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3.5 million Iranian students under roofs of 100 thousand risky classrooms

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Hamidreza Khan-Mohammadi, Deputy Minister of Education, has announced that more than a fifth of the country’s students, equivalent to 3.5 million, study in dangerous schools.

On December 13, Khan-Mohammadi mentioned that the country has a student population of 16 million and claimed that an additional 3.5 million square meters of educational space has been added to address the issue of risky classrooms.

However, according to Nasser Ghofli, the head of the School-Building Charity Society, the government has been unsuccessful in completing school construction projects through the efforts of charities.

In October, Nasser Ghofli stated that charities had paid for the construction of 3,500 schools, which include 100,000 risky classrooms where 3.5 million students are studying, but the government has been unable to complete the projects.

The government’s inability to ensure the safety of classrooms for more than one-fifth of the students is occurring despite the fact that Iranian authorities have always prioritized the promotion of religion and the hijab in schools.

Hamidreza Khan-Mohammadi, the Deputy Minister of Education, stated that the country’s elementary schools have been transformed into “punishment centers” through the deployment of “teachers linked to the IRGC and religious centers.”

The Ministry of Education also announced on December 11 that it intends to take special measures to promote the hijab among students during a meeting of the fashion and clothing working group.

Mohammad Hossein Pourthani, the Cultural Director General of the Ministry of Education, emphasized the need for students to be familiar with Iranian Islamic fashion and clothing, stating, “A circular in this regard has been issued to all schools in the country in early Mehr month (September-October).”

Earlier November, he had said that the Ministry of Education intends to promote the hijab among students through the broadcasting of television programs, 24-hour camps, the training of chaste mentors, and incentive programs.

The head of the working group known as Fashion and Clothing Organization also stated during the meeting, “We are trying to familiarize students with Iranian Islamic behavioral patterns, codes, and symbols in the field of clothing.”

However, according to reports from state-run media outlets, the dropout rates in primary and middle school levels have increased. According to the regime’s IRNA news agency’s report on September 30, the dropout rate in elementary school has increased by approximately 20 percent, and in middle school, it has increased by about 50 percent.

On the other hand, as a result of ideological and governmental policies implemented in the education system, some educational staff members in the country have been forced into early retirement, and many have been dismissed against their will.

EU Sanctions Iranian Individuals, Companies for Sending Drones to Russia

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The European Union announced on Monday, December 11, that it has sanctioned six Iranian individuals and five companies as part of its efforts to counter the Iranian regime’s military support to Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine.

According to the statement by the European Union Council, these punitive measures target individuals and entities involved in the development and production of drones used in Russian attacks against Ukraine.

The European Union Council added that these six individuals and five Iranian companies are the first to be sanctioned under a “new legal framework” to counter Iran’s military support to Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine. These sanctions complement the previous four rounds of EU sanctions against individuals and entities involved in the production of drones for export to Russia.

Per the decision of the Council of the European Union, Shakad Sanat Asmari company, its CEO and deputy, as well as a senior scientist of the company; Baharestan Kish Company and its CEO; and Saad Sazeh Faraz Sharif company and its CEO have been sanctioned for producing drones that are being sent to Russia.

Additionally, Sarmad Electronic Sepahan company has been sanctioned for providing aerospace engineering services to entities associated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, and Kimia Part Sivan Company has been sanctioned for providing services to the IRGC to improve the quality of drones.

Under these sanctions, the assets of the mentioned individuals and companies are frozen within the European Union, and they are prohibited from traveling to the EU. Furthermore, any direct or indirect transfer of funds or financial support to these sanctioned individuals and their affiliated companies listed in the sanctions will be prohibited.

The legal basis for this decision, made on Monday, stems from a resolution by the Council of the European Union about a year ago, which condemned and deemed unacceptable Iran’s military assistance to Russia, including the sending of drones to the Russian army during the unlawful war against Ukraine.

