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Tehran Jeopardizes Global and Regional Peace with Unlawful Enrichment

On Tuesday, January 5, Tehran announced its new breach of the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). A day earlier, government spokesperson, Ali Rabiei had declared President Hassan Rouhani has ordered enriching uranium to 20 percent purity in recent days.

According to a ‘law’—passed by the Parliament (Majlis) last month, Rouhani’s government started “producing and storing 120 kilograms of uranium enriched up to 20 percent per year.”

Tehran took this disputed step while its leaders acknowledged that it might destroy global attempts for reviving the flawed JCPOA agreement. In this respect, Rouhani had initially opposed the step, describing it as “detrimental to the course of diplomatic efforts.”

Tehran Still Breaches JCPOA

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif also boasted and justified this illegal action. “We resumed 20 percent enrichment as legislated by our Parliament,” he tweeted, adding that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had been “duly notified.”

While Zarif’s government had constantly breached the JCPOA, he blamed other JCPOA signatories for “years of non-compliance.” However, he could not veil his concern about the international consequences and wrote, “Our measures are fully reversible.”

Iranian officials attributed their unlawful decision to the West, particularly the U.S. government. However, they simultaneously hope that the incoming U.S. administration would return to the JCPOA. In other words, they made two mistakes, which put their establishment in a bottleneck.

First, if as they predict a Biden administration would return to the JCPOA and grant them economic reliefs, they must once again retreat from their recent ambitions. This action may look like a victory for Tehran. However, due to recent development and the Majlis’ density of radical elements, the government’s retraction—which needs Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s approval, would contribute to severe shockwaves inside Iran’s governing establishment.

Tehran Is Concerned About a New “JCPOA Plus”

Furthermore, if the ayatollahs refuse to negotiate, not only would they not gain economic and political privileges but also they would likely be confronted with a stronger policy toward Iran. In such a case, the European leaders would pressure Tehran to not just acquiesce to nuclear restrictions, but respect its people’s basic rights, limit its ballistic missile programs, and end its malign behavior in the region.

In this respect, as Zarif had forecasted, the ayatollahs’ new ‘nuclear extortion’ sparked international concern. In this respect, the European Commission also voiced its concerns over Iran’s plan to enrich its underground Fordow nuclear facility to 20 percent purity.

The Lead Spokesperson for the External Affairs of the European Union Peter Stano emphasized that “Iran must be prevented from acquiring nuclear weapons.”

“Iran’s decision to increase uranium enrichment has dire consequences. Iran must honor its nuclear pledges,” Stano said in an interview with alalrabiya.net, adding, “the European Union urges Iran to fulfill its nuclear obligations.”

The United States called Tehran’s new step a form of ‘nuclear extortion.’ “Iran enriching uranium to 20 percent at Fordow is a clear attempt to increase its campaign of nuclear extortion, an attempt that will continue to fail,” said a State Department spokesperson.

Even Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying described the ayatollahs’ illegal enrichment as a critical juncture and “extremely complex and sensitive.”

Tehran had previously breached its nuclear obligations by enriching uranium to a level greater than the 3.67-percent limit provided for in the JCPOA. However, its recent violation, which puts the enrichment on the 20 percent threshold, is considered a critical step to achieving the 90-percent purity needed for weapons-grade proposes.

Furthermore, the government started the plan at the severely protected Fordow facilities, which are buried deep under the mountains. According to the JCPOA, Tehran was banned from enrichment at the Fordow facilities.

In this context, the Iranian government’s recent adventurism along with building new covert sites and working on warheads once again shows the ayatollahs’ intention for achieving nuclear weapons. Tehran persistently claims that its religious beliefs prohibit it from obtaining weapons of mass destruction and nuclear weapons.

Iranian Opposition Reveals New Details About Military Aspects of Tehran’s Nuclear Program

However, the beliefs that allowed it to kill at least 1,500 peaceful protesters during only two days in November 2019 are not very reliable in such a status quo. The fact that the ayatollahs kept their nuclear sites a secret until they were exposed by their opposition is a major source of concern.

In this context, the international community must force Tehran to stop its nuclear activities with the language of power and firmness, which the ayatollahs and their appointees well realize. “The re-imposition of six Security Council resolutions, the complete halt to enrichment, the closure of nuclear sites, and anywhere, anytime inspections are indispensable to prevent the regime from acquiring a nuclear bomb,” the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) stated on January 2.

