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A young Iranian's plight in Turkey underscores horrors of refugee life

Negar Mojtahedi
Negar Mojtahedi

Iran International

Jan 31, 2025, 07:00 GMT+0Updated: 11:46 GMT+0
Iranian refugee Sina Rostami currently held in deportation camp in Turkey.
Iranian refugee Sina Rostami currently held in deportation camp in Turkey.

35-year-old Iranian refugee Sina Rostami, who is detained in a Turkish deportation camp for not having proper documentation, is routinely awakened in the morning with the strike of a jailer's baton.

Sina is the portrait of the Iranian youth. Opposed to the theocratic establishment, he dreams of a better life in the West, but what he has experienced in his pursuit of freedom illustrates the grim reality of what many Iranian refugees face.

“The way they treat us here is like we’re not humans,” said Sina, speaking to Iran International.

Sina’s sleeping quarters that he shares with six people and the washrooms have no lights. Sina said he often has to wait 12 to 14 hours before he is permitted to recreation outdoors.

“I wasn’t even registered for food (rations) until recently and other Iranians would bring me food—which is not really edible anyway,” he said.

At the height of the Woman, Life, Freedom uprisings sparked by the death of young woman Mahsa Jina Amini in Iranian morality police custody in September 2022, Sina was one of tens of thousands of demonstrators arrested.

Sina described 18 days of interrogation, saying the night before his transfer to Tehran's notorious Evin prison that he was threatened with death unless he confessed. The next day he was blindfolded and threatened more.

"Prepare for your execution. Write your will if you have anything to say," Sina said his Iranian interrogators told him in prison.

However, he believes the threats of execution were part of their psychological torture. He was released from prison a few weeks later.

Sina felt life wasn't safe anymore after being released and decided two years later it was time to leave his homeland for new beginnings - but what awaited him was worse, he said.

Smugglers and victimizing refugees

After escaping Iran on a perilous journey in June 2024, Sina initially sought refuge in Turkey. He and a friend paid to make their way to Greece en route to the West when he was detained by Greek authorities.

Sina said he and his friend from Iran were searched by two armed men, wearing what he described as commando fatigues. They were then forced onto a pickup truck where they were dropped off at police headquarters.

After being questioned by Greek police, Sina said authorities bundled him and his friend onto another truck manned by a group of masked men. Sina said they were smugglers.

They were beaten with metal pipes, he said, and what happened next left Sina scarred for life. Sina said he was gang raped by the smugglers.

It happened at gunpoint, Sina said, adding that his hands were tied behind his back.

The smugglers took him and other refugees across the Evros River and back into Turkey to Istanbul.

Sina’s therapist, Azadeh Afsahi who was put in touch with him through other Iranian dissidents aware of his case, has been connecting with him since he was smuggled back into Turkey in June.

Sina was staying in insect-infested, illegal hostels until he was caught by Turkish authorities while trying to see a lawyer to legally leave the country.

“The trauma that he is enduring every day and now that he was put in camp in this deportation camp, all of those memories are coming back to him,” Afsahi told Iran International. “He is diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and severe depression. He has nightmares. He can't sleep."

Afsahi, who is of Iranian origin and lives in California, said Sina’s life is in danger either by suicide or death at the hands of Iranian authorities should he be repatriated. She communicates with Sina by telephone.

“He has suicidal thoughts. He is very depressed," said Afsahi who made the assessment of Sina as a clinical therapist.

"I have his permission to talk about this. Usually, I don't talk about what's happening in therapeutic sessions because it's against confidentiality. But the reason I'm talking right now is because his life is in danger," she added.

The conditions in the deportation camp only further put his life in peril, and he feels unsafe in that environment, fearing he could become a victim of sexual assault again, according to Afsahi.

"He thinks that is going to happen again," added Afsahi.

Sina is speaking out, using his real name to raise awareness on the plight of Iranian refugees. It's a rare move as most Iranian refugees are too afraid to come forward given their precarious situation.

39,000 Iranians were registered as refugees in Turkey in 2019, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency.

Afsahi advocates to help save Sina's life and to push for change.

"For the three years that I've been working with the refugees in Turkey, the government is resembling the Islamic Republic, said Afsahi "I want the curtains to be open so we can see what the Turkish government is doing to the Iranian refugees."

Afsahi feels Sina's status under international and Turkish law as a refugee is being ignored.

In the meantime, Sina's life hangs in the balance, not knowing how much longer he has to live in the camp or if he could possibly be deported back to Iran.

"I want people to know what is happening that's why I am allowing my voice and name to come out," said Sina.

