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Washington Targets Senior Iran Broadcasters Over ‘Free Expression’

Iran International Newsroom
Nov 16, 2022, 19:20 GMT+0Updated: 17:48 GMT+1
Ameneh Sadat and Ali Rezvani in an undated photo
Ameneh Sadat and Ali Rezvani in an undated photo

In its latest sanctions on Iran, the United States Wednesday designated six leading employees of its state broadcaster, IRIB.

The designation came under Executive Order 13846, made by then President Donald Trump in 2018 after he withdrew the US from the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement. Amid measures targeting Iran’s financial and energy sectors, EO 13846 empowered government departments to sanction entities implicated in “censorship or other activities with respect to Iran on or after June 12, 2009, that prohibit, limit, or penalize the exercise of freedom of expression…or that limit access to print or broadcast media.”

The US first designated IRIB (Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting) in 2013, and in 2018 reimposed the move in what then Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said was a part of “the maximum pressure exerted by the United States” after withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear agreement.

The six employees named Wednesday by the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) were, its announcement said, involved in “airing forced confessions in the style of documentaries,” had “worked directly with the IRGC [Iran’s Revolutionary Guards] to create false narratives for publication,” or simply had “acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, IRIB.”

The announcement said IRIB and its subsidiaries “act not as objective media outlets but rather as a critical tool in the Iranian government’s mass suppression and censorship campaign against its own people.” The statement said IRIB had since 2009, the year of protests over a disputed Iranian presidential election, “broadcast hundreds of forced confessions as well as defamatory content against hundreds more [people].” The Treasury statement took particular umbrage at broadcasts of forced ‘confessions’ of “dual nationals and foreigners.”

‘Interrogator-journalists’

Among the six cited Wednesday, Ali Rezvani and Ameneh Sadat Zabihpour were described as “interrogator-journalists” who had cooperated with Iranian intelligence organizations. Zabihpour, the Treasury statement said, had a “long history of direct involvement in…coerced confessions” including a 2017 broadcast implicating Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, the British-Iranian woman released in March after the United Kingdom paid a 40-year £400-million debt to Iran.

Peyman Jebelli was named as having “worked directly with the IRGC to create false narratives for publication,” including “many forced confessions of political prisoners.” Mohsen Bormahani, IRIB deputy director, had “replaced a number of directors of IRIB channels, reportedly with members of an ultraconservative political party.” Ahmad Noroozi was listed simply as head of the IRIB World Service, and Yousef Pouranvari as its director of programs and scheduling.

‘Change in behavior’

Under the designations, any property held by the six in the US can be impounded. Any dealings with them by anyone in the US are forbidden, with those ignoring this prohibition themselves liable to punitive action. “The ultimate goal of sanctions is not to punish,” the statement said, “but to bring about a positive change in behavior.”

United States special envoy Rob Malley met Tuesday with European ministers to discuss Iran policy after Malley said Monday there was “no magic in which we will find a new formula.” Malley has recently argued the US had no focus on reviving the 2015 nuclear agreement given Iran’s supply of drone to Russia and treatment of domestic protests. Iran has since 2019, the second year of ‘maximum pressure,’ expanded its nuclear program beyond limits set by the 2015 agreement, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action).

Canada, in its fifth package of Iran sanctions this year, also announced new measures Wednesday, designating six individuals allegedly involved in human rights abuses and two companies – Shahed Aviation and Qods Aviation – that Ottawa said have supplied military drones to Russia.

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Google Play Removes Iranian Regime’s Apps

Nov 16, 2022, 17:09 GMT+0

Google has removed three Iranian native messengers and two smart transportation applications controlled by the government from its digital distribution service Google Play.

Iranian website Digiato announced on Wednesday that the applications are Snap, TAPSI, Soroush, Bale, and iGap, and their accounts have been removed from Google Play.

Digiato claimed that based on its inquiries it has found out the applications are removed because of the sanctions on Iran.

