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Category archive "Exclusive"08/6/30 : Students Interrupt and Expose the Attempted Assault on a Female Student by the Vice Chancellor of Zanjan University08/5/31 : The Pursuit of Arbitrary Detention Committe Meeting on the First Anniversary of Ghassaban, Tavakoli and Mansuri Arrest08/4/7 : Three Consecutive Days of Demonstrations by Students of Tarbiat-Moallem University of Karaj |
30 June » 5 Years Prison for Hana Abdi is Unfair 30 June » Suspending Tehran Emrooz Daily 23 June » AFP: Students Protest Sexual Harassment in Iran University 23 June » AP Media: Iranian Students Protest Sexual Harassment 11 June » Unprecedented Revelations against Senior Iranian Clerics 31 May » Sixty Years of Human Rights Failure – Governments Must Apologize and Act now 31 May » Mohammad Feda’i , Juvenile Offender, Is Facing Imminent Execution 31 May » Unofficial Military Rule in Shoosh 31 May » The Washington Post Report on New Restrictions for Websites in Iran 21 May » Deep Concern on the Condition of Dr. Alireza Alavi and Behrouz Javid Tehrani » » Archive
A Warning to Iran’s Student Movement, Hossein Bastani it is easy to predict that the success of student activists in imposing their will and demands on government officials at academic institutions, such as the Teachers Training college and Zanjan University (where the students boldly took the initiative into their own hands), would result in a backlash by extreme right-wing officials who would plan an “instructive” counter-attack against the student movement.Hopefully such a reaction will not come. But from an analytic perspective, one must not negate it altogether. We hope that by being alert and preventive measures, the student movement will be able to pass the next few weeks and months with minimum turbulence and costs.
The Image of the Regime? Omid Memarian This is the reason that the moment imprisoned students step out of prison, it becomes clear to every one why they were put behind bars: for simply criticizing the president. It becomes instantly clear why they were subjected to interrogations and what questions were asked of them. These are the events that portray the image of this country. Students, social activists and journalists are certainly not on the list of those that dent this image. The publication of the arrest of students because of their criticism of the president brings forth a caricature image of Mahmud Ahmadinejad which does not match the claims that he made at Columbia University or the image that the regime strives to present about its standing.
Iran: A Bad Year for Human Rights, Say Activists There are at least 70 young people on death row who at the time of their arrest were under the age of 16. In the past 12 months, Iranian organisations claim that 80 feminists have been arrested and 20 of them have been sentenced from three to five years in jail. A total of 54 journalists have ended up in prison, several were released without trial after serving jail time, while others remain behind bars. In the past 12 months, 34 newspapers and magazines, among them the feminist magazine Zanan, have been shut down.
Disclosing Statement of Suffering by the Families of Tavakoli, Ghasaban and Mansouri: Details of the Polytechnic University Students Torture The families of Majid Tavakoli, Ahmad Ghasaban, and Ehsan Mansouri are releasing a Disclosing Statement of suffering to Ayatollah Hashemi Shadroudi, in an attempt to reveal what has happed to these three students while in prison. This letter states that 80 days after the trial of these three individuals, they are enduring mental and physical injuries as a result of being imprisoned and it has been requested of the judiciary to report on their condition.
Jail No Deterrent for Iranian Women’s Rights Activists Western diplomats and rights groups see the detention of women activists as part of a wider crackdown on dissent, which they say may be in response to Western pressure over Iran’s nuclear work. Iranian authorities have also clamped down on "immoral behaviour", including women flouting the strict Islamic dress code, since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the presidency in 2005 with his pledge to revive revolutionary values. The women's rights activists say their campaign is not focused on what they wear, even if outsiders see conservative dress codes as a symbolic and visible barrier to equality.
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