• العربية
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • فارسی
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo

IRGC Makes New Corruption Allegations Against Rouhani's Brother

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Jan 23, 2022, 12:11 GMT+0Updated: 17:32 GMT+1
Former US secretary of state John Kerry seen speaking with J. Zarif and Hassan Fereydoun (C).
Former US secretary of state John Kerry seen speaking with J. Zarif and Hassan Fereydoun (C).

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have made new bribery accusations against the brother of former president Hassan Rouhani who is already serving a prison term.

The prosecution in a corruption trial Saturday disclosed the allegations against Rouhani's brother Hossein Fereydoun quoting the intelligence service of the IRGC.

Fereydoun, Rouhani's younger brother and aide, was arrested in July 2017 in connection with a corruption case. He was released two days later, reportedly after paying a massive bail of 500 billion rials (around $15 million). Fereydoun who has always denied any wrongdoing was sentenced to five years in prison and a cash fine in 2019 for accepting bribes. He has been serving his sentence at Tehran's Evin Prison since October 2019.

Fereydoun's name was brought up again in a high-profile trial of eighteen officials of Crouse Industrial Group, one of the largest auto parts manufacturers in the country, that began Saturday at the Special Economic Corruption Court in Tehran. The court is presided by the notorious judge Abolghasem Salavati known for issuing several death sentences and other harsh punishments in similar economic and politically sensitive cases.

The Iranian parliament last week votedto investigate the performance of Rouhani’s government, including the conduct of Chief of Staff Hossein Fereydoun, former Vice-President Mohammad Nahavandian, and other members of Rouhani's economic team.

Fereydoun, 65, a former ambassador to Malaysia and member of Iran's delegation to the United Nations, was accused by hardliners of influencing the appointment of officials of quasi-governmental companies and banks for personal gain during his tenure as his brother's chief of staff.

Fereydoun participated as Rouhani's special representative in the nuclear talks between 2013-2015 that led to the conclusion of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) between Iran and world powers in 2015. He was known as "Rouhani's eyes and ears" who directly reported the progress to the president and conveyed his messages back to the negotiators.

Iranian media at the time claimed that Fereydoun's participation in the talks, which hardliners strongly objected to, was vital as he and Rouhani would use their native Sorkhei language, almost completely incomprehensible even to Persian speakers as a form of cryptography in their communications during the talks as a precaution against any potential eavesdropping.

Crouse officials, including CEO Hamid Keshavarz, have been accused of causing "major disruption in the economy" through organized smuggling of auto parts, bribery, and overpricing of their products. Keshavarz, a dual Iranian-American citizen, who was present at the hearing Saturday is free on bail.

The representative of the public prosecutor in Saturday's session said according to the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) Intelligence Organization, the company had paid 18 billion rials to Fereydoun through another company official, Masoud Ahmadizadeh, who is being tried in absentia. At the time this amount was equal to $600,000. Ahmadizadeh was sentenced to 15 years in prison for assisting in the transfer of bribe money to Fereydoun in 2019 but fled the country to a unknown destinations.

Iranian hardliners, including the IRGC, have been long attacking Rouhani for the nuclear deal accusing him and his officials of pre-West tendencies.

The prosecution also alleged that the money paid to Fereydoun was intended to be used for the March 2012 parliamentary election campaigns. The go-between, Ahmadizadeh, used his bank account to move bribe money from company officials to Fereydoun, the prosecution alleged and said the IRGC Intelligence Organization has reported four such payments to Fereydoun by Crouse officials through Ahmadizadeh.

The case involving Ahmadizadeh and Fereydoun is under investigation by the Judiciary, the prosecutor's representative who was not named in media reports said.

Most Viewed

Iran negotiators ordered to return after internal rift over Islamabad talks
1
EXCLUSIVE

Iran negotiators ordered to return after internal rift over Islamabad talks

2
ANALYSIS

US blockade enters murky phase as tankers spoof signals and buyers hesitate

3
ANALYSIS

Why the $100 billion Hormuz toll revenue is a myth

4

US tightens financial squeeze on Iran, warns banks over oil money flows

5
ANALYSIS

US blockade targets Iran oil boom amid regional disruption

Banner
Banner

Spotlight

  • Hardliners push Hormuz ‘red line’ as US blockade tests Iran’s leverage
    INSIGHT

