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Energy deficit forces Iran's government to shut down offices

Dec 16, 2024, 13:06 GMT+0Updated: 12:05 GMT+0
Streets blanketed in heavy snow as residents navigate through a snow-covered neighborhood under an umbrella, highlighting the winter conditions impacting daily life in Iran.
Streets blanketed in heavy snow as residents navigate through a snow-covered neighborhood under an umbrella, highlighting the winter conditions impacting daily life in Iran.

With freezing temperatures gripping Iran, the widespread closures of yet more schools, universities, and government offices has shown a deepening crisis in the country's energy sector.

On Monday, 18 provinces, including Tehran and Isfahan, were effectively shut down as authorities cited cold weather and energy consumption management for the disruptions.

However, ongoing gas and electricity shortages suggest systemic failures rather than mere seasonal challenges.

According to state media, government operations were fully suspended in provinces such as East and West Azarbaijan, Ardebil, Razavi Khorasan, Golestan, and Gilan. In regions including Khuzestan and Yazd, partial closures and delays in operations highlighted the varying severity of the crisis, leaving only four provinces unaffected.

Alongside freezing temperatures, pollution in provinces like Khuzestan added to the crisis, with six cities classified as hazardous.

Sadegh Ziaeian, head of Iran's Meteorological Organization, reported subzero temperatures at 480 of the country's 675 weather stations, with 28 provincial capitals experiencing freezing conditions. However, the closures have failed to prevent continued gas and electricity outages, exposing the vulnerability of the country’s energy infrastructure.

Hassan Mousavi, spokesperson for Iran’s National Gas Company, confirmed that 850 million cubic meters of gas were injected into the network on Saturday, with 71% allocated to households, small businesses, and industries.

“The gas consumption in the residential, commercial, and small industrial sectors has increased by 17% compared to the same period last year,” he added.

Officials have warned of gas pressure drops in the national network, reflecting the fragile state of the energy system.

Blackouts and power plant shutdowns

The crisis has forced shutdowns at gas power plants in provinces including Golestan and Lorestan. Mehran Amiri, head of Lorestan's Electricity Distribution Company, announced the closure of the Doroud power plant.

"Gas-fired power plants in the province, with a capacity of 130 megawatts, have been taken offline due to increased gas consumption by users," said Amiri.

"The province's power plants, including the Doroud power plant with a capacity of 90 megawatts, are currently out of operation."

Ahmad Mousavi from Golestan’s Electricity Distribution Company reported similar shutdowns in Aliabad Katoul and smaller plants.

Scheduled blackouts in Golestan now last up to two hours per day for each consumer.

The power sector is under immense strain, with many recalling the widespread blackouts of summer 2023 when the failing energy grid struggled to meet demand in extreme heat.

Now, winter has exposed similar deficiencies in gas supply, with citizens enduring heating shortages and intermittent power outages despite government claims of network stability.

In an attempt to manage the crisis, officials have called on citizens to conserve energy through campaigns like Two Degrees Less, urging households to reduce heating. The initiative has drawn widespread ridicule on social media, with critics dismissing it as an inadequate response to systemic infrastructure failures.

A masked pedestrian walks under heavy snowfall, shielding themselves with an umbrella as winter intensifies, causing widespread closures and disruptions across Iran. (Undated)
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A masked pedestrian walks under heavy snowfall, shielding themselves with an umbrella as winter intensifies, causing widespread closures and disruptions across Iran.

Iranian citizens, already burdened by rising energy costs, have expressed growing frustration with the government’s lack of transparency. Officials continue to attribute disruptions to cold weather while avoiding acknowledgment of the underlying issues in the nation’s energy infrastructure.

Only on Sunday, schools and government offices in Tehran and many other provinces were declared fully or partially closed due to factors such as snowfall, rainfall, temperature drops, energy management, air pollution, and dust storms.

Tehran was also shut down on Wednesday and Thursday last week.

Iran's energy problems are not new. Decades of underinvestment in the power and gas sectors have left the country ill-equipped to handle seasonal surges in demand, the closures, pollution, and blackouts this winter serving a reminder of the government’s inability to address long-standing weaknesses in the energy grid.

