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In the complaint, NIAC claims that factual
assertions made by Daioleslam "are false," even though Daioleslam
backed up those assetions with documents made available through
Internet links so that readers could judge the merit of his claims.
NIAC and Parsi take issue with Daioleslam's account of how NIAC was
founded, its relationship to Iranian oil consultant and middle man,
Siamack Namazi, the efforts of former Iranian deputy foreign minister
Sadegh Kharrazi to encourage the creation a pro-Tehran lobby, and
Parsi's part in releasing to the public a 2003 negotiation offer by the
Iranian regime, which Washington rejected after Tehran was caught
backing the May 2003 al Qaeda attack in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. In a recent interview with Frontpage magazine, Daioleslam describes in detail the Iranian government strategy to create a pro-regime lobby in the United States, and attributes that strategy to Sadegh Kharazzi. Trita Parsi and Siamak Namazi used precisely the same logic in a 1999 paper they co-authored and presented at an international conference, in which they advocated the creation of an "Iranian-American lobby... needed in order to create a balance between the competing Middle Eastern lobbies." (Daioleslam's response in Persian is here.) In recent months,
Iranian-Americans have protested NIAC events in California and
elsewhere. So far, Iranian-Americans have responded overwhelmingly in
Daioleslam's support. "We should treat this lawsuit as if we were all
sued by NIAC," one UCLA student wrote. "It should be treated like a
political campaign, where Mr. Daioleslam should not have to worry."
Yesterday, a patients rights group presented a letter of protest to Minister of Health and Treatyment, Dr. Kamran Bagheri Lankarani, requesting that the ministry correct problems that led to patients contracting Hepatitus and HIV from tainted blood. "Mr. Minister, these are some issues of great concern which we humbly request you to act upon; but if you cannot do anything for us Thalassemia patients of Iran and in particular of the Hormozgan province, then we demand your resignation." Dr. Lankarani has agreed to meet with representatives of the Thalassemia patients this Saturday. Thalassemia is an inherited blood disorder that makes patients anemic and that is normally treated through regular blood transfusions. For more coverage, including photographs of slogans carried at the demonstration in Bandar Abbas, go here.
Dr. Mohammad Parvin and Hassan Daioleslam
reveal in "Flirting
with the Mullahs" that an Iranian-American Democrat party activist,
Afshine Afshar, has
played an active role in the "Iran lobby," setting up the Iranian Trade
Association in 1997 to introduce U.S. oil companies to senior Iranian
government offi8cials. April 4, 2008: Death sentences commuted for Ayatollah Borujerdi followers. Ten followers of dissident cleric Ayatollah Borujerdi, initially sentenced to be executed this May, have been given jail sentences ranging from two years to five years by the Special Court of the Clergy in Tehran. While none of the ten are clerics themselves, their "offense" was supporting Ayatollah Borujerdi's belief in secular government. The ten were:
April
3, 2008: Commerce Department fines British group for exporting U.S.
planes to Iran. The
Iranian Web of Influence in the United States, by Hassan
Daioleslam, describes the ties between Balli Group in the United
Kingdom, key influence brokers in Iran, and the pro-Iran lobby in the
United States.
April 1,
2008: Dr. Amir Farshad Ebrahimi reveals "Salvation Committee" to help
Iranian defectors. In an
interview with Newsmax.com, Dr. Ebrahimi describes his role in the
escape of Gen.Alireza Ashgari.
Ebrahimi said that Asghari later expressed concern that U.S.
intelligence analysts were "cherrypicking" his information, to make it
appear that Iran had stopped its nuclear weapons program, when this was
not the case. He urged Ebrahimi to help other
defectors to escape Iran, and effort that FDI applauds.
Ebrahimi thanked the Foundation for our efforts in obtaining his release. "I appreciate the work FDI and other organizations did to help me during this difficult time," he said. In addition, the Foundation has
received a letter of appreciation
from "Bahram," the spokesman for the Organization of the Iranian People
Fedaii Guerillas, applauding our "courageous and timely decision" to
intervene with the Turkish authorities on Ebrahimi's behalf. "I feel
obliged to appreciated your continue[d] support, sense of
responsibility, and humanitarian spirit," Bahram wrote. [PDF file of the Fedaii letter]. March 28,
2008: FDI thanks U.S. government
for its help in securing the release of Dr. Amir Farshad Ebrahimi, who
was returned to Germany this afternoon. After several hours in
a German hospital, where his bruises from being beaten by the Turkish
airport police were treated, Amir Farshad is now free ....A special thanks to the foreign
service officers who labored throughout the night to secure Amir
Farshad's release. We have just learned that instead of putting him on
the 8 AM flight to Tehran, as the Islamic Republic representatives in
Istanbul had demanded, the Turkish authorities allowed him to fly back
to Germany on Turkish Airways flight 1723 this afternoon. “Under international law, if the Turks do not want to admit him to Turkey they are required to send him back to Germany, where he was a political refugee, and not to Iran,” a U.S. official told FDI. “This was handled at a very high level,” the official added. Without these efforts, and the pressure from
human rights groups in Los Angeles, Stockholm, and elsewhere, Amir
Farshad would be back in Iran and undoubtedly dead within days.
