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Team Sergeant
06-22-2009, 08:42
If this gets worse I think "we" should give the young Iranians some internet classes & instruction on "10 Easy steps to Overthrow Your Repressive Iranian Government" ;)

Team Sergeant




Iranian Police Attack Hundreds of Opposition Protesters

TEHRAN — Iranian police attacked hundreds of opposition protesters Monday with tear gas and fire in the air to break up a new rally in Tehran.

Helicopters hovered overhead as about 200 protesters gathered at Haft-e-Tir Square Monday. Hundreds of anti-riot police quickly put an end to the demonstration.

Witnesses said police at the scene tried to prevent any gathering, even small groups. At the subway station at Haft-e-Tir, police did not allow anyone to stand still, asking them to keep walking and separating people who were walking together.

The news comes as Iran's most powerful security force threatened to crush any further opposition protests over the disputed presidential election, warning demonstrators to prepare for a "revolutionary confrontation" if they take to the streets again. It was the sternest warning yet from the elite Revolutionary Guard.

An Iranian woman who lives in Tehran said there was a heavy police and security presence in the location where an opposition march was slated to take place Monday. She asked not to be identified because she was worried about government reprisals.

"There is a massive, massive, massive police presence," she told the Associated Press in Cairo by telephone. "Their presence was really intimidating."

The country's highest electoral authority, the Guardian Council, acknowledged voting irregularities in 50 electoral districts in the June 12 vote, the most serious official admission so far of problems in the election that the opposition has labeled a fraud. But the council insisted the problems do not affect the outcome of the vote. The electoral council said President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won by a landslide.

The Revolutionary Guard, in a statement posted on its Web site, warned protesters to "be prepared for a resolution and revolutionary confrontation with the Guards, Basij and other security forces and disciplinary forces" if they continue their near-daily rallies.

The Basij, a plainclothes militia under the command of the Revolutionary Guard, have been used to quell streets protests that erupted after the election result was announced. At least 17 protesters have been killed, according to an official Iranian toll.

The Guard statement ordered demonstrators to "end the sabotage and rioting activities" and said their resistance is a "conspiracy" against Iran.

Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi vowed Sunday night to keep up the protests, charging the election was a fraud. The 67-year-old Mousavi, who heads a youth-driven movement for reform, claims he was the true winner of the election.

His statement was in defiance of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who holds ultimate power in Iran. In a sermon to tens of thousands on Friday, Khamenei said demonstrators must stop their street protests or face the consequences and he firmly backed Ahmadinejad's victory.

"The country belongs to you," Mousavi's latest statement said. "Protesting lies and fraud is your right."

Mousavi's Web site called Monday for supporters to turn on their car lights in the late afternoon as a sign of protest.

Mousavi's latest statements posted on his Web site also warned supporters of danger ahead, and said he would stand by the protesters "at all times." But he said he would "never allow anybody's life to be endangered because of my actions" and called for pursuing fraud claims through an independent board.

The former prime minister, a longtime loyalist of the Islamic government, also called the Basij and military "our brothers" and "protectors of our revolution and regime." He may be trying to constrain his followers' demands before they pose a mortal threat to Iran's system of limited democracy constrained by Shiite clerics, who have ultimate authority.

Mousavi ally and former president Mohammad Khatami said in a statement that "protest in a civil manner and avoiding disturbances in the definite right of the people and all must respect that."

Official figures say 17 people have died in a week of unrest.

Iran state media reported at least 10 people were killed in the fiercest clashes yet on Saturday and 100 were injured. A graphic video that appears to show a young woman dying within minutes after she was shot during Saturday's demonstrations has become the iconic image seen by millions around the world on video-sharing sites such as YouTube.

Police said Monday that 457 people were arrested on Saturday alone, but did not say how many have been arrested throughout the week of turmoil.

Severe restrictions on reporters have made it almost impossible to independently verify any reports on demonstrations, clashes and casualties. Iran has ordered reporters for foreign news agencies to stay in their offices, barring them from any reporting on the streets.

The country's highest electoral authority, the Guardian Council, agreed last week to investigate some opposition complaints of problems in the voting.

It said Monday it found irregularities in 50 voting districts, but that this has no effect on election outcome. Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei was quoted on the state TV Web site as saying that its probe showed more votes were cast in these constituencies than there were registered voters.