The removal of Iranian applications from Apple and Google Store platforms is not a new thing and dates to 2017. Due to US sanctions against the authoritarian regime, Apple widely removed Iranian applications from the Apple Store.

Iranian regime has shut down two popular applications WhatsApp and Instagram since the beginning of popular antigovernment protests in September to restrict the free circulation of information about events taking place around the country.

Telegram, Twitter, and YouTube are also banned by the Iranian government while the top officials of the country have access to these platforms to spread their propaganda.

The clerical rulers say people are only entitled to use home-grown application like Soroush, iGap, and Bale which are now banned by Google.

Recently, social activists have launched a campaign to put pressure on Twitter to remove the account of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei who is ultimately responsible for human rights violations and the of killing the protesters.

US Targets Supply Of Iranian Drones To Russia In New Sanctions

Nov 15, 2022, 21:57 GMT+0

Washington Tuesday imposed sanctions on companies and people it accused of being involved in the production or transfer of Iranian drones that have been used by Russia in attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine.

Russia has procured drones from Iran that have been used to attack cities and power infrastructure in Ukraine.

Iran has acknowledged that it had supplied Moscow with drones but said they were sent before the war in Ukraine.

"As we have demonstrated repeatedly, the United States is determined to sanction people and companies, no matter where they are located, that support Russia's unjustified invasion of Ukraine," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in the statement.

"Today's action exposes and holds accountable companies and individuals that have enabled Russia's use of Iranian-built UAVs to brutalize Ukrainian civilians," she said.

The US Treasury Department, in a statement, said it imposed sanctions on the Shahed Aviation Industries Research Center, which it said was subordinate to Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force, accusing the firm of being responsible for the design and production of Shahed-series drones being used by Russian forces in Ukraine.

Also designated were United Arab Emirates air transportation firms Success Aviation Services FZC and iJet Global DMCC, which the Treasury accused of collaborating with an Iranian firm under US sanctions to coordinate flights between Iran and Russia, including those tied to transporting Iranian drones.

Treasury said the action against the two companies was taken in cooperation with the government of the United Arab Emirates.

Tuesday's move freezes any US assets of those designated and generally bars Americans from dealing with them.

Reuters report

Iran Calls New EU, UK Sanctions ‘Baseless’

Nov 15, 2022, 12:57 GMT+0

Iran has dismissed sanctions imposed this week by the United Kingdom and the European Union against Iranian individuals and entities claiming they are “baseless”.

Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, Nasser Kanaani called the new round of sanctions “illegal and interventionist.”

He also added that the European parties have lost their “rationality” as such a “wrong approach” would restrict their “scope of interactions.”

Kanaani also threatened that Tehran will take countermeasures against such actions based on its national interests.

The European Union sanctioned 29 Iranians and three entities Monday over what it said was human rights violations related to suppression of ongoing protests.

A statement issued in Brussels, where foreign ministers met, said the move was over “their role in the death of Mahsa Amini and the violent response to the recent demonstrations in Iran.”

Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told reporters that the new sanctions would “send a clear message to those who think they can suppress, intimidate and kill their own people without consequences.”

Britain also slapped a new round of sanctions on 24 Iranian officials who played a role in cracking down on protests after the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody.

In a press release on Monday the United Kingdom announced the “sanctions target officials within the Iranian regime who are responsible for heinous human rights violations.”

Ottawa Officially Bans Iranian Officials From Entering Canada

Nov 15, 2022, 09:59 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

Canada's government has announced senior officials of the Islamic Republic have been officially banned from entering Canadian soil.

Minister of Public Safety of Canada, Marco Mendicino, in a news release on Monday said Canada has designated the Islamic Republic of Iran as a regime that has engaged in “terrorism and systematic and gross human rights violations.”

“This means that tens of thousands of senior members of the Iranian regime, including many members of the IRGC, are now inadmissible to Canada,” added Mendicino.

The list of senior officials encompasses a wide array of individuals in a regime that stands accused of perpetrating crimes against the people of Iran and other nations.