Iran’s New Piracy and Blackmail

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Following the seizure of a South Korean oil tanker in the Strait of Hormoz, Iranian media outlets signaled the government’s main goal through this piracy. In this respect, the media unveiled officials’ dilemmas in various fields, including the economy, society, and international relationships.

Regarding the government’s economic problems, Iranian outlets highlighted state-backed parties’ roles and profiteering policy in the unprecedented air pollution. Simultaneously, they admitted to public hatred and the establishment’s concern about the eruption of another round of nationwide protests.

State-run media also blamed officials for the intensification of the government’s isolation. On the other hand, they explicitly revealed Tehran’s purpose of capturing a South-Korean-flagged tanker. Notably, in recent weeks, Iranian officials such as the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) Governor Abdolnasser Hematti had been paving the path for this piracy by grumbling about the government’s frozen funds in South Korean banks.

Iranian State-run Media Admit to Piracy

Vatan-e Ruz paper, affiliated to the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei‘s Office, carried the headline: “We Captured Thieves”. “The seizure of this oil tanker in the Persian Gulf may send a serious message to the South Korean government. A message that leaves Seoul two options: paying its long-time debt to Tehran or [sacrificing] the security of [its flotilla] at the naval highway of the Persian Gulf and its communication with Arab partners,” the daily wrote.

Iran: A Glance at the Supreme Leader’s Mafia

“The impounding of South Korea’s oil tanker can more than ever before show [Iran’s] grave will for exerting pressure on this country to pay its debts to our country,” Vatan-e Ruz added.

Arman daily affiliated to ‘reformists’ quoted a government-linked expert Ali Bigdeli on the Islamic Republic’s intention through the South-Korean tanker’s illegal capture. “It is true that the South-Korean government cannot pay Iran’s demands through the banking system. However, humanitarian principles rule that this country pays at least some of its debts in the form of [Covid-19] medicine and vaccines,” the daily wrote.

This is while the Iranian government faces no barrier and restriction for purchasing medicine or procuring Covid-19 vaccines. In his earlier February 2020 press conference, then-Spokesperson of Foreign Ministry Abbas Mousavi openly said, “Food and medication had never been sanctioned.”

Corrupt and Inefficient State Versus Public Distrust

Iranian media generally pointed out public distrust toward the officials’ remarks and recommendations, which apparently shows the government’s inefficiency and the gap between the state and society.

Aftab-e Yazd daily raised a meaningful question, titling, “What would happen if we shut down [Tehran] City Council?” “As always, the people follow the news and comment. However, they do not care about politicians’ ideas and views, who have succeeded seats in Pasteur [Street—the President’s bureau], Baharestan [Street—the Parliament (Majlis) building], or Behesht [Street—the central branch of the judiciary],” the daily wrote.

“Fabricated Clash Between Left and Right,” wrote Mostaghel daily, pointing out false conflicts between ‘reformists’ and ‘principlists.’ “Talking to individuals who obtained [official] seats through rent-seeking, lobby, nepotism, political games, and are ruling according to the interests of themselves and their relatives, you are the reason for the collapsing in people’s trust,” the daily wrote.

IRGC Rushes for Iran’s 2021 Presidential Election

Mardom Salari daily blamed officials for indifference about society’s dilemmas. “Air pollution, like many other problems, has become normal for the officials; there is no decision for shutting down Tehran,” the daily noted.

Another outlet controlled by President Hassan Rouhani severely criticized the Majlis for interfering in foreign policies. “The Majlis’s Shadow on Foreign Policies,” wrote Ebtekar daily. In its piece, the daily also highlighted the state’s stalemate and forecasted that “easing tensions in Iran’s foreign relations are out of reach in the near future.”

Ebtekar also underscored the Majlis’s recent law about 20-percent uranium enrichment is an extreme barrier for the government’s foreign policies. “Do these plans decrease the country’s foreign policies’ dilemmas or lift the sanctions? Who are directly responsible for the consequences of such plans?” the daily questioned.

The State’s Dire Political, Military, and Security Conditions

‘Reformist’ media outlets frequently emphasized the imperative of negotiations and concessions to the West. This faction portrays the ruling system’s fate as ‘bleak’, whereas officials still insist on isolation and contraction.

“The Risk of Increasing Tensions Between Iran and the U.S.,” wrote Setareh-e Sobh daily. The ‘reformist’-dominated daily pointed to sanctions and the government’s regional isolation, writing, “These pressures intend to put the [Iranian] state in a political, military, and security impasse to restrict the state’s presence in the region.”

Setareh-e Sobh sounded alarm bells about society’s volatile situation, adding: “There is no cheaper solution than negotiating with the U.S. Because the accumulation of domestic problems has left no way but using the diplomatic instrument.”

