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Iranian Americans rally against human rights violations in Iran.
Over 30 prisoners have been executed by the Iranian regime in last 10 days. We want you to join us to stop this barbaric acts now.
The Campaign to Stop Human Rights violations in Iran is an ongoing campaign, called by the Iranian American Communities-USA.
U.S. Foundation for Liberty is proud to support the Iranian diaspora’s activities, and call all other organizations to join them to expose Iran’s rights violations.
- Tuesday, November 20, 2012
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Blogger Sattar Beheshti
The following is the last blog post of Iranian activist Sattar Behesthi. Beheshti was detained because of his activism, and died under torture during his interrogation.
Translated by: Freedom Messenger
They threaten us, and say that we should not give information otherwise they’ll shut our mouths.
It’s been a while now that the Iranian regime has put a lot of pressure against activists and other independent Iranians to maintain their opinions and thoughts to themselves.
Threats from detention and torture to public executions in order to scare the people!
The people on the frontline is an everyday problem for the Iranian regime where public beating and threats has become a regular matter in our society.
Just this past day day, they threatened me that my mother should prepare herself to wear black clothes indicating my killing, or that if I didn’t close my big mouth; they would make sure it would always stay opened for prayers.
If I write anything I hear and see, they will deal with me in any way that they want until I shut up otherwise they would make sure that I would be silenced without leaving any marks and signs for anyone to know what happened to me! “You will be in no one’s memory and you are a traitor to this nation!”
My intentions are not against my nation thus I’m not a traitor, I love my people, you are the real traitors in our country who does this to our people!
Day and night they threaten us with phone calls and letters, I can’t be be silenced with every expression because I’m an Iranian! I cannot be silenced against this suffering and tragedy!
I’d say you people are doing a terrific job with this bullshit leading our country towards destruction!
There will never be a moment in my life where I shall be silenced even if this leads to my death. No matter where I will be in this world, your threats to kill me is not important to me. “Gentlemen” please close your mouth and stop this injustice so that we don’t have to expose it.
This regime is hypocritically concerned about the freedom of expression in Palestine, Bahrain and many other countries, but does this tell you the whole story regarding these professional actors of and their reasons, how can the Iranian regime record live in these nations and spread their state owned media propaganda to our nation? Not to mention its one sided reporting containing indoctrinated news which forces the Iranian people to eat their propaganda until you puke!
Yet they are silent when it comes to our human rights in our own nation…
Every day we face, imprisonment, torture and group executions which are never officially mentioned, the political prisoners have the worst conditions without even the presence of lawyers. They don’t even let families get a hold of some information regarding their loved ones.
They don’t allow the families to be interview from independent sources nor inform anyone about their children’s presence and conditions.
The threats don’t even stop there; they can easily arrest you and your entire family leaving their destiny in the hands of brutal henchmen. They say that they will arrest the women and girls of the families and their motto is: “We will detain, we will torture, you shall be silenced, and you shall not give information!”
Dear “Gentlemen”; what kind of law says this?! What lawful nation performs these acts?
Right now, you are doing this to the Iranian people. Do these acts occur in other countries ruled by dictators as well?
Believe me, not even in the worst dictatrorships do they enforce these kinds of laws.
Even if this is applied in nations with almost the same brutality, it would not be in the name of God and religion.
Why do they must arrest us, torture us, put us to death and silence our families?!
Why won’t you step down from these tyrannical acts. To see and taste what happens to other countries that went through this,
It’s time for you to realize that this kind of system you have will not even be found in the jungle!
Oh yes, let me spread my expression and information to other countries so that they can see what kind of democracy our people have here. How is that your television network has reporters all over the world, reporting and publishing whatever you want but other nations and their reports can not do the same in our nation?
In order for your regime to survive maybe a couple of more days, you think it’s worth all the killings and executions?
But I have a suggestion, if you’re afraid of information, resign this government, stop this injustice, do not arrest, do not torture, do not slaughter our people, otherwise this injustice will be brought upon yourselves.
Bringing attention to the status of any individual under suppression and oppression is a duty for all Iranians in this society! Anyone who fails or minimizes his obligation is first of all betraying his own conscience.
Anyone who becomes the voice of our dissagrement against this regime will step by step be able to silence this injustice. Even if this dissagrement is on the corners of our country or even between our own family members.
