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Facing the Crackdown in Tehran

by: Matt Renner, t r u t h o u t | Report

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(Photo: AFP)

    An air of fear and uncertainty continues to grip the population of Tehran. State repression, propaganda, swirling rumors of violence and a murky political battle hold an anxious citizenry hostage.

    Were declarations of a second Iranian revolution premature? Are we witnessing an overthrow of a theocratic government, sparked by possible election theft and a subsequent popular protest movement? Will there be further protest? More violence? Will a new government be formed, bringing openness and international cooperation, or will the hardliners win and push Iran further into isolation and toward war? These are questions for later.

Also see below:     
Matt Renner | The Rooftops and Streets of Tehran    â€¢

    Aamina, a young Iranian woman who continues to risk her safety to speak with Truthout, faces immediate concerns as she visits her family in Tehran during the city's post-election upheaval. Her name has been changed and identifying details are being withheld to try and keep her safe.

    "Lately we have seen the Basij [militia] blocking some streets at night, stopping cars, especially those with young male drivers for a search. This kind of stopping used to be very common for late night party people. They used to look for alcohol, or they used to arrest girls because of the way they were dressed up, but now they look for anything Green or anything that has a sign that you support the movement."

    The Basij militia and the Revolutionary Guard troops understand the current unrest as a direct threat to their survival. These forces, tasked with protecting the current regime from foreign armies and internal destabilization, have gained power under current President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Their forces have administered countless beatings to protesters. A Basiji gunman is said to have been responsible for the shooting of Neda Agha-Soltan.

    Aamina was choked with fear as she approached one of these checkpoints. "[Saturday] I was out with some friends. We were passing one of these check-points. They did not stop us but if they would have, I would be in jail. My camera was with me, full of pictures from previous protests, and also a video of the Guards."

    The threat of jail or any interaction with the Basij militia could mean harassment, beating or even disappearance. Hundreds and possibly thousands of protesters, journalists, and others have been seized in the days following the June 12 voting.

    Some of the prisoners have allegedly been coerced into making televised confessions of anti-government conspiracy, according to Amnesty International and press reports.

    British freelance reporter Angus McDowall recently reported on the conditions inside the complicated Iranian detention system, describing the conditions as "torturous."

    "Kianoosh Sanjari was seized by plainclothes revolutionary guardsmen after a protest in 2002, he was beaten up in the back of the car on his way to the police station and his front tooth was broken. His thumbs were tied behind his back, he was blindfolded; his head was shaved (a sign of shame) and, after days in solitary confinement, he was taken before a revolutionary court. He was transferred to Prison 59, a military security facility at a revolutionary guards barracks in Tehran. For three months he was held alone in a cell too small to allow him to stretch out. Wardens mocked him for the amount of weight - about 20kg - he lost," McDowall reported.

    Aamina fears for the prisoners who have been arrested since the recent protests began. The protesters face a legal system and a harsh prosecutor tasked with protecting the current governing structure.

    "Said Mortazavi is the Public Prosecutor of Tehran. He has been on many cases and he will have the power to do anything to punish these so-called 'rebels against the Islamic government.' Zahra Kazemi was an Iranian reporter, who has been living in Canada for many years and came to Tehran to do a report on the prisoner's situations in Iran. She was arrested right in front of Evin Prison, which many political prisoners spent their time there, with an excuse that she broke the law and she was not supposed to take any pictures in front of the prison. She was interrogated and she was taken to the hospital during the interrogation. Nurses reported that her body was beaten, and after few days she died because of a hit in her head. Mortazavi was the prosecutor of the case and there were reports of him being present when she was beaten. Many even said that Mortazavi gave the order for beating her. Despite all controversy, no one questioned him and he never explained anything," Aamina said.

    In an interview with Truthout, University of Minnesota anthropology Professor William O. Beeman, a renowned Middle East expert, said that Mortazavi "is a hard liner, associated with the interrogation and death of Zahra Kazemi. In his hands, indictment and conviction of protesters could be very harsh."

