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Kudos to all who phoned Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, and Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland, who came out against the deal. And shame on Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen and Sen. Barbara Mikulski, who came out in favor of it, and especially on Rep. John Delaney, who voted for it after he said he would vote against it. Read our initial statement opposing the deal. |
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Read the record of the Islamic Republic's use of torture from the Akbar Mohammadi trial
October
2015 UN Human Rights Report Technology Freedom Project Circumventing Internet Censhorship Tools IranWatchList Iran180 Read about Iran's involvement in the Sept. 11, 2012 attacks that killed 4 Americans in Benghazi. The Shadowy Iranian Spy Chief Who Helped Plan Benghazi FDI
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Sharpe's
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Featured Iran Blogs:Directory of Iranian Weblogs in English Read the State Department's 2010 report on Human Rights abuses in Iran (released April 8, 2011). Download the PDF
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Read the latest Mideast headlines here. Check
here for the latest news from the Iranian Political Prisoners
Association ![]() ![]() Search OMID for victims of Islamic Republic human rights abuse Highlights from 2010: Nov. 17: FDI
joins Larry Klayman and Freedom Watch to
examine policy options for the incoming
112th Congress toward Iran. From left to right: FDMI President Kenneth R.
Timmerman, FDI Advisory board member Reza
Kahlili, Larry Klayman (speaking), FDI
advisory board member R. James Woolsey
(l-to-r: FDI president
Kenneth R. Timmerman, FDI Sec/Treasury Bill
Nojay, Rep. Bachmann, FDI Advisory board
member R. James Woolsey)
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Oct. 3, 2016: Those
family ties...Fatimeh Mugniheh
(left), da
ughter
of former Hezbollah military leader Imad
Mugniyeh, and her "friend," Zeynab Suleymani,
daughter of Quds Force leader Qassem Suleymani,
take in a film in Tehran. (Original Twitter pic
here).
Mugniyeh was known to have taken an Iranian wife
and spoke fluent Farsi in addition to Dari,
linguistic skills that helped him during many
missions to Afghanistan for Suleymani's Quds
Force, where he helped al Qaeda plot the 9/11
attacks. Mugniyeh's involvement in the 9/11 plot
was first revealed on pages 240-241 of the 9/11
Commission report, which described his presence
on multiple flights from Damascus and Riyadh to
Tehran between October 2000 and February 2001,
conveying future hijackers to their Iranian
handlers. Families of 9/11 victims won
a $6 billion judgment against the Iranian
regime in a U.S. federal court because of Iran's
material support to the 9/11 plot.
Bill Nojay 1956-2016
FDI Statement
on the death of board member Bill Nojay:
“The
pro-freedom movement in Iran has lost a
great champion.”
Sept. 14, 2016 IFDI) - The FDI Board and supporters of a secular, free Iran were shocked to learn of the death of board member Bill Nojay, who was found dead of a gunshot wound at his family’s cemetery plot in Pittsfield, New York on Friday.
FDI president Kenneth R. Timmerman spoke with Nojay just days before his death. “We were embarking on a new project, and Bill was enthusastic and upbeat,” Timmerman said.
Nojay was elected to the New
York State legislature in 2012, and won
his
primary for re-election on
September 13, four days after his death.
"Bill devoted a huge amount of his time to serve others, without a thought to any reward,” Timmerman said. “I am honored to have served with him on the board of FDI in the service of freedom.”
Nojay worked with FDI to promote the cause of victims of the Iranian government, individuals whose loved ones were murdered, or people subjected to extrajudicial detention and torture.
“We were working with more than 200 victims of Iranian state ter0n U.S. courts because they were not U.S. citizens at the time the crimes against them were committed,” Timmerman said.
“Many of these individuals
have contacted me since
learning of Bill’s death to express their dismay
and sadness at the loss of such a stalwart
champion of freedom,” Timmerman added.
In 2007, Nojay joined Timmerman at a 3-day effort in Paris, known as Solidarity Iran,to build a broad coalition among diverse Iranian opposition groups. “Bill was always generous to volunteer his time and his skills to help Iranians in need,” Timmerman said.
“The pro-freedom movement in
Iran has lost a great champion.”
[Photos: Bill Nojay and FDI President
Kenneth R. Timmerman at the 2007 Solidarity Iran
conference in Paris. Bottom: Timmerman,
Nojay, Rep. Michelle Bachman, and former CIA
Director R. James Woolsey, at the National Press
Club, 2013.
Aug. 26, 2016: Iranian regime seeks to eliminate independent UN human rights reporting.
After its success in forcing the resignation of Ahmed Shaheed, the trail-blazing UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Iran, the Islamic regime in Iran is now hoping it can count on U.S. help to elect a lackey to succeed him.
But that may be easier said than done.
Dr. Shaheed has issued scathing reports on the systematic human rights violations by the Iranian regime, focusing international attention on the persecution of women, children, ethnic and religious minorities, as well as the political opposition.
His focus on the regime’s human rights record got him banned from Iran just months after he took office in August 2011. Despite multiple requests since that time, the regime has never allowed him to visit or Iran. Dr. Shaheed was re-elected to his sixth one year term in March 2016.
