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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 2:55:58 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
thats a lie and you know it. thats why I dont like you



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 3:10:10 PM
From: Ichy Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Len

The Isra'Elis kill ten times the amount of women and children the Arabs kill.

The Isra'Elis do it with the American government's blessings and the U.S. taxpayer's money and equipment.


The Israelis did suggest a spay and neuter program for Palestine but for some reason the UN objected......



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 4:30:28 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
link or lie



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 5:57:59 PM
From: Scoobah  Respond to of 32591
 
The mullahs’ agents abducted and brutally murdered president of Iraqi Women Syndicate
Thursday, 18 January 2007
NCRI - The mullahs’ agents abducted and brutally murdered president of the Iraqi Women Syndicate (IWS), Ms. Amereh Abdul-Karim Al-Aqabi in Iraq.

Ms. Al-Aqabi was one of the fierce opponents of the Iranian regime’s meddling in Iraq. She was also one of the co-sponsors of the historic statement by 5.2 million Iraqis in June 2006 which called for eviction of the mullahs’ regime from her country.

Ms. Al-Aqabi was involved in extensive activities to improve the role of Iraqi women in the society. As the president of IWS, she led a major resistance against fundamentalism and increasing restrictions imposed on Iraqi women.

In a letter to the speaker of the Iraqi National Assembly and Vice-President, she wrote, “I, as a patriotic Iraqi woman, in solidarity with female members of the Mojahedin in Ashraf City, home to the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), call for reaffirmation of the political refugee status of 1000 Mojahedin women who are against the mullahs’ regime in Iran.”

The Iranian Resistance expresses its condolences to Al-Aqabi family and calls for condemnation of the gruesome murder by international human rights organizations as well as women rights organizations. It reiterates on the need for a firm stance in regards with export of terrorism by the regime to Iraq.

Last June 5.2 million Iraqis in their statement called for the eviction of the regime from Iraq and reminded the mullahs’ crimes such as “mass murders, assassination of national figures, abductions and ever more growing waves of arbitrary arrests in Iraq.” It went on to add that the Iranian regime has targeted “security, life, and democracy” in Iraq and had pushed the country to the brink of virtual collapse.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
January 18, 2007

The mullahs’ agents abducted and brutally murdered president of Iraqi Women Syndicate
Thursday, 18 January 2007
NCRI - The mullahs’ agents abducted and brutally murdered president of the Iraqi Women Syndicate (IWS), Ms. Amereh Abdul-Karim Al-Aqabi in Iraq.

Ms. Al-Aqabi was one of the fierce opponents of the Iranian regime’s meddling in Iraq. She was also one of the co-sponsors of the historic statement by 5.2 million Iraqis in June 2006 which called for eviction of the mullahs’ regime from her country.

Ms. Al-Aqabi was involved in extensive activities to improve the role of Iraqi women in the society. As the president of IWS, she led a major resistance against fundamentalism and increasing restrictions imposed on Iraqi women.

In a letter to the speaker of the Iraqi National Assembly and Vice-President, she wrote, “I, as a patriotic Iraqi woman, in solidarity with female members of the Mojahedin in Ashraf City, home to the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), call for reaffirmation of the political refugee status of 1000 Mojahedin women who are against the mullahs’ regime in Iran.”

The Iranian Resistance expresses its condolences to Al-Aqabi family and calls for condemnation of the gruesome murder by international human rights organizations as well as women rights organizations. It reiterates on the need for a firm stance in regards with export of terrorism by the regime to Iraq.

Last June 5.2 million Iraqis in their statement called for the eviction of the regime from Iraq and reminded the mullahs’ crimes such as “mass murders, assassination of national figures, abductions and ever more growing waves of arbitrary arrests in Iraq.” It went on to add that the Iranian regime has targeted “security, life, and democracy” in Iraq and had pushed the country to the brink of virtual collapse.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
January 18, 2007




To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 5:58:58 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Seven prisoners hanged in past four days in Iran
Wednesday, 17 January 2007
NCRI - Seven prisoners were hanged in the past four days, the state-run news agencies Fars and IRNA reported.

A young man, identified as Arash, was hanged in the town of Mobarkeh in the central Province of Isfahan. Two prisoners were hanged in southwestern city of Ahwaz. Three prisoners, identified as Eskandar Abbassi, Vahid and Jamshid Abdi, were hanged in northern city of No-Shahr. One of the victims was hanged in the city’s stadium. Another prisoner, identified as Mahmoud T., was hanged in the Mahalati Square in the central city of Qom.

Simultaneous with the increasing crisis that has engulfed the regime, it has stepped up executions dramatically. On Monday, the French News Agency reported from Tehran that since the beginning of the month 11 prisoners had been executed.

The Iranian Resistance urges all international human rights organizations to condemn the arbitrary executions by the mullahs’ medieval regime and calls for the referral of the regime’s human rights dossier to the United Nations Security Council.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
January 17, 2007



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 5:59:41 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Iran: Quashing of child offender’s death sentence highlights need for urgent legal reform

The outcome of the retrial of 19 year old Mahabad Fatehi, known as Nazanin, as a result of which she no longer faces execution, highlights the urgent need for legal reform in Iran to prevent those accused of crimes committed before they are 18 being sentenced to death.

On 14 January 2006, judges in a Tehran criminal court cleared Nazanin Fatehi of pre-meditated murder following a trial session held on 10 January, but ordered her to pay diyeh (blood money) to the family of the man she killed in self-defence in March 2005. She had been sentenced to death for murder in January 2006, but following international protests, including by a Canadian-Iranian beauty queen Nazanin Afshin-Jam, her death sentence was quashed by the Supreme Court in May 2006 and her case sent for retrial.

