Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Iran: Inflation and corruption are two sides of the same coin

Iran: Inflation and corruption are two sides of the same coin




Corruption and skyrocketing inflation are hallmarks of the regime ruling Iran
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 29, 2019 - While Iranian regime President Hassan Rouhani expressed his optimism for Iran’s economy in a cabinet meeting on July 23 and his first deputy, Eshaq Jahangiri, claimed that the mullahs have overcome the economic crisis and reached the shores of stability, Iranian media announced the next day that inflation has crossed the 40 percent threshold.
Iranian state-run media reported on July 24 that inflation is 40.4 percent. “The government is the main culprit for increasing prices because by changing the price of the U.S. dollars that are used to import meat from 42,000 rials to more than 80,000 rials, they’ve created the conditions for increasing prices in the market,” they wrote citing Tehran’s pundits.
Mohammad Gholi Youssefi, an Iranian economic pundit close to the regime, says “the government’s aimlessness in organizing the country’s economy… has put us in a crisis riddled situation and implementing any decision is rendered very difficult and results in negative consequences.”
“Managerial inefficiencies and the inability of officials and concerned people to organize the country’s economic situation has led to an increase in poverty across the country. Economic pressure on the people is mounting every day,” he further said.

Tabnak website, close to Mohsen Rezaee, former Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) chief and current secretary of the Expediency Discernment Council, also weighed in on this matter. “It was supposed that electronic coupons are distributed among the people to support them. The issue has been studied for months and there is still no result. Or it was supposed that monetary subsidies are increased but that didn’t happen either,” he writes.
Tabnak’s article then concludes: “These issues lead to the gradual increase of the impact of rising currency prices in Iran’s consumer market.”
Vahid Shaghaghi, an Iranian economic pundit, says that considering that inflation has crossed the 40 percent mark, the current process will lead to a “50 percent inflation” over the next four to five months.
Jihad Azour, director of the International Monetary Fund’s Middle East and Central Asia Department, predicts that in light of increasing sanctions imposed on Iran, the country’s inflation rate will rise further to 50 percent this year.
“While sanctions waivers for buying oil from Iran are not extended and U.S. sanctions against Iran are increased, we predict that inflation in Iran will increase to more than 50 percent this year. It means an increase in living costs and consumer goods prices,” he said.

The Iran newspaper, Rouhani’s official mouthpiece, implicates the IRGC for economic failures by accusing this entity of running illegal financial institutions. “Monetary policies are not the unique mandate of the government anymore, and illegal monetary institutions have reached a point where they manage about 25 percent of the country’s total liquidity without accepting any supervision by the central bank. Appeasing this illegal institution is resulting in their corruption spreading over even to banks. This has brought an about huge financial crisis upon the government.”