FDI sources believe that the Iranian regime only succeeded in getting Dr. Shaheed removed from his position because of active assistance of Secretary of State John Kerry. “For Secretary Kerry, human rights issues were among the first things to be sacrificed… to facilitate the normalization of relations with the Iranian ayatollahs,” one opposition activist said.
“For several years, this administration has black-listed those Iranians and Iranian-Americans – and Americans, too – who opposed the Islamic Republic, not only from access to American policy makers, but from all the media it controlled, in particular the Voice of America,” the activist added.
Human rights advocates and at least two U.S. elected officials have been promoting Roozbeh Farahanipour, who came to the United States as a political refugee in 1999, as a replacement for Dr. Shaheed.
Mr. Farahanipour, who runs a business in Los Angeles and was recently re-elected to his fourth term on the Westwood Neighborhood Council, advocates for a “secular republic” to replace the Islamic regime in Iran. He tells FDI that he would continue the work of Dr. Shaheed to expose the barbaric practices that the Islamic Republic considers to be “normal” expressions of Islamic Sharia law.

In his letter of support to the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, California State Senator Joel Anderson commended Mr. Farahanipour for his “unyielding commitment to raising awareness of the injustices that plague his home country and his ability to overcome immense opposition and retaliation in the battle for Iranian human rights.”
In a parallel letter, U.S. Representative Gus Bilirakis (R, Fl) identified Farahanipour as “an invaluable advisor on all issues regarding the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” and commended him as “an international leader in the Iranian cultural renaissance movement.”
Farahanipour has won support from a broad cross-section of Iranian diaspora leaders who agree with him and Dr. Shaheed that universal standards should govern the United Nations effort to monitor human rights practices in Iran, not separate Sharia-law standards.
“I majored in Sharia law as a law student in Tehran, and it’s clear that Islamic law and human rights can never be bedfellows,” he told FDI.
Dr. Shaheed most recently aroused the ire of the Iranian regime for criticizing laws that created two new categories of offensives unknown in other countries: “Mohareb” (literally, one who fights against God), and “Mofsed fel-arz” (“corruptor on earth.”). Both are punishable by death in today’s Iran and have been used as excuses to execute thousands of political prisoners over the past 37 years.
In a
July 12, 2016 statement to
a hard-line website, Dr. Mohammad
Javad Larijani, chairman of the Iranian
regime’s “Human Rights High Command,”
dismissed Dr. Shaheed’s criticism by saying,
“What business of yours are these things?
These issues are solely the concerns of our
laws.”
After enumerating several Islamic punishments enshrined in current Iranian law, Larijani concluded: “Before anything else, Ahmed Shaheed must understand the laws of Islam…”
Speaking to a pro-Rouhani website, Larijani’s deputy for international arffairs, Kazem Gharib-abadi, was more explicit. “One of our tasks at the Human Rights High Command is to influence and reform [Western] human rights documents, because Islamic Human Rights must be recognized and must be reflected in [international] human rights documents.”
In recent discussions with the European Union, the Iranian regime has insisted that the next Special Rapporteur come from a Muslim country and have a good knowledge of Sharia law, informed sources tell FDI.
Three candidates in addition to Farahanipour fit that bill: the former head of Pakistan’s Human Rights commission, Ms. Asma Jilani Jahangir, a fierce opponent of Islamic blasphemy laws; Sudanese lawyer Mohamed Abdelsalam Babiker, who authored a 2012 study on human rights law as it applied to the Dharfur conflict; and Turkish women’s rights advocate Yakin Erturk, who was the UN Special Rapporteur for Violence against Women from 2003-2009 and more recently called the Iranian regime’s war on women a “bloody stain” on its human rights record.
The pro-Tehran lobbying group NIAC has been promoting American Neil Nicks, director of Human Rights Promotion at Human Rights First, an organization that seeks to make the human rights of LGBT people “a foreign policy priority of the U.S. government. Hicks previously worked as a researcher for the Middle East Department of Amnesty nternational in London, and before that, as a project officer at Birzeit University in the West Bank.
The Human Rights Council
is expected to meet during the upcoming
session of the UN General Assembly in New
York and elect on a new rapporteur for Iran
sometime between September 13 and September
25. Permalink.
Aug.
13, 2016: Hard-line publication claims
visiting American was opposition James
Bond. Why was yet another
American taken hostage in Iran? Hard-liners
predictably claim he was a U.S. spy--and now are
saying he's an agent of the exiled opposition.
(Permalink)
Gholamreza "Robin" Shahini traveled to Iran this
May to visit his family in the northern city of
Gorgan after graduating from San Diego State
University with a degree in international
security and conflict resolution. He had gone
back to school after years of running a pizza
shop, and was 46 years old when IRGC goons burst
into his mother's home, presented a search
warrant, and took him into custody.
For two weeks, his girlfriend in the United
States, who was in contact with his family in
Iran, had no news what had happened to him. The
search warrant presented to Reza's sister
accused him of unspecified "crimes against the
state." The LA Times cited
a friend who speculated on Facebook that
he might have been detained because of online
comments criticizing the human rights record of
the Islamic regime.
The
Iranian regime continues to arrest
U.S.-Iranian dual nationals despite the
hostage swap and ransom payment last January.