In another case, musician Sina Paymard, who was convicted of murdering another youth when he was 16 and sentenced to death, has reportedly had a stay of execution ordered by the Head of the Judiciary. In September 2006, a few days after his 18th birthday, Sina Paymard was scheduled to be executed, but was granted a last minute reprieve at the gallows by the family of the victim, who were moved by his playing of the ney (a Middle Eastern flute), his last request. His execution was postponed for two months while it was referred to conciliation but the victim’s family demanded diyeh of 150 million toumans (over $US160,000) which Sina Paymard’s family was unable to pay and Sina Paymard remained at risk of execution. His lawyer also asked for a review of his case in November 2006, after submitting new evidence that the court had not properly considered evidence that Sina Paymard suffered from a mental disorder.

At least 23 other child offenders reportedly remain on death row in Iran. Their names, and ages (where known) at the times of their alleged crimes are as follows:

1- Beniamin Rasouli, 17
2- Hossein Toranj, 17
3- Hossein Haghi, 17
4- Morteza Feizi, 16
5- Sa’eed Jazee, 17
6- Ali Mahin Torabi, 16
7- Milad Bakhtiari, 16
8- Farshad Sa’eedi, 17
9- Mostafa, 16
10- Mahmoud, 17
11- Saber
12- Hamid, 17
13- Sajjad, 17
14- Farzad, 15
15- Hossein Gharabaghloo, 16
16- Asghar, 16
17- Iman, 17
18- Ne’mat, 15
19- Mohammad Mousavi,
20- Delara Darabi, 17
21- Hamzeh S, 17
22- Shahram Pourmansouri, 17
23- Hedayat Niroumand, 15

As a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Iran has undertaken not to execute anyone for an offence committed when they were under the age of 18. Nevertheless, Amnesty International has recorded 21 executions of child offenders in Iran since 1990. In 2006, Iran and Pakistan were the only countries in the world to continue to execute child offenders (although Pakistan enacted in 2000 the Juvenile Justice System Law which abolished the death penalty for people under 18 at the time of the crime in most parts of the country). The Kurdistan Human Rights Organization has reported that in late December 2006, 22-year-old Naser Batmani was hanged in Sanandaj Prison for a murder committed when he was under 18. It appears that the authorities are keeping child offenders sentenced to death in prison until they pass their 18th birthday before executing them.

The Iranian authorities have been considering passing legislation to ban the use of the death penalty for offences committed under the age of 18 for several years. A bill establishing special courts for children and adolescents was reportedly passed by the Majles in the summer of 2006 but has not yet been approved by the Council of Guardians, which vets Iran’s legislation for conformity with Islamic principles.

The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, which monitors states’ compliance with the CRC, in January 2005 urged Iran immediately to stay all executions of people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18, and to abolish the use of the death penalty in such cases.

On 9 December 2005, Philip Alston, the United Nations Human Rights Commission’s Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, said “At a time when virtually every other country in the world has firmly and clearly renounced the execution of people for crimes they committed as children, the Iranian approach is particularly unacceptable... It is all the more surprising because the obligation to refrain from such executions is not only clear and incontrovertible, but the Government of Iran has itself stated that it will cease this practice.”

Amnesty International welcomes the news of the lifting of the death sentence against Nazanin Fathehi and the stay of execution order in Sina Paymard’s case, but is calling on the Iranian authorities to take immediate steps to prevent all executions of child offenders, and to take urgent measures to abolish the death penalty for all child offenders in accordance with Iran’s obligations as a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 6:00:43 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Mullahs’ regime announces it will soon carry out limb amputations in Iran
Thursday, 11 January 2007
NCRI - The chief of the regime’s judiciary in the western city of Kermanshah, Allah-Yar Malik-Shahi yesterday said, “Soon there will be a number of limb amputations in public in connection with robberies in [Kermanshah] Province.” (Official news agency IRNA, January 10, 2007)

He said, “The judiciary will cut off the hand which steals people’s properties in order to serve as a lesson for others… Carrying out several sentences in public will greatly decrease such crimes in society.”

The medieval regime has resorted to extreme measurers, such as limb amputation, eye gouging, flogging, and the degrading punishment of parading prisoners around towns, to combat the rising tide of popular uprisings and demonstrations in various provinces across Iran.

The Iranian Resistance calls on all international human rights organizations to condemn the medieval regime’s punishments and take urgent action to stop the barbaric and systematic violations of human rights in Iran.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
January 11, 2007



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 6:01:10 PM
From: Scoobah  Respond to of 32591
 
Chairman of mullahs’ Majlis Committee on Security admits 300 people sentenced to hanging in Iran
Thursday, 04 January 2007
NCRI - The Chairman of the mullahs’ Majlis Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy, Alaeddin Borujerdi, was quoted as telling a gathering of mullahs in the central city of Qom, “On a recent visit to some prisons, we witnessed 300 prisoners on death row. After the passing of two years they are still awaiting execution.” (State-run news agency ISNA, January 1, 2007)



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19684)1/22/2007 6:01:45 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 32591
 
Twelve prisoners executed in Tehran, Ahwaz and Rafsanjan in 24 hours
Thursday, 21 December 2006
NCRI - Yesterday, several hours after the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution condemning violations of human rights in Iran, state-run media reported that twelve prisoners were hanged in Tehran, the south-western city of Ahwaz and the southern town of Rafsanjan.

The mullahs’ regime’s henchmen hanged in public three Afghan citizens identified as Gholam Hazrat, Shah Mir and Nour Ahmad, the state-run daily Emrouz reported on December 19.