As temperatures drop and frustrations rise, the government's vague reassurances and temporary measures offer little comfort to citizens enduring yet another season of misery while at least one third of Iranians are now living below the poverty line amid the country's economic disaster.

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Kurdish political prisoner at risk of execution for helping injured protesters

Dec 16, 2024, 13:05 GMT+0

An Iranian-Kurdish political prisoner faces execution in Iran for providing medical supplies to protesters injured during the Women, Life, Freedom uprising in 2022.

Rezgar Beigzadeh Babamiri, who was arrested in April last year, now stands accused of a litany of charges, including moharebeh (enmity against God), espionage, and rebellion, in a case marked by torture and judicial misconduct.

If convicted, Beigzadeh could face the death penalty. According to his daughter, Zhino, her father has denied all charges except anonymously delivering medical supplies and purchasing a Starlink device for personal use.

“My only crime was the humanitarian act of providing medicine for the injured,’” here father said, she told Iran International.

Beigzadeh, 47, a farmer and father of three, was apprehended by intelligence officers in Bukan and transferred to Urmia, where his family says he endured months of torture during interrogations.

His daughter described how he suffered beatings that left him with bruises, open wounds, and a ruptured eardrum. Despite filing complaints and requesting medical examinations to document the abuse, no action has been taken.

Zhino contends that the accusations against her father are baseless and serve as a tool of political repression. “He was so certain of his innocence that he didn’t go into hiding, even when others involved in providing medical supplies were being arrested,” she said.

Iran has faced widespread condemnation from the likes of Amnesty International for its execution of political prisoners, forced confessions under torture, and sham trials, particularly in the aftermath of the 2022 Women, Life, Freedom uprising.

Following mass protests sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody, Iranian authorities have executed several protesters in what human rights organizations describe as grossly unfair legal proceedings.

Rights groups and the UN's office of the commissioner on human rights (UNOCHR) have found that detainees are often subjected to brutal torture to extract false confessions, denied access to independent lawyers, and prosecuted in trials lacking due process, with sentences handed down swiftly to warn against dissent.

These executions have been branded by the UNOCHR as a tool of state repression to silence opposition and instil fear among a population demanding justice and fundamental freedoms.

Political prisoner Rezgar Beigzadeh Babamir (undated)
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Political prisoner Rezgar Beigzadeh Babamir

Legal experts speaking to rights group Hengaw, which focuses on Kurdish minority rights in Iran, have highlighted numerous irregularities in Beigzadeh's case.

"The sources emphasized that the charges against Beigzadeh Babamiri are fabricated, and the investigation process has been fraught with significant procedural flaws," the rights group said this week.

He and 13 other defendants were initially forced to rely on a single court-appointed attorney, a move criticized for undermining their defense. Court sessions were later held via video conference, with defendants and their lawyers isolated from each other, preventing effective legal representation.

In addition to political charges, Beigzadeh faces allegations in a separate criminal case involving the murder of a local resident, Mohammad Ali Mohammadi, in March 2023. Despite no evidence linking him to the crime, he is accused of orchestrating the killing.

Legal experts speaking with Iran International on condition of anonymity have criticized the lack of precedent for such a charge under Iranian criminal law, describing it as part of a broader effort to discredit him.

Beigzadeh’s case is just one of thousands caught up in the crackdown on those associated with the Mahsa uprising, particularly in Kurdish regions. Tens of thousands of dissidents have been arrested since 2022 and hundreds more executed each year in a bid to quash dissent.

“In this system, even humanity is a crime,” his daughter Zhino said, emphasizing her father’s innocence and calling on the international community to intervene before it is too late.

Who is the new Syrian leader’s Iran point man?

Dec 16, 2024, 09:52 GMT+0
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Shahed Alavi

Syria's new ruling Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) has appointed a deputy for Iranian affairs known for his jihadist sermons as the group builds ties with Iran's Sunnis in a bid to reduce Tehran's influence in the country.

The appointee, Abdulrahman Fattahi—an Iranian-born Sunni cleric and former imam—brings a history of Salafi activism and ideological influence that could help shape HTS’s strategy toward Iran and the Kurdish regions.

Sources close to Fattahi, who withheld their identity for security reasons, told Iran International that his early influence drew criticism from Iranian authorities and eventually led to multiple arrests, culminating in his imprisonment before his departure to Syria in 2015.