Instead, he is now back in Germany, where he remains under close
surveillance by both the German authorities and by Iranian
intelligence. We also want to thank the Turkish embassy in Washington,
DC, which transmitted letters of concern from FDI and from other human
rights organizations to the Foreign Ministry in Ankara, and the U.S.
regional security officers who worked beyond the call of duty. FDI is concerned not only
with the case of Amir Farshad Ebrahimi, but with other political
refugees now living in Germany who live in a state of constant fear,
under double harrassment from the Iranian regime and from the German
government. We have seen several other cases where refugees
with legitimate travel documents have been denied the ability to board
aircraft by the German authorities, on the pretext they had not cleared
their travel first with the German government. As the Soviet era
demonstrated so clearly, freedom of movement is one of the first
requirements of a free society. FDI calls on its partners and friends
to use their influence to convince the U.S. government to make it
easier for Iranian political refugees to come to this country, where
they can live freely and without fear. UPDATE 9 PM Eastern, March 27, 2008: In a subsequent call from his mobile, Dr. Ebrahimi said that a Turkish lawyer he had called for help had come to the airport, but was not allowed by the Turkish authorities to visit him. After she tried to reach him, Dr. Ebrahimi says that he was beaten by the Turkish guards, then locked in a bathroom in the detention center. According to Pooya Dayanim, a Los Angeles-based activist who spoke to Dr. Ebrahimi later in the evening, the Turkish authorities were planning to deport him on the 8 AM Iran Air Flight to Tehran on Friday, March 28.
FDI has no doubt that Dr.
Ebrahimi will be tortured and executed if he is returned to Iran,
and calls on all activists and human rights organizations to
immediately contact the Turkish embassy in Washington, DC, and Turkish
consulates elsewhere in the United States and Europe, as well as the
German embassy and consulates. Dr. Ebrahimi is a political refugee and
is a legal resident of Germany.
March
15, 2008: Tehran police chief arrested in sex scandal.
March 2,
2008: Smuggled
video footage of mass pro-freedom demonstration in Tehran. Cellphone
video footage of "Arya Shahr" pro-freedom march in Tehran in early
march, 2008. Demonstrators chant, "We don't want this Islamic
theocratic rule!" Feb. 14, 2008: New footage of group hangings smuggled out. Activists working with Marzeporgohar, a nationalist party operating clandestinely inside Iran, have smuggled out video footage of a group hanging that took place last month in the city of Sanadaj. Feb. 11, 2008: Torture of students continues at Evin Section 209. Scores of students arrested over the past three months continue to be tortured inside the notorious "political section" of Evin prison, aaccording to the Iranian Political Prisoners Association. Some have have exhorbitant amounts, ranging from $53,000 to $107,000, to get temporarily released on bail. Student activist Emada-Aldin Baghi was tortured so severely that he was transferred to the prison hospital on Dec. 26, 2007. Feb. 6, 2008:
In testimony before the Senate Select committee on
Intelligence today, the Director of National Intelligence, Admiral Mike
McConnell, appeared to walk back the most dramatic conclusions of the
much-disputed NIE on Iran released in December. Under questioning from
skeptical Senators, McConnell said, “I think I would change the way
that we described the nuclear program. I would argue, maybe even the
least significant portion — was halted and there are other parts that
continue.” Democratic Senator Evan Bahr excoriated
the NIE for “unintended consequences that, in my own view, are
damaging to the national security interests of our country.” Dec. 11, 2007: Germany ignores protests, frees assassins. Reuters is reporting today that the German government has granted early release to two men given life prison sentences for the 1992 Mykonos restaurant killings of Kurdish dissident leaders despite widespread protests. Germany's Chief Federal Prosecutor Monika Harms decided in October there was no legal reason to delay the early release of Iranian Kazem Darabi and his Lebanese accomplice, Abbas Rhayel. German government officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said both men had been released and were being flown out of the country. The two were released on Dec. 10,
International Human Rights Day. "This was a slap in the face of the
people who were killed," said Iranian dissident Sardar Hardar. "This
just sends the wrong message, a message of weakness to Tehran." Here is the latest reporting on the disputed National Intelligence Estimate on Iranian nuclear weapons development: • Dec. 10: The
Daily Telegraph quotes sources who say the CIA "was hoodwinked" by
Iran on the NIE
