Sunday, 10 July 2016

Time to move on assisting Camp Liberty residents

Time to move on assisting Camp Liberty residents


It started out as a series of written promises from the United Nations, the U.S. State Department, and the Government of Iraq.  In return for the residents of Camp Ashraf, Iraq accepting relocation to Camp Liberty, a former U.S. Army base co-located with Baghdad International Airport, they were assured of a safe and humane environment, the right to sell their property at Ashraf, the right to purchase and receive life support items, and the assurance of quick resettlement out of Iraq.  Not a single promise made was fulfilled.

Maryam Rajavi to #FreeIran gathering in Paris: ‘A year after nuclear deal, both factions fail at rescue, Iranian regime on verge of being overthrown’

Maryam Rajavi to #FreeIran gathering in Paris: ‘A year after nuclear deal, both factions fail at rescue, Iranian regime on verge of being overthrown’

Addressing a large gathering of Iranian exiles in Paris on 9 July, Free Iran, Iranian Resistance President-elect Maryam Rajavi presented an assessment of the clerical regime’s situation one year after signing the nuclear agreement and said: “The regime’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei realized that the survival of his regime was threatened. In order to rescue the regime, he ultimately decided to retreat with an at least temporary abandonment of the regime’s nuclear weapons programme. Yet the crisis engulfing the regime could not be contained. On the contrary, it was exacerbated, throwing the regime even deeper into the quagmire of the Syrian war.
“Over the past year since the conclusion of the nuclear accord, many of the sanctions were lifted and oil exports were increased. But the resulting revenues fueled the flames of the Syrian war. Even with some of the most encouraging international opportunities and unwarranted western concessions at the regime’s disposal, the economy went deeper into recession.

Saturday, 9 July 2016

Iran’s regime ‘is weakened and engulfed in real crises’

Iran’s regime ‘is weakened and engulfed in real crises’


THOUSANDS of Iranians opposed to the current regime are expected in Paris today, where the National Council of Resistance of Iran is gathering for its annual conference.
A cross-party delegation of MPs, including Paul Monaghan and other SNP members, will join the event at Le Bourget.
It aims to promote human rights and democracy in Iran and highlight human rights abuses carried out by the regime of President Hassan Rouhani.
Despite claims that the regime is becoming more moderate, the NCRI said the situation in Iran was worsening, with executions at a 25-year high and Tehran openly violating United Nations resolution 2231 by continuing to test ballistic missiles....

Friday, 8 July 2016

Don't Ignore Iran

Don't Ignore Iran

Mr. Amess is Conservative MP for Southend West in the House of Commons and co-chair of the British Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom.

In Iran, punishment for breaking the law is brutal. In May, 30 college students were sentenced to 99 lashes for having a co-ed party—but consider them lucky.
Over the past three years alone the Iranian regime has carried out over 2,400 executions, more than at any period since the revolution. This startling rate of executions was enough to give the country the title of top executioner per capita in the world. And Iran’s current and supposedly “reformist” President Hassan Rouhani, described these executions publicly in 2014 as “God’s commandments” and “laws of the parliament that belongs to the people.”

West should push for Iran regime change

West should push for Iran regime change

The only way to make peace with Iran, according to the Obama administration, is to appease its cruel and authoritarian government.
The alternative, according to the White House, would be increased hostility and perhaps even war.
Under this dichotomy, U.S. President Barack Obama has extended an olive branch to America’s longtime adversary.

Iranian dissidents gather in Paris, slam U.S.’ nukes deal

Iranian dissidents gather in Paris, slam U.S.’ nukes deal


PARIS | In the biggest gathering of its kind, thousands of Iranian dissidents — and no shortage of former high-level American officials from both sides of the aisle — will converge here Saturday for a giant rally calling for the downfall ofIran’s theocratic government.
Organizers say former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is coming, along with former Govs. Howard Dean, Bill Richardson and Tom Ridge, along with former FBI Director Louis Freeh, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and a host of others.
The event’s main organizer is the National Council of Resistance of Iran, whose persistence and tactics have given it a double-edged reputation even among some of Iran’s Western critics. NCRI leader Maryam Rajavi is slated to headline Saturday’s rally with a demand that Washington abandon the year-old Iranian nuclear accord and take a far more aggressive posture toward Tehran.