In another part of the statement by the Council of European Union, it is mentioned that Iranian weaponry, provided by the Russian army, has been used to attack non-military targets and infrastructure in Ukraine, resulting in severe destruction and civilian casualties.

The statement highlights that the drones sent to Russia are manufactured by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics of the Iranian regime, both of which have been sanctioned by the European Union for violating the prohibition on the proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction, including the development, production, and sale of drones to Russia.

On July 20, the European Union adopted a new package of punitive measures related to Iran’s continued military support for Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine. This measure prohibits the export of components and technologies that may be used in Iran’s drone industry.

This decision also empowers the Council of the European Union to impose penalties such as travel bans to Europe or asset freezes on individuals involved in the production of military drones in Iran.

Additionally, on June 23, as part of its eleventh package of sanctions against Russia regarding its military invasion of Ukraine, the European Union had already imposed sanctions on seven entities affiliated with the Iranian regime, including four Iranian drone manufacturers.

In recent weeks, Ukraine has pointed to the resumption of Russian attacks using Iranian Shahed suicide drones against its cities and facilities.

The United States and the United Kingdom have also recently considered imposing sanctions on individuals and companies involved in sending drones to Russia.

Complaint Filed Against Raisi Ahead of his Trip to Switzerland

A legal complaint was filed on Monday, December 11, demanding the arrest of the Iranian regime President Ebrahim Raisi during a planned trip to Switzerland to attend a UN refugee conference. The complaint states that Raisi should be detained upon his arrival in Switzerland this week and charged with crimes against humanity for his involvement in the mass execution of opponents in the late 1980s.

The complaint calls on Andreas Müller, the Swiss Federal public Prosecutor, to ensure that Ebrahim Raisi is arrested and brought to trial for his participation in “acts of genocide, torture, extrajudicial executions, and other crimes against humanity.”

Raisi was scheduled to travel to Switzerland to attend the Global Refugee Forum of the United Nations, which begins on Wednesday in Geneva. He reportedly canceled his trip and regime foreign minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian will be heading the Iranian delegation in his stead.

The complaint was filed by three individuals who were victims of the Iranian regime’s suppression of opponents in the 1980s.

Alongside this legal complaint, an international campaign is also underway expressing outrage at Raisi’s participation in the United Nations Refugee Forum and demanding his prosecution.

The campaign states, “Raisi was the main perpetrator of the massacre of thousands of political prisoners in 1988. His presence at the United Nations contradicts the fundamental values of this organization.”

Human rights groups have long been advocating for justice regarding the alleged unlawful executions of thousands of young individuals in the summer of 1988, most of whom were supporters of the Mujahedin-e Khalq organization (PMOI/MEK).

The complainants who raised the complaint on Monday state that they can identify Ebrahim Raisi as a member of the “Death Committee,” responsible for the execution of thousands of imprisoned opponents during the summer of 1988.

The complaint alleges that Raisi, who was working as the Deputy Prosecutor General of Tehran at the time, showed a particular enthusiasm for condemning prisoners to execution, distinguishing him from others.

The main plaintiff in the complaint in Switzerland is Reza Shemirani, a survivor of the 1988 purge. According to the AFP news agency, Raisi had asked him which group he belonged to, and when he mentioned the PMOI, he was certain that his death sentence was final.

The complaint states that Shemirani still does not know how he managed to survive the execution, as he was among less than 150 individuals out of around 5,000 prisoners who escaped death.

Two other claimants, Razieh Ghodraty and Ali (Bijan) Zolfaghari, were also imprisoned in Iran in 1988 and identify Raisi as a member of the “Death committee.”

In addition to the legal complaint, an international campaign is underway expressing outrage at Raisi’s participation in the United Nations Refugee Forum and demanding his legal prosecution.

More than 200 signatures have been collected from high-ranking officials, including Nobel laureates, judges, former ministers, parliamentarians, university professors, and UN human rights experts.