• Dec. 8: In Tehran, Iranian intelligence official Hossein Shariatmadari, who writes a regular commentary in intelligence-ministry-owned Kayhan daily, "reveals" in his column today that FDI president Timmerman, "who heads the Iran desk at CIA," is following a "four-layer plan" to topple the regime in Tehran. (We couldn't invent this stuff if we wanted!) • Dec. 7: Ken Timmerman reports at Newsmax of mounting skepticism over the NIE, including scathing comments from Rep. Pete Hoekstra, the ranking Republican on the House inteligence committee. In a Commentary piece in the Washington Times, Timmerman writes of "nuclear deceptions" giving rise to a false sense of "peace in our time" with Iran. • Dec 6: John Bolton critiques the NIE in a Washington Post oped. • Dec. 5: Tom Joscelyn at the Weekly Standard questions the involvement of former State Department official Thomas Fingar in writing the NIE. • Dec. 4: Ken Timmerman at Newsmax says that US intelligence was "possibly duped by Iran." Bill Gertz at the Washington Times says the NIE was based on reports from Iranian defector Alireza Asgari. Nov. 8, 2007: "This Pretty Much Kills the Iran Democracy Program," former State Department official Scott Carpenter tells the New York Sun. In a stunning interview, Carpenter warned that sending the $20 million set aside for Iran democracy programs to the newly-created Office of Iranian Affairs office "pretty much kills the Iran Democracy Program." He also revealed the intense, behind-the-scenes battle at State to scuttle the program from the get-go. "From the beginning there was a concern among the foreign service that was magnified when David Satterfield when took over as principle deputy assistant secretary, that the Iran democracy program was not being coordinated well enough with the rest of Iran policy. They thought it was too provocative and too forward leaning," Carpenter said. "It would complicate the relationship, even the prospect of a relationship, with Iran." David Satterfield was hastily sent to Iraq in
2004 after he was identified as a "person of interest" in the
AIPAC/Larry Franklin case, thus making him unavailable to federal
prosecutors eager to identify government officials who may have
provided classified information to individuals not authorized to
receive it.
Nov. 5,
2007: FDI has sent a letter to President George W. Bush, urging
him not to give Turkey a green light to invade northern Iraq. In the
letter, delivered via National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, FDI
presented the President with the conclusions from a recent fact-finding
tour of Iranian Kurdish bases in Northern Iraq, and warned against the
military and strategic alliance between Turkey and the Islamic Republic
to fight the Kurds. "A Turkish invasion of northern Iraq will not only
destabilize a peaceful, prosperous, and pro-American region of Iraq: it
will directly benefit the interests of the Islamic Republic of Iran,"
FDI wrote. Turkey and Iran are claiming that the Party of Free Life of Iranian Kurdistan, commonly known as PJAK ,s the Iranian "branch" of the PKK. "Indeed, it is our opinion that Prime Minister Erdogan, is acting as a stalking horse for the Islamic Republic of Iran in this matter," the letter states. The letter describes PJAK as the "only Iranian opposition group that has launched a comprehensive political and military struggle against the Iranian regime. Furthermore, the letter describes PJAK as "an independent, pro-American group, totally separate from the PKK, that has served America’s strategic interests since 2003 by preventing the infiltration of Iranian-backed insurgents and weapons into Iraq from Iran in the areas of the Qandil mountains under their control." The FDI letter was co-signed by the Hon. David
Beasely (former Governor of South Carolina), Frank Gaffney, president
of the Center for Security Policy, and the leaders of ten other
organizations. Download
the complete letter here. Read the letter on the web. Ken Timmerman reported on his trip to PJAK
Sept.
26, 2007: Two Kurdish students at Tehran university transferred to
Section 209 of Evin prison. The Iranian Political Prisoners
Association announced
today that the two students, Hedayat Ghazali and Sabah Nasri,
were sent to Evin's notorious political prisoner block after 55 days of
confinement and torture in Sanandaj. Sept.
25, 2007: Elisa Davidovitz tears up her Columbia journalism
school diploma to protest Columbia University's invitation to
Ahmadinejad yesterday. Click
here for the story. Go to Newsmax.com
for more coverage. (Photo by Kenneth R. Timmerman/Newsmax.com) Sept.
22, 2007: Join FDI and dozens of
other groups at Columbia University on Monday, Sept. 23, 2007 from 1-3
PM (W. 116th and Broadway) FDI President Kenneth R. Timmerman will be speaking at the rally and on CNBC's Power Lunch at 1:40 pm Eastern. (Please note: Because of the rally, we will not be updating this site on Monday). Read Timmerman's column on the Ahmadnejad visit in Monday's edition of FrontPage magazine FDI will also be joining the World Council for Cedars Revolution and the Reform Party of Syria at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza - Across from the UN, 12 Noon; (2nd Avenue at 47th Street).