Thursday, 7 July 2016

Essential to Counter to Iran’s Regional Misconduct

Essential to Counter to Iran’s Regional Misconduct



As we approach the first anniversary of the Iranian nuclear deal, tens of thousands of activists and Iranian dissidents are set to rally this Saturday in Paris, calling for Tehran’s nefarious conduct at home and in the region to be tackled. One of the primary messages at this rally will be to condemn Iran’s role in the massacre of the Syrian people and to demand an end to its assistance to the Assad government...

Maryam Rajavi wins hearts and minds of Iranian diaspora

In three days' time, the world will witness the largest annual gathering of Iranian exiles in Le Bourget, Paris, with Maryam Rajavi as the keynote speaker.

Iranians of all walks of life as well as hundreds of politicians and personalities from five continents will converge in Le Bourget to declare their support for Maryam Rajavi, the Iranian Resistance and their struggle to overthrow the regime ruling Iran and establish freedom and democracy in their country. But who is Maryam Rajavi?

Maryam Rajavi, a devout Muslim woman, has led the opposition to Tehran's fundamentalist regime for the past three decades. Maryam Rajavi espouses a tolerant and democratic interpretation of Islam and calls for unity of all democratic forces to confront terrorism and extremism emanating from the clerical regime in Iran, as the most dangerous threat of our time to global peace and security...  

Thursday, 30 June 2016

The West must make any trade ties conditional on improvements in human rights.

By Perviz Khazaii
Throughout the three years of Hassan Rouhani ’s presidency, some in the West have maintained hope that it would herald an era of moderation and reform in Iran. Subsequent to the nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1, this sentiment was further accentuated by the same people.
This is an opportune time to fact check. There have been over 2,400 executions in Iran in just under three years. Victims include political dissidents, most notably the activists of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. In a report on March 10, 2016, Ahmed Shaheed, the UN special rapporteur for human rights in Iran, said that executions in Iran had surged to nearly 1,000 in 2015, the highest level in more than a quarter-century. The number of executions in 2015 was roughly double the number executed in 2010 and 10 times as many as were executed in 2005. Amnesty International underscored in its annual report that Iran has the highest number of executions per capita.
This trend continues. The Iranian regime carried out at least 21 hangings in a 48-hour period in the second week of May.


