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Professor Stopped At Airport From Leaving Iran For Yale University

Jan 5, 2022, 14:19 GMT+0Updated: 11:17 GMT+0
Sociologist and political dissident, Saeed Madani.
Sociologist and political dissident, Saeed Madani.

A professor and former polictical prisoner has written to Chief Justice after being denied exit from Iran to begin a one-year research post at Yale University.

Sociology professor Saeed Madani said he was stopped at an airport gate December 7 as he was about to board while security checked his United States visa, and that a Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) intelligence officer then told him, without an explanation, that he was barred from leaving the country and kept Madani's passport.

Madani said in his letter to Chief Justice Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei he had two days earlier been summoned by the intelligence ministry, questioned for four hours, and then told he was free to leave Iran.

It is not unprecedented for someone leaving Iran to discover at the airport they are unable to leave. In 2005, Emaddedin Baghi, who campaigns against capital punishment, was stopped minutes before boarding a flight to Paris, where he was due to receive an award from the French government.

Baghi, also chairman of Society to Defend Prisoners' Rights, was again denied exit in 2009, when he was travelling to receive the Martin Ennals Award, which is given by ten international human rights organizations.

Unofficial foreign travel bans often prevent activists, political figures, and former officials from participating in international academic events and seminars.

On several occasions in recent months, Mohseni-Ejei has criticized foreign travel bans levied by tax authorities, banks, and legal authorities, but not by security and intelligence bodies. Any or all could act against activists. Mohseni-Ejei told judiciary officials October 11 that for people to find out they were unable to leave only at the airport was “damaging.”

In his letter, Madani wrote that such actions, regardless of who was behind them, violated Articles 9, 20, 30, and 33 of the Iranian constitution, and violated the right to freedom of movement given by Article 13 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

In an earlier letter, sent to the Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance Mohammad-Mehdi Esmaili in November, Madani protested against the ministry banning publication of his books without a court order.

Madani − whose research interests include poverty, drug addiction, child abuse, and prostitution − belongs to the banned Nationalist-Religious Alliance, a group of small non-violent religious opposition groups that favor political reform and welfare economics. He has been sentenced and imprisoned several times for membership of the alliance and for "propaganda against the state." In 2016, he was exiled to the southern port city of Bandar Abbas after four years of an eight-year prison sentence served at Evin prison, Tehran.

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Lebanese Ex-Prisoner In Iran Sets Up NGO To Support All Hostages

Jan 5, 2022, 13:03 GMT+0

Nizar Zakka, a Lebanese who spent about four years in prison in Iran on political charges, has established an NGO to support and help the release of people held hostage for unjust reasons.

Kylie Moore-Gilbert, an Australian-British expert on Islamic studies who was also jailed in Iran for about two years, said Wednesday that the non-profit NGOaims at preventing the inhumane act of hostage taking while advocating for the unjustly detained and their families.

“As a former hostage who was kidnapped for almost 4 years in Iran, I have experienced firsthand, the pain, suffering and betrayal that comes with it”, Zakka said on the website of Hostage Aid Worldwide.

He was arrested on vague charges of espionage for the US and was released in June 2019 after an appeal by Lebanese President Michelle Aoun. After his release, Zakka talked about various types of torture he suffered in prison, including spending about 18 months blindfolded.

Zakka, who was also a US permanenet resident, was invited to Iran in 2016 by a top official of former president Hassan Rouhani’s government but he was arrested by the Revolutionary Guard.

Iran has detained many dual nationals who have visited the country and used them as bargaining chips against Western countries, according to human rights organizations.

Iran Holding Imprisoned Students In Evin’s Notorious Security Ward

Jan 5, 2022, 11:27 GMT+0

The attorney of imprisoned student Ali Younesi says the authorities want to keep him and another jailed student, Amir Hossein Moradi in the high security ward of the Evin prison.

Mostafa Nili said in an interview on Tuesday that these two award winning students, who are only 21 years old, have been held in harsh conditions of the notorious 209 section of the prison for over 600 days.

He added that despite repeated demands to transfer them to other wards, the prosecutors want to keep them there until a final verdict is issued.

Section 209 of Evin Prison, reportedly the most dreadful ward of the detention facility, is one of three prison sections that are controlled by Iran’s intelligence ministry.

Nili also talked about a video of forced confessions by the two students that was published by the Fars news agency, saying that it was recorded under duress and was not even included in their files. “The question is how the agency even acquired such a document that we, as the lawyers of the case, hadn’t seen them”, he asked.

Younesi, who was the winner of the gold medal in the International Astronomy Olympiad in 2018 in China, was arrested in April 2020 along with Moradi, another award-winning physics student of the Sharif University. They are charged with “corruption on earth”, which is punishable by death in Iran.

Dissident Prisoner’s Body Released On Assurance Of Quiet Funeral, Sister Says

Jan 5, 2022, 09:41 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

The sister of a prisoner who died in prison in the past week says “security forces” made the family promise to bury him quietly before handing over the body.

"The elders of the family had to sign a pledge not to do anything, not to talk [to the media?], or they would not allow the funeral to be held," Azar Kianpour said in an audio file sent to Iran International TV Tuesday.

She said there had anyway been a “clash” at the funeral between “plainclothes security forces” and male cousins of the deceased.

Azar Kianpour said her brother, Adel Kianpour, demanding his case be reopened, told relatives last week he was going on hunger strike and would "either die or be set free.” She claimed he had been denied proper medical attention, that the family had found out about his death from a cellmate who phoned them, and that they had been left to search for his remains at various hospitals.