STUDENTS ATTENDING THE AHMADINEJAD SPEECH: HERE are a few suggestions of "how to behave" with Ahmadinejad from the Yari National Group: 1. If you know of a streaker.... 2. Female students who are attending, please dress as little as it is possible to dress, expose much of your body. 3. Have pages of "Satanic Verses" by author, Salman Rushdie re-printed and give it as handout/gift to his entourage attending his speech. 4. Female students, remember 1970's women's liberation Movement? Please do burn your bra's front of Mr. Ahmadi Nejad! This action will be in support for your bonded sisters in Iran who are constantly being beaten, tortured and imprisoned for requesting equal rights with men. 5. All of you try your best to shake hands with Ahmadi Nejad. Specially the female students. This action will also break his fasting and will bring major protest from his Mullah Bosses in Iran. Please
try to do your best to make it very uncomfortable while he is among
you. Show him what true democracy is all about. Sept. 21, 2007: Columbia University speech is on. Bloomberg News service apparently confused last year's cancellation by Columbia of Ahmadinejad with this year. The Monday afternoon speech is on - and has been cleverely scheduled to correspond with the main anti-Ahmadinejad demonstration at UN Plaza in New York organized by the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations. Newt Gingrich revealed on FoxNews this morning
that the New York Times editorial board will host Ahmadinejad for lunch
at the Four Seasons hotel on Monday. "That is like hosting Adolf
Hitler to lunch in 1940," said Dave Bossie of Citizens United. Update:
Hotair.com said this afternoon that the NY Times luncheon was
a "joke," but Ahmadinejad is planning to meet the press - via a live
video-link with the National Press Club in Washington, DC. And
this one does NOT appear to be a joke! Sept.
20, 2007: • Update,
4:41 PM: Ahmadinejad tells Scott Pelly of CBS 60 Minutes he is
"amazed" that Americans are upset about him going to Ground Zero, and
hints he may drop that part of his trip. But don't bet on it. You can send an email to the
US Secret Service, who will handle his security (now that NYPD says
it won't), to protest their action.(More phone numbers, here) Michelle Malkin links to this hotair.com
soundbite from Sen. John McCain, who says Ahmadinejad should be
"physically restrained, if necessary" to prevent him from desecrating
hallowed ground. • Update, 1:45 PM: The latest is that
Ahmadinejad will attempt to desecrate Ground Zero at 10 AM on Monday.... • Earlier
today: Despite the refusal by the NYPD, Foxnews reported this morning that
Ahmadinejad still plans to come to Ground Zero on Monday, and will only be barred from the
September 11 memorial area. FDI will be there! Along with partners
in the Washington, DC area, we will be chartering buses to bring
freedom-lovers to New York on Monday to prevent Ahmadinejad from
desecretating hallowed ground. We need your
financial support, and your bodies. Please
email us directly if you can help or read more about our appeal and
what we plan to do. Here are a few additional steps you can take. 11:05 AM
[breaking]: President Bush answering a question about the
Ahmadinejad trip at his live press conference: "I can understand why
[the NYPD] would not want somebody who's running a State sponsor of
terror down there." Sept. 19,
2007: Update to Ahmadinejad tour:
The New
York Times reported two hours
after comments started streaming into to Mayor Bloomberg's office
following our blast email (below) that the
City has denied the Ahmadinejad request. Presidential candidates
Mitt Romney, a Republican, and Hillary Clinton, a Democrat, vigorously
denounced the proposed Ground Zero visit. But that didn't deter
Columbia University from maintaining its invitation to the man who
openly says his goal is to "destroy America" and to "wipe Israel off
the face of the map." Major American Jewish groups are planning a mass protest
of the Ahmadinejad visit. We will update our readers on protests
planned by Iranian-Americans as more details become available. Just Say No! to Ahmadinejad tour of
Ground Zero. FDI is calling on all Americans, regardless
of their origin or political beliefs, to contact
the office of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, to oppose
allowing Ahmadinejad to tour Ground Zero during his visit to New York
next week. NY City police commissioner Raymond Kelly announced today that the
Mayor's office was "in discussions" with the Iranian regime's Permanent
UN mission and the U.S. Secret Service to arrange the visit. FDI
president Kenneth R. Timmerman called an Ahmadinejad tour of Ground
Zero an "unconscionable outrage to the memories of our dead," and
warned that the Iranian president was seeking "bragging rights" with
his terrorist friends. Download our full statement as a
Word doc, or as a PDF
file. Sept 17,
2007: Iran cuts off Google and gmail access. In an apparent
response to the recent Israeli airstrike on Syria, Iran confirmed today
that it had cut off access to Google, gmail, and other international
servers, the quasi-official Mehr news agency reported today. "I can
confirm these sites have been filtered," said
Hamid Shahriari, the secretary of Iran's National Council of
Information. - State Department releases religious freedom report. The State Department's annual report on the status of religious freedom around the world found continued repression on religious ground of minorities in Iran. The government in Iran continued to harass non-Shia Muslims and excluside them from universities and government employment, while offering to lift those restrictions if they abandoned their faith and converted to Jaafari (Shia) Islam, the report found. While President Ahmadinejad "called for an end to the development of Christianity in the country," nevertheless "Christian groups outside the country reported the growth of underground churches in the country during the reporting period." Read the report (PDF document)(hot link to State Department website). Sept. 16,
2007: French foreign mininster Bernard
Kouchner warned that Iran's leaders that war was coming if they
didn't halt their nuclear programs.