Senior IRGC commanders  (undated)
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Senior IRGC commanders

According to the Canadian government, heads of state, members of the Cabinet, ambassadors, senior diplomats, members of the judiciary, senior military and intelligence officials and senior public servants are included in the list.

“In addition to being banned from entering Canada, current and former senior officials present here may be investigated and removed from the country,” added the press release.

Mendicino, further noted that “Ottawa is taking decisive action by designating the Iranian regime and its most senior officials including the IRGC … and the consequences will be severe.”

He said this is the strongest sanction imposed on the Iranian regime yet, reiterating “we will continue to stand up for women’s rights and fight for justice on behalf of the families of PS752. Canada will be a beacon for human rights around the world.”

Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752 was a scheduled international civilian passenger flight from Tehran to Kyiv, operated by Ukraine International Airlines. On 8 January 2020, it was shot down by the IRGC shortly after takeoff, killing all 176 passengers and crew aboard.

Meanwhile, Canada's Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Sean Fraser also asserted in a similar statement that senior officials of the Iranian regime and the IRGC are inadmissible to Canada.

Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Sean Fraser (file photo)
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Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Sean Fraser

“Canada is a country that many have come to in search of a safer and more prosperous future for them and their loved ones. Canada has a vibrant Iranian population, some of whom fled oppression in the past, and we are determined to take the most effective steps to keep them and all Canadians safe,” added Fraser.

Fraser went on to say that Iranian officials’ actions are reprehensible, and their views have no place in Canadian society.

In another development, Canada’s Prime Minister Trudeau in a tweet slammed the brutality of the Iranian government, saying “Canada denounces the Iranian regime’s barbaric decision to impose the death penalty on nearly 15,000 protestors.”

Expressing support for the Iranian protesters, Trudeau underscored that “the brave Iranians were fighting for their human rights – and we continue to stand united in support of them, and united against the regime’s heinous actions.”

The nationwide uprising, largely led by women, has seen daily protests in cities across Iran calling for an end to rule by hardline clerics in the aftermath of the death of a 22-year-old woman, Mahsa Amini, in the custody of morality police in September.

Back in October, Canada announced sanctions against Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), permanently banning over 10,000 of its officers from entering Canada.

At the time, Trudeau said Canada has had designated Iran's IRGC leadership, adding that “we will restrict financial transactions with the Islamic Republic of Iran associated with the IRGC and the proxies that support them. These actions are some of the strongest measures anywhere against Iran.”

UK Imposes Sanctions On Iran Over Protests Crackdown

Nov 14, 2022, 20:08 GMT+0

Britain has slapped a new round of sanctions on 24 Iranian officials who played a role in cracking down on protests after the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody.

In a press release on Monday the United Kingdom announced the “sanctions target officials within the Iranian regime who are responsible for heinous human rights violations.”

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly stated that by these sanctions the UK and its partners have sent a “clear message” to the Iranian regime that “the violent crackdown on protests must stop and freedom of expression must be respected.”

The Foreign Secretary expressed that Britain designates Iran’s Communications Minister Issa Zarepour as well as a number of law enforcement agents and IRGC officials who ordered and been involved in the clampdown on demonstrators.

The British foreign office further noted that Chief of Iran’s Cyber Police, Vahid Mohammad Naser Majid, will be targeted due to the internet shutdown and “disabling WhatsApp and Instagram, and banning the use of the Google Play app and virtual private networks (VPNs).”

Governor of Sistan and Baluchestan as well as Kordestan have also been sanctioned due to massacre of 80 people on September 30 in Zahedan and heavy crackdown on Kurdish protesters.

The name of Chief of Tehran Police could also be seen in the list. Hossein Rahimi is sanctioned for using live rounds and tear gas against students at Sharif University in Tehran.

The sanctions include asset freezes and travel bans.

Meanwhile, the European Union also approved a new round of sanctions Monday against 29 individuals and three entities with asset freezes and travel bans.