“Diplomatic Revenge or Psychological Operation” was Jahan-e Sanat daily’s title. In its piece, the daily warned about the deteriorating Iran-U.S. relationship, writing, “If the U.S. could not open this knot with fingers, it would use military forces.”

“In such circumstances, the slightest undiplomatic behavior may lead to irreparable damages… Therefore, Majlis should not increase tensions with provocative plans in this sensitive status quo,” Jahan-e Sanat wrote.

Iran’s Hostage-Taking Government Only Responds to Firmness

A Glance at Iran’s Human Rights in 2020

As we enter 2021, it’s time to look back at human rights in Iran during the past year, with the help of the Iran Human Rights Monitor, and to describe the situation as bleak would be a horrific understatement.

This article will focus solely on the staggering number of executions carried out in Iran, which is the world record holder for executions per capita, executions of juvenile offenders, and executions of women.

Iran: Life Under the Whip of Execution

While the death penalty can never be justified in human society for any reason, the Iranian government uses it for a variety of non-violent crimes, including using drugs, drinking alcohol, and intentionally vague ‘Muharebeh,’ waging war on God.

Human Rights Violators’ Record in 2020

In 2020, they executed at least 255 people, with just 54 of those announced by official sources. Of those executed, 198 were charged with murder, but it is important to stress the lack of due process in the justice system, which makes for unfair trials.

What’s more, Iran’s laws don’t separate murder based on degrees, which means that the death sentence is applied regardless of motive. In the case of female murderers, many were victims of violence and killed their abusers.

At least 26 of those executed were charged with drug offenses, at least 12 were political prisoners arrested during nationwide protests, and at least four were juvenile offenders.

“The collected statistics cannot depict the reality of what is going on in Iran because the highly repressive conditions do not allow access to the true data by human rights activists.

On the other hand, many executions in Iran are carried out secretly. Therefore, the actual statistics must be considered higher than those presented here,” Iran HRM wrote.

They said that the government uses the death penalty to terrorize and intimidate the Iranian people, which is just one of the reasons the regime was condemned by international human rights organizations. Iran HRM urged the United Nations to take immediate action to stop this egregious abuse.

Iran on the International Human Rights Day

Political Prisoners’ Executions

  • April 23: Abdol-Basset Dahani was executed after making confessions under torture.
  • April 11: Mostafa Salimi was hanged for taking part in a prison break following the coronavirus pandemic first coming to Iran
  • May 11: Hedayat Abdollahpour was executed by a firing squad
  • July 14: Diako Rasoulzadeh and Saber Sheikh Abdollah were hanged after making confessions under torture.
  • August 5: Mostafa Salehi was hanged for taking part in the December 2017-January 2018 protests
  • September 12: Wrestling champion, Navid Afkari, 27, was hanged for his role in the August 2018 protests
  • December 12: Ruhollah Zam was executed in a crackdown on protests in prison

Iran’s Government: “We Are 40 Years Behind the World”

One of the main challenges of Iran’s economy is the practical possibility of growth and promotion of domestic products and the ability to export quality products in global markets. Otherwise, any country that fails to do so will be phased out of the international economic system.

Economic Indicators of Iran According to Reputable International Centers

Last year, when the coronavirus had not overtaken Iranian society and the crime of the mullahs in the field of health had not been revealed, Alef website on 30 December 2019 in a report citing the report of reputable international centers, examined and compared the country’s economic index with leading countries in the Middle East.

This report in the field of industry and products ‘Made in Iran’ states: “Statista International Statistics Institute, through field research in 52 countries, ranks ‘Iran made’ products 50th.”

Iran’s Low Position in The World Production Index

The low level of industrial production, which is the basic basis for non-oil exports, has also been accepted by the Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade, which is itself in charge of production and trade. In a report on the decline of Iran’s position in the global economy, the Center for Business Studies and Research of this Ministry says:

“A study of the global position of Iran’s economy in 2019 shows that Iran is not in a good position in some international indicators related to production, especially global competitiveness, business ease index and global innovation index,” Jahan-e-Sanat daily wrote on December 28, 2020.

The same report shows the negative growth of the industrial sector, especially since 2018. The decline in investment to compensate for the depreciation of production and the lack of increase in new capacity adds to a decade of decline in this area.

Statistics show that in 2019, inflation in the production sector reached more than 36 percent, and the rate of this variable in 2020 was still high.

