Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Without US hostage taking, Iran regime was overthrown in the first decade Unprecedented confession of the Commander in Chief of Iran Revolutionary Guards Taking US diplomats as hostage was pre-planned and was approved by Khamenei

ander in Chief of Iran Revolutionary Guards Taking US diplomats as hostage was pre-planned and was approved by Khamenei




IRGC commander Jaffari admits that Khamenei approved the US hostage taking in Iran
In his remarks on November 4, Mohammad Ali Jafari, the Commander of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), underscored that taking over the US Embassy and hostage taking of American diplomats was pre-planned and totally approved by Khamenei. He stressed if this had not taken place, the regime would have been overthrown in the first decade of its tenure. 
Jafari made the unprecedented confession during a speech on the anniversary of taking US diplomats hostage on November 4, 1979.
He said: “According to a highly classified plan, a protest was organized from Tehran University towards the nest of spies (U.S. Embassy)… Only a limited number of students and the University staff knew that an attack to the embassy was planned. When the crowd reached in front of the University, according to the plan, since a limited number of people were cognizant of the plan, amidst all the razzmatazz, all the slogans, and the mood among the crowd, the attack was depicted as being spontaneous and as if it was decided by the crowd and on the scene.”
“Only a handful of the officials and revolutionary figures, and on top of them, the supreme leader, (Khamenei), were totally in support of this revolutionary move,” and if the hostage- taking had not taken place, “undoubtedly our revolution could not last for forty years and it would had been over in the first decade,” Jafari added.
The commander of the IRGC suggested resorting to similar acts as the solution for the regime’s crisis and said: “Similar moves, of course not taking over embassies, this is not what I mean, but this sort of moves, should be conducted for creating stability, for providing more services to the society, for solving economic problems, and in other aspects such as cultural affairs. This is what one can pin his hope on.”
Jafari’s remarks is a clear acknowledgment  that the clerical regime has always found the solution in hostage-taking, creating crisis and havoc, export of terrorism, and belligerence and it plans for these acts at the highest levels.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
November 6, 2018

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Iran: Protesters demand release of teachers activist

Iran: Protesters demand release of teachers activist




Family members, colleagues of Hasham Khastar rallying outside the hospital
Reported by PMOI/MEK

Iran, Nov. 6, 2018 - Dozens of people in Mashhad joined family members of Mr. Hashem Khastar, head of the Teachers Union Center, in this northeastern Iran city on Monday to rally outside the Ebn Seena Hospital and protest Khastar’s abduction and apprehension.
State police and anti-riot units ready at the scene immediately arrested Mr. Khastar’s son.
Mr. Khastar’s wife said, “I will remain here until my husband is released.”
However, the repressive police arrested and transferred to an unknown location. It is worth noting that Ms. Maleki, the wife of Mr. Khastar, has recently undergone open-heart surgery and is currently ill.
Mr. Khastar’s sister refused orders from the regime’s repressive forces saying she must leave the area. She was seen shouting they must release her brother.

State police & anti-riot units at the protest rally scene
State police & anti-riot units at the protest rally scene

Hashem Khastar, the retired teacher in Mashhad, was abducted on October 23 by security forces. Following continuous efforts by his family to learn of his whereabouts, security forces eventually said he was hospitalized in the psychiatric branch of the Ebn Seena Hospital
Mr. Khastar’s wife has denied her husband had any physical or psychological illnesses.

