Sunday, November 09, 2014

NEWS))))))



Iran: Pressure on a political prisoner

Ali Salanpour, a political prisoner, is transferred back to the prison, preventing him from completing his medical treatment. He was sent to a health care center for treatment outside Gohardasht prison over 2 weeks ago. He has been subjected to torture that has led to serious neck and back injuries during his interrogation.  Ali Salanpour was arrested in 2011, and was sentenced to 5 years imprisonment for 'acts against national security due to his support for the PMOI(People's Mojahedin of Iran).

Iran: Basij militants flee after clashes with youth in Korram-Abad

During an Ashura religious ritual, a group of mourners clashed with a number of Basij militants who were harassing a young woman. When the militants tried to arrest the young woman in Mottahary Street on Nov. 3rd, 2014 for improper Islamic dress code, other mourners came to the aide of the young lady and attacked the militants forcing them to flee.

Tehran: A female student vs. a Basij militant

During a heroic confrontation, a female university student resisted harassment by a Basij militant in Tehran on Thursday trying to defend herself against this corrupt government agent. The militant agent had approached the young girl to object her clothing, but she resisted and called passers bys for help and force the militant flee.  

Iranian Resistance Reveals New Details of Iran’s Nuclear Weapons Program

The Iranian regime has built explosive chambers that are to be used particularly for high explosive impact as part of its nuclear weapons program, the National Council of Resistance of Iran – U.S. representative Office revealed on Friday in Washington.
The NCRI- National Council of Resistance of Iran office in the
US released the names of key figures, officials, organizations, staff and foreign advisors that have been involved in the project. According to the information obtained by the network of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) inside the country, the chambers were built by a company affiliated to the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards Corp (IRGC) as part of a highly classified project that only two senior officials were informed about.
NCRI said Ukrainian experts who were in Tehran at the time collaborated closely with the regime in the field of explosive impacts. An explosive chamber was installed and used at Parchin Military Complex as part of a project that began under the supervision of the Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research, or SPND. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh Mahabadi, the key figure for the Iranian regime’s nuclear weapons program, headed the project. However the main individual responsible for the design and installation of the explosive chambers was IRGC official Saeed Borji. Saeed Borji, an explosives expert and a former official at the “Center for Explosives, Blast Research and Technologies,” is a confidant of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. Two Ukrainian nationals worked closely with Borji in the design and installation of the explosive chamber that was built by IRGC affiliated company AzarAb Industries.
In other news and according to Associated France Press, the Iranian regime is still failing to provide answers to questions related to its military dimension of its nuclear activities, the UN atomic watchdog said on Friday. The International Atomic Energy Agency said in a new quarterly report on Friday: 'Iran has not provided any explanations' on two issues that Tehran had undertaken to clarify by August 25. The Iranian regime and the IAEA have agreed to a 'technical meeting to further discuss the two outstanding practical measures ... but not before November 24,' said the report, not yet public but seen by AFP.
The Iranian regime and six world powers are seeking a separate landmark deal by November 24.

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In Iran and under the rule of Mullahs the Godfather of ISIS, having a dog is going to become a crime, being Bad Hijab also has its own consequences, FB and Twitter users, activists, Christians, Sunnis, Baha'is and now Dog owners are being suppressed and penalized.

In the recent attempts to control and further suppress the public, members of the Iranian regime parliament presented a bill that would require those who keep, sell, buy and walk dogs as pet in public to get 74 lashes and fine.
The bill was presented by 32 members of the regime’s parliament as an amendment to the clerical regime’s penal code.
Part of the bill reads: “Anyone who takes a pet like a monkey or a dog in public and damages the Islamic culture or the health and tranquility of the people - particularly children and women, or attempts to buy or sell them, or keep them at their home, and not to act on the warnings issued by State Security Forces (police), would be fined between 10 to 100 million Rials or would receive 74 lashes, plus the pet would be confiscated.”
Based on the bill, the pet would be “transferred to a zoo or desert” and the owner is responsible for the full cost of the transfer and keeping of the pet.
The Iranian regime periodically uses the issue of pets for public crackdowns.
Using this pretext, the police stop cars, carry out searches, confiscate pets and fine women if they are considered improperly dress.