Friday, July 26, 2019

Iran: How foreign currency at state-set rates are embezzled

Iran: How foreign currency at state-set rates are embezzled




Corruption is running rampant in Iran under the mullahs’ regime
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 26, 2019 - In Iran, the U.S. dollar is traded at two completely different rates: The state-set rate and the true rate set by the market. The state-set rate is at about 42,000 Iranian rials while the fluctuating real price of U.S. dollars set by the market is three times that amount, somewhere between 120,000 to 140,000 rials.
Traditionally, the purpose of this setup is to provide cheap foreign currency to importers of essential goods and services such as food and medicine, or raw materials that help Iranian factories produce at competitive prices. The dollars that are sold to the “private sector” at the low rate are covered with the foreign currency Iran receives through its crude oil sales. In a way, this should act as a type of government subsidy for essential goods and services, helping the Iranian economy to thrive.
However, to no one’s surprise that is not what actually takes place.
There are many institutions and individuals among the well-connected elite in Iran who are the actual recipients of the U.S. dollars at the state-set rate and instead of spending the money for its original purposes, the recipients import luxury items for their fellow oligarchs or simply deposit it in foreign accounts.
In the eternal fights among the different factions of the ruling elite in Iran, both sides are trying to blame their opponents for the corruption to avoid the increasing public outrage over poor economic conditions and blatant corruption.
In his recent visit to Northern Khorasan province, Iranian regime president Hassan Rouhani blamed profiteers for taking U.S. dollars at state-set rates and not importing essential goods.
“These profiteers took the dollars from us to import essential goods to cover the public’s needs, but cheated and used fake forms, and didn’t live up to their obligations, leaving the people to suffer,” Rouhani said.
Nonetheless, the fact is that the very profiteers Rouhani talks about are the governmental institutions or individuals with excellent connections to the top. Otherwise, they would not have received any foreign currency for importing goods.
“While providing foreign currency at state-set prices to government companies, we have repeatedly warned and the government has never listened,” says Gholam Ali Jafarzadeh, a member of the regime’s Majlis (parliament). “Ten thousand government companies have received subsidized foreign currency. If the government has been cheated while distributing subsidized foreign currency, it needs to go after the perpetrators. The government needs to identify the CEOs who did wrong and refer them to the judiciary.”
While profiteers received subsidized foreign currency, in many cases they sell their imported goods at real market rates.
According to Keyhan newspaper, the head of Iran’s Chicken Farming Association says: “During the Persian new year (March 21), the price of soy imported with subsidized foreign currency that should have been 24,000 rials per kilo reached 50,000 rials per kilo. Now that the set price for it is 24,500 rials, the end-user is getting it for 31,500 rials.”
“Just in the second half of the Persian year 2018-2019, more than $3.7 billion have been allocated for livestock food at 42,000 rials. However, the end product reaches chicken farmers at twice the price. The institution's responsible need to answer where the remaining hundreds of billions of rials of subsidies from the public’s pockets went?” asked the president of Iran’s Chicken Farmers Association.
Majlis member Vali Maleki describes another avenue of stealing foreign currencies at state-set prices and addresses Rouhani directly. “Immense economic pressure has devastated the people. In these circumstances, it is very painful to hear that foreign currencies are sold to charities, individuals, and companies that have infiltrated ministries and the Central Bank by forging documents and are importing secondhand equipment. Dear colleagues, please note that foreign currency at the rate of 42,00o rials was supposed to be used for essential goods. However, we have reports and documents that show this currency has not been used properly,” he said.
Gholamhossin Esmaily, spokesman for the judiciary says, “$157 million at state-set rates have been paid for importing paper. However, only about $57 million worth of it has been imported into the country.”

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Iran: Authorities detain political prisoner’s mother

Iran: Authorities detain political prisoner’s mother




Farangis Mazloom, mother of political prisoner Soheil Arabi
Reported by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 24, 2019 - A political prisoner’s mother, who has been vocal in defending her son’s innocence, was detained on Monday during a raid targeting her house involving seven male agents and a female agent of the repressive mullahs’ regime ruling Iran.
Mrs. Farangis Mazloom, the elderly mother of Soheil Arabi, a prominent Iranian political prisoner who has been in the Iranian regime’s dungeons since November 2013, was arrested and taken to an unknown location.
Mrs. Mazloom has time and again expressed concern and outrage over her son’s physical health in the prison.
Soheil Arabi, an Iranian blogger imprisoned for five years for opinions he posted on his Facebook. He recorded an audio message from inside the Greater Tehran Prison in November 2018. His message, sent on the occasion of International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, described the plight of Iranian women in prisons and the savage policies ofmisogynist mullahs ruling in Iran, was widely circulated on the web.