    Arrested protesters do have hope in navigating the legal system according to Beeman, because the head of the judiciary, Ayatollah Hashemi-Shahroodi, is a reformer who previously placed a moratorium on public stonings and other extreme treatment.

    "All convictions in Iran may be appealed, and Shahroodi has been known to intervene," Beeman said.

  

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Matt Renner is the Director of Development at Truthout. He can be reached at Matt@truthout.org.

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CA prisons in the USA aren't

CA prisons in the USA aren't too nice either: http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/2582 On April 2, 2005, K'napp was moved from CSP Los Angeles (Lancaster) after about 100 people showed up to picket over his abuse in the hole where he was psychologically tormented for nearly six months. The Warden Michael Harrison claimed this was necessary "in order to save his own life from other inmates" What they did to him in the hole: 1. Blocked all phone calls going in and out of the prison, even to his attorney, 2. Refused to wash his laundry for four months. Can you imagine no clean clothes or underwear for four months? 3. Starved him. He was semi-starved by being fed portions of only one or two tablespoons of food. This is a common complaint from inmates in the hole at many prisons. 4. Denied him showers, K’napp was given a shower only twice a week, maybe, 5. Denied him proper personal grooming aids such as clippers for his beard and personal care supplies, nor was he allowed to get them in the canteen. 6. Given the stub of a pencil to write with. Even with legal work in progress he was given only the short stub of a pencil to write with which interfered with his access to the courts. K’napp has a growth on his finger and under ADA should be given the typewriter his family purchased for him to write with at all times. 7. Blocked outgoing mail. The prison refused to send his mail, even his legal mail, 8. Blocked correspondence from his family which means so much to anyone in cruel isolation. 9. One guard rapped on his door with a metal baton all through the night to keep him awake so that he would suffer intimidation and sleep deprivation. 10. Denied canteen, packages, and contact visits for half a year 11. He could have no television, no radio, and no art supplies, nothing but the four bare walls for months. 12. He had no access to his legal files even with court deadlines looming. Even though he is not isolated at this moment, most of this abuse continues today in Pleasant Valley Prison. This folks, is business as usual at most prisons. K’napp and his family wrote to Roderick Hickman, the big Kahuna head of the Adult and Correctional Agency who is supposed to be taking care of inmate problems. Hickman has been asked numerous times for relief by thousands of inmates and their families but there is never a reply. Hickman couldn't care less about the prisoners and their torment. His staff does nothing to relieve the abuse and tensions which ultimately return prisoners to their communities much sicker than before they were incarcerated. K’napp tried writing to other legislators to no avail, even the ones who pretend to be advocates for prisoners will not answer any inmate’s letters. Over the years, he has sent letters begging for relief to Senators Gloria Romero, Jackie Speier, others who are now termed out. Assembly member Jackie Goldberg, all of whom vote the right way on the bills but none of whom appear to have power to stop abuses, even when they are extreme, if they even received the letters. This is the dilemma for all inmates: there is no place to go for help. The Ombudsmen are as useless as yesterday’s oatmeal. Governor Schwarzenegger views prisoners as a photo opportunity and was forced by a lawsuit to parole some of them. But he is not worried about the day to day operations of the prisons and is now posturing some of the harshest laws in the country, thinking that will get him elected. Not so if the 3 million voters attached to inmates get out the vote against him for these tactics which serve no public safety interest.

ATTICA PRISON, USA: I went

ATTICA PRISON, USA: I went through the doorway and into A Block, and that's when the man I was working for in the laundry saw me and made me go over to the table on the side of wall. He laid me on the table and put a football under my chin and tortured me for four or five hours. [The guards said] if the football fell, they would kill me. Over me, they were dropping hot cigarettes and gun shells. And [they were] spitting on me. They kept telling me, "We're going to kill you, nigger. You done had your day and now we're going to have ours." They made me get off the table, and they beat me and ran me through a gauntlet, which was set up in the hallway. Everybody had to go through that, with glass broken on the floor. Five officers beat me and broke my wrist and opened my head up and knocked me just about out. They took me to a room next to the hospital, laid me on the floor, spread-eagled me, and played shotgun roulette with me. Then they took me and dumped me on the floor in the [prison] hospital.