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Newly Elected Iranian Hardliners Try To Assert Their Influence

Iran International Newsroom
Mar 17, 2024, 11:18 GMT+0Updated: 10:55 GMT+0
A session of the Iranian parliament on March 5, 2024
A session of the Iranian parliament on March 5, 2024

Newly elected ultraconservative lawmakers are poised to leverage Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf's credentials in order to protect a hardliner threatened with exclusion from parliament by the IRGC.

All elected and re-elected members of parliament need to have their mandates approved first by the investigative committee and then in full session of the newly elected legislature.

Ghalibaf’s saga started when Hamid Rasaei, a newly elected hardliner politician attacked him in a TV program and on social media, calling the veteran politician, former IRGC general, mayor of Tehran and speaker of parliament a “hypocrite.” The IRGC media immediately came to Ghalibaf’s defense threatening that Rasaei’s credentials could be rejected in parliament. It is worth noting that Ghalibaf is a relative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and it is safe to assume that he enjoys his support.

According to Reformist figure Mohammad Reza Javadi-Hesar, the ultraconservatives at the new Majles (parliament) might take Ghalibaf's credentials hostage to make sure that Rasai's credentials get the approval of the parliament, and he can get away with undermining Khamenei's advice to avoid conflicts and controversies.

Javadi-Hesar also warned that hardliners might use all their political muscle and influence to back the motion to reject Ghalibaf's credentials to blackmail him and his supporters and get Rasaei's credentials through the vetting during the next parliament's first two weeks in May and June.

Iranian parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf    (undated)
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Iranian parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf

The elections were marred by the lowest turnout in the 45-year history of the Islamic Republic. Official numbers said 41 percent voted in the March 1 elections, although many observers looking at partial numbers published believe the turnout might have been around 30 percent. Also, millions of people cast invalid ballots to show their dismay at the existing conditions in the country. All this has put the legitimacy of the new parliament in serious doubt.

There were as many as 500,000 invalid ballots cast in Tehran alone, with some hardliners getting elected with around 5% of all eligible votes in the capital.

Another lawmaker, Massoud Pezeshkian, who won the elections only after Khamenei intervened to avert his disqualification by the Guardian Council, told reformist Shargh newspaper that the newly elected hardliner lawmakers have very limited experience and knowledge. He explained that the regime is underestimating potential damage by barring the candidacy of many experienced politicians from the elections and putting the ultraconservatives in majority of the new parliament.

Pezeshkian reiterated his concern, stating, "The new lawmakers are incapable of addressing the country's major challenges." Additionally, he criticized the government, highlighting its failure to deliver on numerous promises regarding housing, employment, and tackling economic corruption. He further remarked, "The government has failed to fulfill even one of the many promises it made."

He further argued that "I cannot say the Majles and the government ignore the country's problems, but their decisions are problematic and those who should carry out these decisions are not capable of accomplishing their tasks. They lack the knowledge and experience for doing their job."

Meanwhile, hardliners continue to make outlandish claims about how successful the elections were. Esmail Kowsari, a hardliner and an IRGC officer said in an interview that “polling stations in Tehran were too busy and the waiting lines were too long in the morning, so voters decided to vote in the afternoon. The situation was the same in the afternoon, so they decided to go to the polls during the night, but the polls were still busy."

However, numerous videos taken by citizens showed empty polling stations in the capital and other large cities. The lackluster elections has become another issue of legitimacy for the regime that faces intractable economic and other crises.



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Iran To Shorten Mandatory Military Service To 14 Months

Mar 17, 2024, 10:41 GMT+0

The Guardian Council of Iran has officially endorsed a plan to reduce the mandatory military service period to 14 months from the current timespan of 17 to 24 months.

Hadi Tahan Nazif, the spokesperson for the council, announced the decision on Saturday. The Guardian Council is a 12-member body which checks if the legislations passed by the parliament are not against the country’s Constitution and the Islamic laws.

"With the amendments made by the parliament and in compliance with Article 4 of the Public Service Duty Law and within the framework of the measures of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, it (reducing the mandatory military service) was not considered contrary to the criteria of Sharia and the Constitution," he said.

Mohsen Dehnavi, a member of the parliament's presiding board, said in February that, "The average military service, including the training period, will be reduced to 14 months, meaning a minimum of three months reduction in the service of all soldiers."

Under the plan, individuals over the age of 35 with two or more children are exempt from compulsory military service, offering relief to a specific demographic.

Military service in Iran is obligatory for all Iranian men over 18 years old, except for certain exemptions outlined in the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The mandatory 21 to 24-month service has faced criticism due to the physical and psychological pressures on soldiers, sometimes leading to outcomes such as suicide or violent acts.