Shahini is the
third U.S.-citizen currently
held in Iran. The regime has also arrested
Canadian and British citizens in recent
months.
Secretary of Sate John Kerry and his
spokesperson, John Kirby, apparently just
wish Shahini would go away. Both have
refused to answer questions from
reporters. The State Department did not return
several calls by FDI asking for comment.
"All I hear from Secretary Kerry is 'human
rights, human rights,' and yet when an American
citizen is taken hostage in Iran, what do they
do? Nothing," Shahini's girlfriend told FDI.
Shahini's arrest was first
reported on July 21. Three days later,
former intelligence minister Gholam-Hossein
Mohseni-Eje'i, now spokesman for the Judiciary,
confirmed
his arrest.
But it wasn't until last Wednesday (Aug. 10)
that his lawyer was allowed to visit him, after
he had a medical emergency. "Robin has severe
asthma and they took away his medication," his
girlfriend said. "I sent all that information to
the lawyer. He is allergic to cigarette smoke.
So then they put him in the place in the jail
where all the criminals go to smoke!"
Shahini told his lawyer that his interrogators
were accusing him of being a spy for the United
States.
A
hard-line Iranian internet publication published
on Friday two
photographs of Shahini, apparently taken
from his laptop, which had been seized by the
authorities. The first shows him shaking hands
with former president Abolhassan Banisadr in
Banisadr's residence in Versailles, France. The
second shows him at a conference table to Reza
Pahlav, son of the former shah.
The article claims that Reza was "commissioned
by the National Council to reconcile Bani Sadr
to the Pahlavis." The article also claimed that
Reza traveled to Iran at the request of the U.S.
intelligence services "on a mission from the
U.S. government... to create chaos in the
country."
The full name of Reza Pahlavi's organization is
the Iran
National Council for Free Elections. It
promotes reconcillation and cooperation among
all democratic factions of the Iranian
opposition, as does FDI.

Neither Banisadr nor Reza Pahlavi has confirmed
the authenticity of the photographs, and
Shahini's girlfriend told FDI that he had never
been a supporter of either politician. But a
2009 trip to Iran during the Green Movement
protests "was a turning point for Robin" and
made him more aware of the human rights
situation inside Iran.
The regime has been on an execution spree in
recent weeks, on some days killing as many as
five political prisoners, many of them Kurds,
according to the International
Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.
In an ominous development, Shahini's family say
he has been placed in the Quarantine ward in
isolation from other prisoners. Families of
other political prisoners note that they have
been called to visit their loved ones in the
isolation ward shortly before they were
executed.
Permalink
Aug. 6, 2016: Iran executes former nuclear
scientist - Clinton email tie?
(Permalink)
Five
years into a ten year jail sentence for
espionage, former nuclear scientist Shahram
Amiri was executed on Saturday by hanging and his
body returned to his family.

Amiri “disappeared” while
making the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca in
2009. The Iranian regime accused the United
States of kidnapping him because he was
engaged in sensitive nuclear research.
Later, Mr. Amiri surfaced in the United
States, and published reports said he was paid
$5
million by the U.S. government for
providing information on Iran’s nuclear
program.
In July 2010, Mr. Amiri
had remorse, after several emotional phone
calls with his five-year old son, who he had
left behind in Iran. He traveled from
Arizona to the Iranian Interests Section in
Washington, DC, asking to be taking back to
Iran.
Those events led to crudely-coded email
exchanges between Jake Sullivan and his
boss, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
that were released in July 2015 under the
Freedom of Information Act.
“The gentleman you have talked to Bill Burns
about has apparently gone to his country’s
Interests Section because he is unhappy with
how much time it has taken to facilitate his
departure,” Sullivan
wrote in an email to Mrs. Clinton
private email server on July 12, 2010. “This
could lead to problematic news stories in
the next 24 hours. Will keep you posted.”
This is the type of email exchange,
containing classified information, that Mrs.
Clinton’s aides never should have
communicated over an unclassified system,
giving rise to the charge by FBI Director
Comey that Mrs. Clinton had been “reckless”
in her handling of classified material.
So reckless, in fact, that now someone
clearly referred to in her emails is dead,
executed by the Islamic Republic of Iran.
“Something dramatic happened that caused the
regime to execute Shahram Amiri on Saturday,
half-way through his ten-year sentence for
espionage,” said Roozbeh Farahanipour, an
Iranian human rights activist who has been
nominated to become the next United Nations
Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Iran.
Did the release of the Hillary Clinton
emails provide the Iranian regime with some
proof it had previously lacked that Shahram
Amiri was a U.S. spy? If so, it shows once
again the reckless disregard of Mrs. Clinton
and her aides for protecting U.S. national
security - and indeed, the lives of
individuals who had a secret relationship to
the U.S. government.
For more background on Amiri's initial
defection to the United States, see our July
20, 2010 blogpost.
Permalink.
Aug. 5, 2016: Iranian state
television showed footage
of ransom payment.
Donald Trump got into hot water last week
when he claimed he had seen television
footage of the $400 million cash payment to
Iran made by the United States government in
January. While he subsequently said he had
been mistaken, and had seen U.S. TV footage
of the aircraft carrying the hostages
arriving in Geneva, he may have been
right to begun with.
