HRANA – Saman Nooranian’s 3 year prison sentence was confirmed by the appellate court.
According to Daneshjoo News, the lower court’s imprisonment sentence for Saman Nooranian has been confirmed by judge Salavati presiding over Branch 15 of the appellate court. Mr. Samanian is a graduate of the prestigious College of Engineering and Medicine at Amir Kabir University; one of the most reputable institutions of higher education in Iran.
Mr. Nooranian who is currently held in Ward 350 of Evin prison was arrested in the aftermath of the popular protests on December 27, 2009 (the day of Ashura).
Category: News
Prisoner Hanged in Kashan, Iran
HRANA News Agency – A prisoner convicted of drug trafficking was hanged in Kashan, Iran.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), quoted from IRIB News, a prisoner convicted of drug trafficking was hanged in Kashan Central Prison om Monday, December 17, 2012.
No information about Hossein Fallah after a week of his arrest
HRANA News Agency – After one week passed from the arrest of Hossein Fallah, there is no information about his situation.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Hossein Fallah, one of the activists in “House of NGOs” in Ghazvin city, after being called by intelligence office in this city, was arrested and has had no communication with his family.
Continue reading “No information about Hossein Fallah after a week of his arrest”
Three Iranian Sunni M.D. students were fired with no certification

HRANA News Agency – Three Iranian Kurdish M.D. students with Sunni faith were fired from college with no certification.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Three Iranian Kurdish M.D. students with Sunni faith (followers of Kakeh Ahmad Moftizadeh) were fired from college after they presented their final thesis. And, the college authorities in Kurdistan and Hamedan of Iran did not deliver their M.D. certificates. They were told their certificates have been seized by Intelligence Ministry.
Continue reading “Three Iranian Sunni M.D. students were fired with no certification”
IRGC Invites Kurds to Take up Arms Against PJAK
HRANA News Agency – The Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution (IRGC) in Salmas County has published and distributed a pamphlet asking tribal forces and those living in border regions to fight against Kurdish Workers’ Party (PJAK).
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), IRGC has asked Kurdish citizens to begin an armed conflict against Kurdish Workers’ Party.IRGC agents have begun an orchestrated propaganda against PJAK by pressuring and threatened underprivileged citizens in the border regions to join the Basiji Milita in order to help the Islamic government to defeat PJAK.
In the pamphlet released by the Revolutionary Guard, IRGC warns the members and supporters of PJAK in Iran and says, “We ask courageous Kurds and honorable tribes in Salmas County not to tolerate injustice and oppression perpetrated by PJAK and to defend your honor, lives, properties, families and country by waging war against this group.Don’t remain silent until the last of these mercenaries are wiped off the face of this earth.”
According to the international rules of war and military engagement, civilians and their safety and security must not be endangered or threatened deliberately by the armed conflict between two adversaries.IRGC’s statement calling for armed confrontation between civilians and PJAK has militarized the region and has intentionally carried the current conflict into civilians’ lives.
Mothers of Park Laleh Remember Political Prisoners Slain in the 1980s
Mothers of Park Laleh condemn the 1980s massacres especially the mass executions of political prisoners in 1987 and join all mourning mothers to demand justice!
Another anniversary of mass executions of political prisoners in 1987 arrives while the horrifying account of this brutal massacre has spread all over the world.With each passing year, curtains purposefully drawn to conceal these crimes are opened to reveal dark accounts as living eye-witnesses begin to talk about those murderous years.
The story of 1987 is the tale of tortures, lashes and atrocities; it is the tale of sudden cessation of all communications with and visits from the outside world.It is the story of trials lasting only a few minutes with a single question asked and a lone answer received without the presence of an attorney or the right to defend oneself;it is the story of prosecuting even prisoners whose prison terms had ended.It is the tale of death sentences not subject to appeals.
It is the story of raping young, virgin girls before execution in order to deny them entry into the heaven according to the prevailing ideology of the rules.It is the tale of mass graves dug as large channels to bury the unknown unceremoniously in unmarked graves in a place today called Khavaran, the Valley of Flowers.
It is the story of the disappeared for whose return the surviving mothers still await.It is a tale lingering to this day, the continuation of the same atrocities materialized as executions, the chain killings and other forms of oppression.It is the story of the oppressed standing side by side, moving forward to reach justice and to witness the people’s uprising.
The story of 1987 is a tale meant to remain hidden but partially revealed by Ayatollah Montazeri and freed prisoners recounting the events.A story with darkened angles that in due time, must someday be fully explored and exposed.