The following is Soheil Arabi’s audio message from prison:
Talk about the struggle against violence against women!
About your struggle against tyranny, discrimination, and violence in society against women;
Talk about the violence against women in Qarchack prison or Evin, talk about hunger strikes;
Talk about the interrogator’s assaults and threats against women in prison;
Talk about teary eyes and hands in the short visits in prison;
Indeed, fighting the violence against women has always been a must for any freedom-seeking movement in the face of sexual discrimination;
Ruling systems have been always creating the impression that men own women and women are men’s property;
This belief made me break the silence;
Silence in front of violence is a betrayal;
Stand up and speak out:
Speak out that my mother does not deserve violence;
Speak out that my sister does not deserve discrimination, and I don’t deserve superiority;
Stand up warrior, and break the ignorant beliefs;

I salute everyone who has stood up against sexual discrimination and stands tall in front of violence against women, and especially salute those who have paid the price of such true beliefs, by suffering in cold and damp prison cells and bearing the pain of lashes, and even those who felt the noose around their necks.
I salute mothers who have given birth and have raised freedom fighters; those who saw the violence and stood firm against it.
“Violence” is a word that deserves to be eradicated, and society needs people who will fight for this cause.
Now, it’s time to stand tall against those aggressive fists targeted against women and freedom fighters.
So I stand up and shout alongside the great freedom-loving women of my country:
No to violence against women.
No to compulsory hijab
No to the silence in front of violence
Stand up to teach our children that human beings deserve the best.

Monday, July 22, 2019

Iran: Mullahs fears consequences of widening rift among ruling elite

Iran: Mullahs fears consequences of widening rift among ruling elite




Iranian regime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s concerns are growing over escalating domestic rifts
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 20, 2019 - These days, rank and file of Iranian officials, from the Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei himself to the President Hassan Rouhani, and the rest don’t miss an opportunity to reiterate the importance of unity and solidarity to go through "current dangers".
What Iranian authorities deliberately miss in these calls is any meaningful reference to the real issue at hand between the Iranian people and an unelected and undemocratic government. However, since this particular struggle has been going on for over four decades, the ruling mullahs’ fear it can be seen as resurfacing time and again.
In a recent meeting with Friday prayer Imams, who are actually appointed by Khamenei himself, he warned of criticism targeting officials and government institutions during Friday prayers.
“We shouldn’t raise an issue immediately in Friday prayers when we see it in governmental, judicial, or other institutions,” Khamenei said, warning this “would increase the rifts and differences and agitate the population.”
Meanwhile, Massih Mohajeri, an Iranian mullah close to Rouhani’s faction, and the editor in chief of the Islamic Republic newspaper accuses the Friday prayer Imams and their speeches of escalating the rift between the population and the authorities. “The reason why participants of Friday prayers are decreasing over the past recent years is that there has been negligence in the necessary qualities for choosing Friday prayer imams,” he warned.
“There are Friday prayer imams who lack the necessary qualities and don’t have the ability to attract the people and unite them,” he wrote in the Islamic Republic newspaper.
Mohajeri continues by referring to the widespread disgust for the public Friday prayers, even by practicing Muslims. “In recent decades, a large amount of money and energy have been spent on building prayer sites in different cities. However, there hasn’t been much spent to significantly improve the quality of Friday prayer imams. The result is that we have praying sites but no worshippers and the number of individuals who participate in Friday prayers all over the country is a fraction of the population that actually prays. More importantly, the number of young people present is very small. This means that the Friday prayer imams lack connection to the current generation,” he explained.
In an interview on July 13, Amir Mohebbian, an Iranian strategist for the conservative camp, acknowledged the population’s hatred for the ruling elite. “Due to the disappointment about the management of [Iranian] political movements, the population has concluded that one political movement is like the other and there is no difference,” he said.
“The internal and external difficulties of the conservative movement is serious as is that of the moderates. The most important problem of conservatives is their weakness in political marketing for their opinions among the population,” Mohebbian said. “Eventually, the people will move beyond both [political factions],” he added.
Referring to the widespread hatred for the regime among ordinary Iranians, Arman newspaper wrote on  July 16: “The situation is such that the society is under the most severe economic conditions. In such circumstances, it is not easy to make the people optimistic about the future and their problems. And then we expect the youth to be cheerful and violence to be nonexistent in society.”