Iran claims It Will Reduce Inflation While 45 Million Have Inadequate Income

Closure of Industrial Units

Also, the study of the situation of industrial and production units shows that in 2019, some 40 percent of active industrial units (more than 14,000 units) with a capacity of less than 50 percent were operating and more than 70 percent of the reason for the closure was lack of liquidity and about 20 percent lack of market (About 10,000 units). In this regard, it is said that in the period 2016-2019, the average share of production guilds was estimated to be less than 20 percent.

The Decline in Foreign Trade in the Last Decade

No jump in exports and imports due to production constraints and lack of competitiveness in global markets over the past decade has led to the decrease of exports of 75.8 million tons (down to 14 percent) worth $21.6 billion (down to 20 percent), imports 21.8 million tons (down to 1 percent) worth $23.1 billion (down to 18.5 percent), the average price per ton of exported goods at $285 (down to 6.8 percent) and the average price per ton of imported goods at $1057 (down to 17.5 percent),” Jahan-e-Sanat added.

Two Dangerous Scenarios

It is these shocking realities in the field of production and exports that have led the Chamber of Commerce to express concern that the Iranian government is an ‘exceptional’ government that stubbornly goes beyond the FATF standards and has practically brought exports to a standstill. Finally, there are just two ways in front of this government:

There are two scenarios in this story that seem to have reached the last days. Iran should abandon normal foreign trade. In this case, the risk of phasing out of tangible and observed global trade must be accepted over time,” wrote Eghtesad News website on December 31, 2020.

Iranian economic activists and businessmen have come to the conclusion that Iran is gradually removing itself from the normal world economy due to the non-acceptance of the FATF.

What Is Happening With Iran and FATF?

“Overhead costs and complex ways to bypass end foreign trade capability. Another scenario is for the country’s governing institutions to accept the truth of the world and to organize their foreign trade in such a way that they can sustain the economy,” Eghtesad News added.

Which, of course, means backing away from the regime’s nuclear and terrorist policies.

Excluding Iran from the World’s Largest Free Trade Agreement

“Recently, a very important economic agreement was reached between 15 countries of Asia and the Pacific, including ten countries of Southeast Asia (ASEAN) and 5 countries of China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand in the form of the world’s largest free trade agreement called the Comprehensive Regional Economic Partnership. Which, unfortunately, was not given much attention in Iran,” wrote Eghtesad-e-Mardom daily on December 28, 2020.

“The cost of exchanging the economy, especially the production sector, has increased significantly due to sanctions, and the country’s competitiveness in the region has decreased. The result of these issues has been a near halt in Iran’s economic growth over the past decade, a decline in real household incomes, and a decline in investment in the country,” Eghtesad-e-Mardom added.

Iran: 58 Percent of Society Struggle Just to Remain Alive

Fifty-eight percent of Iranian society, including workers and their families, are struggling to remain alive, according to the chair of the Supreme Labor Council’s Wage Committee Faramarz Toufighi.

On December 30, 2020, in an interview with Tasnim news agency affiliated to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Quds Force, Toufighi pointed out rampant prices of essential goods. “Currently, the population of workers and their family members is more than 49 million people, which makes up about 58 percent of Iran’s society. Regarding the high prices, with a maximum revenue of 30,000 million rials [$120], this strata is struggling to remain alive, not just to make ends meet,” he said.

In his remarks, the Wage Committee’s chair explained that having a small apartment and a Pride Car has become a workers’ dream. “In such circumstances, while workers wish to have minimums, there are rich people who invest with massive sums and enjoy luxury lifestyles,” Toufighi added.

Iran: Improving Citizens’ Livelihood or Stealing From the Nation

This is the flipside of the existing gap between society’s classes in Iran. While officials and their children and relatives enjoy aristocratic lifestyles, many citizens cannot make ends meet despite hard work day and night.

Earlier, Majid Farahani, the chair of Tehran City Council’s Budget and Financial Supervision, acknowledged that “today, we have seven poor deciles, and only three deciles of society are above the poverty line. We had never experienced such status quo,” according to Tasnim on December 14, 2020.

Notably, around ten million underground workers in Iran do not receive minimum wages, according to a member of the Supreme Labor Council Ali Aslani. Therefore, Iranian workers have no share of the country’s national assets, including oil revenue. Instead, Lebanese Hezbollah, Palestinian Hamas, Iraqi Shiite militias, Yemeni Houthis, and other extremist proxies line their pockets with impoverished Iranians’ wealth.