Iranian state TV included pictures of the
palettes with shrink-wrapped cash in a
documentary called "Rules
of the Game" it aired on February 15.
"A narrator, speaking in Persian, describes
a money-for-hostages transaction over video
clips of a plane on an airport tarmac in the
dead of night and a photo of a giant
shipping pallet stacked with what appear to
be banknotes," The
Guardian newspaper reported.
Yesterday, Pastor Saeed Abedini, one of the
three U.S. hostages who was released on
January 17, told
Fox News that his captors told him
they were waiting for another plane to
arrive before letting his plane take off.
Meanwhile, the corruption scandals inside Iran
continue to generate unrest, as does the regime's
recruitment of young Afghan men to fight
Iran's battles in Syria. Iranians are
increasingly furious as more
details of the payslip scandal emerge,
showing that grossly-incompetent employees at a
state insurance earn phenomenal salaries,
because of political ties to Rouhani-regime
insiders.
July 21, 2016: Saudi FM blasts Iranian
consul for Iran-al Qaeda ties. In
a remarkable exchange Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir demolished a senior Iranian
diplomat for Iran's ongoing ties to al Qaeda.
Today's forum, sponsored by the Belgian foreign
ministry and hosted
by the Egmont Institute, took place a day
after the United States Treasury designated
three additional al Qaeda members as
global terrorists, two of them working from
Iran. (For more on the Treasury designations,
see here
and here).
In response to a harangue by the Iranian
diplomat that Iran couldn't possibly be
sponsoring al Qaeda because of their sectarian
differences, al-Jubeir calmly expounded a series
of facts, starting with Iran's sponsorship of
the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing, and leading up
to the 2003 Riyadh bombings and beyond. "The
order to blow up three housing compounds in
Riyadh, in 2003, was made by Saef al Adel, Al
Qaeda's chief of operations, while he was in
Iran. We have the phone conversation on tape. We
didn't make this up," he said. "Ronald Reagan
used to say, facts are stubborn things, They are
stubborn. Because you can't get around them."
Saudi Arabia has captured Iranian agents on its
soil, and has seized explosives Iran attempted
to smuggle into Saudi Arabia for additional
terrorist attacks. But Saudi wasn't the only
target, he noted. "Iranian agents have been
linked to terrorist attacks in Europe, to
terrorist attacks in South America. We didn't
make this up. This is the world. This is
evidence." This remarkable six minute exchange
is worth viewing in its entirety.
May 13, 2016: Mullahs re-arrest Christian
pastor and his wife.
Yousef
Naderkani, who was arrested in 2009 and
condemned to death for apostasy for renouncing
Islam, was rearrested on Friday along with his
wife, Tina Pasandide Nakarkhani and three
members of their house church. According to Christian
Solidarity Worldwide, they were
interrogated for several hours but ultimately
released later in the day. The status of the
other detainees remains unclear.
Pastor Youssef was acquitted of the apostasy
charge and released from jail in September 2012,
after refusing to recant his Christian faith. He
was rearrested a first time on Christmas Day
2012 and held for more than two weeks.
"The continued harrassment of Christians by the
Islamic regime authorities in Iran because of
their religion shows once again that this regime
does not respect the most fundamental human and
civil rights of its own citizens," said FDI
President Kenneth R. Timmerman. "Western
governments would do better to hold the Iranian
regime accountable for its egregious human
rights violations and its ongoing support for
international terrorism, rather than seek
illusive profits by doing business in Iran."
May 1, 2016: First Labor
Day labor protests in 8 years;
tens of thousands take to the street. Tens
of thousands of workers marched through the
streets of Tehran on Friday, the first Labor Day
protest in eight years. Bahar
News reported that close to 10,000 workers
demonstrated against the Rouhani government in
front of the state-affiliated Workers House and
then made their way toward Palestine square.
Protesters held
posters demanding insurance for
construction workers, job security in the
workplace, and a ban on hiring foreign workers.
The protests were led by Hassan Sadeghi, head of
the state-sanctioned Union of Veterans of the
Labor Community, and included leaders and
members of the Asalooyeh Guild, a newly-formed
"unofficial" union.



Comments from readers thanking
the website for reporting on the protests
received over 500 likes.More photos from the
protests are here.
Labor activist Mansour Osanloo, the
former head of the Tehran Bus Driver's Union who
fled Iran three years ago and now lives in the
United States, told FDI that labor unrest has
spread to Iran Khodro, the largest auto maker in
the country. "The Sepah Pasdaran owns the
petrochemical industry and the car plants,
through Khotam ol-anbia," Osanloo said. "These
people are not qualified. They are not managers.
They have stolen so much from these companies
they can no longer pay the workers. The whole
system is corrupt."
Over the past year, labor unrest has spread
through the oil industry in Khouzestan and into
Iranian Kurdistan, Osanloo said. "Without
sanctions relief, the regime was in big trouble.
Don't give them the money!" Osanloo said.
April 27, 2016: Iran Oil Exports soar, but
Leader blasts U.S. for failed sanction
relief. The latest
figures, released by Reuters today, show a
50% leap in Iranian oil exports in March
to its primary Asian markets, China, South
Korea, Japan and India. Oil shipments reached
1.56 million b/d, up from 1 million b/d for
March 2015. The most notable increase was India,
which had stopped importing Iranian oil because
of its inability to find a payment mechanism.