Sept. 6, 2007: Sen. Lieberman voices strong support for democracy program. In a speech on the floor of the U.S. Senate. Sen. Joe Lieberman urged Congress to restore the full $75 million the administration had requested to fund pro-democracy programs in Iran. Lieberman blasted colleagues who sought to decrease funding for the programs, arguing that the money only provoked the regime."Do we give less to democracy advocates in Myanmar or Zimbabwe or Belarus when they are being harassed by the regime? On the contrary, it is precisely when dissidents are under attack that they need more help, not less, from the United States," Lieberman said."Does anyone in this chamber seriously believe that, if we give less money to the civil society leaders in Iran that the Iranian regime will repress them any less?" Read Lieberman's full statement here. Sept. 5, 2007:
"Call It War, Mr. President." Column by FDI president details
Iran's proxy war in Iraq. Aug. 6, 2007: Killing spree. Ahmadinejad and the ruling clerics have gone on a rampage of executions in recent weeks, killing more than 118 people, including four who were stoned to death. A professionally-made video of the latest hangings was posted this morning. Amir Taheri, writing in today's Wall Street Journal, calls it the"largest wave of executions" since 1984, and quotes Said Mortazavi, the chief Islamic prosecutor, warning that at 150 more are scheduled to be hanged or stoned to death in the coming weeks. Two Iranian Kurdish
journalists Adnan
Hassanpour and Abdolvahed "Hiva" Butimar, were convicted of spying for
political parties and foreigners during a secret trial ten days ago, and have been sentenced to death. Hassanpour,
30, hails from Marivan and works for ASO, a bilingual Kurdish/Farsi
newspaper. Boutimar, 29, is also from Marivan and was the founder of an
environmentalist group. French foreign minister
Bernard Kouchner has appealed to the Iranian regime for their
release, and on July 31, Rep. Frank
Wolf (R, Va) sent a
letter of appeal to Secretary of
State Condoleeza Rice [PDF file], asking her to urgently
intervene. So
far, the State Department has remained silent. Family
members told the Leadership Council for Human Rights, chaired by
Kathryn Cameron Porter, that the two men were "politically
unaffiliated." Download the LCHR
petition in support of the two condemned men as a Word file, or sign
the petition for their release on-line.
In earlier articles, Daileslam has exposed NIAC (see below) for championing the viewpoint of Tehran in Washington; most recently, NIAC has attempted to appropriate the issue of human rights, he wrote. NIAC carefully filtered access to the July 26 event, preventing more than a dozen Iranian-American human rights activists from expressing their views. Among those prevented entry to the Congressional meeting room were Dr. Manouchehr Ganji and Manda Zand-Karimi. See also Sen. Jon Kyl's policy
prescriptions on Iran. July 25, 2007: Policy alert: Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and sponsors in Congress will host a panel this Thursday, July 26, that will be chaired by Trita Parsi, a Swedish-Iranian also known as the "mullah's voice" in Washington. The informal hearing will take place from 12:00-2:30 PM in room B369 of the Rayburn House Office Building tomorrow. In a Frontpage magazine column this week, FDI President Kenneth R. Timmerman explains that Parsi and his group have consistently opposed U.S. Assistance to pro-democracy groups in Iran, and have advocated in favor of expanded U.S.relations with the Iranian regime, making his presence at such a panel a travesty. This is still time to prevent this from happening. FDI calls on supporters to call Alex Arriega at Amnesty International, the nominal sponsor of the event. She can be reached at 202-544-0200. Alternately, phone Amnesty' Middle East Advocacy director, Mr. Zahir John Mohammad, at 202-675-8755. Please also call Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D, MD), who booked the room for this outrageous event. His office: 202-225-5341. There are plenty of authentic victims of Iranian human rights abuses available in Washington, DC for such a hearing, as well as authentic spokespersons for those victims. Trita Parsi is not one of them.