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Khamenei insists on continued JCPOA breaches

Khamenei insists on continued JCPOA breaches




Iranian regime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 17, 2019 - Merely one day after the European Union Council of Ministers’ session emphasized on the necessity for Iran’s regime to step back from its 2015 nuclear deal violations and abide by the agreement, Iranian regime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said this process will in fact continue.
“Our Foreign Minister is saying this very frankly that Europe has 11 commitments with us and they have not lived up to their end of the deal. Why should we? We have been loyal to our commitments in the JCPOA,” Khamenei said, using the acronym for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. “Now we have started to decrease our commitments and they are angry, saying why are you decreasing your commitments? How rude! You had 11 commitments and failed to live up to even one. Why are you asking us to live up to our commitments? Now we have just begun decreasing our commitments and this process will certainly continue,” he added.
Khamenei also made remarks over the seizure of the Iranian regime’s “Grace 1” supertanker by the United Kingdom near Gibraltar based on violating EU sanctions on the export of oil to Syria.
“This will not go unanswered,” Khamenei threatened. “Now, we have the treacherous UK take on piracy. They have actually stolen our ship. This is legalized piracy. This is how they behave. They commit the crime and seek to provide a legal framework to it, claiming the reason was this or that. However, the truth is piracy. Of course, this will not go unanswered.” 

Monday, July 15, 2019

Maryam Rajavi: Women’s Progress in the Resistance Movement is Indebted to an Incessant Battle Against Reactionary and Exploitive Thoughts

Maryam Rajavi: Women’s Progress in the Resistance Movement is Indebted to an Incessant Battle Against Reactionary and Exploitive Thoughts




Speech to the international conference at Ashraf 3 on women’s leadership in the Iranian Resistance
Albania, July 14, 2019 - At the “Free Iran” women’s conference in Ashraf 3, where women’s rights activists and dignitaries from around the world attended to express support for the Iranian Resistance, and to defying the misogynist regime ruling Iran, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, president of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, NCRI, welcomed the guests to Ashraf 3, home to members of the Iranian opposition, People’s Mojahedin of Iran, MEK.