Despite the dramatic upsurge in Iranian oil
exports, regime leaders in Tehran said the U.S.
was not doing enough to provide sanctions relief
promised under the nuclear agreement. Both
Khamenei and Rouhani blasted the United States in
separate statements for the recent Supreme
Court ruling that allows victims of Iranian
state terror attacks in Beirut and Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia to
collect some $2 billion frozen in U.S.
accounts held beneficially for the Iranian
Central Bank. Foreign Minister Javad Zarif went
even further, calling a recent decision by a
U.S. court that Iran must pay damages for its
role in the 9/11 attacks "the
height of absurdity." Until now, the
Iranian regime has simply ignored U.S. lawsuits
stemming from its terrorist activities,
resulting in a string of default judgments
against Iran that allow plaintiffs to freeze and
potentially seize assets.
April 15, 2016: Dissident ayatollah
escapes alleged assassination attempt. Dissident
ayatollah Kasemeini-Borujerdi, who has been
jailed since 2006 for his refusal to accept the
doctrine of absolute clerical rule, narrowly
escaped an assassination attempt in Evin prison,
according to his European representative Maryam
Moazen. Citing reports from inside Evin, Mrs.
Moazen told FDI that Iranian regime intelligence
agents gave Borujerdi poisoned food that caused
"severe pains, in particular in his legs," and
affected his eyesight. The attempted food
poisoning occured on April 7, following 440
days of solitary confinement, and was not
the first assassination attempt against the
dissident ayatollah while in prison. It also
came at the end of Borujerdi's 11 year sentence.
He was scheduled to be released earlier this
month but continues to be held in Evin, where
the Special Court for the clergy is now
attempting to file a new case against him for
"heresy," Mrs. Moazen said.
March
30, 2016:
U.S.
and allies say Iran missile-launches
violate UN resolution. In
a letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
the U.S. and its European allies blasted Iran
for recent ballistic missile tests "in defiance"
the UN Security Council resolution that ratified
last year's nuclear deal. UNSC Resolution 2231
called on Iran to "refrain" from testing
ballistic missiles designed with the capability
of delivering nuclear weapons. The letter
stated that Iran had achieved that key
capability with its improved Qadr missiles, test-fired
on March 9. The Qadr-F reportedly had a
range of 2,000 kilometers (1,243 miles), and the
Qadr-H had a range of 1,700 kilometers (1,056
miles), bringing not just Israel but targets in
Europe within range.
March 23, 2016: State Department confirms
additional payments to Iran. In
a startling announcement that Secretary Kerry
somehow forgot when he was promoting the Iran
nuclear deal, the State Department continues to
negotiate with Iran disputes going back to the
1979 hostage crisis, and foresees making
additional payments to Iran beyond the $1.7
billion ransom payment in January. The news
emerged in a letter from the State Department in
response to an inquiry from Rep. Mike Pomeo,
R-KS, that Pompeo's
office released today. The letter noted
that the January payment liquidated a $400
million Trust Fund on deposit with the U.S.
Treasury from Iran for Foreign Military Sales
purchases in the United States, plus interest,
but that "fact-intensive claims" involving "over
1,000 separate contracts between Iran and the
United States" remain outstanding and are now
the subject of new negotiations. The letter is here (pdf file).
March 21, 2016: DIA document shows Iran's
involvement in Benghazi. The
Iranian Connection to the Benghazi attacks is
finally coming to light, from today's
Washington Times. An analysis of the
involvement of the IRGC Quds Force in the
attacks was ordered by then DIA Director LTG
Michael Flynn. While the results remain
classified, Gen. Flynn has confirmed that he
issued the tasking order for an all source
review of what the defense intelligence
community knew about the Iranian presence in
Benghazi and involvement in the attacks. View
the original DIA document here
[pdf document]
March
19, 2016: U.S. arrests Babak Zanjani crony
in Miami; unseals federal indictment. Reza
Zarrab, 33, was
arrested on charges of money-laundering
and sanction violations, and flown over the
weekend to New York. A sealed indictment, handed
down in July 2015, was released that detailed
the allegations against Zarrab, which included
laundering over $130 million of Iranian oil. You
can read the unsealed indictment here
[pdf document].
March
6, 2016: Ajad's sanctions-buster-in-chief
condemned for fraud: The
official media in Iran says that Babak Zanjani,
who has boasted of laundering billions of
dollars of oil sales through Western sanctions
regimes, has been condemned
to death. We'll see. More likely is that
he hasn't turned over the keys to his overseas
empire to his handlers, who now sing for
Rouhani....
March
2, 2016: Bin Laden says Iran is "our main
artery for funds..." In a
dramatic new revelation, so far under the radar
of the national media, the Director of National
Intelligence has released a letter from al Qaeda
leader Osama bin Laden to a follower,
admonishing him for threatening to attack Iran.
The letter was among a cache of documents seized
during the 2011 raid by Seal Team 6 that killed
Bin Laden and was posted
yesterday to the DNI website. In the
letter, Bin Laden reveals that Iran "is our main
artery for funds, personnel, and communication,
as well as the matter of hostages." Read
more at The Tower.