But this "has no effect on the result of the elections," he said.

Mousavi has demanded that the election result be annulled and a new vote held.

Khatami said "taking complaints to bodies that are required to protect people's rights, but are themselves subject to criticism, is not a solution" — effectively accusing the Council of collusion in vote fraud.

The government has intensified a crackdown on independent media — expelling a BBC correspondent, suspending the Dubai-based network Al-Arabiya and detaining at least two local journalists for U.S. magazines.

English-language state television said an exile group known as the People's Mujahedeen had a hand in the street violence and broadcast what it said were confessions of British-controlled agents in an indication that the government was ready to crack down even harder.

The Foreign Ministry lashed out at foreign media and Western governments, with ministry spokesman Hasan Qashqavi accusing them of "a racial mentality that Iranians belong to the Third World."

"Meddling by Western powers and international media is unacceptable," he said at a news conference shown on state TV, taking particular aim at French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

"How can a Western president, like the French president, ask for nullification of Iranian election results?" Qashqavi said. "I regret such comments."

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,528063,00.html

Red Flag 1
06-22-2009, 09:00
I find it very interesting that France is taking the "heat" for meddeling.

It seems the US response has been tame and toothless, even compared to Carter era policies. It does seem BHO is failing to cast a vote but once again voting "present".

As for the 10 ways.....It seems step one has been taken. Iranians are demonstrating their disapproval at great personal expense. We did this with the help of France way back when......is France a solid player here too?

:munchin

My $.02.

RF 1

rubberneck
06-22-2009, 09:00
Maybe the Iranian EFP's we found in Iraq could be sent home. It would be nice for the Revolutionary Guard to taste a little bit of their own medicine.

rubberneck
06-22-2009, 09:03
I find it very interesting that France is taking the "heat" for meddeling.

It seems the US response has been tame and toothless, even compared to Carter era policies. It does seem BHO is failing to cast a vote but once again voting "present".

As for the 10 ways.....It seems step one has been taken. Iranians are demonstrating their disapproval at great personal expense. We did this with the help of France way back when......is France a solid player here too?

:munchin

My $.02.

RF 1

The problem is that the "One" painted himself in a corner when he apologized for U.S. intervention in Iranian affairs during the 1950's. How can he say that we were wrong for meddling in their internal affairs and then turn around and do exactly the same thing he just apologized for doing. He can't without losing face and frankly he seems to be more worried about his image than how to effectively handle national security issues. Our President is dangerously naive.

Team Sergeant
06-22-2009, 09:09
I find it very interesting that France is taking the "heat" for meddeling.

It seems the US response has been tame and toothless, even compared to Carter era policies. It does seem BHO is failing to cast a vote but once again voting "present".

As for the 10 ways.....It seems step one has been taken. Iranians are demonstrating their disapproval at great personal expense. We did this with the help of France way back when......is France a solid player here too?

:munchin

My $.02.

RF 1

I agree, but we can assist them in removing their current president/dictator. ;)

Hey Iranian protesters, target your governments electricial supply and communications; it's hard to give orders when you're talking into a dead handset. (Generators and communications antennas & towers don't shoot back. ;))



Maybe the Iranian EFP's we found in Iraq could be sent home. It would be nice for the Revolutionary Guard to taste a little bit of their own medicine.

I like the way you think.

incarcerated
07-13-2009, 00:48
http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-07-12-voa21.cfm

Watchdog Report: 41 Journalists Jailed in Iran

By VOA News
12 July 2009
The press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders says it is concerned by what it calls the growing repression of journalists and cyber-dissidents in Iran.

In a report issued Sunday, the RSF (Reporters Sans Frontieres) announced the detention of five more journalists. RSF says 41 journalists are currently imprisoned in Iran a month after the country's contested election.

RSF says Iran is currently the world's biggest prison for journalists, and is becoming the world's most dangerous place for them to operate.

RSF says the recently-detained journalists include photographers Majid Saidi and Tohid Bighi, blogger Henghameh Shahidi, and journalists Somaieh Nosrati and Said Matinpour.

According to RSF, four of the five are being held in secret locations with no information about their condition being released to their families or legal representatives.