“There are workers whose rights are not supervised by anyone, and they receive even less than the minimum wage. Some of them receive 7 or 8 million rials [$28–$32] per month,” the semi-official ISNA news agency quoted Aslani as saying on January 2.

On the other hand, new people add to the country’s unemployed population every day due to the government’s mismanagement and squander of national resources on irresponsible projects. Officials’ shambolic policies have even earned criticism from government-linked individuals.

Seventy Percent of Iran’s Construction Workers Are Unemployed

“Might officials actually live with workers’ salaries?” Toufighi questioned, adding, “In the past nine months, the product basket’s price has increased by around 200 percent. During a two-year period, housing expenditures both in prices and rents have become fivefold,” he added.

Observers believe that given unbridled inflation, workers’ purchasing power is too insignificant despite the increase in wages. They reported that working families had lost their purchasing power by 100 percent.

Workers’ representative at the Supreme Labor Council Nasser Chamani blamed the government’s failure to clarify a sufficient wage for workers. In this context, while the workers’ purchasing power has dropped by 100 percent, the government must probably increase their minimum wage.

In other words, the government, as the greater employer, must define a fair salary for workers, which has denied performing it so far. “This backwardness—regarding inflation rate and workers’ minimum wage—must be offset to improve workers’ living situation,” Chamani said.

Tehran’s Hostage-Taking Government Executes Three Prisoners

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At dawn on Sunday, January 3, Iranian authorities executed two other political prisoners and one ordinary inmate at Zahedan Central Prison in Sistan and Baluchestan province, southeastern Iran. The executed political prisoners were Hassan Dehvari and Elias Qalandarzehi, and the ordinary inmate was Omid Mahmoudzehi.

The government implemented these sentences while the lawyer of Dehvari and Qalandarzehi, Mostafa Faqihi, had announced that the trial was distorted. He had registered for a retrial at the Supreme Court Secretariat for his clients.

“When we precisely studied the case of the two convicted prisoners in the Zahedan Revolutionary Court, our findings showed that their trial had legal problems. In this respect, their sentences are wrong. Therefore, as the most normal legal action in this process, we requested a retrial,” Faqihi explained.

“On Saturday [January 2], this retrial was registered at the Supreme Court Secretariat. So, this case was in the process of being designated to an appeal court,” the lawyer added.

The State Security Forces (SSF) detained Dehvari and Qalandarzehi on April 5, 2014, on security charges. The Revolutionary Court sentenced them to death on December 19, 2016.

Omid Mahmoudzehi had previously been sentenced to death for several allegations, including Muharebeh, the Iranian authorities’ formal excuse for killing citizens.

Iran: Seven Silent Executions at the End of 2020

Two Political Prisoners Kept as Hostages

At night on Friday, January 1, the prison guards transferred Dehvari and Qalandarzehi to solitary confinement, preparing them for the execution. In this context, their family members complained to the authorities.

Iranian Baluchi human rights defenders had already announced that the government kept these prisoners due to their relatives’ membership in dissident groups. Authorities claimed that Dehvari’s brother and Qalandarzahi’s relatives are members of anti-government groups.

In response to their families’ complaints, Iranian authorities acknowledged that as long as their relatives do not turn themselves in, their death penalties will remain active. Notably, the government still chases Dehvari’s brother and Qalandarzaehi’s relatives despite these inhuman executions.

On December 26, the Iranian government hanged three inmates at Zahedan Central Prison, including political prisoner Abdolhamid Mir-Baluchzehi. Iranian authorities hanged this political prisoner while the judiciary had registered an appeal for a revision of the case. However, the regime suddenly executed this political prisoner.

“The website of the Judicial Services has registered an appeal for the revision of the case of Abdolhamid Mir-Baluchzehi, and we are waiting for the case to be referred to a branch (for revision). But his family today informed me that he had been relocated from the general ward of the Prison of Zahedan, and they feared that he was going to be executed,” tweeted Mostafa Nili, Mir Baluchzehi’s lawyer, on December 24.

Furthermore, on January 1, human rights defenders reported that Iranian authorities have silently executed at least seven prisoners at Mashhad’s Vakil-Abad Prison, in northeastern Iran, and Ahvaz’s Sepidar Prison, in the southwest of the country during the past week.

The Iranian government is the world’s record-holder of executions per capita. In 2020, they had executed more than 250 prisoners, including juvenile offenders, women, political activists, and prisoners of conscience. Out of six juvenile offenders who were executed in 2020 across the globe, four were in Iran.