March 1, 2016: American terror victims to
collect $9.4 million from Iran. In
a landmark
victory after years of litigation, U.S.
victims of Iranian state-sponsored terror
attacks have won the right to collect $9.4
million from a long-frozen asset in California
belonging to the Iranian regime.
Feb. 24, 2016: Regime Vice-president reveals execution of village's "entire male population": Shahindokht Molaverdi, vice president for Women and and Family affairs, revealed that regime agents had executed the entire male population of a population in Sistan-va-Baluchestan province, on allegations of drug trafficking. "Society is responsible for the families of those executed," she told the Mehr news agency.
Feb.
11, 2016: Today the 1st Islamic State
Celebrates its Anniversary. ISIS,
the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, is the
late-comer to the world of Islamic-inspired
murder and mayhem. The regime that invented the
genre will celebrate its 37th anniversary on
Feb. 11. It’s official name: the Islamic
Republic of Iran. Read more from FDI president
Kenneth R. Timmerman's column in today's Frontpage
magazine.
Feb. 10, 2016: Boroujerdi supporters
appeal to Congress. Sup
porters
of jailed dissident Ayatollah Hossein Kazemeini
Boroujerdi have sent an an empassioned letter to
Reps. Pompeo, Zeldin, and LoBiondo, who are
seeking to travel to Iran to monitor the
upcoming "elections." In the letter, they note
that Boroujerdi, who was jailed along with
thousands of supporters in 2006, is one of the
longest suffering political prisoners in Iran.
"His crime: advocating the separation of
religion and state and defending democracy and
freedom," they write. Boroujerdi's health has
"reached a precarious state, because of diseases
caused by constant beatings and other forms of
torture over the past ten years," they added.
And yet, the regime continues to deny him
medical treatment.
Boroujerdi has particularly angered the regime
because as a cleric, he was expected to support
the velayat-e faghih, absolute clerical rule. In
fact, there are so many clerics who reject the
clerical dictatorship that the regime has
established a Special Court of the Clergy to
punish them. Boroujerdi's supporters asked the
three Republicans to visit Boroujerdi in prison,
and if possible to bring a physician with them.
Read
the letter.
Feb. 5, 2016: Conservative Republicans
want to visit Iran. Three
conservative members of Congress, Reps Mike
Pompeo, Lee Zeldin, and Frank LoBiondo, have
sent a letter to Ayatollah Khamenei and IRGC
Commander Gen. MOhammad Ali Jafari, asking for
visas so they could come to Iran to observe the
upcoming Majlis elections on Feb. 26 and meet
with IRGC leaders. Pomeo said the three
Republicans asked to meet the head of Iran's
nuclear program, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi,
whom the Iranians have kept off-limits to
international weapons inspectors, and with
Iranian-American hostage Siamak Nemazi. They
also wanted information on the missing former
FBI agent, Robert Levinson.
" If Iran is truly a partner
in peace, as President Obama and Secretary Kerry
claim, then Iranian leaders should have no
problem granting our visas and arranging the
requested agenda. I look forward to
receiving a timely response from Iran,” said
Pompeo, a member of the House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence. “Americans
deserve credible, first-hand confirmation of
what present-day reality is in Iran, regarding
the implementation of the Iran nuclear deal,
status of American hostages and foreign policy
objectives of Iranian leaders,” Zeldin added.
The full text of the letter is here.
Jan. 29, 2016: Italy veils statutes to
please Rouhani. The
Italian government shrouded nude Roman
statutes when Islamic Republic
president Rouhani came to town on his
shopping spree this week, apparently
to "spare" him embarrassment. While
Rouhani reportedly did not ask for the
veiling, he said, "I
thank you for this." The Iranian
women's group, My Stealthy Freedom,
criticized Italian media and female
politicians who went along with this
expression of dhimmitude: "This
censorship reminds us of the way the
Iranian regime has been forcing
millions of women in Iran to cover up.
The politicians of our country,
regardless of whether a woman is
Muslim or not, force women in Iran to
cover up and their justification is,
‘You, as a woman, should be shrouded
in front of my eyes in order not to
provoke me’. This way of thinking is
completely unacceptable.” The Persian
Facebook link is here.
Jan. 17, 2016: Welcome to the Banana
Republic. Read FDI
President Ken Timmerman's take on the hostage
for prisoner swap at
Frontpage magazine.
Jan. 16, 2016: U.S. Gives Iran a Clean
Nuclear Bill of Health, Lifts Sanctions,
Swaps Hostages.
There was so much news that the media has had a hard time keeping up. An overall guide by the Treasury Department of sanctions relief can be found here. The list of Iranian government entities removed from sanctions is here. A profile of seven of the Iranians released by the U.S. in exchange for U.S. hostages in Tehran is here.
While FDI welcomes the release by Iran of U.S. citizens it had taken hostage, we deplore the cynical and misguided trade of Iranian nationals who were arrested and convicted for violating U.S. export control laws. There can be no equivalence, moral or otherwise, between hostages, seized for purely political purposes, and individuals who broke the law and were afforded due process under a democratic system of laws.