So lets embrace these threats. We are no longer afraid, fear is no longer within us. Flogging and torture will not stop us from spreading information.
If your motto is: “We will detain, we will torture, you shall be silenced, and you shall not give information!” then don’t spread this information.
But our motto is: We have taken a stand in the face of oppression, our freedom is either obtained by the end of our struggle or the end of your injustice!
Long live Iran and Iranians, let my life be sacrificed for Iran.
Author: Sattar Beheshti
- Friday, November 9, 2012
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Iran’s Murder Machine
Facing growing dissent and protests within Iran, the regime has resorted to a bloody campaign of executions and repression to incite fear in the population. Iran is second only to China in the number of executions, and leads the world in executions per capita. Many of these executions are carried out in public, so as to create a climate of terror and deter popular protests against the regime.
The case of Iranian blogger, Sattar Beheshti is particularly shocking, as he was arrested for his online activism, and died 4 days while under severe torture. Sattar Beheshti’s story is but one of many involving Iranians who seek freedom and are killed at the hands of the regime.
Many political prisoners in Iran are sentenced to death in show trials which lack due process or transparency. Some activists are arrested and charged with drug trafficking or other crimes which carry automatic death sentences, while avoiding the political nature of their case. As a result of the regimes censorship it is often impossible to verify the exact number of executions in Iran, and many fear the real numbers are much higher than those reported. The following is just a small sample of the regimes terror against the people of Iran:
- Since January 2012, some 400 people have been executed in Iran;
- During one week in May 2012 Iran executed 57 prisoners, i.e. one every three hours;
- 4 women were stoned to death in November of 2012;
- In a three-week span from October 22nd to November 7th, 2012, thirty-eight people were execuThe Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council took a stand against Iran, stating “We have repeatedly urged Iran to halt executions,” they said. “We regret, however, that instead of heeding our calls, the Iranian authorities have stepped up the use of the death penalty.
The Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council took a stand against Iran, stating “We have repeatedly urged Iran to halt executions,” they said. “We regret, however, that instead of heeding our calls, the Iranian authorities have stepped up the use of the death penalty.”
The UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Iran, Ahmad Shaheed has also protest Iran’s appalling execution rate. Allegations contained in this report paint a disturbing picture of a government that seriously struggles to comply with its international and national obligations,” Shaheed told a meeting with diplomats, journalists and experts. “The concerns remain unabated — if anything, they are growing,”
As the pressure mounts on the Iranian regime, it will surely resort to even more barbaric and cruel methods of torture and execution in order to suppress dissent. It is crucial that the international community not abandon the people of Iran in their quest for freedom against such a bloodthirsty regime. The crimes of the Iranian regime must be exposed, and its victims must not be forgotten.
- Friday, November 9, 2012
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Iran’s Killing Machine
The recent trip to Tehran by a number of die-hard appeasers of the Iranian regime in the European Parliament on the heels of the hanging en masse of 10 prisoners under bogus charges has outraged human rights advocates, parliamentarians and the public at large.
In a letter to the the European Parliament Parliament President Martin Schultz, two U.S. Senators, Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Ben Cardin (D-MD), wrote, “Sending a delegation to Iran for a seven-day visit sends the wrong message.”
In voicing strong opposition to this visit, they wrote that Iran’s non-compliance with UN Security Council resolutions calling for the suspension of Iran’s nuclear enrichment program, its nefarious “interference” inside Syria, its support for “terrorist activities around the globe” and its “abysmal” human rights record would make any trip to Tehran “ill-advised” and undermine U.S. efforts to work with the European Parliament to present a “united front” on Iran.
Growing more vulnerable in the face of rising popular discontent, a crumbling economy, deepening factional feuding and increasing international isolation, Iranian authorities have embarked on an unprecedented execution spree to keep their fragile grip on power.
“Iran – which is second only to China in the number of executions carried out annually – is believed to have put to death at least 368 people so far this year, including 136 executions that have not been formally announced,” according to the Human Rights Advocacy Group, Amnesty International, on October 22.
In his latest report on the situation of human right in Iran, Ahmed Shaheed, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Iran, told the Third Committee of the U.N. General Assembly this week that the rights situation in Iran remains critical, especially as it pertains to human rights defenders, journalists, and religious and ethnic minorities.