Shaped by Salafi teachings

Fattahi’s religious education began in mosques in Mahabad, where he studied Islamic theology under Kurdish clerics. His leanings toward Salafi ideology deepened after he traveled to Iraqi Kurdistan in 1992 to study under Abdulqader Tawhidi, a leading figure in the Tawhid Movement for Iranian Sunnis. Tawhidi’s teachings, rooted in emulating the practices of Salafism, shaped Fattahi’s doctrinal beliefs.

Fattahi, also known as Abu Safiya al-Kurdi, has spent decades advocating Salafi-jihadi ideology. Born in Sulgheh, a village near Mahabad in Iran’s Kordestan Province, his early life and religious studies set the foundation for a trajectory that led from local leadership to regional prominence.

After completing his studies in 1996, Fattahi joined the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan, which maintained ties with Iran’s government. He returned to Iran in the late 1990s, where he became the imam of Ziveh, a village near Mahabad. His Salafi views gained him followers but also drew scrutiny, with Iranian authorities repeatedly detaining him. His last arrest in 2011 resulted in a three-year sentence in Rajaei Shahr Prison near Tehran.

Abdulrahman Fattahi, Iran affairs aide to Syria's de facto leader Muhammad al-Julani (undated)
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Abdulrahman Fattahi, Iran affairs aide to Syria's de facto leader Muhammad al-Julani

Rise in Syria’s jihadist networks

After his release in 2014, Fattahi left Iran and joined jihadist groups in Syria, where he became a prominent figure in the Movement of Sunni Migrants of Iran. This HTS-aligned faction, formed in 2019, consists of Iranian Sunni jihadists who pledged allegiance to HTS’s predecessor, Jabhat al-Nusra.

In HTS-controlled Idlib, Fattahi rose to senior positions, serving as a Sharia judge and Mufti. Video footage shows him delivering fiery sermons in Kurdish, praising figures like Osama bin Laden and denouncing Iran’s Shia rulers as “Rawafid” (rejectors). In these speeches, he vowed to “liberate Iran’s Sunnis from occupation.”

The source who spoke to Iran International detailed Fattahi’s ability to inspire Kurdish jihadists. His rhetoric, the source said, “combines religious authority with political strategy, making him a key figure in HTS’s evolving regional plans.”

Fattahi’s reported appointment as deputy for Iranian affairs to HTS leader Abu Mohammad al-Joulani signals a potential shift in the group’s regional strategy.

Al-Joulani recently described Iran’s presence in Syria as a significant threat. He said: “We were able to end the Iranian presence in Syria, but we are not enemies of the Iranian people.”

Fattahi’s Kurdish roots and ideological stance position him to influence HTS’s approach to both Iran and the Kurdish regions. His prominence suggests that HTS is leveraging Iranian Sunni dissidents to consolidate its control in Idlib while countering Tehran’s influence in Syria.

For Tehran, Fattahi’s role represents a direct ideological and strategic challenge. His leadership highlights the enduring influence of transnational Sunni jihadist networks and highlights the vulnerabilities posed by Iranian Sunni dissidents.

As HTS seeks to balance its Salafi roots with pragmatic goals in Syria’s fragmented conflict, figures like Fattahi demonstrate the group’s adaptability.

His ascent could also further complicate Iran’s efforts to maintain its foothold in Syria - a key smuggling route to its military allies in the region and trade route amidst sanctions - while countering the resurgence of Sunni militancy on its borders.

Salafis, an ultraconservative branch of Sunni Islam, emphasize a return to the practices and beliefs of the early Muslim community (the Salaf Salih or pious predecessors) and often view later interpretations of Islamic teachings as deviations.

Their rigid adherence to this ideology has historically put them at odds with Shia Muslims, whom they label as Rawafid (rejectors) for not recognizing the legitimacy of the first three caliphs and for their veneration of Imams. Salafis accuse Shias of deviating from the core principles of Islam, regarding many of their rituals and beliefs as innovations (bid’ah) forbidden in Islam.