Saveh-Iran: 1200 workers of Safa pipe manufacturing co. on trike

1200 workers of Safa pipe manufacturing company went on strike to protest against unpaid salaries.  

Camp Liberty: Iraqi agents obstruct transfer of six patients to hospital including two with acute eye problem

Gasoline delivery to Camp Liberty has been blocked for four consecutive weeks
On Wednesday, November 5, the Iraqi forces blocked the transfer of four patients to the hospital in Baghdad. Two of those patients are among the 53 who have been waiting for months for their eye surgery, but each time the Iraqi forces have prevented their trip to Baghdad.
One of the two patients is waiting for an eye surgery since November 2013. Previously on June 28, August 9, and
October 11, 2014, the Iraqi forces had prevented this patient from going to the hospital and on November 5th the appointment for this patient’s surgery was cancelled for the fourth time.
During the past few days, on the pretext of religious holidays, the Iraqi agents refused to transfer any patient to the hospital despite the fact that only Tuesday, November 4, was a holiday. Obstructing the transfer of patients is solely for the purpose of torturing them and tormenting them to death.
Similarly, on Thursday, November 6, the Iraqi forces again prevented the transfer of the patients. Four patients, three with gastrological and internal problems and one with hepatitis, had been waiting for a long time for their surgeries on November 6, but their appointments were thusly cancelled. 
Meanwhile, in continuance of the antihuman logistical blockade of the camp, it is now the fourth week that the Iraqi agents have prevented the entry of gasoline to
Camp Liberty. This is despite the fact that according to the tripartite accord of two years ago with the Iraqi government and UNAMI, there is a weekly need for 800 liters of gasoline that is basically used by public service vehicles and the vehicles used for the transportation of patients and injured inside the camp. Since the camp lacks any asphalt or concrete streets, commuting is extremely cumbersome for the patients especially during the winter season. Obstructing the entry of fuel has been reported by the residents to UNAMI on numerous occasions, but no steps have been taken.
The Iranian Resistance warns about the above measures and considering the commitment of the United States government and the United Nations for the security and well-being of Camp Liberty residents, it calls for immediate intervention by the United States and the United Nations to end these suppressive measures and to completely revoke the medical blockade and to secure the free access of residents to medical services.
Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of
Iran
November 6, 2014

Iranian regime creates new proxy group to fight for Assad: Syrian opposition

The Iranian regime is planning to create another proxy force in Syria like the Lebanese Hezbollah that includes foreign fighters to reduce casualties by Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) fighting against the Syrian people. According to reports by a Syrian opposition news outlet, the new force that will be a ‘Parallel Army’ to the Syrian army will include Iraqi and Afghan nationals who are on the Iranian regime’s payroll.
The Iranian regime pays each fighter about $400 a month for joining the force and promises that they will be rewarded with Syrian citizenship after a certain period of time. According to the report, the new group will be similar to the Hezbollah in
Lebanon, and it will fight alongside Hezbollah and Syrian regime forces. Recruiting Iraqis and Afghans may be part of an Iranian strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the Syrian Civil War at a time when the Syrian regime is finding it difficult to recruit new fighters to attack opposition forces.
A video obtained by CNN last week from Syrian rebels shows a prisoner that doesn’t speak Arabic, but mutters in Dari, the language spoken mainly in
Afghanistan. The prisoner says: 'My name is Sayed Ahmad Hussaini. The Iranians pay people like me to come here [Syria] and fight. I am from Afghanistan and I am an immigrant in Iran. The Iranians brought us to Syria to fight”. “I don’t want to fight anymore,' he adds.