    Hardliners push Hormuz ‘red line’ as US blockade tests Iran’s leverage

  • Ideology may be fading in Iran, but not in Kashmir's ‘Mini Iran'
    INSIGHT

    Ideology may be fading in Iran, but not in Kashmir's ‘Mini Iran'

  • War damage amounts to $3,000 per Iranian, with blockade set to add to losses
    INSIGHT

    War damage amounts to $3,000 per Iranian, with blockade set to add to losses

  • Why the $100 billion Hormuz toll revenue is a myth
    ANALYSIS

    Why the $100 billion Hormuz toll revenue is a myth

  • US blockade targets Iran oil boom amid regional disruption
    ANALYSIS

    US blockade targets Iran oil boom amid regional disruption

  • Iran's digital economy battered by prolonged blackout
    INSIGHT

    Iran's digital economy battered by prolonged blackout

•
•
•

More Stories

Poking Fun At President Costs 'Empress Kuzcooo' Her Instagram Page

Jan 22, 2022, 22:04 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Empress Kuzcooo, a female comedian, says Instagram deleted her page after she was reported for a post that poked fun at Iran’s president for praying at the Kremlin.

In a Twitter post Friday, the taboo-breaking standup comedian alleged that her page was reported by hardliner cyber-activists paid by state organizations. "It upsets me that some people are now sending invoices, and are getting paid from taxpayers' money, for shutting down my account," she wrote.

Recently, the online admission of a jihadi man proved that hardline followers of Iran's regime get paid for their activities online.

Empress Kuzcooo's Instagram page had over half a million followers before being deleted but she was lucky she had a second Instagram page that she had kept running in the background in preparation for the rainy day.

The video-post that demolished Empress Kuzcooo's very popular Instagram palace was entitled "Expert Scrutiny of Prayer at the Kremlin". In the video she made fun of President Ebrahim Raisi's prayer during his meeting with the Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Wednesday. Iran's hardliners say Raisi's much advertised prayerwas a "spiritual victory" for the Islamic Republic.

'Empress Kuzcooo' in one of her personalities.
100%
'Empress Kuzcooo' in one of her personalities.

In her standup, Empress Kuzcooo criticized Raisi in hilarious terms for using time that should be dedicated to diplomatic negotiations, and "doing something for his country", to pray at the Kremlin Palace in front of cameras and made fun of his not-too-good public speaking skills.

"He knows he is not capable of speaking [diplomatically] … so he communicated his heart's desire to his God instead … Oh, God, he said, make Mr. Putin love me to help our wishes come true," Empress Kuzcooo who speaks like an elderly illiterate woman in Qom accent squeals in the video from under the black veil that only leaves her nose to be seen.

The number of followers for Empress Kuzcooo's 'spare' account, to which she has emigrated since Friday, is growing by the hour as followers discover her new page. In a matter of three hours Saturday, over four thousands followed the new page (iam.kuzcooo) which now has 26.5k followers.

Empress Kuzcooo is the artistic name of Zeynab Mousavi, a 32-year-old computer software graduate. Mousavi is also active on Twitter and Telegram. She works from home in her hometown of Qom, the city of Iran's largest Shia seminaries, and makes her living from advertisements on her social media accounts.

Her artistic name, Empress Kuzcooo, draws from the protagonist in the 2000 Disney animation 'Emperor's New Groove', an arrogant and saucy personality.

Mousavi is known to millions of Iranian social media users for her biting humor, impetuous criticism of clerics and politicians, and for breaking taboos by sometimes explicit sexual references in her standups.

In 2017, Mousavi told The Guardian that she would not give in to censorship and intimidation. On her Tweeter account Mousavi has published dozens of screenshots of abusive messages and comments she receives from hardliners. "Look, we have no toleration for insults against three people: The Leader of the Revolution, President Raisi, and Ghasem Soleimani. Our blood will boil if you insult them and we won't be responsible for anything we do," one such comment read.

Instagram users can report posts, profiles, and comments if they think they are spam or inappropriate directly from their own feed. Instagram will suspend or completely shut down the account if the number of complaints reaches a certain threshold or if the content is too obviously abusive, explicit, etc. Recovering deleted pages is possible if the account owner can prove they were wrongfully reported but it may take some time.

Critics Say Dismissal Of Professors In Iran Is A Political Move

Jan 22, 2022, 14:13 GMT+0

Dismissal of two professors from two of Iran’s top universities has created controversy, evoking memories of purging independent-minded academics in the past.