This animosity has fueled sectarian tensions in regions where Salafis seek influence, often leading to violent clashes. Militant Salafi-jihadi groups, such as ISIS and al-Qaeda, have taken this opposition to an extreme, targeting Shias in their campaigns, excommunicating them (takfir), and justifying violence against them as part of their broader ideological and political objectives. This sectarian divide continues to play a significant role in the dynamics of conflicts across the Middle East.

Image of Abdolrahman Fattahi in Rajaei Shahr Prison in Iran (Undated)
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Image of Abdolrahman Fattahi in Rajaei Shahr Prison in Iran

Kurdish members of the Movement of Sunni Migrants of Iran training militarily in Idlib (undated)
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Kurdish members of the Movement of Sunni Migrants of Iran training militarily in Idlib

Abdolrahman Fattahi (in white shirt) in a meeting with Abu Mohammad al-Julani (on chair) in Idlib (Undated)
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Abdolrahman Fattahi (in white shirt) in a meeting with Abu Mohammad al-Julani (on chair) in Idlib

Israel carries out heaviest attack since 2012 on Syrian coast - monitor

Dec 16, 2024, 09:50 GMT+0

Multiple large explosions shook Syria's coastal areas, home to Russian and pro-Assad bases, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, as Israel continued its week-long bombing campaign targeting military installations across the country.

In addition to the airstrikes on positions in the 23rd Brigade of the Aerial Defense and the headquarters of the 23rd Brigade, targets included missiles depots and launchers, radars at a military airport, and bases in the 107th Barracks on Sunday.

“Violent explosions were heard in Tartus due to consecutive strikes and explosions of ground-to-ground missiles from the warehouses,” the rights group said on Monday.

“These are considered the most violent strikes in the area of the Syrian coast since the start of the airstrikes in 2012,” they added. SOHR said no casualties were reported.

Since the beginning of Syria's civil war in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria to quash Iran’s influence as it used the Arab state to smuggle supplies to its military allies in the region such as Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The strikes reported by the SOHR in Tartus were picked up by Israel’s earthquake monitor late Sunday night, although there has been no confirmation of the connection.

A 3.1 magnitude temblor, said to be 20km deep, was reported by the Geographic Survey of Israel’s seismology department at 11:49 pm Sunday night, with its epicenter about 28 kilometers (17 miles) off the coast of the city of Banias.

Volcano Discovery, an earthquake monitoring site, also reported that it had received four reports from Syria and Cyprus for the earthquake reported at 12:48am on Monday, said to have been felt in up to approximately 20 km (12 mi) away. It said the quake was 5km deep.

While Israel continues to reiterate it has no interest in conflict with Syria and never comments on strikes, since the fall of President Bashar al-Assad, it has carried out a series of strikes on weapons facilities and research centers in preventive action as the new Sunni leadership takes control, including destroying leftover chemical weapons facilities from the Assad government.

Israel has troops inside the buffer zone and slightly beyond, as it continues to act to prevent a repeat of the October 7 attacks last year which saw Iran-backed Hamas infiltrate the country, killing over 1,100 people and taking more than 250 hostages.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement that the latest developments in Syria increased the threat to Israel, "despite the moderate image that the rebel leaders claim to present".

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday: "We have no interest in a conflict with Syria”, actions in Syria intended to "thwart the potential threats from Syria and to prevent the takeover of terrorist elements near our border," he added.

Iran no longer the same country after Israeli blows - Netanyahu

Dec 15, 2024, 22:22 GMT+0

The Israeli prime minister says his country's attacks against Iran and its allies in the region over the past few months have destroyed the so-called Axis of Resistance led by the Islamic Republic and changed Tehran's behavior.

"A year ago, I said we'd change the face of the Mideast, and we're indeed doing so. Syria is not the same Syria. Lebanon is not the same Lebanon. Gaza is not the same Gaza. And the head of the axis, Iran, is not the same Iran; it has also felt the might of our arm," Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement on Sunday.

Since the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, the Israeli military has been engaged in a multi-front war against Iran and its allied militants. The Israeli offensive has led to a chain of events that resulted in the decimation of Hamas and Hezbollah, the killing of their leaders and commanders, and direct attacks on Iranian soil.

Iran also lost the route it used for arming Hezbollah after the fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, one of its most important allies in the Middle East who was toppled in a swift offensive by rebel groups led by the Hayat al-Tahrir al-Sham (HTS).