Read more:
Following the abduction of Hashem Khastar, a known teachers’ union activist in the city of Mashhad, northeast Iran, and the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) intelligence confining him in a psychiatric hospital his wife and child were finally permitted to visit him.
“On Thursday, I went to the courthouse for permission to visit my husband, Mr. Seyed Hashem Khastar, in Mashhad’s Ebn Seena Hospital. There was no file or records about this arrest. I spoke to the deputy public prosecutor about my husband’s arrest and he said they had not issued any orders for his arrest. I spoke with another deputy public prosecutor and he said we had not given any orders either. I received the same answer from the Intelligence Ministry, the IRGC intelligence and the police,” Mrs. Sedighe Maleki-fard said.
“The Social Emergency unit arrested him outside his orchard and took him straight to the Ebn Seena Hospital. They took blood from him and gave him an injection… Considering the fact that my husband’s life is in danger in this psychiatric hospital, he must be released immediately,” she continued.
Mrs. Maleki-fard issued a call to her compatriots asking them to raise the issue of her husband’s arrest with the Iranian regime’s judiciary and demand his release.
The Iranian opposition coalition National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) is calling on all international human rights organizations to see into this matter and call on the Iranian regime to have Mr. Hashem Khastar released. His transfer to a psychiatric hospital after the revelation of his abduction is nothing but the regime’s effort to cover up their crime.
The NCRI Education Commission is also calling on the international community, the United Nations Secretary-General, the UN Security Council, the UN Human Rights Council and the Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Iran to take urgent action aiming to protect Mr. Khastar’s life and guarantee his well-being.
According to reports published in social media networks about the sudden disappearance of Mr Hashem Khastar, the representative of the teachers union and a known teachers’ rights activists, Mrs. Sedighe Maleki, the wife of Mr. Khastar, said the IRGC intelligence arrested (abducted) Mr. Khastar without providing an arrest warrant. He was hospitalized on Tuesday in Mashhad’s Ebn Seena Psychiatric Hospital that is specially designed to treat mentally disturbed patients.
“A nurse told me that Mr. Khastar has been hospitalized in an emergency room and is banned from any family visits, based on orders issued by security officials,” she continued.
“He was completely healthy and after retiring spent many of his days farming. The only medication he consumed were blood pressure pills. Khastar being hospitalized in an emergency section of a special facility for psychiatric patients means [authorities] injected a special type of medication with the intention of killing him, or he had been severely injured under torture or during his arrest,” Mrs. Maleki added.
Seyed Hashem Khastar, had gone missing since Tuesday. His vehicle was found on Tuesday outside the city of Mashhad, northeast Iran, near an orchard. His mobile phone was turned off.
Khastar had time and again been harassed by operatives linked to the Iranian regime for defending the rights of Iran’s teachers. On numerous occasions, Khastar was arrested by the mullahs’ intelligence agents and placed behind bars.
During the past few weeks, Khastar had made public calls for widespread measures aimed at having jailed teachers released.
Ever since Khastar’s disappearance, teachers across the country and other social media users have launched a wave of protests demanding information about his whereabouts, security, and well-being. They are using two different Farsi hashtags, “Hashem Khastar” and “Where is Hashem Khastar,” warning the mullahs’ regime is responsible for his well-being.

Sunday, November 4, 2018

U.S. imposes new sanctions against the Iranian regime

U.S. imposes new sanctions against the Iranian regime




U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo declares new sanctions on Iran
Report by PMOI/MEK

Washington DC, November 2, 2018 - The U.S. Treasury declared today new sanctions against the Iranian regime for its illicit nuclear program and its support for terrorism across the globe.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin declared the sanctions, which will target the Iranian regime’s shipping, financial and energy sectors. Oil exports, which account for the funding of most of the illicit activities conducted by the Iranian regime, will be the biggest focus of the new sanctions.
The U.S. officials also declared that 700 companies, individuals, businesses, aircraft and ships will be added to the U.S. sanctions list and will be blocked from accessing global business and financial networks.
The reimposition of sanctions "is aimed at depriving the regime of the revenues it uses to spread death and destruction around the world," Pompeo said, adding, "Our ultimate aim is to compel Iran to permanently abandon its well documented outlaw activities and behave as a normal country."
The measures will restore sanctions that were lifted after the signing of the 2015 nuclear deal between the Iranian regime and world powers. At the time, the regime was given economic incentives and access to frozen assets in exchange for the partial suspension of its nuclear activities and the reduction of its enriched uranium stockpile. As the Iranian opposition had warned, the regime used the windfall to fund its terrorist activities and fuel wars and conflict in the Middle East region. The main beneficiary of the deal has been the IRGC, which is the regime’s main implement for suppressing protests in Iran, developing ballistic missiles and pursuing the regime’s terrorist agendas abroad.
The new sanctions, which will come into effect on Monday, November 5, will deal a heavy blow to the IRGC’s financial resources.