Tehran Hangs Juvenile Offender On the Eve of 2021

Iran: Seven Silent Executions at the End of 2020

In the final days of 2020, Iranian authorities silently executed at least seven prisoners at Mashhad’s Vakil-Abad Prison, in northeastern Iran, and Ahvaz’s Sepidar Prison, in the southwest of the country.

Human rights groups acknowledged that the government simultaneously implemented death penalties for four prisoners in Sepidar Prison on Thursday, December 24. One of the executed prisoners was identified as Jafar Zabi. However, there is no information about the three others.

Execution After Ten Years

In this respect, the human rights association No to Prison – No to Execution revealed shocking details about these executions. “One of the executed prisoners was Jafar Zabi. This prisoner had been detained at the age of 18 under the accusation of murder during a clash with a man named Heydari. After ten years of being held in prison, he was eventually hanged at the age of 27,” a source familiar with the issue told the human rights association.

“A day before the execution, Jafar’s mother had pleaded with the case’s judge to give a one-month deadline to convince the victim’s family to revoke the sentence. However, the judge did not postpone the death penalty, and a day later, Jafar was executed,” the source added.

No Iranian state-run media reflected the news despite the government delivering the corpses to their families.

Execution of Three Political Activists and Prisoners of Conscience in Mashhad

Furthermore, Iranian authorities executed three Sunni prisoners Hamid Rast-Bala, Kabir Sa’adat-Jahani, and Mohammad-Ali Arayesh at Mashhad’s Vakil-Abad Prison on Thursday, December 31. Notably, on the same day, the judiciary implemented the death penalty of a juvenile offender Mohammad Hassan Rezaei at the Rasht Lakan Prison, in the north of Iran.

Tehran Hangs Juvenile Offender On the Eve of 2021

According to Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) on January 1, the sudden implementation of the execution of these [three] prisoners took place while their families were deprived of the last visit with their loved ones. Previously, on December 30, the prisoners had been transferred to an unknown place.

In 2015, intelligence agents affiliated to the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) had detained Hamid Rast-Bala, Kabir Sa’adat-Jahani, and Mohammad-Ali Arayesh along with Farhad Shakeri, Isa Eid-Mohammadi, Hakim Azim-Gorgij, Taj-Mohammad Khormali, Abdolrahman Gorgij, and Hossein Varasteh-Soleimani.

For 10-12 months, they had been kept in solitary confinement at the detention center of Mashhad’s intelligence department. Later, they were transferred to Vakil-Abad Prison and held there for around four years.

Sources familiar with the issue also acknowledged that the judiciary had deprived these citizens of their chosen lawyer and a fair trial. According to human rights activists, the Iranian government executed more than 250 inmates in 2020, including four juvenile offenders, nine women, and ten political activists and prisoners of conscience. Iran is the world’s record-holder of executions per capita.

Iran: Life Under the Whip of Execution

New Wave of Arrests in Khuzestan Province

According to human rights activists, Iranian authorities have launched a new wave of arrests in Khuzestan province, southwestern Iran. The human rights association No to Prison – No to Execution reported that at dawn on December 20, intelligence agents affiliated to the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) detained Mr. Hossein Zadeh Shaye (Shenavari).

Mr. Shaye is 42 years old and from the Taleghani district in Bandar Mahshahr county. He is a cameraman and in addition to cultural activities, he was filming concerts. Mr. Shaye was also collaborating with another cultural activist Fatemeh Tamimi, who had been arrested on December 9.

Tamimi along with her partner Maryam Ameri—who was also arrested on December 10—were collecting traditional stories, lullabies, and songs in the Arabic language from local villagers. Shaye had also aided them to produce and publish these pieces on Tamimi’s Instagram page—followed by 25,000 people—to register them as part of the region’s history.

Iran: Civil Rights and Cultural Activists Arrested, Further Detentions Expected

Intelligence agents brutally raided the homes of these activists and seized their personal belongings such as laptops, smartphones, and memory cards, in addition to detaining them. To instill a sense of fear, they conducted the raid with several vehicles at Mr. Shaye’s home before dawn.

“At 4:00 am on December 20, forces of the intelligence department sieged Hossein Zadeh Shaye’s home with several vehicles. They instilled a sense of fear among this family and impounded all filming equipment, including his camera, mobile, and computer. Then, intelligence agents transferred Hossein Zadeh Shaye to Ahvaz Intelligence Department,” a source familiar with the issue said.

Mr. Shaye suffers from intestinal pain, chronic asthma, and kidney stone infection. In this context, his family is deeply concerned about his health and life regarding inhuman torture and ill-treatment usually practiced through interrogations.