The statement by the signatories asserts that Raisi was the main perpetrator of the mass murder of thousands of political prisoners in 1988.

They strongly believe that his presence at the United Nations contradicts the fundamental values of the organization.

The statement further adds that they firmly believe that the United Nations, as the guardian of human rights and justice, should not jeopardize its credibility by inviting an individual accused of severe human rights violations.

The signatories also express their support for the request for an investigation and prosecution of Ebrahim Raisi under international laws, including by countries with global jurisdiction.

Concerns over Iran-Russia Information Security Cooperation

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The draft cooperation agreement between the Iranian regime and the Russian government in the field of information security has raised concerns after being submitted to the Majlis (parliament).

It is feared that this draft, which was approved by the Iranian regime’s parliamentary security commission in mid-November and is now waiting to be discussed in an open session, could strengthen the infrastructure for internet censorship in the country or jeopardize the security of individuals’ information on the internet.

It is expected that, considering the trend of approving similar bills such as the “internet Protection bill” and the violation of users’ privacy, this draft will also be approved without significant changes. According to analysts, this has increased concerns regarding the content of the draft and the effects of the cooperation between the two countries in the field of information security.

The technology platform “Zoomit” has revealed that despite not yet being approved by the Majlis, the Iran-Russia agreement on information security is already being implemented. It has also stated that cooperation documents between the two countries have been signed, and both sides have been progressing their collaborations by visiting each other’s countries.

The Iran-Russia agreement on information security, signed in Moscow in 2020 by former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and the Russian government of the time, was sent to the parliament as a cooperation draft between the two governments in the field of information security for approval by the government of Ebrahim Raisi in July 2023.

This draft contains interpretable and multifaceted articles such as “major threats in the field of information security,” “information protection,” and “major areas of bilateral cooperation.” The inclusion of Russian technology in digital access control has angered users.

The protocols of this agreement are widely interpretable and can potentially lead to the transfer of data from Iran to Russia in the future.

The free structure of the internet is not preserved in Russia, and there is concern that, in addition to the Iranian regime controlling people through this means, the Russian government may also have the same control over the Iranian people. The Iranian regime has a long history of censoring and disrupting the internet to prevent nationwide protests.

Experts warn that the information security mentioned in this draft is actually aimed at further controlling the people, and under the pretext of preventing information from falling into the hands of the West, there is an attempt to seek more control over the people through cooperation with Russia.

This draft consists of nine articles and an appendix, and some of its main titles include “major threats in the field of information security,” “major areas of bilateral cooperation,” “general principles of cooperation,” “forms and mechanisms of cooperation,” “information protection,” and “financial support.”

Some of the areas of cooperation between the two countries listed in this draft, which have sparked reactions, include “information exchange and cooperation in the field of law enforcement for the prevention, detection, investigation, and prosecution of crimes related to the use of information and communication technologies for terrorist and criminal purposes.”

It is expected that criticisms of this draft will increase simultaneously with the discussion of the cooperation agreement between the Iranian regime and the Russian government in the field of information security in the parliament.

Iran: Retirees, Oil Workers Protest Poor Economic Conditions

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On December 10, protests by employees of the Iranian Offshore Oil Company on Siri Island continued.

Socioeconomic protests in Iran continued with gatherings of retirees from the Social Security Organization in several cities and oil industry workers on Siri island and Aghajari. At the same time, vendors in Ganaveh continued their strike for several consecutive days.

According to reports on social media on December 10th, a number of retirees from the Social Security Organization gathered in several cities in Iran, including Ahvaz, Arak, Kermanshah, and Shush. These protesters, demanding the resolution of livelihood and healthcare issues, voiced their objections to economic policies and injustice in the Iranian regime, citing the expansion of embezzlement.

The gathering of retirees from the Social Security Organization in Shush included the symbolic act of distributing tea as a reference to a recent government embezzlement case, and the protesters chanted slogans such as, “Debsh tea is great, but our table is empty.”