Since Assad's downfall, Israel has ramped up its airstrikes against the positions of Syrian army and Iran-backed militants across the Arab country on the pretext of preventing rebels from accessing advanced military assets that might be used for attacks against the Jewish state.

"On Saturday, Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem said so openly: 'Hezbollah has lost its military supply route through Syria.' This is, of course, additional testimony to the severe blow with which we have struck the entire Iranian axis," Netanyahu said in his statement.

However, he warned that the IDF airstrikes will continue to prevent Tehran and its proxies from attacking Israel. "I unequivocally declare to Hezbollah and to Iran: In order to prevent you from attacking us, we will continue to take action against you as necessary, in every arena and at all times."

Syria's de facto leader hits back

The ongoing Israeli airstrikes against Syria have outraged HTS leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, better known as Abu Muhammad al-Jolani.

In an interview published on Syria TV's website, the rebel leader urged Israel to halt its strikes, saying the attacks cannot be justified as Iranian and Hezbollah forces are no longer operating in the Arab country.

Netanyahu on Sunday said his country has "no interest in a conflict with Syria."

"We will determine Israeli policy regarding Syria according to the reality on the ground. I recall that for decades Syria was an active enemy state toward Israel. It has attacked us repeatedly. It allowed others to attack us from its territory. It allowed Iran to arm Hezbollah through its territory. In order to ensure that this does not recur, ever, we have taken a series of intensive actions in recent days," the Israeli prime minister said.

Iran hangs 11 in one day, moves political prisoner to solitary cell for execution

Dec 15, 2024, 20:55 GMT+0

Iran executed 11 detainees on Sunday and transferred a political prisoner to solitary confinement over the weekend ahead of his imminent execution, sparking fresh condemnation from rights groups.

Among the detainees executed, seven were hanged in Yazd Central Prison in central Iran and four in Zahedan Central Prison in the southeast, on charges of murder and drug-related crimes, Norway-based rights group Hengaw and local rights group Haalvsh reported Sunday.

Reports from rights groups indicate that at least 34 prisoners were executed in Iranian prisons between Wednesday to Sunday this week.

Meanwhile, on Saturday, political prisoner Saman Mohammadi-Khiyareh was transferred to solitary confinement in Ghezel Hesar Prison in Karaj – a move typically signaling an imminent execution.

His family has been summoned for a final visit, according to information obtained by Iran International.

Mohammadi-Khiyareh, arrested at 19, was sentenced to death on alleged charges of "waging war against God" through "membership in anti-regime groups."

Rights group Hengaw said that his death sentence was overturned last year and replaced with a 15-year prison term, with his release expected this year during Yalda Night, a national winter celebration. Despite this, he was transferred on Sunday, signaling the reversal of his commuted sentences.

A close associate of Mohammadi-Khiyareh told Hengaw that he was expected to be released during next week’s Yalda Night – an Iranian celebration of the winter solstice.

Hengaw reported that Mohammadi-Khiyareh was denied the right to choose his own lawyer during his trial and court proceedings.

He was reportedly subjected to severe torture during his detention, forcing him to make false confessions. He was coerced into admitting responsibility for the killing of Khalifeh Ebrahim Farhadi in Qorveh and the murder of a military officer in Sanandaj during the 2009 Green Movement protests, Hengaw added citing an informed source.

The news of Mohammadi-Khiyareh’s imminent execution comes as rights groups on Saturday reported the transfer of another political prisoner, Mohammad-Amin Mahdavi Shayesteh, to solitary confinement. Oslo-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) warned on Saturday that Shayesteh faces execution on charges of "insulting Islamic sanctities" and "collaboration with the enemy."

Iran’s escalating execution trend, coupled with the looming sentences for political prisoners, signals what rights groups describe as a deliberate effort by the Islamic Republic to instill fear and maintain control amid ongoing domestic unrest.

According to a November 21 report by US-based rights group HRANA, at least 133 executions were documented in the past month alone, averaging more than four per day. This follows data from the Iran Human Rights Organization, which recorded at least 166 executions in October.

HRANA’s reports reveal an annual average of 811 executions between October 2023 and October 2024, encompassing both political detainees and ordinary prisoners.