Iran: 80% decrease in workers’ purchasing power

Iran: 80% decrease in workers’ purchasing power




Iranian people are losing their purchasing power day by day
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, Nov. 2, 2018 - Davoud Mirzaie, an economic expert close to the Iranian regime, recently said Iran’s workers have lost 80 percent of their purchasing power as the country’s currency, the rial, continues to plummet.
“The 19.5 percent wage increase has not shown itself in the workers’ lives, meaning the value of their wages in March 2018 is far below its value in March 2016. In other words, the workers’ purchasing power has decreased between 50 to 80 percent. This is causing numerous problems for the families of the country’s workers,” he said in an interview with the state-run ISNA news agency on Wednesday.
“Such conditions have left the workers unable in providing for their basic needs. Therefore, labor unions have time and again called on the Ministry of Labor to see into this issue. Unfortunately, this remained unresolved,” he added.
It is worth noting that Mohammad Reza Pour-Ibrahimi, head of the Majlis (parliament) Economy Commission has made interesting remarks over skyrocketing prices of essential goods.
“The average price of essential goods, despite providing currency at 42,000 rials/U.S. dollar, has increased 30 to 50 percent in comparison to last year. It shouldn’t be this way,” he said recently.
The price of most goods in Iran, in comparison to last year, have increased. The price hike in meat, dairy products and fruits have has been over 20 percent, meaning these goods are no longer even seen at the tables of workers’ families, or will eradicate as this trend continues. Furthermore, the price of imported tea has also increased by nearly 20 percent.
According to the latest Central Bank report focusing on developments in Iran’s home market for this summer, mortgages have increased by 13.6 percent in Tehran in comparison to last year, and 11.1 percent other cities.
To add to the Iranian regime’s concerns, Assadollah Asgar Oladi, head of the Iran-China Chamber of Commerce, said recently no Chinese bank is willing to work with Iranian merchants. As a result, Iran’s exports to China have come to a standstill, he added in an interview with the state-run Tasnim news agency, affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards Quds Force.
Negotiations between the mullahs’ Central Bank to gain the cooperation of Chinese banks have failed to this day, he added. U.S. secondary sanctions have resulted in many banks and companies ending their cooperation with Iranian regime entities.

Read more:
An open-door session of the Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament) back in September shed new light on the country’s economy and poor living condition of  ordinary Iranians.
“To those government officials who are trying comfort themselves with unreal statistics, our workers and employees, young and old, are all living in conditions with inflation reaching 60 or 70 percent,” said Majlis member Mohsen Bigleri. “Mr. Rouhani, we have five million unemployed people and most of them are college educated, and yet they’re struggling to procure their next meal… The prices of people’s basic necessities, such as meat, poultry, dried goods and fruits have increased more than 70 percent…”
Sedif Badri, another member of the Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament) expressed concerns about the inflation and skyrocketing prices.
“The government’s weak and indefensible economic practices… unbridled inflation increase and skyrocketing prices, are imposing pressures on the lower class of our society and has completely disappointed our middle class… the people are truly being crushed under these conditions…” she added.
Alaedin Borujerdi, a member of the Majlis (parliament) National Security and Foreign Affairs Commission, cited foul practices in Iran’s petrochemical industry.
“The petrochemical industry presents its own products in the stock market. Informed dealers purchase the products instantly… and these products are then sold to needy factories at extremely higher prices. The factories are forced to either not purchase the raw material or as a result increase the prices of their own goods to an extreme extent. This results in inflation; people lack purchasing power and finally workers are fired from factories,” he explained.
Hossein-Ali Shahriari of the Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament):
“Are you aware that people have no income? Are you aware that the people’s drinking water has serious problems? Are you informed that people are leaving their ancestral homes and resorting to living in city slums…? What crime have these people committed to be punished like this?”
As explained by another Majlis member by the name of Gholamreza Sharafi, social issues in Iran are evolving into security matters.
“People in parts of Abadan (in southwest Iran) haven’t had decent drinking water for 17 years… These innocent people rarely see a blue sky due to air contamination. These people have the sea, yet non-standard laws have made fishing difficult for them. These people once had the best dates production in the region. Today, however, their share of agriculture water is stolen and they are witnessing their date trees being destroyed,” he said. “4.3 million date trees have been lost.”
This is only the tip of the iceberg of the corruption, crimes and theft taking place by Iranian regime officials. It’s strange how various European countries continue to seek appeasement deals with this regime that is engulfed in theft and corruption.
The Iranian people, and the resistance units associated to the Iranian opposition People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), are seeking to bringing an end to this regime. This regime’s days are numbered and those companies continuing to seek economic incentives should better plan for the future.

