Saturday, November 12, 2016

A Report# About the Systematic# Executions# in Iran# and the Massacre# of 1988#

NCRI Iran News | Human Rights

NCRI Iran News | Human Rights


NCRI - On November 5th 2016, Alsharq Al-Awsat the Premier Pan-Arab Daily Newspaper, published a report regarding the results of a research carried out by the researchers of Khalij-e-Fars (Persian Gulf) on the systematic executions and the massacre of the political prisoners in Iran in 1988.
The news reads:"the researchers did a research on the statistics and numbers as well as the events related to the systematic executions of Iran in 1988 when Khomeini came to power.
The dictatorial regime ruling Iran is established on the gallows that Khomeini founded. This regime tried to follow suppression and execution as a way to get rid of rivals who are the fan of thoughts and progress in the political sovereignty.
The executions are still continuing after 37 years. The research focused on the three charges of "waging war against Islam", "acting against the national security" and "rooting corruption in the society". These charges were the pretext of the Mullahs' regime for eliminating the political dissidents."
The researchers also wrote about the massacre of the political prisoners as well as the consequences of the tape release by Ayatollah Montazeri. In 1988, Khomeini ordered a Fatwa to legalize the execution of the PMOI (MEK) as well as those who are against the regime. Consequently, the Judiciary of Iran passed the sentence and executed the 30 thousand numbers of people, as PMOI (MEK) estimated.
Following the 40-minute tape released on the official website of the former successor of Khomeini, Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri in August 2016, the tape is a recorded conversation of Ayatollah Montazeri with the 4 members of Khomeini's committee for the execution (known in media as the death committee).
Many of those executed were previously sentenced to imprisonment or they had already served or been serving their time in prison. In addition to that, some others also were those who had been released but imprisoned again with Khomeini's order. These people were executed because they had only family connections with the members and supporters of PMOI (MEK).

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Friday, November 11, 2016

Iran#: Teenagers# Arrested by Police for Attending# 'Mixed- Gender# Party'

Iranian regime’s police in Khuzestan province arrested 11 girls and 12 boys in connection with a “private mixed - gender party”

Iranian regime’s police in Khuzestan province arrested 11 girls and 12 boys in connection with a “private mixed - gender party”

In Khuzestan province 11 girls and 12 boys were arrested in connection with a “private mixed - gender party”.
Iranian regime’s police chief in Dezful said the teenagers have been arrested in connection with a “private mixed - gender party” held in a garden in a garden on Friday, November 4.
According to the state-run Mehr news agency, Ali Elhami, the police chief in Dezful stated on Friday: “Last night we received a news that 11 girls and 12 boys committed ‘norm-breaking’ by renting a garden in Ben-Jafar county in Dezful and holding a dance party.”
He said these boys and girls on the eve of Arbaeen (a religious ceremony in Iran) committed “norm-breaking” by holding a mixed-gender ceremony


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Thursday, November 10, 2016

Iran#: A Female# Political# Prisoner# Prevented# of medical# Treatment#

Iran Regime Prevents Treatment of political prisoner Lavin Karimi

Iran Regime Prevents Treatment of political prisoner Lavin Karimi

Lavin Karimi is a political prisoner in Hamedan prison. Iranian regime officials have been preventing her from getting medical treatment .

She is a 26 years old university student, who has developed stomach problems due to severe torture inflicted on her during interrogation, is now suffering from stomach bleeding. Prison doctors have emphasized that she has to receive medical treatment immediately but one of the torturers, called Rajabi, has told Lavin that the Intelligence Ministry does not allow her out of prison and the prison cannot do anything.
Karimi was arrested on August 15, 2015 in her father’s home in the city of Saghez (Northwest Iran) and sentenced to five and half years in prison. But following objection by her lawyer, the verdict was reduced by the regime’s appeal court to three years imprisonment and exile to Hamadan prison.


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Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Khamenei# contre l'humanité#، Iran# regime blinds# man on the election# day

Man being blinded for punishment in Iran [file photo]

Man being blinded for punishment in Iran [file photo]

On the same day that more than 220 million Americans go to the polls, Iranian regime blinded both eyes of a man to punish him
Associated Press cited Iranian media on Nov. 8 that the authorities in Iran on the basis of 'retribution in kind' and 'an eye for an eye' have blinded a man for throwing harmful chemicals in the face of a four-year-old girl back in 2009 that destroyed her vision.
The harsh punishment of totally blinding a man, despite happening in rare cases, but still a brutal act to be done by state regardless of the crime.
The semi-official Fars news agency affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) said Tuesday's punishment was only the second time the Islamic Republic has implemented the 'eye for an eye' legal provision, which was first approved in 1958. In March 20 15 a man convicted of blinding another man in an acid attack was blinded in one eye in a prison near Tehran.


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Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Iran# regime’s# official: Iranian# people# one of the unhappiest# in the world

90% of Irans labor community live in poverty

90% of Irans labor community live in poverty

Stop Fundamentalism, 07 Nov. 2016- The National Council of Resistance of Iran ( NCRI ) reported that the head of the Iranian regime’s Social Workers Association said Iran, under the mullahs’ rule, is the second saddest country in the world after Iraq.
Hassan Mousavi Chalak said that information from international organizations regarding average statistics on social happiness shows that the people of Iran are generally not happy. He said: “Among 185 countries, Iran is ranked 105, and regarding the world’s unhappiest countries, Iran is at the bottom of the list behind Iraq. We are the second saddest country in the world after Iraq.”
He said that mental issues are a real problem in Iran and claims that statistical studies show that in Tehran there is a 35 percent rate of mental disorders, with some parts of Tehran as high as 80 percent. This is “critical” and “raises the issue of social happiness more seriously than ever”.
Mousavi Chalak also said that the age of entry into prostitution has fallen to below the age of 10. “Definitely, the country’s current and future security is tied to the social issues, since the major crises today are the social ones.”


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Monday, November 7, 2016

IRAN#: Political# Prisoner, Maryam# Akbari Monfared Denied Medical Treatment# for Filing Complaint

Maryam Akbari-Monfared

Iran Focus- London, 5 November - Political Prisoner, Maryam Akbari-Monfared, arrested in December 2009 for alleged participation in the peaceful 2009 street protests after a foul and bogus Presidential Elections in Iran, and later charged with being connected to the PMOI/MEK has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for the so called “waging war against God” in June 2010.
Four of  her siblings were executed in the 1980s for their affiliations with the MEK, and in 2009 she was also accused of making phone calls to her remaining brother and sister who were at the time based in Camp Ashraf in Iraq.
“I was in the courtroom when my wife was being tried,” her husband Hassan Jafari said. “Judge [Abolqasem] Salavati told my wife that she was paying for her brother and sister’s activities. I was left with taking care of our three small girls, whose mother has now been imprisoned for six and a half years.” 


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