She then addressed the conference. The following is the full text of her speech
My dear sisters from Albania, European countries, the United States, Canada, Australia, Asia and Arab countries who are attending this summit.
I would also like to salute my dear sisters, members of the big family of Resistance. Welcome to Ashraf 3.
And I hail the members of the Central Council of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), the majority of whom are participating in this gathering.
Such an assembly usually takes place on the International Women’s Day, but anywhere women come together to discuss their mission for freedom and equality, and for the emancipation of society in general, that day becomes a day for women.
This is particularly true for the women of Iran since they are defying and resisting against a fundamentalist and reactionary regime which is characterized by misogyny as one of its most prominent features.
Before the current regime seizes power in Iran, women participated in the uprisings in large numbers. This indicated a transformation in the status of women and their role in the democratic struggle. Women’s widespread participation in the anti-monarchic revolution had significant precedent in Iranian women’s past struggles. Specifically, in the 1970s, female vanguards actively participated in the revolutionary struggle against the Shah. Some of the most prominent among these pioneering women were Fatemeh Amini, Marzieh Oskouii, Azam Rouhi Ahangaran, and Ashraf Rajavi. The made great sacrifices to open the way for the revolution.
The regime which took over, however, is a misogynous theocratic regime. In 1979, when it seized power, it acted as a barrier or a wall in front of the roaring river of Iranian women’s progress and advancements.
I remember many of its days and moments. It seemed as if two hostile forces were face-to-face on the battlefield. The mullahs’ enmity against women and women’s abhorrence of and distrust in the new regime started on the very day Khomeini took power.
As soon as the revolution was high jacked and the mullahs seized power, they began their clampdown on women with the motto of “either the veil or a hit on the head.”
At the same time, women also started their resistance against this regime, a resistance which has continued to this date.
I would like to briefly review the status of Iranian women from a few different angles:
As for political participation, I must say that women have no role in the ruling regime and in its decision making at any level of its hierarchy.
Another issue is depriving women of their personal and social freedoms and their right to free choice. Women have been deprived of their rights to travel, marry and have a private life, choose their occupation, and the most pervasive of all, their free choice of clothing.
Another issue is the existence of hideous inequalities and discriminations against women under the rule of the clerical regime.
Drastic inequalities in job opportunities, in wages, in families, in education, in testimony before a court, in having access to medical services and insurance, in their share of the inheritance, in access to sports fields and stadiums, and a long list of denial of rights in every realm.
Such discrimination in any society, at any juncture in history, would mean subjugation of the people, suppression, plundering, and deprivation of political rights.
Another issue is promoting violence against women.
Women of Iran do not feel safe anywhere, not at the workplace, not when they commute in the streets, and not even in their families. The regime enforces this clampdown through a countless number of patrols, security forces and police tasked with offending and insulting women and arresting them.
Inhumane treatment of women in prisons is common practice. Since Hassan Rouhani took office as the regime’s president, some 90 women have been hanged by the regime.
A deeper look into the reason for the mullahs’ savagery towards women reveals that misogyny is the driving force and the essence of the regime’s suppression of the society in general.
I must also underline the rampant poverty and destitution in today’s Iran most of whose victims are women.
Over 62 percent of women above 10 years old are housewives. Those who have a job, are considered the world’s cheapest workforce. Women make up half of the workers of brick kilns in Iran.
The average economic participation of women in the Middle East is 22 percent. But this rate is only 12 percent in the cities of Iran. This rate has not changed for over five decades.
In reviewing the status of 200 countries, the International Labor Organization announced that Iran is among six countries at the bottom of the list, namely among the war-stricken and shattered countries such as Syria and Iraq.
You must have heard the spin doctors of the regime claiming that if the mullahs were to be overthrown, Iran would experience chaos and disaster. This is while Iranian women are currently living in conditions reminiscent of an even worse than war-torn countries, and they are suffering from poverty, destitution, unemployment, and homelessness.
Look at the meager wages of young female workers and their agonizing work environments.
Young women with Bachelor’s or Master’s degrees are working for salaries of 10 to 20 dollars a month.
In fact, women are not only cheap laborers in Iran’s Job market but they are working under horribly oppressive conditions.
We believe that the common answer to all these problems is freedom and equality. Not just equality and not just freedom. But both freedom and equality. This is the answer to the liberation of women. This is why I have always emphasized that women not only free themselves but free their societies at large.
This is our mission and we are determined to carry it out.
