran today can be traced to the United States. Bill Casey, Ronald Reagan, and the Khomeni cut a deal. Casey approached the Khomeni and suggested that if he had a friendly U. S. government behind him he could go to Iran as the Supreme Leader. They would work together. The Khomeni went back to Iran and saw to it that the U.S. Embassy hostage situation happened. Out of deference to Casey and Reagan he held the embassy hostages past election day. Casey knew his cancer was terminal. You can't prosecute a dead man. The voters saw Jimmy Carter as weak and put Reagan in.

It was a put up deal. If you or I had done this deed and gotten caught we would have been shot at sunrise for treason. It was, still is, treason.

Casey had cancer. Some of his missives and meetings are believed to have been covered by George Bush the first. Reagan became president. Casey was appointed to Director of the CIA. Bush became second in command at the CIA. They then had the power to do what ever coverup was possible at this point. Casey died. Bush became Director of the CIA. It is just possible that Bush had to become president to continue the coverup.

What does this mean for Iran. The CIA think tanks created this in Casey's mind back during the Nixon administration. They knew the Shah had cancer and would die.

The CIA think tanks, Bill Casey, and Ronald Reagan made the decision to make the government of Iran a theocracy. They had decided that the people of Iran would not accept their preferred idea, a dictator. The central point of this whole thing is that the people of Iran did not pick the idea of a theocracy. They've got one but they didn't pick it.

Are we seeing the ferment for democracy? I certainly am no judge. In my mind there is no reason to believe that if the election had fallen the other way that democracy would have automatically followed. I really suspect that if the CIA had not interfered in 1953, that Iran would be the best and strongest democracy in the Arab world.

I expect at some point to be asking the people of Iran to support me when I ask that the United States be changed from a representaive form of government to a participatory democracy. We are, after all, in this together.

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Theocracy!
Posted by: bobtr900 on Jun 26, 2009 5:50 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The clerics, the theocracy is suppressing the people of Iran. same thing is going on here in America by the religious Right of the GOP. Bush and the GOP have been waging their wars of death and we the people have been told to support them by our clergy.

It all sounds quite undemocratic to me.

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