The consequences of the
lifting of U.S. sanctions will be felt far and
wide. One group of Americans may pay an
extraordinarily high price for the misguided and
dangerous U.S. opening to the Islamic Republic
of Iran: victims of Iranian state-sponsored
terrorist attacks.
Under sanctions relief, Treasury has removed
sanctions and asset blocks on the property of Assa
Corp and Assa Ltd. These front
companies were created in 1989 to disguise the
40% ownership interest of the Iranian
state-owned Bank Melli in a Manhattan skyscraper
located at 650 Fifth avenue that continues to be
the subject of litigation between terror-victim
claimants and the Alavi Foundation, which federal
prosecutors allege to be an Iranian
government entity. In November, the 2nd
Circuit court of appeals chastened U.S.
prosecutors for mishandling the case against
Alavi, and is expected to send the case back to
the District court for trial. Meanwhile, Assa
Corp, which was never the subject of a final
judgment in the lower court, may simply move
for dismissal of the charges against it,
effectively putting its 40% share of the $800
million building beyond the reach of the terror
victim creditors.
Jan.
14, 2016: Iran gloats over
captured
U.S. sailors. Senior
Iranian officials gloated over the way their
government put captured U.S. sailors on public
display. In initial photographs and video
footage released by State media, the 10 U.S.
sailors were seen with their hands over their
heads, making them appear like prisoners of war.
“This is a sign of our might,” said
deputy foreign minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi,
a senior member of Iran’s nuclear negotiating
team. Despite the fact the sailors were seized
on Tuesday, apparently in international waters
off the coast of Kuwait, President Obama failed
to even mention them during his State of the
Union speech that night. Iran agtreed to release
them the next day after “the Americans
humbly admitted our might and power,” IRGC
deputy commander Hossein Salami
boasted to the Iranian media.
IRGC naval commander, Ali Fadavi, revealed that the carrier USS Truman “showed unprofessional moves for 50 minutes after the detention of the trespassers,” presumably meaning that the Truman tried to challenge the Iranian ships that had seized control of the two U.S. coastal patrol boats. ““The US and France’s aircraft carriers were within our range and if they had continued their unprofessional moves, they would have been afflicted with such a catastrophe that they had never experienced all throughout the history,” Fadavi boasted.
Jan. 11, 2016: Iran tops world with 1084
executions in 2015. The
Boroumand Foundation estimates
that Iran executed 1084 people in 2015, the
highest number in more than 25 years and the highest
per capita execution rate in the world. A
detailed listing of 964 of those executed can be
found at the Iran
Human Rights Documentation Center. So much
for the "moderate" President Hassan Rouhani, whose
primary goal has been to pull the wool down over
the eyes of the West.
an 15
months in Evin prison without trial before he was
brought before a Revolutionary court in Tehran. He
was eventually
sentenced to six-years for "action against
national security," cooperating with foreign
organizations," and "evangelism," and moved to
Ward 350 in Evin. Pastor
Farshid's letters to his family and to the
faithful have been shared through social media
around the world.
ore from
President Obama's new "friends" in Tehran, a
gigantic street caricature of the famous Iwo Jima
memorial in Washington. The intent is clear: to
poison the mind of ordinary Iranians to the brave
soldiers carrying our flag and wearing our
uniform.


he broadcast
report came a week after Iran announced it
had test-fired a new medium-range missile, the
Emad, which Defense Minister Brig. Gen. Hossein
Dehghan said was "the first ballistic missile
developed by Iran that can be precision-guided
until it reaches its target." Western analysts
have estimated that it can carry a
terminally-guided nuclear warhead weighing 750
kilograms to targets 1,700 kilometers (1,100
miles) away. However, the fact that Iran would
develop a liquid-fueled successor to the Shahab-3,
rather than more solid-fuel missiles,
suggests to some analysts that the financial
bite of international sanctions also reached the
IRGC missile corps, causing them to focus on less
expensive liquid-fuel missiles, which take much
longer to prepare for launch than solid fuel
rockets. Full
video of the inspection tour is
here, with more stills and the Persian
language IRINN report here.
ust be met with "immediate
action, both unilaterally and at the UN Security
Council, to make clear that Iran remains
prohibited from developing this dangerous
technology."
FDI has
joined a broad coalition of U.S.
organizations that has called for a massive rally
this Wednesday, July 22, at 5:30 PM
at Times Square in New York. The disastrous
Vienna agreement enables the Islamic regime in
Tehran to expand its reign of terror both at
home and abroad, better armed, better funded,
and with fewer constraints than before.
July 15, 2015:
Iran
deal enhances regime, disregards people.
Statement from
FDI President & CEO Kenneth R.
Timmerman:
The nuclear agreement announced on July 14
is a bad deal for the Iranian people, and
for the people of the region. Unverifiable
at its core, it virtually guarantees a
nuclear arms race with Pakistan helping
Sunni allies Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and
possibly Turkey and Egypt, to counter the
growing power of the Islamic Republic of
Iran. It enables the regime to continue
enriching itself and its elites through
hundreds of front companies and black market
oil traders, selling the people’s resources
without accountability. As President Hassan
Rouhani said in his speech yesterday, "our
prayers have been answered." He hastened to
add, so have the prayers of Hamas and
Hezbollah, who will see their annual
paychecks from Tehran increase.