Iran is likely the biggest executor of juvenile offenders. And executions of ethnic and religious minorities have increased dramatically.
Meanwhile, those who are not put to death may be subject to other cruel punishments. Last August, a prisoner in Mashhad had his right hand and left foot amputated as others were forced to watch.
Violent punishments are not confined to Iran’s prisons, either. For instance, in October 2014, gangs affiliated with the regime carried out acid attacks on at least 25 Iranian women and girls who were regarded as being improperly veiled or otherwise in violation of religious norms.
This sort of enforcement of the regime’s ruling ideology has also motivated a massive, ongoing crackdown on activists, writers, bloggers, and artists. This has helped Iran to secure its title as the largest jailer of journalists in the Middle East.
In short, the human rights situation is deteriorating at a fast pace.
Tehran’s nefarious conduct is not limited by the country’s borders. Day by day, Iran is expanding its involvement in the Syrian civil war. It is now evident that if it were not for the Iranian regime’s all-out support for Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, he would have been overthrown long ago. The Iranian regime is thus the main cause of continuing carnage in Syria.
The Revolutionary Guards have now dispatched a conglomerate of more than 70,000 troops on the ground, consisting of 10,000 notorious Quds Force members, and tens of thousands of foot-soldiers and mercenaries from Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, and Pakistan. Tehran is so caught in the Syrian quagmire that a brigade of Iran’s regular army was recently dispatched to Syria as well.
On May 13 Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif heaped praise on the notorious terror group Hezbollah’s top military commander in Syria, who died in a Damascus explosion.
“I express my condolences on the martyrdom of the great holy fighter Mustafa Badreddine who was full of spirit and heroism in defending the righteous values of Islam and the combatant people of Lebanon,” Zarif said in a message to Hezbollah leaders. This followed Zarif’s previous acts such as laying a wreath at the grave of Imad Mughniyah, the former military commander and head of the terror apparatus of Hezbollah, in 2014. Heaping such praises on notorious international terrorists clearly shows that Zarif regards terrorism as a state tool.
I am no stranger to diplomatic relations. I was one of three senior Iranian diplomats who resigned from our ambassadorships in protest against an unbridled wave of executions in Iran in the early 1980s and joined the National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi . Doing so came at great personal cost. Two of us were gunned down in broad daylight in Geneva and in Rome by terrorists dispatched from Tehran, the first in 1990 and the second in 1993. I am the sole survivor.
Despite the persistent danger, I remain active in the NCRI to this day. On July 9, I will travel to Paris to take part in the organization’s “Free Iran” rally, which is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, comprised not only of Iranian exiles but also their supporters from the governments and activist communities of their many host countries to highlight Tehran’s nefarious conduct at home and abroad, calling for a new policy that sides with the Iranian people and their desire for freedom.
Recent Western policies that flirt with appeasement and neglect human rights, putting trade agreements and expanded relations ahead of such issues is totally unacceptable. Human life and safety cannot be made subordinate to short term economic interests.
It is high time for Western countries to take a stance on the dreadful human rights situation in Iran and make any improvement of relations with Tehran and any trade ties conditional upon improvement of the human rights situation in Iran, including an immediate halt to executions in that country.
Perviz Khazaii is the former Ambassador of Iran in Sweden and Norway and the representative of the National Council of Resistance of Iran in Nordic countries.
Source: The Diplomat, 29 June 2016
.

Iranian political prisoner on hunger strike

A former political prisoner and the cellmate of prominent political prisoner, Jafar Azimzadeh has written a letter describing the time he served in the same cell with him. Mr. Mohsen Rahmani says when I learned that Jafar has been transferred to the hospital and lost consciousness, I couldn’t keep silent anymore. I couldn’t just stand back and see a strong man, a caring man who always had a smile on his face to fade away and die in vain. I could no longer live with a conscious knowing I could do something for him and I didn’t. “Jafar was always happy and with high moral. But now he has lost so much weight and even unable to walk to his own bed. He is getting thinner and thinner every day and seems tired. He is taking his last breaths,” Mr. Rahmani says in his letter. “When he first started on hunger strike, I tried to joke around and make him forget the pain and the hardship of hunger. I tried to make him laugh. He was a strong man with a healthy body. That’s why he lasted so many days without food or any nutrition. He used to tell me that he had lived a hard life and seen poverty all his life, so he would not break easily,” the letter continued. “Once I tried to remind him that he has tree young sons that need him and he would better give up and think about his children. He answered don’t you care about the lives of thousands of laborers who can’t feed their children and have to see them go to be hungry every night? I was ashamed. He used to scream when the base salary for a laborer is only half as much as the official rate of poverty line, how would you expect me to think about my own self and my own family?“Can you tell me why those people have to be arrested only for peacefully demonstrating in front of the country’s parliament just for asking their rightful rights? Is it not that the constitution allows peaceful protest? Under what law are they being framed and arrested? Some people have to struggle to get a piece of bread for their families, where others like some of these elite rob and plunder the country’s wealth and nobody does anything to them. They only asked for their basic rights. They were no danger to the country’s security…”On the end, Jafar Azimazdeh told me “I will stand to the end