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Iranian actress in Oscar-nominated film hit with charges, travel ban - Deadline

Jan 30, 2025, 20:52 GMT+0

An Iranian actress featured in a film recently nominated for an Academy Award has been barred from leaving Iran and faces propaganda and immorality charges, according to US entertainment news site Deadline.

Soheila Golestani faces charges of propaganda against the Iranian government and promoting immorality due to her role in the film The Seed of the Sacred Fig, directed by dissident Iranian film maker Mohammad Rasoulof.

The official ban came as she was due to attend the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) and judge the competition alongside other luminaries of the international film industry.

Nominated as Germany's entry for the best international feature Oscar, The Seed of the Sacred Fig chronicles the protest movement in Iran sparked by the 2022 death in custody of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, after her arrest for not wearing a hijab.

Rasoulof’s lawyer, Babak Paknia, disclosed in April that several crew members associated with the film had been summoned by authorities, with some facing interrogation and others barred from international travel.

Deadline said in its report that Rasoulof, who fled Iran last year, will attend the festival and speak at a panel titled “Cinema and the Rise of Authoritarianism” on February 3.

Iran Air blocks flight to Paris over privatization dispute

Jan 30, 2025, 18:17 GMT+0

An Iran Airtour flight set to fly from Tehran to Paris on Friday was canceled due to an objection by state carrier Iran Air over a commercial dispute, a source told Iran International.

The spat blocked what would have been the first flight by an Iranian airline to Europe in nearly three months as sanctions on the country have deepened.

Iran Air's flights to European Union countries were suspended in October last year due to sanctions imposed by the bloc over its involvement in the transfer of Iranian-made UAVs to Russia for use in its war against Ukraine.

Earlier on Thursday, state-affiliated media quoted Iran's Civil Aviation Authority as saying the French government had unexpectedly canceled Iran Airtour's license for flight B9 9770 from Tehran to Paris.

Promised ticket-holders a full refund, the airline blamed the French Civil Aviation Authority for revoking its flight permit without explanation.

The source told Iran International that it was a complaint by the state operator Iran Air that prompted France to cancel permission for the flight.

Iran Airtour and its CEO failed to fulfil commitments during the company’s transfer, the source added, meaning the airline is still considered a subsidiary of Iran Air, the Islamic Republic’s flagship airline.

A review by Iran International found that the privatization process was not complete and there are no legal documents confirming the company’s change into a private-sector entity.

Iran Airtour was established in 1973 by Iran Air and is based in Mashhad in northeast Iran.

Google says Iran-backed hackers use its Gemini AI for research

Jan 30, 2025, 17:35 GMT+0

Google says Iranian state-backed actors online are using the tech giant’s AI chatbot Gemini to research defense organizations, foreign governments, and dissidents abroad.

"Iranian government-backed actors accounted for the largest Gemini use linked to advanced persistent threat actors," the company’s Threat Intelligence Group said in a report on Wednesday.

"Across Iranian government-backed actors, we observed a broad scope of research and use cases, including to enable reconnaissance on targets, for research into publicly reported vulnerabilities, to request translation and technical explanations, and to create content for possible use in future campaigns."

State-backed hackers have stepped up strategic intelligence gathering and disruptive cyberattacks, an online security firm reported last year.

Iran views cyberspace as another front in what it describes as a religiously-ordained fight against the United States and Israel.

"Their use reflected strategic Iranian interests including research focused on defense organizations and experts, defense systems, foreign governments, individual dissidents, the Israel-Hamas conflict, and social issues in Iran," Google said.

"Rather than enabling disruptive change, generative AI allows threat actors to move faster and at higher volume," it added.

Google reported that Gemini's safeguards blocked attackers from exploiting it for more advanced attacks like extracting information to influence Google products.

Analysts have long been warning that generative AI, which produces text or media content based on what the user types, can be leveraged to support hacking and disinformation campaigns.

Iranian cyberattacks are now a major problem for governments, industry and cybersecurity professionals globally.

Iran-related hacking groups—which are frequently associated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)—have been routinely engaged in cyber espionage, cyberattacks and disinformation.

The operations commonly aim at infrastructure, financial institutions, political enemies and foreign adversaries.

Canada moves to deport suspected Iranian official - Global News

Jan 30, 2025, 16:09 GMT+0

Canadian authorities have launched deportation proceedings against an Iranian woman they say was a senior member of the Iranian government, Global News reported on Thursday.

According to the report, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) requested a deportation hearing for Elham Zandi on January 7 under regulations targeting high-ranking officials from Iran, citing the country's Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB).