Some information for this report was provided by AFP.

incarcerated
10-11-2009, 11:57
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/11/iran-defiant-over-death-penalties

Iran defiant as three more given death penalty over election protests

Sentences handed out despite widespread international condemnation
Peter Beaumont
The Observer
Sunday 11 October 2009
Iran has sentenced to death three more protesters who were arrested after the country's disputed presidential election in June. The verdicts came despite a widespread international protest over the death penalty given last week to a man identified as Mohammad Reza Ali Zamani, a member of a group seeking to reinstate the country's monarchy.

The sentences were said to be for involvement in the countrywide protests that followed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election as president in polls many Iranians said were rigged. The authorities have rejected the charges and portrayed the protests as a foreign-backed bid to undermine the Islamic republic.

Announcing the latest sentences through the ISNA news agency, Zahed Bashiri Rad, a spokesman for the justice ministry, said: "Three people who were accused [for their role] in the post-election incidents have been sentenced to death."

The identities of the three protesters were not revealed. Instead Bashiri Rad supplied only the initials of those condemned. "MZ and AP were convicted for ties with the Kingdom Assembly of Iran" – an organisation that seeks to bring back the Shah – while NA was convicted for ties with the People's Mujahideen, an exiled opposition group. It is unclear whether Zamani is the "MZ" mentioned by ISNA.

The four prisoners who have been sentenced in the last week are among more than 4,000 Iranians arrested for their part in the protests that followed the disputed election, many of whom have been accused of trying to overthrow the Islamic republic. Most of those detained have been released, but about 200 remain behind bars and around 110 have so far been put on trial.

Last week Amnesty International called on Iran to lift the death penalty on Zamani, 37, after he was sentenced by the court, criticising his prosecution as a "show trial" and a "mockery of justice".

Bashiri Rad said the death sentences were "not final and they can still be appealed to the supreme court".


More here:
http://www.rferl.org/content/Iran_Death_Sentences_Seen_As_Move_To_Intimidate_Op position_/1848910.html

Box
10-11-2009, 13:02
I find it hard to sympathize. We are just the ugly Americans until a bully shoves someone. Then we are dicks when we go and punch said bully in the nose.

These are people from the same place that cheered in the streets when American hostages were taken, the same people that held parades when the towers came down, the same people that give illicit support to al Quead and our other enemies as we try to bring stability to the region (the very region THEY are a part of) the same people that want to demonize the US for our 'intrusion' into islam, and our illegal occupation of the muslim world... Well, they are right, its not our business: its not the way peace lovers here in the US do things. Maybe we should leave them alone and hope they don't kill themselves off.

Anything else just wouldn't demonstrate our peaceful intentions.

Sorry Iran, maybe you should take a few government tyrants hostages or fly a plane into Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's palace... Then the rest of the world will see your plight. Your countrymen sure seemed to think it was a good idea when it happened in the USA. We have an economy, some poor people without health insurance and some sexual identity issues we need to settle first. Tyranny sucks, maybe the Ayatolla can chat with Mahmoud and get him to act right.

incarcerated
03-16-2010, 00:25
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ixeFBxfLzaSjs8Mb8cuFmtPOT6-wD9EF5HJ03

Iran bans leading pro-reform political party

(AP) – 14 hours ago
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's hard-line government says the country's largest pro-reform political party has been banned as part of the crackdown on the opposition.

Deputy Interior Minister Solat Mortazavi says the party, the Islamic Iran Participation Front, had its authorization to conduct political activity stripped by the judiciary. His comments were reported Monday by the semi-official ISNA news agency....

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http://www.rferl.org/content/Iran_Said_To_Ban_Largest_Reformist_Party/1984541.html

Iran Said To Ban Activities Of Largest Reformist Party

March 15, 2010
TEHRAN (Reuters) -- Iran's judiciary has banned the activities of a leading reformist party, the semiofficial ISNA news agency quoted an official as saying, in a further attempt to end the reform movement in the Islamic state.

Interior Ministry's political deputy Solat Mortazavi said Iran's judiciary had banned the activities of the Islamic Iran's Participation Front, the largest pro-reform party in Iran, and had "closed down its office," ISNA reported.

The party, close to reformist former President Mohammad Khatami, had been scheduled to hold its annual meeting on March 11.

But the party said in a statement it had been banned from holding the meeting and called it "an illegal act and a clear example of taking citizens' fundamental rights away," the opposition Norooznews website reported....