At least 40 Iranian journalists as well as human rights defenders like Abdolfattah Soltani, Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, and Mohammad Seifzadeh, have been imprisoned in Iran. In his report, Shaheed noted that at least 32 lawyers have been prosecuted in Iran since 2009, and that at least nine attorneys are currently imprisoned.
- Wednesday, October 24, 2012
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Current Situation In Camp Liberty Cause For Alarm
Roughly 3,200 residents of Camp Ashraf have relocated to Camp Liberty, a former U.S. military base near Baghdad International Airport. The relocation, which began in Februar,y 2012, was part of a plan initiated by the United Nations and supported by the U.S. Government.
Initially, under a Memorandum of Understanding signed between the United Nations Secretary General’s Special Representative on Iraq, Martin Kobler, and the Iraqi government’s National Security Advisor, Camp Liberty was described as a Temporary Transit Location (TTL), where the residents would quickly undergo identity verification and refugee status determination (RSD) and resettled in third countries in a matter of a few months.
Since then, the United Nations Refugee Agency, UNHCR, has continued its RSD process, but at a very slow pace. To date, some 2,000 residents have been registered and about 1,100 have been interviewed, but no one has yet been resettled through the UNHCR. Only a handful of people have been notified that they have been accepted but even in their case it would be a few months before they are resettled.
Indeed, contrary to earlier assurances by the SRSG Ambassador Kobler, it will take anywhere from three to 10 years before any sizable number of the residents would be relocated in third countries.
Against this backdrop, there is increasing concern over the safety and security of the residents in Camp Liberty. While the residents are doing their best to improve the living conditions in the Camp and turn it into a habitable place, they are confronting two major problems: first, the Iraqi Government has been stepping up restrictions on entry of goods into the Camp and second, it is engaging in greater provocation to justice: the use of violence against the residents in the weeks and months ahead.
It is incumbent upon all parties concerned, particularly the UN and the U.S. to impress upon the Iraqi Government to refrain from imposing further restrictions on entry of goods and needed essentials into Camp Liberty and to end its provocative actions.
In addition, the UNHCR must be urged and given the resources to expedite the RSD process and to take a more engaged and active posture vis-à-vis this humanitarian issue. Since it has already declared the residents of Liberty as “asylum-seekers” and “people of concern,” the UNHCR must work in tandem with the international community and designate Camp Liberty as a refugee camp in order to secure the rights and liberties bestowed upon all refugees, including the right to freedom of movement and visitation by lawyers and family members.
- Wednesday, October 24, 2012
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Turn About, Fair Play
The International Telecommunications Satellite Organization, or Itelsat, has blocked Iran’s official broadcast channels in Europe, according to a report on October 26 by the French news agency.
“Intelsat confirms that we took IRIB (Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting) channels off the satellite,” Alexander Horwitz, a spokesman for the Washington-based company, told AFP.
The channels that were shut down included Sahar, Jam-e-Jam, Islamic Republic of Iran News Network and al-Kowsar, said Press TV, a unit of IRIB.
The action by Itelsat follows similar measures on October 15, by one of Europe’s leading satellite providers, Eutelsat Communications, which said it stopped broadcasting the Iranian channels.
Viewers in the Middle East and Europe as well as those inside Iran who accessed the channels through the popular Hotbird satellite no longer have access to the channels, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal.
The ban by the two telecommunications giants was viewed by Iran observers as being inevitable given the crippling sanctions the international community has imposed on Iran, making any financial dealings with the regime illegal. The move also appears to have been prompted after Iran escalated the jamming of satellite broadcasts to censor broadcasts during recent protests over a plunge in the local currency in early October.
Over the years, Iranian authorities have tried desperately to block any satellite transmission into Iran, especially broadcasts that are critical of Tehran’s handling of the Iranian economy, its human rights record, its nuclear program and its meddling in Syria and other regional countries.
In addition to the Voice of America and BBC Persian Services, Iran has specifically targeted Iranian opposition channel, Simay-e Azadi, which is sympathetic to the main Iranian opposition movement, the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK). The channel’s broadcasts, which can also be accessed through the internet (www.iranntv.com), have proven to be extremely popular with Iranians. Its satire pieces, which mock senior Iranian officials including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have wide following inside the country.
- Saturday, October 20, 2012
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