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Many Iranian Prisoners Injured As Guards Open Fire At Inmates

Iran International Newsroom
Dec 17, 2022, 19:35 GMT+0Updated: 17:40 GMT+1
A view of Karaj central prison near Tehran
A view of Karaj central prison near Tehran

Reports from Iran say there was a clash in a prison in Karaj, west of Tehran, on Saturday as a conflict erupted between prison officials and inmates.

Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says the conflict took place after the detainees protested to the transfer of several prisoners, who had been sentenced to death, to a separate section for execution.

At least 100 prisoners have reportedly been wounded after prison officers opened fire to suppress resistance by prisoners, says HRANA. One government official said a prisoner was killed when others threw rocks, but there is no independent confirmation of how he was killed.

Iranian officials usually either under-report the number of casualties or the information is released belatedly.

It is still not clear what the role of detained antigovernment protesters was in the prison clash, but an jailed human rights activist, Saeed Eghbali, send a message via phone that prison officials in recent days were constantly moving political prisoners to solitary cells, a move usually undertaken before executing people. This action was clearly intended as psychological torture.

“Prison officials were planning the execution of four inmates when a number of prisoners started chanting slogans. The protest turned into a confrontation with the intervention of the guards who shot and injured over one hundred,” an informed source told HRANA.

A man driving near the Karaj prison describes the heavy presence of security forces and firetrucks, as he calls on citizens to drive to the location

A witness who drove to the prison at around 20:00 local time, as calls went out to people to congregate outside to prevent the government from employing violence, told Iran International that it was impossible to approach the perimeter, but he could hear repeated gunshots.

“The prisoners broke a number of doors and cameras in protest against the violent behavior of the jail officials,” HRANA said.

The four prisoners, who are sentenced to death are now in solitary confinement, but their identity has not been revealed yet.

Some activists on social media called on the people to immediately congregate outside the prison to prevent another tragedy like the Evin prison fire in Tehran.

On October 15, a series of incidents including a fire, explosions and automatic gun fire occurred at Evin Prison. At least eight inmates died, and 57 others were injured according to government sources.

Officials said during a fight between several prisoners in Ward 6 and Ward 7, both of which are special prisons for financial and theft convicts, the sewing workshop of the prison caught fire.

However, some journalists and people on social media accused the Islamic Republic of setting the prison on fire intentionally.

This has led to some speculations on social media that the clerical regime is planning another Evin tragedy to kill some prisoners while it is under pressure by the international community for the execution of two protesters last week.

Meanwhile, Chief Justice of Alborz province Hossein Harikandi claimed Saturday that there was just a limited clash between the prisoners of “the drug dealers ward, during which a number of prisoners set fire to some blankets.”

He further alleged that the security of the prison is restored, and the prisoners are safe.

Some reports said the situation was tense near the prison in the evening and internet data is completely unavailable on mobile phones in Karaj.

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Father Of Teenager Killed By Iranian Regime Slams Injustice

Dec 17, 2022, 16:51 GMT+0

The father of a boy killed in Iran protests has lashed out at the judiciary saying that all Iranians are watching “the unjust actions” and justice will soon be served.

The father of Abulfazl Adinezadeh, a 17-year-old teenager who was shot dead by 24 bullets in the religious city of Mashhad, harshly condemned the execution of protesters ordered by Gholam-Hossein Mohseni Ejei, Iran’s Chief Justice.

“How is it possible that you issue a death sentence for the death of a Basij militiaman within 23 days, but in my son’s case, the murderer has not been identified after 70 days and you have not allowed our lawyers to investigate the case,” he said in an Instagram post.

Iranian security forces killed Abolfazl Adinezadeh by firing a shotgun at him at point-blank range in the city of Mashhad on October 8. He died as a result of liver and kidney damage caused by birdshot, according to the BBC.

Saeed Eghbali, a human rights activist and political prisoner, in an audio file sent to Iran International from a prison near Tehran, asked people to keep holding demonstrations to stop the execution of protesters in Iran.

Earlier, Amnesty International announced in a statement that at least 26 people who were arrested during the uprising against the Islamic Republic are at risk of execution.

Iranian Oil Industry Workers Stage Strikes In Several Cities

Dec 17, 2022, 14:26 GMT+0

Employees and workers at some industrial and operational units in Iran’s oil sector have gone on strike in several cities in the south of the country.

The protest actions have reportedly taken place in Mahshahr, Ahvaz, Asaluyeh, Gachsaran and Tang-e-Bijar.

Firefighters in Kharg Island and the staff of a chemical studies Company in the southern oil-rich regions have also stopped working on Saturday.

The Telegram channels of the Council for Organizing Oil Contract-Workers' Protests as well as the Free Workers’ Union have published details and photos of these protests.

According to reports, the strikes were held in protest to inattention to the demands of these workers, including higher wages and retirement bonuses.

In its latest statement, the Council for Organizing Oil Contract-Workers' Protests called for a nationwide strike by the workers saying that the move is to protest “lack of job security.”

The strikes are also seen as support for ongoing anti-regime protests. “We all know that executions and repressions serve to enslave us more, and workers would suffer the consequence,” reads the statement.

During the nationwide protests in Iran in the past three months, workers, and employees in various industrial, production and energy sectors have held numerous protest gatherings and strikes.

Low wages, non-payment of arrears, and inattention to their demands have been mentioned as among their main grievances.