There was a time when government authorities were able to lie about the connection between the massacres and the causes leading to Ayatollah Montazeri’s resignation as the designated successor to the Supreme Leader and denied the true account of what happened altogether.However, today, some of the members of the ruling class have given up rebuffing these mass executions and admit to these internal killings and political cleansings in different forums.Nonetheless, those in power at the time still refuse to accept the responsibility of ordering and perpetrating the massacres and decline to clarify all the facts.
Unaware of the fact that the truth will be eventually revealed, yesterday and today’s ruling class were complicit in a deliberate act to show then and now that the attacks by PMOI were the main causes leading to the mass killings.However, today we know that the plan for these massacres began in 1986.Following the cease fire between Iran and Iraq and PMOI’s attack, the best time and excuse for the mass killings and elimination of Iran’s bravest and the purest of hearts were at hand.
Consequently, given the proper pretext, this crime against humanity was carried out in the shortest amount of time through an act of abomination unparalleled and unseen.Although the exact number of those slain is still not known, some statistics estimate 5,000 to 12,000 prisoners were killed.What is certain is that such killings didn’t stop and continue in different shapes and forms to this day.
As a result, the efforts of political prisoners’ families have become more defined and determined.A sit-in protest in front of the main court house, a gathering in front of the prosecutor’s office, a ceremony to deliver a petition with 370 signatures to the United Nations Committee on Human Rights and contacts with defenders of political prisoners’ rights and human rights organizations abroad are only a few actions taken in order to protest against a national tragedy that has finally provoked a reaction from Europeans and Americans.
From September 1987 when the news of the massacres had reached the families in one way or another, large numbers of written and verbal complaints were sent to the Special Representative of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, Dr. Reynaldo Galindo Pohl.During his visit to Iran, Dr. Galindo Pohl devoted the majority of his time speaking with Iranian government officials and the least amount of his time to visiting the families, prisons and Khavaran.At the same time, the families gathered every day in front of the United Nations office in order to see him.
Although the Islamic Republic did its best to prevent Dr. Galindo Pohl from finding out the facts, the United Nations Commission on Human Rights clearly had what it needed in the form of documents and evidences which were unfortunately not taken seriously.No one knows why and the questions still linger to this day!
So far during the process to seek justice for the victims, international organizations have been silent about these enormous criminal acts which according to the international laws are rightfully considered to be crimes against humanity.
Meanwhile, mourning mothers and families have individually and collectively tried to reach some answers.Visiting Khavaran regularly in order to safe-guard the evidence of the 1980s massacres has been one of such efforts.Despite the fact that Iranian security forces have attacked Khavaran many times and bulldozed the grounds such that there might have remained no evidence of the slain, Mothers of Khavaran love this dry, barren piece of land because they know that in the most hideous way possible, their loved ones were buried in Khavaran.These mothers’ questions must be answered someday.
For precisely such reasons, the mothers continue to visit Khavaran in spite of enormous threats and intimidations to keep the memory of their children alive until the day to answer their questions arrives.
Now, after ten years has passed since Dr. Galindo Pohl’s visit, and human rights have been clearly and widely violated in Iran, a special UN rapporteur has been appointed to look into the situation in Iran.We, the Mothers of Park Laleh, ask the United Nations, the Commission on Human Rights and all other international organizations to take the violations of human rights in Iran seriously and face their responsibilities expeditiously so that the end result will not be the same as the time of Dr. Galindo Pohl.
We, the Mothers of Park Laleh, together with the families of the slain exclaim that talking about forgiveness is meaningless until all the facts about these crimes are revealed and all the perpetrators of these massacres are tried in public and just courts because none of the Islamic Republic’s high officials have so far admitted to their mistakes publicly and formally.Furthermore, the mass murder of political prisoners remains an open case, and the evidence of such criminal acts will be someday revealed to the public and media.And, that day will be the judgment day.
Mothers of Park Laleh demand to know:
Why were human beings with prison sentences executed?
Why were human beings who only demonstrated in street to demand their rights killed?
Why are human beings interrogated, imprisoned and sometimes hanged simply because they express their thoughts and beliefs?
And a thousand other whys we and all other mourning mothers and families during the last thirty two years want to know.Until the time to answer arrives, we won’t give up fighting and remain standing.
Mothers of Park Laleh
August 19, 2011
Copyright © 2011 All Rights Reserved
Three Kurds in Prison for Helping Iranian Filmmaker Saber Kaka Hasan
HRANA News Agency – Although one year has passed since three young Kurdish men, Alireza Yaghoobi, Siavash Dehghani, and Mohsen Alimaradi, have been arrested on charges of helping the Iranian Kurdish filmmaker Saber Kaka Hasan, their current condition remains unknown.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), a member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard close to one of the prisoners’ families has said, “Making a documentary was an excuse used by Saber Kaka Hasan to photograph several secret military installations in remote forests of northern Iran.These three individuals have been charged with helping him.”