My dear sisters,
A few minutes ago, I pointed to women’s widespread participation in the struggle against two dictatorships. Let me add that they have always been at the forefront of the struggle since the outset of the mullahs’ theocratic rule, and more significantly, they have been the trailblazers and leaders of this struggle.
Those days, women faced numerous problems compared to men for joining the democratic struggle. Young Muslim women, in particular, faced greater problems since there was no trend of Muslim women in the struggle against dictatorship before the emergence of the Mojahedin. So, the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran broke a taboo.
Later on, the PMOI’s struggle against Khomeini, as a religious authority, and against reaction and fundamentalism, under the leadership of Massoud Rajavi was characterized among others by widespread participation of Muslim women all across Iran.
They wanted freedom, equality, and democratic Islam. But the regime continued to impose further restrictions and pressure on women and increasingly deprived them of their rights.
The history of struggle in the past four decades against religious dictatorship is notable because of the leading role of PMOI women.
These days, you have seen an exhibition (at Ashraf 3) that shows parts of the history of the Iranian people’s resistance over the past 40 years. The exhibition reminded us of the tortuous and bloody path paved by women of the Iranian Resistance. You saw the images showing cages where prisoners were detained. Some of the women who were imprisoned in these cages for a long time, are now sitting here among you.
You have seen images of the torture chambers called the residential units, where female prisoners were sadistically mistreated and harmed 24 hours a day.
You can see survivors of the 1988 massacre.
In this gathering, you can see those who have come through such dreadful conditions and are now proudly fulfilling their duties in our struggle.
They have written a number of books on women’s struggle and resistance in the mullahs’ torture chambers, about a few of the tens of thousands of women who have been tortured and executed over the past 40 years, from Fatemeh Mesbah who was only 13 to Mother Zakeri who was 70 at the time of her execution. Nevertheless, I’m sure that the true story of these women’s resistance still remains an untold story.
Parts of the story about enduring vicious torture, resisting the brutal behavior of interrogators and the Revolutionary Guards, resisting in order to preserve their collective fighting spirit in prison, struggling and overcoming all the hurdles for rejoining the Mojahedin, their efforts to form new resistance cells, …
All of these were epics of the perseverance of these women.
These women have proven their capabilities in the military field as well.
The hardships and complexities involved in the participation of women in the ranks of an army, which is also at war with the enemy was another chapter. How they formed their combat units, how they were trained, and how they learned to command.
How they struggled during 14 years of perseverance at camps Ashraf and Liberty, fighting all the obstacles and did not give up resistance.
Now, you can see 1,000 pioneering women in this place. One thousand women who come from various cities in Iran. They come from universities in the U.S., Europe, and Iran. Some have given up their jobs and families for freedom of their people and country and have joined the Mojahedin. What you see here are three generations of women sitting side by side. In fact, the most senior body that is leading this movement is made up of only PMOI women.
This accomplishment is the fruit of the path the Mojahedin have paved from the beginning under the leadership of Massoud Rajavi with conviction in freedom and equality.
I should point out that two months after Khomeini took power, the Mojahedin issued a 15-point declaration explaining their expectations from the new regime. In article 6 of this declaration, they have reiterated the need “to respect full political and social rights of women” and specifically, they stressed on “equal pay for equal work” for female workers.
A few months later, when Massoud ran for the presidential elections, he offered a ten-point plan which started with the formation of councils with the participation of people to run the country’s affairs. Again, the seventh article of this plan emphasized the equality of women and men.
There were other articles on the rights of ethnic groups, freedom of parties, freedom of opinion, freedom of the press, and equality of Shiites and Sunnis which were widely embraced by women and youth, by ethnic groups and followers of religions other than Islam. Virtually, all political groups and parties endorsed the plan. This is what terrified Khomeini and compelled him to make a disgraceful decision against his own promise which removed Massoud from the list of candidates.
In such a tortuous struggle, there was a generation of young women and girls who became increasingly informed every day and widely participated in the anti-fundamentalist struggle and in the fight for freedom and equality.
One of the most important chapters in this brilliant struggle were young women, young teenagers who waged the strongest resistance against the revolutionary guards and torturers. Among them were heroines like Homeira Eshraq, Zahra and Kobra Ebrahimian and Sorayya Abolfathi. Their names are etched in the history of women’s struggle forever.
Their first encounters with politics and democratic struggle happened when they first got to know Massoud Rajavi and believed in his cause which was freedom. Every one of them became a pioneer on this path. Today, young women are joining the units of rebellion and continuing their path. Therefore, when we speak of members of the PMOI’s Central Council, we are talking about women who have