In
a press release in April,
NIAC openly slandered Mr. Dailoleslam by calling him "a Marxist
Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MKO) supporter," because an MEK-affiliated website
had picked up one of his articles exposing NIAC's
ties to the Iran oil mafia.
In fact, in a statement released today, Mr. Dailoleslam said that while
many Persian-language websites picked up his article, "This by no means
suggests I am affiliated to any of them." He accused NIAC of launching
a "disinformation campaign to create a smoke screen hiding its
disguised relations with mullahs," and stated categorically, "I have
never been in MEK or worked with MEK." Mr Dailoleslam revealed in his statement
that in addition to working with Barzagan in Iran, he was in charge of
collecting donations in Europe along with two other members of
Barzagan's Freedom Movement, an opponent of the MEK. June
22, 2007: Human Rights Action
Alert; Placed under house arrest in
July 2006 after addressing a massive gathering of his followers, Borujerdi's family compound was
assaulted by regime agents in October, who overpowered
demonstrators who had gathered in his
defense. Borujerdi fell afoul of the
authorities for
refusing to acknowledge the role of Islam in politics, and for his
rejection of the doctrine of velayat-e fagih, absolute clerical rule.
Associates say he has received support from Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani
in Iraq, Ayatollah Vahid Khorassani, and Grand Ayatollah Sadegh
Rouhani, also under house arrest in Iran (and the brother of FDI
founding board member, Dr. Mehdi Rouhani), who so far have been
powerless to win his freedom.
Tried by the Special Court of the Clergy earlier this week, Ayatollah Borujerdi was accused of speaking against the word of the Koran, making up a false god, speaking against the Iranian government, holding illegal gatherings, and about 20 other allegations which his supporters tell FDI were "an excuse to cover up what they want to do to him." Apparently, the regime decided to stay his death sentence last Thursday because he was on a hunger strike, and rescheduled his execution for this coming Monday, June 25. Go to this special page for more photos and links to Persian-language video-clips of Borujerdi, including the encounter with the security forces. June 19, 2007: Reporting on the Paris conference of Solidarity Iran appeared in Newsmax, and in the New York Sun (Claudia Rosett). A follow-on piece in Newsmax featured interviews with KDPI deputy secretary general, Hassan Sharafi, and monarchist intellectual, Ramin Parham. We will post pictures as soon as we can. FDI board members sat in on the three-day conference as observers. May 31, 2007: As
more than 250 Iranians from a broad spectrum of society prepare to meet
in Paris for a "Solidarity" conference, some Iranian opposition
political figures continue to launch old-style attacks on their
competitors. Thus Amir-Abbas
Fakhravar,
a self-styled "student" leader who spent time in Evin prison with Ahmed
Batebi, viciously attacked student leader Ali Afshari and former
reformist publisher (and founder of the IRGC) Mohsen Sazegara today. Fakhravar accused Afshari of being a "lackey" of the U.S. government because he had received a grant from the NED (National Endowment for Democracy), and alleged that Sazegara was beholden to Israel because he has been a visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Curiously, his accusations were picked up word by word, along with the photo from Fakhravar's blog site, by asre-iran, the website run by Allah Karam, head of the pro-regime Ansar-e Hezbollah thugs in Tehran. Coincidence? In Washington, DC, Michael Ledeen writes in today's National Review Online that the Iranian regime has taken five U.S. hostages - ironically, most of whom favor U.S.-Iran dialogue. "The Americans were taken hostage for the same reasons the regime has routinely taken foreign hostages from the first year of its existence: to resolve internal power struggles, to demonstrate to the Iranian people the hopelessness of their condition by directly challenging the infidels to do anything about the humiliation of their countrymen, and to impose their will on a Western world the mullahs view as feckless and paralyzed," he writes. FDI President Kenneth
Timmerman dissects the U.S. Iran talks in Baghdad in
today's Frontpage magazine, and gives a foretaste of the upcoming Solidarity Iran conference in Paris. May 19, 2007: 23 murdered in Tehran Security
crackdown. Twenty-three
persons were beaten to death last week in a security crackdown
last week in the south Tehran neighborh The crackdown, ostensibly aimed at
homosexuals, prostitutes, drug addicts, In one of the photographs, shown below, a suspect has been
collared with a red aftabeh,
a clear sign of public humiliation. (The aftabeh is a device normally used
in Iran to wash the anus after defecation.) News organizations interested in reporting on this massacre
are invited to contact FDI for
additional information and graphic photographs. “This crackdown on so-called “alvats” [perverts] is a massive
violation of commonly accepted standards of human rights,” said FDI