Worse, under this agreement, apparently
drafted in Tehran, the United States agrees
to lift sanctions on a host of murderers,
including notorious former Qods Force
commander Qassem Suleymani, IRGC commander
Rahim Yahya Safavi, IRGC intel chief Morteza
Rezai, al Qaeda-enabler Gen. Moh. Baqr
Zolqadr, as well as missile and nuclear
procurement agencies and the IRGC itself.
This agreement makes a mockery of American
democracy, by putting the onus on Congress
if it "interferes" with the dictates of an
executive branch it repeatedly warned and
passed legislation to limit. It remains
baffling what prompted the U.S.
administration to throw away a winning hand,
built up judiciously since 2005 with
international support, in exchange for total
capitulation to a nuclear-capable,
expansionist Sharia regime in Iran.
Read Timmerman's
more detailed analysis of the agreement
at the Daily Caller.
, 2015: Nazanin
Afshin-jan outs Canadian Muslim groups for
honoring Khomeini. 

e,
but today's article in the IRGC-controlled Mashregh
News
website, FDI once again makes the hit
parade of IRGC enemies in the West.
ndictment
more than a dozen times. Timmerman was also
instrumental in laying out the elder Mugniyeh's
involvement in recruiting the al Qaeda
terrorists who carried out the 9/11 attacks on
America.
Nov. 19, 2014: Mobile
billboard campaign in Washington, DC.
e
Voice of America's Persian language service is
aimed at providing Iranians an alternative to
the propaganda they receive daily from the state
run media. But some VOA shows have become
favorites of the Iranian regime itself.
nian activist honored
as "hero" by California Senate. California
State Senator Joel
Anderson (R, El Cajon) took the unprecedented
step of honoring Iranian activist Roozbeh
Farahanipour as a "California Hero" in a
ceremony in his district office today.
California Senate Concurrent Resolution 97,
authored by Sen. Anderson, officially declares
September as "California Heroes Month," and
Farahanipour was one of the first nominees. "You
have set yourself apart by showing concern for
others in need, and take action to help others
without expectation of reward," Sen. Anderson
said. Farahanipour, a leader of the 1999 student
uprising in Tehran who came to the United States
in 2002 after he was released from an Iranian
prison, has become a local watchdog in Los
Angeles in exposing Islamic
Republic agents.
(For a larger photo of the certificate, click
here).
g
been used for secret nuclear weapons tests.
Built initially by Nazi Germany, it was expanded
and modernized in the 1970s by SNPE of France to
make a wide variety of explosives and solid
missile propellants. Israel's minister of
intelligence, Yuval Steinitz, recently
reiterated longstanding claims by the IAEA
that Iran had tested internal neutron initiators
at Parchin in 2000-2001. These
polonium-beryllium devices have no other purpose
than to trigger a nuclear weapon.
our, who was murdered in 2007,
now claims he was murdered by the regime for
refusing to cooperate with the nuclear weapons
program. In video
conference
calls with the California-based opposition
group, The New Iran, Mahboobeh Hosseinpour
said her brother was contacted by three special
agents of the regime's Defense ministry "with a
direct message" from Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei, who was seeking Dr. Hosseinpour's
help. When Dr. Hosseinpour turned down repeated
offers, including a senior rank in the IRGC and
part ownership of several factories as perks,
regime thugs assassinated him, Mahboobeh told the
Media Line, in a call arranged by Dr. Iman
Foroutan of New Iran.
"This is a great victory
for the pro-freedom movement," Farahanipour told
FDI. "Westwood is the heart of the Iranian
community in the United States, and in recent
years the opposition has not been very active.
This shows that the opposition is still alive
and well in Westwood."
al
signs, street banners, symbols and
advertisements" promoting relations or business
with the Islamic Republic of Iran "and its related
institutions and companies."
Rouhani publicly gloated over
fooling the West in his last nuclear negotiation
when he ran for president last year. In
a
televised interview, he explained in
detail how he tricked the EU-3 negotiators in
talks from 2003 to 2005. Instead of shutting
down or even slowing its nuclear development,
Rouhani boasted that centrifuge production
actually increased, and Iran managed to finalize
its Uranium Conversion Facility in Isfahan, all
the while pretending it has "suspended" its
enrichment program. without the conversion plant
(often known as the "hex" plant, since that's
where Iran transforms uranium yellowcake into
Uranium hexafluoride for gaseous enrichment),
there could be no enrichment. Permalink.
sent back to prison.
Former student leader and human
rights activist Heshmatollah Tabarzadi has been
ordered to return to prison, effective Jan. 6,
after a year-long "furlough." In a letter
explaining his reason for returning to jail,
Tabarzadi said his temporary release was
continent upon his silence, but that "the
situation of the people and my country is such
that I could no longer keep quiet." He blasted
so-called pro-freedom activists who have
embraced the new government of mullah Hassan
Rouhani. With his forced return to prison, "These
hypocrites can no longer claim to the international
community that after the emergence of President Hassan
Rouhani, Iran's human rights situation has improved,"
he wrote.
h/t Banafhsheh Zand.
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