Recent reports of such incidents have further underscored the concerns. Last month, the prosecutor of Bam in Kerman province confirmed the death of a conscript due to self-inflicted gunshot wounds. Similarly, Iranian media reported on January 22 that a soldier stationed in a garrison in Kerman had killed five fellow soldiers before fleeing.

The decision to approve the reduction of the service, which had been sidelined for at least four years, follows recent reforms in conscript payments.

In November, Iran introduced a new salary structure for its soldiers, who can now receive variable monthly salaries ranging from $60 to a maximum of $180. The current minimum wage in Iran is around $150 a month with the average income between $150-250.

Israel Hits Damascus As Iran Hints At Giving Syria Weapons

Mar 17, 2024, 07:54 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

Israel struck multiple sites in Syria hours after Iran hinted that it would give Syria weapons to "boost" its military power.

In a meeting between the defense ministers of Iran and Syria Saturday, the Iranian official said his country is willing to “utilize its full capabilities” to help Syria strengthen its “defense and deterrence” against Israel and the United States.

Shortly after, the Syrian army announced that Israeli missiles had hit “several points” in southern Syria early Sunday local time, injuring one soldier and causing some “material damage”.

No more details were offered immediately, neither by Syria nor by Israel –which rarely comments on such events. Several local sources reported, however, that the targets had links with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) and were located around the Syrian capital, Damascus.

Syrian opposition sources indicated Israel launched missiles from the Golan Heights targeting the Damascus countryside. Some reports spoke of large explosions lighting up the night sky.

Israel is known to launch frequent airstrikes inside Syria, often targeting IRGC-related sites or personnel. These airstrikes have intensified since October 7, when Hamas forces stormed Israeli territory bordering Gaza, killing more than a thousand civilians and soldiers.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) has recorded 24 Israeli attacks inside Syria this year, killing more than 40, including members of Hezbollah and the IRGC.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards have scaled back deployment of senior officers in Syria due to a spate of deadly Israeli strikes and were relying more on allied Shi'ite militia to preserve their sway there, Reuters reported in February.

The attacks early Sunday seem to have hit a weapons depot linked to Iran and a military airport, both in the outskirts of Damascus. SOHR has said that two Hezbollah bases in north-east Syria have been targeted.

It’s unclear if the timing has had anything to do with the meeting between the defense ministers of Iran and Syria Saturday –where the Iranian general warned Israel and America not to ‘intensify’ the ongoing crisis in the region.

Iran and its regional allies, identifying themselves as the Axis of Resistance, have been in a state of heightened military tension since last October, but have so far managed to avert a full-blown war, thanks also to the Biden administration’s reluctance to confront Iran.

The Israeli government, however, has been far more willing to launch direct attacks on Iranian interests, especially in Syria, where several IRGC officers were killed a few months ago. As a result, the regime in Tehran seems to have slowed the flow of its IRGC personnel into Syria.

The scale and significance of the latest attack is yet to be known. So is Iran’s response, if any. Recent history suggests that Iran prefers to let such attacks go unanswered, focusing instead on enabling and coordinating its allied groups to keep threatening US and Israeli interests.

Reports emerged Friday that senior Houthi and Hamas representatives held a rare meeting in Lebanon last week to discuss “expanding confrontations and encircling" Israel. Other Palestinian factions were also present at the meeting, according to AFP, including the Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

The aim, AFP reports, was to find ways to “coordinate their actions of resistance" for the "next stage" of the war in Gaza. It is hard to imagine Iran –or IRGC’s Quds Force, to be more specific– not having played a leading role in this.

Law Enforcement Officer Killed In Attack In Southeast Iran

Mar 16, 2024, 23:40 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

A law enforcement officer lost his life while two others sustained injuries during an armed confrontation with unidentified people in Saravan, southeast of Iran.

The clash, reported by Iranian media outlets citing the Sistan and Baluchestan Police Information Center, took place Friday afternoon.

The incident unfolded between police forces and occupants of a Peugeot vehicle in a village near Saravan county.

The fallen officer has been identified as Ali Kouchakzaie by the Baluch news website Halvash, which also highlighted the critical condition of one of the injured officers. No individual or group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Previously, Jaish al-Adl, a militant group advocating for enhanced rights and improved living conditions for the Baluch ethnic minority, has conducted numerous assaults on Iranian security forces in the province.

Domestic media outlets have refrained from publishing any updates regarding the arrest or casualties of the attackers.

The incident adds to the concerning trend of armed attacks targeting government forces in Sistan and Baluchestan, as well as violence by government forces in recent months. On Thursday, a young Baluch activist was killed by unknown assailants in another part of the province.