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Iran: Khamenei rep threatens missile attack on regional targets




Iran’s regime is threatening terror attacks on targets across the Middle East
Report by PMOI/MEK

Iran, November 3, 2018 - Following the announcement of the second round of U.S. sanctions against the Iranian regime, Alam Alhoda, representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Mashhad, northeast Iran, resorted to unbridled threats of terrorism against regional countries.
"If we reach a point that our oil is not exported, the Strait of Hormuz will be mined. Saudi oil tankers will be seized and regional countries will be leveled with Iranian missiles,” he said at Friday’s prayer sermon.
"Qaher missiles along with technology have been provided to the Ansarollah. These are Yom al-Assad systems. When orders are issued from Iran, they're enough for the Saudis' Aramco oil facilities, putting all of these facilities out of control,” he added in reference Houthi militias in Yemen.
"The navy will mine the Strait of Hormuz and protect the mines. Three Saudi oil tankers pass through this strait each day. If necessary, we'll seize three Saudi ships each day, confiscate the oil and imprison the personnel,” Alam Alhoda continued.
"At first, after seizing these three oil tankers, the joint UAE-Qater oil field and rigs will be closed down by Iran. With just one missile, Qatar's Wafaq site oil systems will come to a standstill. They will seek to retaliate and attack Iran from the air. Missiles will target six international airports in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Riyadh, Bahrain and Qatar. All air/shipping lines in the Persian Gulf will be cut off in just 30 minutes with our missiles,” he added.
"The world economy and stock markets, mainly owned by these Arab countries, will cripple. The price of oil will reach $400 a barrel instantly… Sharjah-14 missiles; Manama-4; Abu Dhabi-7; Doha-11; Kuwait-22; Jadah-24; Riaydh-28... These missiles will destroy these cities,” Alam Alhoda threatened.
"If Iran decides, a single drop of this region's oil will not be exported and in 90 minutes all Persian Gulf countries will be destroyed. The UAE and Saudi Arabia will be destroyed in 60 minutes. After 90 minutes the U.S. will have nothing in this country. And we haven't even started with Israel. Beware of the day we go after Israel, too. That's why they want us to round up our missiles."
In regards to the Iranian regime’s terrorist intentions, Iranian opposition President Maryam Rajavi recent said in a video message on October 4:
“By using terrorism, the regime wants to compel the world to silence and surrender. The best response to such a regime is firmness. This is a responsible policy for global peace and security.
The mullahs are highly motivated for terrorism. Popular protests have been continuing for nine months in Iran and the mullahs have not been able to stop them. As the regime’s highest officials have confessed, the PMOI has had an increasing role in organizing and leading the uprisings.
The country’s currency has lost 80 percent of its value in 12 months.”

Thursday, November 1, 2018

From nationwide strikes to the toppling of the Iranian regime

From nationwide strikes to the toppling of the Iranian regime




Iran regime is fearful of continuous strikes
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Nov. 1, 2018 - In recent weeks, Iran has witnessed new waves of nationwide strikes. Different strata including truck drivers, bazaar merchants, teachers, and retired employees joined separate strikes and rallies to express their protests against the regime’s catastrophic policies. The strikes coincided with laborers’ protests in different cities making the situation harder to handle for the regime. A new characteristic that separates the mentioned strikes from previous ones is that all of them were organized and declared in advanced on social media. And the regime tried so hard to prevent the strikes from happening using various tricks and suppressive measures but to no avail.
The regime’s officials and state-run media have warned about the current situation. They fear that these protests go public and spread among other strata in the society, making a strong wave which can trigger more uprisings.
Ghorbanali Dorri-Najafabadi, former Minister of Intelligence of the Islamic Republic of Iran and current representative of supreme leader in Arak, linked the Iranian people to “enemies of” the regime saying, “our enemy is trying to exaggerate the social problems in order to arouse disappointment and frustration among us.”
Saeid Lavasani, the Friday prayer leader in Lavasan city, linked the protests to the regime’s enemies, saying, “Our enemy is behind the nationwide strikes to conduct a psychological war… they want to bring us to our knees.” Lavasani called the widespread news of protests and strikes as “fake news” which is worse and more dangerous than chemical war. He mentioned the Iranian opposition’s efforts saying, “one of the enemies’ plans is to conduct nationwide strikes; they wanted to create a crisis in the country by supporting the teachers’ strike which could affect half of the country; they believe that they can join these strikes and protests together and bring down our government.”
Abbas Akhoundi, a former minister in Rouhani’s cabinet, pointed out to a fundamental gap between the Iranian people and the government. Jamaran state-run website wrote, “Akhoundi believes that Iran doesn’t have a solid and firm policy and economy, therefore we’re stepping into the darkness. He also believes that all these have root in social problems.” Akhoundi believes that the society is living in a calm before the storm due to the wrong policies of the regime both inside the country and outside.
In addition, Mohammad Fazeli, a so-called “social expert” of the regime, warned about the inevitable continuation of uprisings. “The government’s measures are increasing the number of people whose rights were ignored. Many strata of the society are now deprived of their just rights, women, youth, poor people, etc. This is all because of the wrong policies of the government,” Fazeli told the state-run newspaper, Arman, in October.
All abovementioned facts show how the regime is worried about a new storm that will soon come.
In fact, any social and economic protests can potentially turn into an anti-governmental uprising. Last December, economic woes triggered demonstrations in various cities, but the protests soon spread to more than 140 cities in every corner of the country demanding regime change. The protesters chanted slogans against all factions of the regime. “Death to Khamenei and Rouhani”, “hardliners and reformists, the game is over” were chanted in cities of Iran.
Hamidreza Jalaiepoor, a former IRGC official who is now working under the cover of a journalist, told the state-run newspaper Iran in October: “I told Rouhani that all strata of the society have enormous potential for an earthquake and revolution. Iran is experiencing a new era, the January protest turned into violence as happened again in August’s protests in Kazerun and Khorramshahr.”
Now the regime itself reveals that protests have enormous potential for an earthquake and revolution. Of course, the regime’s officials name the Iranian thirst for freedom as “violence” as they do not want any Iranians to stand against their rule of dictatorship.
This is not Iran’s story. This is a part of the world’s history. The story of the revolution has been narrated time and again in many countries who have risen up to take back their freedom. They started with demonstrations over social shortcomings and economic woes, but led to protests against the dictatorship, and in the end a revolution that can give the people control of their destiny.