Firstly, conquered prisons and opened their way into battlefields.
Secondly, they have opened their way in the overall struggle by fighting two horrific ideologies. One of them is the ideology of gender discrimination, and the other the ideology of negative individualism.
I deliberately use the word negative, to distinguish between this subjugating ideology and evolutionary or positive individualism which leads to the spiritual growth of human beings.
These women have shouldered a heavy responsibility. They have chosen to hold firm onto their commitment in every defeat or victory, in every turmoil, and in all the ups and downs.
The imperative that compels these women to accept responsibility and lead the movement, is the liberation of the entire Iranian society. This is our responsibility. We must respond to the most fundamental sufferings and challenges in our communities.
Issues like poverty and discrimination, homeless children, homeless people, environmental disasters, and most importantly, political and social participation of all individuals, the right to free choice, and of course, ridding all women and men from gender discrimination.
All of these are our responsibility.
I must emphasize that equality and emancipation of women would be genuine only when it is accompanied by the emancipation of men.
This is the achievement of our movement, namely the human growth and progress of pioneering men who have rebelled against gender discrimination and patriarchy to build truly equal relationships. And on this path, they have emancipated themselves.
If our movement was not deeply against exploitation and all of its political, social, theoretical, and cultural components, women could not have held such positions for a long time.
Women’s progress in the resistance movement is before anything else indebted to a consistent struggle against reactionary and oppressive thoughts.
The prevalent thought among mankind is that women are second-rate citizens and that they are incapable of doing many things. This thought is as old as the history of mankind.
But the women of this resistance have fought this thought and this is a struggle that is ongoing. The more these women push back negative individualism, and improve the inter-relations they have with one another, they achieve higher levels of efficiency and capability in shouldering more responsibilities, and the road for their advancement become smoother.
This means moving from living an isolated life to a social life which is the product of human evolution on the highest levels of human relationships, which of course requires a constant struggle.
Women can and must lead and have a pioneering role on this path.
This is why today the women of Iran are the answer to the overthrow of the religious dictatorship. And tomorrow they are going to be harbingers of peace and construction of Iran.
Fortunately, today, the emancipating message of the PMOI, and specifically the message of gender equality, has been embraced by young women and men in cities across Iran.
The units of rebellion have expanded over the past two years. They are greatly impressed by the role model of women in this Resistance.
A young woman from Khorramabad wrote: “I am a leaf on the PMOI’s robust tree. I'm alive, and I fight. I am a Mojahed, therefore I am."
And these are the words of a woman by the name of Mina, also a member of a Resistance unit: “I dream about blossoming of the flowers of my hope and a voice that tells me, ‘Although the night is dark, be confident that the dawn is near.’ In the depth of night, I am dreaming of becoming a butterfly.”
These enlightened and brave young women and men have been and continue to be inspired by four decades of sacrifice and perseverance of the PMOI. For them, the Mojahedin’s conviction in and adherence to the cause of freedom and equality is a living example which directs them in the struggle against the ruling tyrannical regime.
At this point, I would like to salute Iran’s political prisoners especially my sisters who have been resisting and defying the regime in Khamenei’s jails in various cities.
In addition to opposition to dictatorship, they have committed the unforgivable crime of being a rebellious woman.
To be a woman and not surrender, to be a woman and persevere in the struggle, to be a woman and instead of thinking about yourself, think about the liberation of a people in chains, this is something that has driven the mullahs insane.
And finally, please allow me to address my sisters in Iran, especially the conscious young women who are fed up with the intolerable circumstances prevailing Iran.
The present circumstances are extraordinary. The regime is at an impasse. The society is like fire under the ashes. The country’s economy is totally paralyzed.
The clerical regime is endeavoring day and night, to compel Iranian women into submission.
But Iran’s enlightened women and rebellious girls inspired by the 1,000 women of Ashraf, are following the tradition of an emancipating struggle. This is a role model devoid of all gender-based discriminations in outlook, standards, mentalities, and values. This is a role model where women have arisen, determinant, and capable of having an impact and opening the way. She believes that the political fate of her country and society is equal to her own fate.
She believes that it is her duty to save Iran from dictatorship, poverty, and retardation, to save millions of hungry and homeless children, to save so many unfortunate women whose lives have been tainted with misery.
This is how an enlightened and rebellious woman goes into the battlefields of emancipation. This is how she makes the goal of gender equality realized.
I thank you all very much.