Based on the slogans written on their placards, protesters in Kermanshah demanded “a change in the bylaws of the Retirees’ Association and the establishment of an independent organization” as their “immediate demand.”

Retirees from the steel industry also gathered in Isfahan and Ahvaz in front of the Steel Pension Fund buildings.

The ongoing protests by retirees, which have been taking place continuously for several days, coincide with the approval of a provision in the “Seventh Plan” bill in the parliament, which will raise the retirement age for Iranian citizens.

Furthermore, on December 10, a group of employees from the Iran Offshore Oil Company on Siri Island in Hormozgan Province, and a number of official employees of the Aghajari Oil and Gas Exploitation Company in Khuzestan Province, gathered at their workplaces to protest the lack of attention to their demands.

Reports on social media indicate the continuation of the market vendors’ strike in Ganaveh. This is the fifteenth day of the extensive strike in the Ganaveh market in Bushehr Province. The protest by this group of workers is against the decision to “regulate and supervise border trade,” which imposes restrictions on the import of goods labeled as “smuggling” and affects the livelihoods of thousands of people.

Despite Uncertainty, Concerns Grow over Iran-Russian Military Cooperation

It was reported on that the United States had imposed new sanctions on 21 individuals and entities believed to be involved in financing activities for Iranian military and paramilitary forces. The measures were revealed as tensions continue to rise throughout the surrounding region, and just one day after Tehran claimed to be on the cusp of a major upgrade to its military capabilities, care of its continually expanding relationships with the Russian Federation.

Officials from the Iranian Ministry of Defense told the state-affiliated Tasnim News Agency on that Tehran and Moscow had concluded a long-anticipated deal for the transfer of Russian jet fighters and helicopters to Iran. If implemented, such a deal would allow the Iranian air force to finally replace some of the aging, American-made aircraft that have comprised its entire arsenal since before the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Although the existing Iranian air force is considered the largest in the region, it is also understood to be at a serious disadvantage against more technologically advanced adversaries, particularly Israel. However, this has not stopped Iranian authorities from threatening its adversaries, especially after the October 7 attack that triggered the recent war in Gaza.

As is typical, those threats have largely relied upon reference to Iran’s other militant proxies in the region, rather than to its own military. State media has gone so far as to diagram what it might look like if all of those groups attacked Israel at once, from various sides. The establishment of a more modern Iranian air force might yet embolden Tehran to include its own military operations as part of that broader vision, especially if it signified that the Iranian regime’s posture in this conflict had the backing of a greater power.

So far, that has not been the case. Although Iranian-Russian relations have been developing for many years and have been accelerated by international sanctions imposed upon Iran over its nuclear activities and upon Russia over its ongoing war against Ukraine, the fact remains that Russia has traditionally had a cooperative relationship with Israel and is seemingly unwilling to involve itself in what many have described as a proxy war between the Israel and Iran’s regime.

The implicit threats from an upgraded Iranian air force are further diminished by the fact that Russia has provided no confirmation of a finalized deal, while this is not the first time that Iran has claimed a transfer is imminent. Earlier this year, Iranian state media broadcast images of fortified hangars which the military had reportedly set up to receive the Su-35 fighters it had been expecting. That expectation is grounded in Moscow’s perceived indebtedness to Tehran for the continuous supply of Iranian-made drones to be used as tools for keeping pressure on Ukraine, particularly through attacks on civilian infrastructure.

Most Western powers share the perception that Russia owes something to Iran, even if they question the latter’s claims about what form the repayment will take and how quickly it will arrive. In fact, it appears as if a greater concern for the United States and its allies is that the Islamic Republic might soon expand its support for the Russian war effort.      On November 21, the White House revealed intelligence pointing to the potential Russian purchase of Iranian ballistic missiles. Moscow has tacitly encouraged that concern by stating that it has no intention of adhering to restrictions on the trade of such weapons with Iran, now that a relevant provision of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231 has expired. The United States, Britain, and the European Union, on the other hand, continue to enforce the now-expired sanctions, in response to Iran’s preexisting arms sales and the acceleration of its nuclear activities.