This member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard added, “Since the contents of this film are very sensitive and a threat to the country’s national security, the families of these prisoners must find a way to return Saber Kaka Hasan to Iran and deliver him to the Intelligence Agency in exchange for their children.”
Alireza Yaghoobi, Siavash Dehghani, and Mohsen Alimaradi had no role in making the film or photographing the sites and only accompanied Saber Kaka Hasan as guides familiar with the region.
These prisoners have been charged with acting against the national security, reporting for foreign news agencies and spying for Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government and the US forces.
An informed source has told HRANA, “The Iranian security forces have contacted Siavash Dehghani’s family to give his father the news of Siavash’s suicide and the whereabouts of his grave.However, when the family went to that location, they were told to consider themselves forewarned and to take the matter seriously.”
Since these three prisoners don’t have an attorney and their families are not given any information, nothing is known about their cases.
Two Urmia University Student Publications Banned
HRANA News Agency – The Supervising Committee of Student Publications has banned two Kurdish student newspapers in Urmia University after two issues were released by these periodicals.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), on Tuesday, June 9, 2011, the officials at Urmia University Student Affairs summoned the editors of two Kurdish newspapers and informed them that their periodicals have been banned by the Supervising Committee of Student Publications.These two student publications, Herewez and Bojan, were the only Urmia University student newspapers published in Kurdish.
Last year, two other student publications named Rwanga and Jino were also banned.These periodicals were published in Kurdish and Farsi.
Siamak Sohrabi, Student Activist, Received Five Years Suspended Sentence
HRANA News Agency – Siamak Sohrabi, a student activist at Sharif Polytechnic University, has been sentenced by the Revolutionary Court, Branch 26, to serve five years in prison on charges of planning gatherings and conspiring to act against national security. According to this verdict, his five-year prison sentence is suspended.
On Wednesday, April 13, 2011, Siamak Sohrabi was released on bail after spending 45 days in prison. On April 25, 2011, the Revolutionary Court, Branch 26, was convened with the presence of Siamak Sohrabi’s attorneys, Dr. Yosef Molahi and Saleh Nikbakht. Judge Pierabasi presided over the trial. Amongst those arrested during the demonstrations on February 14, 2011 in Sharif Polytechnic University, Siamak Sohrabi is the first college student who has been tried and convicted.
According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Siamak Sohrabi is the chairman of the board for the General Council of Islamic Students’ Association, the representative of the Islamic Association in the university’s Civil Council and a Civil Engineering graduate student. Siamak Sohrabi was arrested on February 28, 2011 while attempting to leave the university and then transferred to Evin prison.
Siamak Sohrabi has also served as a member of the University Guild Council and the Civil Engineering Guild Council. Prior to his arrest, he had written a letter to the Interim President of the Sharif University, Reza Rosta Azad, criticizing his policies and pressures placed on students and demanded the release of all arrested students.
On February 14, 2011, eighteen students were arrested during a gathering held in the Sharif University. Ali Akbar Mohammad Zade, the Secretary of Islamic Students Council, is the only student who is still in prison after being in custody for over three months. In the last few weeks, after spending nearly two months in the solitary confinement, Ali Akbar Mohammad Zade was transferred to ward 209 and then to the high-security ward 350 in Evin prison.
Textile Workers in Kashan Protested Again
HRANA News Agency – Workers of the Spinning and Weaving Textile Company in Kashan gathered in a rally to protest in front of gubernatorial building and demanded their weekly wages promised to them by their employer. The Spinning and Weaving Textile Company had agreed to pay the workers $40 a week, the amount equal to 1/6 of a worker’s monthly wages.
A number of workers spoke with ILNA [Iranian Labour News Agency] in Kashan and said, “The Company owes us 32 months of back wages. We used to get paid $80 a week, but our wages were cut down to only $40.00 per week. Since the beginning of this year [March 21, 2011], they even don’t pay us that amount. We haven’t received a penny from them.”
During their rally, workers asked the authorities to follow up and take the necessary steps to quickly pay them their back wages for the last 32 months and also resolve the problems and concerns related to the retirement of 400 workers in this company.
The protesters blocked the main street in front the gubernatorial building and carried a placard asking, “Who answers for 32 months of back wages?” The rally disturbed the flow of traffic in this part of the city.
It must be noted that there are 1200 workers employed by the Spinning and Weaving Textile Company in Kashan. However, from the beginning of this year [March 21, 2011], the Company has been shut down because of a strike by the workers demanding 32 months of back wages.