chairman, Nader Afshar. “When coupled with the recent arrest of Haleh
Esfandiari, who has long been an advocate of rapprochement between the
United States and the Tehran regime, it shows that hard-liners are not
only clearly in charge, but they are warning their opponents that no
deviation from their policies will be tolerated,” Afshar said. May 12, 2007: Voice
of America's Persian TV service hosted
a debate on Iran sanctions
and the Divest Terror campaign between pro-regime activist, Rostam
Pourzal, and Roozbeh Farahanipour, a leader of the July 1999 Tehran
uprising and secretary general of Iranians for a Secular Republic. Pourzal's Campaign against Sanctions and against Military
Intervention in Iran refers to President Bush's January 2002 State of
the Union speech as the "infamous
Axis of Evil speech,"
calls the invasion of Iraq "illegal," and chides the United States for
"war crimes" in Abu Ghraib, Falluja, and elsewhere. Farahanipour, by
contrast, has been
testifying in public
on behalf of California State legislator Joel Anderson's Divest Terror
legislation (see entry for April 24, below), and has called sanctions
and divestment a middle ground between appeasement and war, both of
which he opposes. At the end of the hour-long debate, VOA host Bijan Farhoodi
pointed out that for the past 27 years, the Voice of America had tried
without success to invite a representative of the Islamic Republic to
express their point of view. In Rostam Pourzal, he added, they finally
had one. May 4, 2007: In an unbelievable ad carried by the International Herald Tribune (April 25), the Economist (p111 of last week's edition), Iran Daily, and other newspapers, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization called for international bids to construct "two large-scale nuclear power plants"in Busheir. It requires bidders to make a non-refundable deposit along with their bid to an account with Austria Bank-Creditanstalt in Vienna, and to post a performance bond of twenty million euros "delivered to AEOI's representative office in Vienna" by Aug. 2, 2007. The United Nations Security Council has banned all nuclear trade with Iran. In an almost equally-unbelievable response to questions from journalists, the International Herald Tribune defended its acceptance of the advertisement, despite the fact that it cleared flouted international law. As Claudia Rosett of the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies
noted in an oped today,
at first glance the ad appeared to be a joke. "It smacked of Iranian
nose-thumbing so extreme one had to wonder if it was a spoof. It's no
joke."
The banner reads: "We don't want nuclear energy, we don't want your minimum wages. We work to live but we don't want to live to work!" (Hat-tip to Winston) Meanwhile,
crunch time for Iran's economy will hit on May 21, when gas rationing
goes into effect.
Iranian drivers will be limited to three litres per day at the
subsidized cost of 40 cents per gallon. They will be permitted to
purchase more than the three litres, but anything beyond the limit will
be at market prices, according to Resource
Investor. April 25,
2007:FDI Executive Director Kenneth Timmerman testified today in
Columbus, Ohio in support of HB
151,
an Ohio state bill to divest the state pension funds from companies
doing business in Iran. For more on Timmerman's testimony, provided in
his own name, see the April 27, 2007 edition of Frontpage
magazine. The Ohio bill was crafted by Republicans
Josh Mandel, a 29-year old Iraq war Marine Corps veteran, and
Shannon
Speaking in favor of the bill was Roozbeh Farahanipour, chairman of Iranians for a Secular Republic, who described how he was tortured after the July 1999 student uprising using a technique called "chicken kabob.". Assemblyman Anderson called his testimony "gripping," and included excerpts in a press release on the bill. April 23,
2007: FDI Executive Director Timmerman comments in
Human Events on the growing unrest among Iran's oppressed
minorities, but warns against encouraging ethnic conflict. "[I]t
would a tragic error for this or any U.S. administration to encourage
ethnic revolt [in Iran] because we would then alienate 95% of the
pro-democracy forces in Iran." Instead, "what we need to be doing is
finding a way to get all of these groups to work together rather than
supporting separate wars. What’s needed is a coordinated
nationwide movement. A violent revolution will only open a Pandora’s
box for a future dictator.” March 27,
2007: Pro-democracy
activists will testify in
favor of California bill 221 to disinvest state pension plans from
companies doing business in Iran. Reza Pahlavi also has sent a letter
to the speaker of the California State assembly, Fabio Nunez, in
support of the disinvest campaign. "This act will hearten Iranians by
demonstrating Californian's solidarity with their plight and national
struggle against tyranny, injustice and suppression," he wrote. March 26,
2007: The California Assembly will hear
legislation on Wednesday, March 28, at 9 AM, that would require the
State pension funds to disinvest from companies doing business in Iran.
