Friday, September 5, 2014

Eye on Iran: US, Iran Hold Second Day of Nuclear Talks in Geneva








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AFP: "US and Iranian officials were meeting for a second day of negotiations in Switzerland Friday as they work towards hammering out a full nuclear deal ahead of a November deadline. The US team led by Deputy Secretary of State Bill Burns and Under Secretary Wendy Sherman began meeting Thursday with an Iranian delegation led by Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in a luxury Geneva hotel. No information filtered out from the first day of closed-door talks, and it remained unclear whether they would wrap up Friday or continue into Saturday... State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf meanwhile called Thursday on Iran to 'fully and without delay' cooperate with UN watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), after its inspectors were refused access to a military base outside Tehran that they have been trying to visit since 2005." http://t.uani.com/1xkEuZV

IHR: "Two prisoners were hanged in the public in two different Iranian towns in the Mazanderan province (Northern Iran), reported the Iranian state media. One of the prisoners was a man identified as 'Mohsen D.' charged with a murder in 2008, according to the official website of Mazanderan Judiciary. The execution was scheduled to take place in the town of Mahmoodabad on Monday September 1. But due to protests by the people it was interrupted and carried out on Tuesday September 2, under heavy security measures... Since the beginning of August 2014 at least 90 people have been executed in Iran. 17 of the executions have been carried out in the public." http://t.uani.com/1qtokbP

ICHRI: "The accelerated efforts to restrict women's access to jobs, professions, and public venues continue in Iran. In the latest announcement, Colonel Khalil Helali, Head of the Public Buildings Office of the Iranian Police, said on August 30, 2014, that henceforth women are not allowed employment in coffee shops, coffee houses, and traditional Iranian restaurants.  No laws or reasons were cited as the basis for the decision to bar women from having such jobs. Shargh Daily also reported on September 2, 2014, that women are now banned from appearing on stage at musical performances in 13 provinces across the country. Only bands without any female members will be granted the required performance license, according to the report." http://t.uani.com/1lEQeBc


 
Human Rights

RFE/RL: "A newly launched women's monthly run by a prominent female editor has irked Iranian hard-liners, who have accused her of promoting 'obsolete' feminist views and ideas that are un-Islamic. Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported last week that Shahla Sherkat , editor of 'Zanan-e Emruz,' will be put on trial by Iran's Press Court on September 7. Fars, said to be close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), did not provide details about the charges against Sherkat. The report has led to concern that action could be taken to shut down the monthly devoted to women's issues." http://t.uani.com/1rPQOis

ICHRI: "Omid Kokabi, an exceptional student serving a 10-year sentence, has not been allowed medical treatment outside Evin Prison despite his worsening kidney stone condition and stomach ailment, a source told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. Kokabi, 33, who has not been allowed furlough once in the four years since his incarceration (a customary practice in Iran but routinely denied to political prisoners), was among the country's top students. He was studying post-doctoral Nuclear Physics at the University of Texas at Austin at the time of his arrest at Tehran's International Airport as he was about to leave the country on January 30, 2011, after visiting family in Iran. He was kept in solitary confinement for over a month during his 15-month pre-trial detention. On May 14, 2012, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison by Judge Salavati for 'contact with enemy states' and other falsified charges." http://t.uani.com/1xkBeOb

AFP: "A Dutch-Iranian human rights campaigner who had been sentenced to death in Iran has been freed and allowed to return home to the Netherlands, his son told a Dutch press agency on Friday. Abdullah al-Mansouri, 69, arrived home on August 20, his son Adnan told the ANP press agency. 'He did not expect to leave prison alive,' the son said. A defender of Arab minority rights in Iran, Mansouri was sentenced to death in 2007 for 'terrorism', but this was later commuted to 15 years in prison. He does not know why he was released so early, ANP reported. His son said Iranian prisoners can be released early for good behaviour. Mansouri was convicted for his work in the Khuzestan province of western Iran, where the majority Sunni-Arab population has pushed for greater autonomy." http://t.uani.com/1t8wCUT