Prior incidents, such as the attack on a police station in the village of Shuru near Zahedan on January 25, and an armed assault on a checkpoint near Rask on January 10th, resulting in the death of at least one law enforcement officer, underscore the escalating violence in the region.

Turkey Detains Iranian Over Running Betting Sites, Money Laundering

Mar 16, 2024, 22:24 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

Turkish Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya has announced the arrest of an Iranian citizen for his involvement in illegal betting sites, money laundering, and organized crime.

In addition to the main character, Sa’dollah Amirshaghaghi, three other people have also been detained in connection with the case, and six people are being sought, Yerlikaya wrote on X on Saturday.

Amirshaghaghi, aka Saeed Amiri, used someone else’s identity to stay in a hotel in Izmir and was arrested while preparing to flee abroad. Turkey’s interior minister also said that Amirshaghaghi was the head of an organized crime group that runs illegal Iranian betting and gambling sites. It is not yet clear whether he has been arrested at the request of Iranian officials.

The report further added that during the operation, $120,000, €80,000, 9 luxury watches, 15 companies worth $500,000, 10 cars, and partnership shares in 17 houses and buildings and 9 other companies were identified, discovered, and seized upon court order.

Amirshaghaghi’s name has been in the news for a long time after accusations by Iranian officials. In an interview with Iran International in September 2021, he had claimed that some people accuse him of running betting sites because they do not want the identities of the real administrators to be revealed. “I am sure that the operators of the betting sites are inside Iran,” he stressed.

"I'm not involved in politics, and I respect the Islamic Republic. However, I'm puzzled as to why I'm consistently portrayed as the central figure behind these sites," Amirshaghaghi told Iran International.

Betting is forbidden in Iran as it violates Islamic Sharia law. However, many Iranians argue that the network of betting sites is launched or at least supported by the Iranian government as these sites can freely use Iranian bank payment gateways for their transactions.

According to the Iranian media, those behind such websites reportedly employed Turkey-based Instagram influencers and celebrities such as Milad Hatami and Davoud Ghaffari, known as “Davoud Hazineh,” to lure Iranians into gambling over the past years. Both individuals have been arrested and deported to Iran.

Hatami was sentenced to death in October 2023 over such allegations as “corruption on earth” and “widespread promotion of corruption.”

The most famous figure linked to betting sites is Amirhossein Maqsoodlou, an Iranian rapper better known by his stage name “Tataloo.” Turkish authorities detained and extradited him to Iran in December.

Tataloo's alignment with the regime was evident when Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei praised one of his songs titled "Nuclear Energy." Khamenei described it as having a "good melody" and "good content," expressing satisfaction that it had unsettled the "enemy."

Although in custody in Iran, the latest news from Iranian officials indicated that he has written an apology, which can help his legal case.

Tataloo also backed Ibrahim Raisi’s failed campaign in Iran’s 2017 presidential elections.

In 2021, Mehr news agency, close to Iran’s hardliners, estimated the total turnout of the Persian gambling sites to be over 5,000 billion rials (around $200 million a year).


Iranian Baluch Activist Killed Amid Ongoing Tensions

Mar 16, 2024, 21:08 GMT+0

Naim Arbabi, an Iranian Chabahar resident and participant in the 2022 anti-government protests, was shot dead by four armed assailants on Thursday.

Arbabi, who had been arrested during September 2022, was subsequently granted temporary release from Zahedan's Central Prison upon posting a substantial bail.

"Four unidentified armed individuals riding two motorcycles attacked Naim in the Chabahar Free Trade Zone near the Lipar Hotel, where he was camping. He was shot directly in the head with four bullets, resulting in his death due to the injuries sustained," Baluch sources reported Saturday.

The circumstances surrounding his murder remain shrouded in mystery, with sources suggesting involvement by security forces due to his continued political activism on social media.

Arbabi's death underscores the ongoing struggles faced by Baluch Iranians, particularly in Sistan-Baluchestan Province, where minority groups have endured repercussions for their involvement in the 2022 protests. The province, predominantly Sunni Baluch, has witnessed a heavy-handed response from the regime, with dissenters facing harsh punishments, including execution.

The Baluch people have long been targets of persecution in Iran, with a significant number of executions occurring within their populations. Many Baluchis face execution on drug-related charges, yet activists argue that they are often denied fair trials. The regime's use of drug charges is seen as retaliation for persistent protests following Friday prayers. These communities, residing in one of Iran's most impoverished regions, struggle with high unemployment and inadequate infrastructure, leading some to resort to fuel, goods, and even drug smuggling as a means of survival.