The pro-Tehran group NIAC has come out against the bill. Why? Because
it just might convince major multinational companies to rethink their
business in Tehran. Four trade unions have already come out in favor of
the bill. Last week, legislators in Maryland introduced
similar legislation. Here's
a round-up of the current Disinvest Terror campaign, March 7,
2007: On-line
petition calling for international action in
support of freedom in Iran. FDI applauds the efforts of Amil Imani
and
other activists in drafting a
comprehensive list of steps freedom-loving nations can take to support
the pro-democracy movement inside Iran.
As we have been saying for many years, the United States does not need
to send the 82nd Airborne or B-2 bombers to take out Iran's nuclear
sites. A better course is to increase pressure from the outside through
a package of sanctions and other measures described in the petition,
and from inside Iran by support for the pro-democracy movement.
Also today in Washington: Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns described the administration's efforts to ratchet up international sanctions on the Tehran regime, all the while opening a dialogue with Iran and Syria on Iraq. Burns told House Foreign Affairs committee Tom Lantos (D, Ca) that the U.S. opposed new legislation proposed today that would make mandatory U.S. sanctions on foreign companies that invested in Iranian oil and gas projects. After describing efforts to get Europe, Japan, Russia and China on board in stiffening UN sanctions, he said, "If the focus of our policy is to sanction our friends and not Iran... it might undercut that coalition." The Iran
Counter-Proliferation Act of 2007 (H.R. 1400), introduced
jointly by Lantos and ranking Minority commitee member Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, also rescinds the Clinton exception to imports into the
U.S. of Iranian dates and carpets (used some believe to finance Iranian
intelligence operations in the U.S.), and places the IRGC on the
terrorism list. March 2, 2007: Know your friends - and your enemies. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R, NE) will address two events sponsored by the American Iranian Council today. The AIC is a lobbying group with 501(c)3 status that consistently takes positions in sync with the Tehran regime, which has been seeking to get the US to lift sanctions on Iran for years. Sen. Hagel has been a strong AIC supporter, as today's events show. In New York, Sen. Hagel is the featured guest at "an exclusive" closed-door AIC fund-raising luncheon. At 3:30 PM, he will address a public event, hosted by AIC at Rutgers university. AIC specializes in upbeat economic bulletins on the Islamic Republic of Iran and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in an apparent effort to attract international investment to Iran. Feb. 23, 2007: FLASH NEWS: Reports from FDI sources in Tehran say that Wednesday's demonstration (2/21) by Iranian teachers in front of the Majles buildings continues to worry government officials, who fear that the teacher's could make good on their threat of a general strike starting on March 6. Demonstrating teachers called for improved salary and benefits, and lew legislation governing teaching standards. Regime media outlets reported that "hundreds" of teachers took part in the demonstrations, but strike organizers said more than three thousand teachers took part in the march, under the watchful eyes and batons of national police. MOIS agents filmed the demonstrators, FDI sources said. At the end of event, demonstrators stated that if the government did not accept their requestss, they would launch a general strike on Tuesday March 6. In public statements yesterday, regime officials said they wanted to avoid an escalation of tensions that could induce other government employees to join striking teachers. - -
Feb. 16, 2007: In a briefing in Baghdad on Sunday, the U.S. military presented new evidence of IRGC Qods Force involvement in Iraq. The evidence included Iranian-made weapons used by insurgents, Iranian-made IEDs, and IRGC identity cards captured from senior al Qods officers. You can download the PDF file (700 kb) of the 16-page briefing here.
Based on internal IRGC analysis, "the security and intelligence strike against U.S. forces in Karbala prompted the Americans to act against elements they believed responsible," Rahimi wrote. Among those Iranian "elements" arrested by the Americans in retaliation for the Kerbala attack was "the second secretary of the Iranian embassy in Baghdad," Rahimi added. (The original can be found at http://sobhesadegh.ir)
Jan. 8, 2007: Rafsanjani says road to be named after the "Martyr" Ahmadinejad. With Tehran swirling with rumors regarding the pending demise from cancer of Supreme Leader Ali Khamene'i, the ultimate power jockey, Hojjat-ol eslam Ali Akbar Rafsanjani, hinted recently that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad could be forcibly removed from power if he doesn't resign voluntarily. Following December's widely-boycotted elections, Rafsanjani has now taken over as head of the Assembly of Experts, the body that under the Islamic Republic constitution will name the Supreme Leader when Khamenei dies. In an otherwise fawning paeon to Khamenei ("whose death will have a shattering effect on the Iranian public, who idolize their leader and would largely view his loss as a catastrophe" [sic]), Stratfor notes that "[i]t might be no coincidence Rafsanjani, in a recent talk with journalists, described a new highway currently under construction in Tehran, as the "highway of Shahid (martyr) Ahmadinejad." Hat tip to Gary Metz for pointing out the Stratfor piece.
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