US, Europe Continue To Voice Support For Iran Protests

Dec 17, 2022, 14:09 GMT+0

Three months into antigovernment protests in Iran, expression of international support continue, emphasizing that the regime must be held accountable for its crimes.

US State Department Deputy Spokesperson, Vedant Patel said the eyes of the world are upon Iran right now – and human rights violations – inflicted by Iran’s government on its own people must not go without consequence.

He told a press briefing on Friday Washington is gravely concerned that authorities reportedly continue to kill more of their own people in an effort to suppress peaceful protests.

“We also continue to remain deeply concerned about reports of mass arrests, sham trials, and now death sentences being handed down to protesters and carried out as well,” underlined Patel.

He further reiterated that the JCPOA is not the focus right now, and the US candidly remains very skeptical of anything coming out of Tehran on this issue, whether it be issues relating to the IAEA or other things.

Meanwhile, President of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola expressed solidarity with Iranians in a Tweet Friday saying “the women, men and all those protesting in the streets of Iran have inspired the world. We have stood by you and will stay with you.”

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) announced in its latest report that from September 17 until Friday, December 16, at least 495 protestors have been killed, of which at least 68 were minors.

UK Says Over 40 Iranian Officials Sanctioned In Past Three Months

Dec 17, 2022, 09:42 GMT+0

British Secretary of State James Cleverly says his country has sanctioned more than 40 officials of the Islamic Republic since the beginning of the protests in Iran.

UK’s foreign policy chief said in a tweet on Friday that “Three months ago today, Mahsa Amini died after her arrest by Iran’s 'Morality Police'. Since then, we've sanctioned over 40 Iranian officials.”

He further added that in total, the UK has sanctioned over 300 people and entities, including the IRGC in its entirety.

Nationwide protests that erupted after the death in police custody of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman Mahsa Amini on September 16 have posed one of the biggest challenges to the Islamic Republic since its establishment in 1979.

Britain announced sanctions December 9 against 30 people worldwide, including Iranian officials, for serious rights violations, such as the violence on protesters.

Iran executed the first detained protester December 8 after a sham trial, sparking worldwide outrage and condemnations. The execution is seen as part of a government strategy to intimidate ordinary people and activists from pursuing the almost three-month-old antigovernment protests movement.

In mid-November, Britain had slapped a new round of sanctions on 24 Iranian officials who played a role in cracking down on protests.

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

Prominent Ayatollah In Iran Condemns Execution Of Protesters

Dec 17, 2022, 09:27 GMT+0
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Iran International Newsroom

A few days after the execution of two detained protesters, a prominent cleric in Iran has voiced his objection to excesses and called for fair treatment of inmates.

At the same time, tens of Friday prayer Imams as well as some other hardliner clerics supported the executions and demanded longer prison sentences for protesters. One Imam, firebrand Ahmad Khatami in Tehran said that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei “speaks for God Almighty” and that his orders should be obeyed as sacred words.

Khatami added that confronting Khamenei is tantamount to standing against God and his saints and prophets.

Elsewhere in Iran, another cleric, a member of the Assembly of Experts, Abbas Ka'bi supported the protesters' execution and said at the Qom Seminary that protesters disrupt public security and thus they fight God and should be executed.

Many Iranian clerics as well as Muslim scholars in Iran and other countries have objected to the execution of protesters on religious grounds of punishing those “who fight God.”

Meanwhile, another hardliner, Ahmad Alamolhoda, who represents Khamenei in Khorasan Province in northeast Iran said on Friday that those who chant, "Woman, Life, Freedom" are godless. He also described those who are against compulsory hijab in Iran as "mercenaries."

Alamolhoda, who is the father-in-law of President Ebrahim Raisi, further claimed that God belongs to the Islamic Republic and that there is no God for the enemies of the clerical regime in Iran.

Ayatollah Alamolhoda (C) with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his son-in-law Ebrahim Raisi
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Ayatollah Alamolhoda (C) with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his son-in-law Ebrahim Raisi

Confronting the extremist clerics, Ayatollah Mostafa Mohaqeq Damad, the Chairman of the Islamic Studies group at the Iran Academy of Sciences has criticized the hardliners who call for maximum punishment, saying that individuals who have no legal knowledge of justice are forcing themselves upon the Judiciary .

Damad was also referring to a majority of Iranian clerical judges who happen to be ruling at the revolutionary courts, accusing them of lacking the academic background required for anyone who wants to be a judge.

After the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979, people with minimal educational background were appointed as judges as political appointees of the ruling clerics. As a result, many defendants and lawyers have pointed out that judges take their orders from the security forces and in fact the verdicts issued for political prisoners come from the intelligence organizations.

Damad also condemned the "unforgiveable" executions in the first years of the Islamic Republic as a stigma on the face of the Islamic government in Iran. He added that history will not forget the bloods spilled because of unfair and illegitimate punishment.

During the past three months as security forces have sent thousands of protesters to jail for taking part in protests, many inmates and their families have voiced concern about harsh treatment and brutality in Iranian jails and courts. Many inmates have complained that they have been denied the right to be represented by lawyers. As an example, Mashaallah Karami, whose son Mohammad Mehdi is in jail and sentenced to death told Etemad online that they have not been allowed to have their own lawyer. The court has appointed its own lawyer who does not answer his phone calls. Karami added that the revolutionary court tells the families that their children have apposed God and his prophet, while they were demanding democracy and freedom.