In the wake of the American intelligence disclosure, independent security experts have noted that there is some uncertainty as to the timing and scale of forthcoming Russian purchases of Iranian missiles, and indeed whether they are forthcoming at all. No concrete statements on the matter have come from either side of the would-be transactions, but both appear to be making concerted efforts to stoke Western anxiety about military cooperation between the two rogue states.

On Tuesday, the Russian news agency TASS quoted Professor Hadi Goudarzi, counselor for science and education at the Iranian Embassy in Moscow, as saying that the two countries have made significant technical achievements together, but “the potential for cooperation between Iran and Russia is far from being exhausted.”

This was arguably in tension with remarks made by Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani in a press conference the previous day. Kanaani directly rejected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s call for fresh international sanctions to forestall the supply of ballistic missiles to Iran, then went on to argue that Iran’s cooperation with Russia “does not mean confrontation with Ukraine.”

The Foreign Ministry spokesman accused Western adversaries of using “media hype” in an effort to “influence Ukrainian officials’ positions and impact the two countries’ relations.” He also reiterated Tehran’s official denial of having provided any weapons to Russia since the start of war early last year, despite the fact that numerous independent analyses have confirmed the Iranian origin of drone components recovered from attack sites inside Ukraine.

Ukrainian media outlets and intelligence services have continually warned about both recent and forthcoming Iranian military transfers to Russia, making it somewhat ironic that Kanaani has now appealed directly to Ukrainian authorities to safeguard their own relationships with Iranian counterparts against supposed sabotage from the West.

 

 

Iran: $3.37 Billion Stolen in Latest Government-Linked Embezzlement Case

In recent weeks, numerous cases of organized corruption involving various agencies, ministries, and even the central bank have been reported. For example, the General Inspection Organization of the regime announced on December 2, that $3.37 billion in subsidy currency had been allocated to an importer for importing tea between 2019 and 2022, but no goods were imported for $2 billion of that amount, and the currency was sold in the free market. Additionally, in other imported goods worth $1.37 billion, there was a “multiple underreporting” of several times.

There have also been reports this week of simultaneous embezzlement and forgery in the payment of 244 marriage loans in the city of Qom, central Iran.

In another example of reports regarding embezzlement and financial corruption within the institutions of the Iranian regime, a member of Tehran City Council revealed on December 5 that it is unclear where 170 trillion rials (approximately $337.5 million) from the municipality’s budget have gone.

On 5 December, Heshmat-Allah Falahat Pishe, a former member of the regime’s Majlis parliament), told the state-run Etemad newspaper: “The Majlis has remained silent in the face of the disclosure of one of the largest embezzlements, which was predominantly carried out during the thirteenth government.”

Furthermore, Maryam Shokrani, an economic journalist and the economic secretary of the regime’s Shargh newspaper, commented on the recently exposed embezzlements, saying: “Only two cases of corruption have caused the country to lose around 2000 trillion rials (approximately $3.96 billion).”

Referring to the “astonishing corruption of the owner of the Debsh tea brand,” she mentioned that this one importer alone has taken “around $240 million annually,” which is equivalent to “14 years of tea imports acquired at a cheap dollar rate.”

The journalist stated that the tea imports in the past year amounted to “approximately 110,000 tons,” which is “twice the country’s need.” She said that these reckless imports, for which the importer also received a cheap dollar rate, have resulted in “setting the price of tea six times higher than the global consumer price, while also artificially inflating the price through hoarding,” causing significant damage to tea farmers.

Shokrani also emphasized reports about financial corruption documents of the Noor Financial and Credit Institution, which has links to “a number of influential individuals,” including “support from the members of the Majlis at the time.” She stressed that the “main shareholders” of this institution have obtained “large-scale facilities with fictitious accounts and destroyed the documents.”