The international conference on women in the Iranian Resistance at Ashraf 3
The international conference on women in the Iranian Resistance at Ashraf 3

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Iran regime broker in US accused of sanctions violations

Iran regime broker in US accused of sanctions violations




Weapons of mass distruction
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 9, 2019 - The Atlanta prosecutors office has accused an Iranian regime dealer of violating United States sanctions and plotting to export biological material from the U.S. to Iran against a United Nations resolution.
AP reported that when an Iranian academic by the name of Masoud Soleimani touched down on U.S. soil last fall, returning from Iran, federal authorities armed with a secret indictment arrested him on charges indicating he had violated trade sanctions by trying to have biological material brought to Iran. Nine months later, as tensions escalate between the two countries, Soleimani sits in a detention center just south of Atlanta.
Federal prosecutors say the attempted transport was illegal and secretly obtained an indictment against Soleimani in June 2018. Government officials revoked his visa and arrested him in October when he landed in Chicago.
Soleimani and two of his former students are accused of conspiring and attempting to export biological materials from the U.S. to Iran without authorization. The two counts each carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
The U.S. attorney’s office in Atlanta declined to comment, but prosecutors have argued in court filings that the comprehensive sanctions in place for years do not allow goods to be exported to Iran except under very limited conditions that don’t apply in this case.
The U.S. and other world powers announced an agreement with Iran in July 2015 that said that country would curb its nuclear activities in exchange for the lifting of international sanctions, though the U.S. did impose new sanctions after Iran tested ballistic missiles.
After U.S. President Donald Trump came into office, tensions escalated and he pulled the U.S. from the nuclear deal in May 2018. Prosecutors in Atlanta obtained an indictment against Soleimani the following month.

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Iran: Smuggling fuel to neighboring Pakistan

Iran: Smuggling fuel to neighboring Pakistan




Trucks smuggling fuel from Iran to Pakistan
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, July 9, 2019 - In recent days, reports have emerged on social media claiming that huge amounts of fuel are smuggled to Pakistan over Iran’s eastern borders. Namely the Sistan and Baluchistan province in southeast Iran where the major part of the Sunni minority lives is blamed for the smuggling.
However, it is no secret that the main smuggling of fuel and especially oil in recent years isn’t done with 40-liter fuel containers. Organizing endless caravans of fuel tankers with thousands of liters of capacity each can’t be done without at least receiving the green light from authorities.
In 2018, the Fars news agency, affiliated to the terrorist-designated Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), published a video clip titled, “Organized smuggling of fuel/‌pipework on the seabed for smuggling fuel!” They also wrote about smuggling fuel with small boats: “In Hormozgan province, there are 50 launches [small boats] which smuggle 20,000 to 50,000 liters of fuel each, every day. That’s how millions of liters of the country’s resources are stolen every day.”
Smuggling fuel was a lucrative business in Iran even before the energy sanctions that prevented the Iranian mullahs from selling the country’s crude oil for hard currency. That is because fuel is subsidized in Iran and is sold way lower than free market prices. Profiteers with the right connections and assets can make a fortune by smuggling the cheap fuel to neighboring countries.
Also in late 2018, Abdollah Hendiani, deputy manager of the office of the fight against goods and currency smuggling in Iran, said during an interview with Iran’s state-run television, “Over the past three months, about one billion liters have been smuggled. This is about ten to 13 million liters of smuggled fuel every day.”
Smuggling this huge amount of fuel over the Iranian border per day requires a caravan of 500 fuel tankers with a capacity of 20,000 liters each. And every tanker needs to cross the border twice per day.
The amount of trafficked fuel is so high that Pakistani officials are calling for action to prevent further damages to their economy.
Fars news agency writes, “The Pakistani customs office announced in a report that smuggled fuel from Iran is damaging the country in the range of 300 million rupees per year, calling for increased supervision of the borders.”
“Reports show that about 50 to 60 percent of Karachi’s fuel is smuggled and foreign shipping companies and domestic fuel stations are the customer base of Iran’s smuggled gas,” Fars news agency further writes.
The situation is so bad that Iranian regime Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh acknowledges the fact that officials have a hand in the entire smuggling business. “Smuggling has increased. And it’s not only smugglers, everybody has [a hand in it],” he said.
Iran’s chief of the committee for combating trafficking also said that smuggling fuel is an “organized crime” and “it may be connected to some government institutions.”
Although smuggling fuel and crude oil can by no means compensate for the sales that the Iranian regime has lost due to sanctions, pundits expect further increases in smuggling in the coming months.