Opinion & Analysis

Sumitha Narayanan Kutty in Lawfare: "As the United States begins to disengage from Afghanistan, there is renewed interest in Washington to understand the extent of Iran's involvement in the region... When it comes to Afghanistan, Iran's influence is here to stay. Nevertheless, there are no indications that Iran looks to involve itself militarily in the country after 2016. Iran has lasting political, economic, religious, ethnic, and cultural assets in Afghanistan, given that the latter area was historically part of the Persian Empire. The two countries share a 582-mile border along a plain in western Afghanistan. About one-fifth of Afghanistan's population is Shi'ite, and this remains the focal point of Iran's interaction. Twenty percent of Afghans speak Dari, a dialect of Persian. The two countries have never fought a war with each other. Yet, despite these deep ties, the bilateral relationship remains fettered by issue-based rivalries over conflicting economic interests, shared river waters, and treatment of ethnic and sectarian minorities in Afghanistan. Given these circumstances, Iran has four long-standing strategic objectives in Afghanistan. First, Iran wants a pro-Tehran administration in Kabul: one that will preferably distance itself from the United States and remain wary of the Taliban and its state sponsors (Pakistan and Saudi Arabia). Tehran will also not object to a Pashtun-majority government as long as ethnic minorities (Tajiks and Hazaras) obtain fair representation in the new government... Iran's second non-negotiable objective is to maintain is its leverage over the Shi'ite, Dari/Persian-speaking, non-Pashtun population. Iran has long supported its traditional Afghan allies-the Farsiwan Heratis, the Shi'ite Hazara, and the Tajiks. Iran has also preserved relationships with the various militias it helped train during the Soviet invasion,  many of which are led by prominent Afghan political players... Iran's third priority is to preserve and expand its economic sphere of influence in Afghanistan. Iran provides about 50 percent of Afghanistan's oil imports. Bilateral trade shot up ten-fold in the last five years to $5 billion, with Afghanistan accounting for 45 percent of Iran's exports. On reconstruction efforts, Iran pledged over $900 million in aid between 2002 and 2013. According to Iranian officials, their "golden era" of support was from 2002 to 2007, with contributions totaling over $560 million. From 2007, funds were directed toward existing projects with the aim of pushing them toward completion. Over half of that amount was spent on infrastructure and power projects in western Afghanistan. In recent years, Iran has worked meticulously to expand its cultural and economic profile, particularly in the western border province of Herat, which feeds into its regional integration strategy. Iran has long advertised to its landlocked neighbor the availability of land and sea access through Iran to Central Asia and beyond. Tehran's regional vision also includes the growth of transit trade through its new Chabahar port in the country's southeast, with the participation of Afghanistan and India." http://t.uani.com/1o68Fub

Abdulrahman al-Rashed in Al Arabiya: "Iran's rush to aid the Sunnis among Iraqi Kurds expresses Iran's tripartite strategy towards Iraq, Syria and Turkey. Tehran wants to dominate the area to protect its influence in Baghdad. It also aims to control eastern Syria and to influence Kurdish relations with Turkey. Arabs don't have plans to dominate or to gain influence in either Iraq or in Syria and they also avoid raising Turkey's suspicions. Iran, however, is less concerned about respecting the rules of the regional security balance. Iran desires to take over Iraq at any price by presenting itself as the protector of Sunni Kurds and Shiite Arabs... No one will remember ISIS in few years but Iran wants to seize Iraq for decades to come, and this is the regional game of the struggle over land and influence... Unfortunately, the interest of Arab governments in Iraq's Kurdistan is limited and it's no match for the interest of the United States and Iran, although the Kurdistan region is like a balcony which different powers use to overlook Baghdad since Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. Kurdistan is also important in the game of balance played out in the Iraqi parliament and cabinet. Iran's domination over Iraq will eventually lead to targeting the Arab Gulf area, because this is the center of regional and international battles and it is the center of global energy, funds and political influence. As for the Kurds, they feel grateful to the Iranians without giving any attention to the nature of Iran's goals, particularly as Arab governments have not communicated with them to even verbally convey their solidarity against the threat of ISIS. This is what one Kurdish official told me. Truth be told, Kurdistan's leaders are wrong to point this exaggerated finger of blame as Arab governments don't have an expansionist agenda like Iran does. Second, ISIS is a general problem that is not limited to Kurdistan. There are Kurds, not only Arabs, fighting alongside ISIS! Third, ISIS has done worse to the Sunnis of Anbar. It also shed the blood of many Syrian people and killed hundreds of young men from the al-Sheitaat clan and they are all Sunni Arabs. Finally, the Kurds must remember outgoing Iraqi Prime Minister's Nouri al-Maliki's abuses against them and how all these violations would not have occurred if Maliki hadn't coordinated with Iran. So, let's not think that Iran's sudden rescue of Kurdistan is for the sake of god." http://t.uani.com/Wl2j2z


Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

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