The prospects of student uprisings in Iran

The prospects of student uprisings in Iran




As protests continue to rage across Iran, the regime is eyeing students with growing fear and skepticism.
Analysis by PMOI/MEK

Iran, Oct. 30, 2018 - In recent days, reports have surfaced of student movements supporting the strikes of teachers and truck drivers. Student movements and protests in Iran have historically been closely tied to nationwide uprisings and social and worker-class protests.
The unity between students and workers and other hardworking classes of the Iranian society are not new, and neither are they unique to Iran. All across the world, student protests have had a pivotal role in the society. Some examples include the 1968 protests in France and the student protests in China at the end of the 20th century.
In Iran, students have been the momentum of struggles for freedom, both under the Shah and Khomeini dictatorships. And despite having been suppressed violently, they have never backed down from their struggle.
For instance, during the reign of the Shah dictatorship, security forces murdered three students after the coup against Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953. The people of Iran still commemorate that event today as the Day of Student. In 1980, the Khomeini regime shut down all universities in a wave of suppression that aimed to curb the growing influence of PMOI/MEK. The event led to the souring of relations between the regime and students across the country.
Throughout the rule of both the Shah and the Khomeini regime, student associations and universities have been a bastion for freedom fighters. The People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran was founded by three students.

 

Student protests in Iran during the mullahs’ rule

Soon after Khomeini seized power in Iran following the 1979 revolution, he ordered the shutdown of universities in what he called the “Cultural Revolution.” During that time, several students were murdered and injured, and several university professors were fired.
The regime later tried to prevent dissidents from finding their way into universities by creating forged accounts and bringing up excuses to disqualify them. The main fear of the regime was opposition groups such as MEK and the Organization of Iranian People's Fedai Guerrillas.
37 years after the so-called cultural revolution, the regime continues to suppress university students.
In recent years, the question has remained that why does the regime continue to create an environment of suppression and terror in universities. Why are student activists facing heavy punishments from regime courts and security forces? Why is the regime so terrified of students?
The regime eyes every single student as a threat to its rule. The students of Iran do not tolerate the outdated ideology of the Iranian mullahs' regime, a fact that is not lost on its officials. Students are also very explicit in their opposition to the censorship and oppression of the ruling regime.
There’s potential that the rage of Iranian students might erupt at any time and expand to the entire country, facing the regime with a serious challenge at a time it is dealing with an escalating wave of protests everywhere in Iran.
Also, the history of the Shah and the Khomeini regime has shown that the voice of students can’t be stifled, and any effort by both regimes to silence protests in universities has failed.

 

The prospects of the student movement

As protests continue to rage across Iran, the regime is eyeing students with growing fear and skepticism. And that is why it is ramping up its suppressive measures against students and universities. However, as we’ve seen in the past months, the will of Iranian students, teachers, workers, merchants and every other community in Iran can’t be suppressed. And the Iranian people will continue to fight for their rights no matter how hard the regime tries to suppress them.