The journalist continued, stating that “ultimately, this loss will likely be paid from the pockets of the people through inflation.”

Reactions to financial corruption in Iran have increased following the disclosure of several embezzlement cases.

Continuing with embezzlements and financial corruption within the institutions of the Islamic Republic, a member of Tehran City Council revealed on December 5 that it is unclear where the amount of “170 trillion rials” from the capital city’s budget has gone.

Of course, the last thing that concerns the MPs and other regime officials, if at all, is the livelihoods of millions of Iranians who are living in abject poverty. The reality is that they are fighting over who gets a bigger share of the pie.

In the meantime, the government continues to face the budget deficit problem and it will have to deal with growing waves of protests by teachers, pensioners, workers, and other segments of society whose longstanding demands remain unanswered.

Systematic Corruption within the Iranian regime’s officials

Ali Khan-Mohammadi, the head of the “Managers’ Guidance Patrol,” has reported widespread economic and ethical corruption among managers in various Iranian institutions, stating that numerous cases of “ethical corruption” by managers have been reported, with the highest number of cases related to “financial corruption.”

According to the regime’s Didbaniran website citing Khan-Mohammadi’s remarks, corruption among managers within the Iranian regime is extensive, ranging from ethical corruption to corruption in contracts and appointments. He further stated that corruption is deeply rooted in administrative institutions and has affected the country’s managers.

Khan-Mohammadi also commented on the issue of “tea corruption” and the claims of fighting corruption by various authorities, saying, “We cannot claim to have fought corruption and that there are no more corrupt managers. Unfortunately, corruption is deeply rooted in administrative institutions, involving some of the country’s managers, and this issue cannot be concealed.”

He referred to the current dilemmas in the discovery and confrontation of managerial corruption as “legal weaknesses.”

This is happening while the Iranian regime and security and monitoring agencies, including the “Morality Police,” enforce regulations regarding people’s attire, with or without clear laws.

Within the context of Khan-Mohammadi’s statements, there are indications of concealment and political considerations. He mentioned a case in which a violation was reported in the municipality, but after the violation was confirmed and addressed, its media coverage was prevented.

In recent weeks, numerous cases of organized corruption involving various agencies, ministries, and even the central bank have been reported. For example, the General Inspection Organization of the regime announced on December 2, that $3.37 billion in subsidy currency had been allocated to an importer for importing tea between 2019 and 2022, but no goods were imported for $2 billion of that amount, and the currency was sold in the free market. Additionally, in other imported goods worth $1.37 billion, there was a “multiple underreporting” of several times.

In another example of reports regarding embezzlement and financial corruption within the institutions of the Islamic Republic, a member of Tehran City Council revealed on December 5 that it is unclear where 170 trillion rials (approximately $337.5 million) from the municipality’s budget have gone.

There have also been reports this week of simultaneous embezzlement and forgery in the payment of 244 marriage loans in the city of Qom, central Iran.

Experts believe that regardless of who the head of the government is, the organized and systematic network of corruption and economic mafia in Iran continues its activities with the support of the “first circle of governance,” and the escalation of tensions between the Iranian government and other countries further boosts their activities.

Iranian Security Forces Raped Detained Protesters, Amnesty International Reports

On Thursday, December 6, Amnesty International released its latest report on the conditions of Iranian regime opponents and detainees of the protests in 2022 in Iran. The organization stated that the regime security forces have extensively used sexual assault and other forms of sexual violence to intimidate protesters and opponents.

The report documented in detail the harrowing ordeals of 45 survivors of nationwide protests in 2022, including 26 men, 12 women and seven children, who were subjected to rape, gang rape and/or other forms of sexual violence by intelligence and security forces.

The report reveals that perpetrators of rape and other forms of sexual violence included agents from the Revolutionary Guards, the paramilitary Basij force, and the Ministry of Intelligence, as well as different branches of the police force including the Public Security Police (police amniat-e omoumi), the Investigation Unit of Iran’s police (agahi), and the Special Forces of the police (yegan-e vijeh).