The Shaye family urged international and human rights organizations to pressure the Islamic Republic to release this cultural activist immediately and unconditionally. “He is one of the advocates for Iranian Arabs in Ahvaz, who reported on these people’s suffering and misery,” said the family.

Furthermore, on December 30, the judiciary convicted Lamia (Sahba) Hemadi, 23, to seven years in prison for ‘Baghi,’ [riot] and ‘acting against national security.’ She was also a cultural activist, and the autocrats could not tolerate her activities.

In the past month, the State Security Forces (SSF) and MOIS agents have arrested a significant number of civil rights and cultural activists. They detained Azhar, Abbas, and Reza Albo-Ghabish—all of them under 20 years old—in early December, Fatemeh Tamimi on December 9, Maryam Ameri on December 10, and Zeinab Savari along with her little brother and sister on December 11.

Observers say that the Iranian government continues to intimidate society with such oppressive actions. They reasoned that given public disappointment about the government’s miserable performance in different sectors, including economic issues, civil rights, combating the novel coronavirus, and procuring the Covid-19 vaccine, the ayatollahs have intensified oppressive measures to quell any protest at the beginning.

World Must Push Iran to Procure Covid-19 Vaccines for its Citizens

Tehran Hangs Juvenile Offender On the Eve of 2021

In a horrible violation of human rights and international conventions, Iranian authorities executed juvenile offender Mohammad Hassan Rezaei at the Lakan Prison, in Rasht city.

Security forces arrested Rezaei 12 years ago, accusing him of murdering a man. However, in the lack of reliable evidence, interrogators severely tortured him and coerced him to accept the crime.

Afterward, Iran’s judiciary filed forced confessions as testimony and sentenced him to death. Mohammad Hassan Rezaei was the fourth juvenile offender, hanged in 2020.

Human rights activists and organizations previously expressed their concerns over the immediate execution of Rezaei. Since December 18, Amnesty International launched an urgent action, calling human rights defenders to demand Iranian authorities to suspend the death penalty.

However, the government finally transferred him to solitary confinement on Wednesday, December 30. Authorities acknowledged the Rezaei family to visit their loved one for the last time.

“After more than 12 years on death row, Mohammad Hassan Rezaei was transferred to solitary confinement in Lakan Prison in Rasht on Thursday, and his family was told that his execution would be carried out ‘in a week’. The Iranian authorities are yet again waging an abhorrent assault on children’s rights and making an absolute mockery of juvenile justice,” said Diana Eltahawy, Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.

“Mohammad Hassan Rezaiee arrested at 16 and tortured to “confess” is hours away from execution in a prison in Rasht, Iran. The Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, President Hassan Rouhani, and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif must halt his execution now and ensure a fair retrial in accordance with the rules of juvenile justice. #SaveHassan,”  Amnesty Iran tweeted on December 30.

“Iran is one of the last remaining countries in the world which continued to carry out executions, even for crimes committed by minors, in violation of its obligations under the International Covenant On Civil and Political Rights and Convention on the Rights of the Child,” wrote Iran Human Rights Monitor on December 31.

According to human rights defenders, the Iranian government has executed at least 257 prisoners, including political and civil rights activists, prisoners of conscience, women, juvenile offenders, and followers of religious and ethnic minorities.

The Iranian opposition extremely slammed the Iranian authorities for this execution. “A prisoner was executed today in Rasht after 13 years of imprisonment. He had been arrested at the age of 16. Continued executions in Zahedan, Sanandaj, and Urmia show that this regime cannot survive without torture and executions,” the President-elect of National Council of Resistance of Iran Maryam Rajavi tweeted, adding, “I call for urgent action to save death-row prisoners, particularly minors, whose execution is in violation of international conventions.”

Iran: Improving Citizens’ Livelihood or Stealing From the Nation

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These days, the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf prepares himself for the 2021 Presidential election. In this context, he raises ridiculous claims about people’s livelihood dilemmas and their hardship. He has claimed that the Majlis will pay attention to citizens’ problems.

“We study the 2021-22 budget bill article to article and will principally reform it in the way that benefits the people’s livelihood and our dear country,” Majlis’s official website ICANA quoted Ghalibaf as saying on December 20.

Notably, the Majlis Speaker has a notorious background in corruption and embezzlement, which forced him to resign as Tehran Mayor in 2017. Tehrani residents know him as someone who donated public estates and properties to his allies and relatives.