Mohammad Fazeli, a professor of sociology at Beheshti University, and Arash Abazari, a philosophy professor at Sharif University, were dismissed in the last few days.

Abazari is well-known for his book Hegel's Ontology of Power: The Structure of Social Domination in Capitalism, which was published by Cambridge University Press. Fazeli’s works focus on sociology of politics and science, especially in the energy sector.

The Islamic Republic has conducted several ‘cleansing’ operations in universities, firing professors that it has deemed not committed to the regime.

The most widespread firings took place right after the 1979 revolution and was peaked again during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who forced many professors into retirement.

Kaave Lajevardi, a fellow philosopher and translator, called it a disgrace for Iran’s education system, saying that Abazari is not tolerated while many are busy Islamizing the universities.

Abdonnaser Hemmati, the former head of Iran’s central bank who run for president last June, has protested to Fazeli’s firing and called on President Ebrahim Raisi to intervene.

Renowned reformist Abbas Abdi described such dismissals as part of a larger process to destroy the institution of science in Iran.

Smaller Conservative Groups Emerge In Iran With An Eye On Power

Jan 22, 2022, 09:22 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

Smaller conservative parties in Iran have become more active recently, in what could be a design to shape politics more to the liking of the Supreme Leader.

Every week a new conservative group emerges on the Iranian political scene. Groups that already existed but were less visible, are given a wider exposure on national TV.

Even compared to Majles Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and his aides who call themselves "neo-cons," the new conservatives, the likes of Tehran Mayor Alireza Zakani, are far more ruthless in their quest for power, according to some local media.

While traditional conservatives started forging alliances following former President Hassan Rouhani's victory in the 2013 presidential election, this time, it is a new generation of conservatives that is marching to occupy positions of power and to get ready for the next parliamentary elections in February or March 2024.

Last week, the party known as the Selfless Devotees of the Islamic Revolution held its congress in Tehran. With two other parties, The Society of Sacrificial Warriors, and the Society of Wayfarers, the three groups are known in the Iranian political circles as the Conservative Triplet. The names these groups use can be defined as super-revolutionary labels, but in fact their leaders are nothing more than typical political actors in an authoritarian system who want a bigger piece of the pie.

Tehran mayor and a conservative force Alireza Zakani. File Photo
100%
Tehran mayor and a conservative force Alireza Zakani.

Currently, Iran’s parliament is dominated by the hardliner Paydari group, which has not always followed signals coming from the office of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The re-emergence of the triplet with new momentum, could be Khamenei's policy to introduce them as his favorite so that they could replace Paydari in 2024.

Apart from their leaders, most of the members of the three parties have been hitherto unknown. The Sacrificial Warriors come from a background of former revolutionary guards (IRGC), the Wayfarers are former, or current Basij militia members and the Selfless Devotees are the family members of the veteran soldiers of the 1980s Iran-Iraq war.

A meeting of a group of 'Sacrificial Warriors'. Undated
100%
A meeting of a group of 'Sacrificial Warriors'.

After Alireza Zakani took office as the Tehran Mayor last summer, many of the members of the Sacrificial and the Wayfarers have joined the Tehran municipality as managers. Meanwhile, as some newspapers in Tehran have noted, members of all the three parties frequently take part in news and current affairs programs on state television in a bid to build recognition and credibility for the future.

The Selfless Devotees have their roots in a pre-1979-armed group, which would have been characterized as terrorist if it was active today. The group's name was Saf (Rank) and its members included Yahya Rahim Safavi the former IRGC commander and the current military adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Low-ranking members of that group included current IRGC General Esmail Kowsari who has been a member of the Iranian parliament three times so far and every time he immediately went back to the IRGC to serve as a security officer. Kowsari was, for some time, the secretary-general of the party.

Rehim Safavi, military advisor to the Supreme Leader. FILE PHOTO
100%
Rehim Safavi, military advisor to the Supreme Leader.

All three groups were formed in the 2000s when the IRGC was beginning to become a major political and economic power in Iran.

Among the three groups, the Sacrificial Warriors is politically more important than the others and has been involved in making all the major decisions of the conservative camp. Former President Ahmadinejad was a member of the central council of this party when he became Iran's president in 2005. Its members include powerful conservative politicians such as Ali Darabi and Hassan Fadaei. The former was the deputy chief of the state television under three different heads of the state TV.