No date has yet been set for the proceedings and Zandi's alleged role within the Iranian government have not been disclosed, the report said.

The CBSA told Global News it could not discuss the matter due to privacy reasons, while Zandi’s lawyer declined to comment.

Citing government records, the Canadian news outlet reported that Zandi first arrived in Canada as a tourist before applying for a work permit.

When immigration officials investigated her background, the report says she sued the government over delays, seeking $10,000 in damages.

Her case also reportedly caught the attention of Liberal MP Patrick Weiler’s office, which reached out to Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada at least five times on her behalf.

In July last year, Canadian immigration authorities initiated deportation proceedings against five suspected senior Iranian government officials residing in Canada.

CBSA alleged that these individuals held senior positions in Iran’s government and has requested the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) to conduct hearings on these cases.

Prior to that in March 2014, Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) ordered the deportation of Salman Samani, Iran's deputy minister of interior during Hassan Rouhani's term as president.

The tribunal’s verdict was issued in accordance with sanctions imposed on Iranian officials following the 2022 nationwide protests in Iran, sparked by the killing of Mahsa Jina Amini in the custody of the so-called morality police.

Salmani was the second high-ranking Iranian official who had been ordered to leave Canada. In February, Majid Iranmanesh, a director general at Iran's Vice-Presidency for Science and Technology, was also forced to leave.

Canada first barred members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards' (IRGC) leadership in October 2022.

“The designation of a regime is a permanent decision. This means that more than 10,000 members of the IRGC leadership, for example, will be inadmissible to Canada forever,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said at the time.

In June 2024, after pressure from members of the diaspora, Ottawa moved to officially designated the IRGC as a terrorist organization, effectively barring thousands of senior Iranian officials, including top IRGC members, from entering Canada.

FATF opponents are profiteers of Iran's isolation, economist says

Jan 30, 2025, 14:11 GMT+0

Economist Ali Ghanbari has criticized opponents of Iran joining the money laundering watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), accusing them of benefiting from the country's isolation.

"Those who oppose Iran's joining the Financial Action Task Force are profiteers of sanctions and Iran's isolation and want to benefit from this isolation for themselves," he told ISNA in an interview published on Thursday.

He argued that claims that joining FATF would hinder oil sales are unfounded. "The claim that some individuals make, that joining FATF will make it impossible for us to sell oil, is an incorrect justification; because the whole world knows who our oil buyers are."

"Not joining FATF and selling oil through unofficial channels causes about 30% of the proceeds from exports to go into the pockets of intermediaries,” he added.

Ghanbari pointed out that out of 200 countries, only three—Iran, North Korea, and Myanmar—remain outside of FATF. "Even Russia, which has political and commercial relations with us, says join FATF, and if you do not do this, we cannot have economic and commercial exchanges with you," he added.

He expressed hope the Expediency Discernment Council would support FATF membership, which he said has traditionally had negative views about the organization.

The Expediency Discernment Council, which mediates disputes between parliament and the Guardian Council (a constitutional watchdog), became involved after parliament approved the legislation but the Guardian Council rejected the two bills concerning the Palermo and CFT conventions regulating money laundering and financing of terror groups.

Last month, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei approved revisiting the two critical international conventions required to ease banking restrictions resulting from Iran's blacklisting by the FATF.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), established by the G7 member countries to safeguard the international financial system, influences banking policies in most countries and guides businesses aiming to protect their own integrity and reputations.

Iran's status on the FATF blacklist has had a major impact on its international banking operations. The country remains on the list of high-risk countries with serious strategic deficiencies in countering money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

Iran needs to finalize legislation enabling the enactment of two international conventions: the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) and the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (Palermo Convention).

The dispute between the parliament and the Guardian Council was referred to the Expediency Council in 2019 for arbitration.

The Expediency Discernment Council, which mediates disputes between parliament and the Guardian Council (a constitutional watchdog), became involved after parliament approved the legislation but the Guardian Council rejected the two bills concerning the Palermo and CFT conventions regulating money laundering and financing of terror groups.

The Expediency Council has stalled the matter since then, neither approving nor rejecting the bills. The inaction is apparently due to objections from hardliners, such as the Chairman of the Expediency Council Sadeq Amoli Larijani.

They argue that joining the conventions would harm Iran's national security by exposing its dealings with regional Tehran-backed allies—precisely the activities these international agreements are designed to address.

Iran will remain on the FATF's list of High-Risk Jurisdictions Subject to a Call for Action until it fully implements its action plan, including ratifying the Palermo and CFT. Only then will the FATF consider next steps, such as suspending countermeasures.