Iran’s Presidential Election and Intensification of Crises

In May 2017, during the Presidential campaign, Vice-President Eshaq Jahangiri shed light on Ghalibaf’s corruption cases. “Mr. Ghalibaf, have you ever known about the Ghavamin bank conditions? You established many of these credit institutions,” Jahangiri said.

Furthermore, in 1999, as the commander-in-chief of the State Security Forces (SSF), he played a leading role in the crackdown on student protests. During the 2017 Presidential debate, President Hassan Rouhani revealed Ghalibaf’s ruthless methods called ‘putting students in pipes’ to suppress protesters.

“Mr. Ghalibaf, you always planned to put [protesters] into ‘pipes.’ Every time, you were saying in the secretariat [of the National Security Supreme Council], ‘Let me put these students into pipes over two hours. If we didn’t object to you, now, all the Iranian universities would have been filled with pipes,” ILNA news agency quoted Rouhani as saying on May 12, 2017.

Ghalibaf is also proud of crimes against dissidents, including supporters of the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK/PMOI), in the 1980s. “I’d be among club wielders on the ground if it was necessary to beat [people], and it is my pride. Since 1979 I was beating [MEK leader] Massoud Rajavi‘s supporters. We were beating them on the streets and in colleges and were stopping them. We were among Beheshti’s supporters and they were Massoud Rajavi’s. We have been club wielders on the ground since then,” Ghalibaf said in a Basij meeting in Tehran Sharif University on May 12, 2013.

Moreover, the Majlis itself is considered one of the corrupt centers, which issues ‘necessary licenses’ for plundering institutions. Several officials implicitly admit to the Majlis’s role in profiteering policies, saying, “The budget bill depends on expenditures of [official’s] loved ones.”

On December 16, the state-run Ofogh TV Channel even stepped further and bluntly blamed MPs for looting people’s belongings. “Improving the livelihood is carried out by withdrawing the nation’s savings,” the TV Channel said in a broadcast.

On the same day, Shargh daily pointed out expenditures that are supposed to be covered through people’s pockets. “The same Majlis, whose members were at the top of flu vaccine receivers’ lists and some of them were rejecting automakers’ gifted cars because the cars were not SUV-model, these MPs are supposed to receive a 1.88-trillion-rial [$7.286 million] welfare credit,” Shargh wrote on December 16.

“Thanks to the chart—published for the first time about the 2021-22 budget bill and which showed how executive organs spend credits—we obtained interesting figures about welfare expenditures of the country’s legislator apparatus. The big number belongs to the Majlis, and the Guardian Council will also spend 130 billion rials [$504,000] on welfare fields [alone],” the daily added.

Iran: 2021-22 Budget Bill and Economic Crisis

This is while MPs systematically benefit from special privileges such as a Dena+ automobile and billion rials of low-interest loans for residing in the best areas in the capital, renting an office, and hiring staff, who are usually chosen from their relatives.

Surprisingly, Ghalibaf claimed he would improve impoverished people’s livelihood while each lawmaker has received 2 billion rials [$7,750] as the housing right. Notably, this huge bonus is in addition to stellar salaries and pensions.

On the other hand, to help the budget bill gain approval, Rouhani’s government has filled MPs’ accounts with countless advantages. Rouhani grants generous privileges to MPs while many of the administration’s employees and workers, including municipal workers, have yet to receive their wages for several months. However, as people endure additional pressure due to the coronavirus consequences, the government prefers to fill MPs’ pockets.

“For five months, you did not pay my salary. As a sweeper and municipal worker, how should I respond to my family? How can I say to my children that I have no money?” a municipal worker said in a clip circulated on social media.

However, MPs’ luxury lifestyles and windfall salaries have intensified public hatred of the legislator apparatus. Many people believe that no one represents them at the Majlis and all of the ‘lawmakers’ are Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei‘s appointees and merely obey and implement his orders.

The economic gap between governors and the people they governed displays systematic corruption and officials’ abuse of power. This issue prompted officials to frequently warn each other about public ire and potential anti-establishment protests.

“Officials’ and managers’ aristocratic lives and forgetting the hardships faced by society’s low-income and needy classes are the reasons for the people’s growing economic and living dilemmas. Any kind of negligence about the future would lead the country to serious challenges,” ICANA quoted Hossein Noosh-Abadi, MP from Tehran, as saying on December 16.

Ghalibaf’s hollow gestures and Noosh-Abadi’s remarks prove the country’s fragile conditions. In reality, the Iranian government is deeply concerned about potential protests, which may end the dictatorship’s rule. Officials’ 41 years of failures and the coronavirus consequences have placed society in a volatile state, and this volcano may erupt at any moment.

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