The report reads in part, “State agents raped women and girls vaginally, anally and orally, while men and boys were raped anally. Survivors were raped with wooden and metal batons, glass bottles, hosepipes, and/or agents’ sexual organs and fingers. Rape took place in detention facilities and police vans, as well as schools or residential buildings unlawfully repurposed as detention places.

Rape and other sexual violence were frequently accompanied by other forms of torture and ill-treatment, including beatings, floggings, electric shocks, administration of unidentified pills or injections, denial of food and water, and cruel and inhuman detention conditions. Security forces also routinely denied survivors medical care, including for rape-related injuries.

The overwhelming majority of survivors told Amnesty International that they did not file complaints after release, fearing further harm and believing the judiciary to be a tool of repression rather than redress.

Amnesty International also examined a leaked official document, dated 13 October 2022, and published by a media outlet outside Iran in February 2023, which reveals that the authorities covered up complaints of rape made by two young women against two Revolutionary Guards agents during the protests. The Deputy Prosecutor of Tehran advised in the document to classify the case as “completely secret” and suggested to gradually “close [the case] over time.”‎

“Our research exposes how intelligence and security agents in Iran used rape and other sexual violence to torture, punish and inflict lasting physical and psychological damage on protesters, including children as young as 12. The harrowing testimonies we collected point to a wider pattern in the use of sexual violence as a key weapon in the Iranian authorities’ armory of repression of the protests and suppression of dissent to cling to power at all costs,” Amnesty International’s Secretary-General Agnés Callamard said.

“Amnesty International shared its findings with the Iranian authorities on 24 November but has thus far received no response,” Callamard said.

Without political will and fundamental constitutional and legal reforms, structural barriers will continue to plague Iran’s justice system, which has time and again exposed its shameful inability and unwillingness to effectively investigate crimes under international law,” Callamard added.

Agnés Callamard addressed free countries saying, “We urge states to initiate criminal investigations in their own countries against suspected perpetrators under the principle of universal jurisdiction, with a view to issuing international arrest warrants.”

Revolutionary Guards Seize Two Vessels in the Persian Gulf

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The Iranian regime’s IRGC has seized two vessels with 34 foreign crew members in the Persian Gulf on charges of “fuel smuggling.” The IRGC announced the seizure of the ships on December 6.

According to the regime’s news agencies, citing Ali Ozmayee, the commander of the fifth naval zone of the IRGC, one of these ships, with 13 foreign crew members, was smuggling 2.28 million liters of fuel and was seized near Abu Musa Island in the south.

He added that the other ship, with 21 foreign crew members, was carrying 2.3 million liters of smuggled fuel and was confiscated by IRGC forces.

No information was provided about the nationality of the foreign sailors or the countries to which the ships belonged.

This is not the first time the IRGC seizes foreign ships in the Persian Gulf. The United States announced earlier this summer that Iran had “attacked, harassed, or detained over 20 ships in the Persian Gulf” in the past two years.

In one such incident on July 7th, the IRGC claimed to have detained a vessel with 12 foreign crew members carrying 900 tons of smuggled fuel.

The IRGC had previously attempted to seize two foreign oil tankers in the south waters of Iran, but the attempt was intercepted by the US Navy.

The IRGC claims that these actions are taken with a “judicial order” to prevent cheap fuel from leaving the country and being smuggled to other regional countries.

In addition to the IRGC, the Iranian Army’s Navy also detained a foreign oil tanker, the “Advantage” of Switzerland, in May, claiming that it had collided with an Iranian boat.

John Kirby, the Coordinator for Strategic Communications at the National Security Council in the White House, called on Tehran to put an end to the continued detention of foreign ships in the Persian Gulf by Iranian military forces.

Mr. Kirby emphasized in a July 20 interview that no one wants a military confrontation in the Persian Gulf region.