The family has said Adel Kianpour was arrested in August 2020 after returning home from abroad, and was sentenced to three years after conviction on offences over national security and ‘propaganda against the system.’ He was held at Shiban prison in Ahvaz, provincial capital of Khuzestan, and the family have said, sentenced to three years in prison.

At a regular press conference Tuesday, judiciary spokesman Zabihollah Khodaeian said Kianpour had been “convicted of financial crimes" that were “not political” and that he had not been refusing food.

"According to Ahvaz Department of Justice, the said individual was not on hunger strike,” Khodaeian said. “He complained about his health without showing any signs, was sent to a hospital and eventually passed away.”

In an audio message from prison sent to the Iran’s chief justice, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, and circulated on social media December 25, Kianpour called himself as a “political prisoner fighting for justice and democracy.”

Kianpour said he was going on hunger strike, and that he had returned from abroad – he did not say where from, or what his political background was – expecting safety. “You said that anyone with security issues who lives abroad should return to Iran and you will help them return to life,” Kianour said, addressing Mohseni-Ejei. “Did you mean life in prison?”

In February, the death in custody of Behnam Mahjoubi brought allegations of mistreatment. Mahjoubi, who was sentenced to two years’ jail after protests by Gonabadi Dervishes around the Tehran home of their leader, suffered from panic disorder and other health issues.

In June monarchist Sasan Niknafs, serving five years after convictions on national security grounds and ‘propaganda against the system,’ died at the Greater Tehran Central Penitentiary. Niknafs suffered from epilepsy and diabetes.

Hackers Interrupt Briefing By Lawyers For Victims Of Airliner Downed By Iran

Jan 5, 2022, 08:33 GMT+0

Hackers on Tuesday interrupted a video briefing by lawyers for relatives of those who died when Iran shot down a Ukrainian airliner, playing clips of loud music and showing sometimes violent images for more than two minutes.

The lawyers ended the Zoom call and restarted it without further incident. The briefing was held after a Canadian court this week awarded C$107 million ($84 million) to the families of six people who died when Iranian Revolutionary Guards downed the jet near Tehran two years ago.

The interference started shortly after Mark Arnold, one of the lawyers, said "if anybody from the Islamic Republic of Iran is on this call ... we're coming after your assets."

Images of a doll with sharp teeth and a dog with shining eyes then popped up on the screen, followed by a clip of a man singing a rap song with obscene lyrics and then repeated images of a man running towards a camera and pretending to kick it.

"I cannot speculate on who hijacked the call, but it was indeed interference," Jonah Arnold, another lawyer on the call, said by email when asked whether he thought Iranian actors were responsible.

No one has claimed responsibility. The lawyers had sent out a news release to the media with the dial-in details and password for the call.

Iran shot down the airliner in January 2020. All 176 people onboard were killed, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents.

The six family members awarded compensation by the court had filed a civil lawsuit against Iran and other officials they believe were to blame for the incident.

Report by Reuters

Families Of Airliner Downed By Iran Win C$107 Million In Canada Court

Jan 4, 2022, 08:21 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

A Canadian court, which had concluded in May that the downing of a Ukrainian airliner by Iran in 2020 was deliberate, has awarded C$107 million ($84 million) to the families of six people.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) shot down the Ukraine International Airlines plane on January 8, 2020, as it was taking off from the capital’s international airport. All 176 people onboard were killed, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents.

The six family members awarded compensation by an Ontario court lost spouses, siblings, children, nieces and nephews aboard Flight 752, their lawyer, Mark Arnold, said in a statement on Monday. They had filed a civil lawsuit against Iran and senior officials they believe were to blame for the incident.

A report by an association composed of mostly Canadian families of Flight PS752 victims in November challenged Iran's official findings that blamed a misaligned radar and an error by the air defense operator for downing the plane. Iran has not allowed any independent investigation to take place.

The lawyer said his team will look to seize Iranian assets in Canada and abroad. He said Iran has oil tankers in other countries and his team will be looking to seize whatever it can to pay what the families are owed.

The decision by Justice Edward Belobaba of Ontario's Superior Court of Justice was dated December 31 and announced by Arnold on Monday and awarded $100 million in punitive damages to be shared by the estates of the six victims. The court also awarded another $1 million to family members for the loss of guidance, care and companionship, and $6 million for pain and suffering.

Since it was a civil and not a criminal lawsuit the plaintiffs did not have to prove beyond “a reasonable doubt” that the downing of the plane was a deliberate terror act.

The case was filed by Shahin Moghaddam, Mehrzad Zarei and Ali Gorji. Fearing reprisals from Iran, some of the other plaintiffs withheld their names, CBC News reported earlier. Earlier reports had said that there are other pending court cases in Canada and in the United States.

A special Canadian forensic team had produced a report in mid-2021 that accused Iran of incompetence and recklessness over the downing of the Ukrainian passenger plane. Iran criticized the report as being "highly politicized".

Canada is not the only country seeking justice in the incident. Ukraine has been the most vocal party affected by the tragedy and has repeatedly blamed Iran for lack of cooperation in the investigation.

The report found that while the shooting down of Ukrainian International Airlines flight 752 had not been premeditated, it did not absolve Iranian officials of responsibility for the incident.

Iran admitted it shot down the airliner shortly after takeoff from Tehran in January 2020 and blamed a "disastrous mistake" by forces on high alert during a confrontation with the United States.

At the time, Iran was on edge about possible attacks after it fired missiles at Iraqi bases housing US forces in retaliation for the killing days before of its most powerful military commander, Qasem Soleimani, in a US missile strike at Baghdad airport. But authorities failed to close the civilian airspace that led to the tragedy.

With reporting by Reuters