It appears that the three groups are preparing to seize the parliament and dominate the presidential administration as the "young revolutionaries" Khamenei wants for his ‘second step of the revolution,’ his jargon for his vision of Iran in the next 40 years.

Iran Website Claims Putin Was Stressed During Meeting With Raisi

Jan 21, 2022, 19:09 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Fars News Agency has claimed that Vladimir Putin was so overwhelmed in his recent meeting with the Iranian president that he became fidgety and had to tidy his tie to calm himself.

"Those who have seen the 21-minute footage released by Ria Novosti know how Putin looks stressed during the meeting, tidying his tie twice, moving his legs and shoulders. Why? Because he feels this is a very important political meeting that is vital for his country," a seven-minute-long video-commentary by media researcher Mohammad Lesani claimed.

The video-commentary entitled "Historical Arrangement, Iranian Power and Authority" which was published Friday by Fars news website affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) was widely circulated by other government-controlled media outlets.

"On the other hand, you see Mr. Raisi's serenity who is speaking calmly without moving his hands and legs," the video went on to say.

Many Iranian social media users have interpreted the placement of a massive table to separate the two presidents in the meeting as an intentional act to imply "distance" and said it was a sign of disrespect that Putin was chewing gum while Raisi was speaking. They have also pointed out that unlike most official meetings, the flags of the two countries were nowhere to be seen in the hall.

Drawing by an Iranian cartoonist showing Raisi praying in the Kremlin.
100%
Drawing by an Iranian cartoonist showing Raisi praying in the Kremlin.

While showing a photo of Putin's meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nicol Pashinyan at the same table sitting a closer and facing the Russian president, the narrator said Putin had a "haughty" and "emperor-like" demeanor while Aliyev and Pashinyan looked as if they were being "politically humiliated".

The Fars video went to great lengths to justify the mise-en-scene in the room. Showing photos of Putin's meetings with other foreign dignitaries in the same hall, including his meetings with the former German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the Venezuelan president Nicholas Maduro, the narrator said Putin meets foreign dignitaries in the same hall and "his important working meetings" at the same table.

"But the arrangement this time was a historical and unprecedented arrangement… Two political leaders are sitting at the two ends sides of the table…[resembling] balanced plates of a weighing scale," the video said.

"I wanted to make a response to those people who beat the drums of despair and think that the strategic agreements of our country with Russia, China, and other countries of the East …are supposedly equal to destroying our nation, identity, and Iran's power and authority," the narrator said in the video.

The publication of a photo of President Raisi praying at the same hall has also raised much controversy in social media. State media and hardliners say Raisi broke his meeting with the Russian president not to miss the noontime prayer and to display spirituality at a place where once atheists ruled.

Several Friday imams eulogized Raisi's move to stand to prayer at the Kremlin as a gesture of great significance. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's representative in Alborz province, Mohammad-Mehdi Hosseini-Hamedani, in his Friday sermon also predicted that Raisi may stand to prayer at the White House someday because his act of praying at the Kremlin "bore important messages".

Iran Cleric Says Raisi Will Pray At the White House One Day

Jan 21, 2022, 18:09 GMT+0

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's representative in Alborz province says President Ebrahim Raisi will offer Islamic prayers at the White House someday.

Mohammad-Mehdi Hosseini-Hamedani, a cleric, said in his Friday Prayer that Raisi’s prayers at Kremlin conveyed a very important message.

A photo of Raisi praying at the Kremlin during his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin has been advertised by many officials and followers of the Iranian president, including his wife that described it as a revelation of spirituality.

The photo has been used extensively in what appears to be a publicity campaign for Raisi amid public criticism of his government's efforts to expand relations with Russia and China. Among Iranians the names of both countries are associated with communism and atheism.

During their Friday Prayer sermons, representatives of Khamenei all over the country praised the image, calling it an important event.

Mohammad Ali Nekounam, the Friday Prayer leader of Shahrekord, described Raisi’s prayers at Kremlin as a “conquest” and the Friday Imam of Esfahan said it showed that “We only rely on God”.

The contents of Friday Prayer sermons delivered by Khamenei's local representative in various cities are dictated by two state bodies close to Khamenei's office, officially known as "The Policy-making Council for Friday Prayer Imams" and the "Friday Prayer Headquarters," both dominated by hardliner clerics.