Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

4 Pakistanis Killed By Iranian Forces In Balochistan: Pak Officials – NDTV

Two Pakistanis were also injured after Iranian forces opened fire in Balochistan. (Representational)

Four Pakistanis were killed and two were injured late on Tuesday night, when Iranian forces opened fire in the restive southwestern province of Balochistan in Pakistan, officials said.

The shooting took place near the Pakistan-Iran border, in Washuk District, confirmed Umar Jamali, additional deputy commissioner.

Naeem Umrani, deputy commissioner Washuk, said an investigation is being initiated to determine the reason for the shooting.

Former Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi visited Pakistan in April on a three-day official visit as the two Muslim neighbours seek to mend ties after unprecedented tit-for-tat military strikes this year. Raisi's visit was seen as a key step towards normalising ties with Islamabad.

Iran and Pakistan have had a history of rocky relations, but missile strikes in January were the most serious incidents in years, with Pakistan recalling its ambassador to Tehran and not allowing its counterpart to return to Islamabad, as well as cancelling all high-level diplomatic and trade engagements.

Swift efforts to lower the temperature subsequently led to assurances that they respected each other's sovereignty and territorial integrity, as well as vows to expand security cooperation and requests for envoys to return to their posts.

Islamabad said it hit bases of the separatist Baloch Liberation Front and Baloch Liberation Army, while Tehran said it struck militants from the Jaish al Adl (JAA) group.

The militant groups operate in an area that includes Pakistan's southwestern province of Balochistan and Iran's southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province. Both regions are restive, mineral-rich and largely underdeveloped.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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4 Pakistanis Killed By Iranian Forces In Balochistan: Pak Officials - NDTV

Human rights experts highlight threats to journalists covering Iran – UN News

The experts highlighted recent incidents targeting the Persian language news service Iran International, its journalists and staff, and its owner Volant Media UK Limited. Death threats and intimidation against the staff escalated into the violent stabbing of journalist Pouria Zeraati outside his home in London on 29 March.

Since 2017, Iran International has faced ongoing threats and harassment from Iranian authorities and their proxies, which intensified following the 2022 Woman, Life, Freedom protests in Iran. Persian media abroad were falsely accused of inciting unrest, exacerbating the abuse.

Such attacks not only violate the human rights to life and personal security but are also aimed at suppressing freedom of expression and the media, including legitimate criticism of the Iranian Government, they said.

According to the experts, there have been at least 15 credible Iranian plots to kill or kidnap individuals in the United Kingdom since 2022.

British counter-terrorism police warned two Iran International personnel, including Volants General Manager Mahmoud Enayat, of imminent threats to their lives in November 2022, prompting them to flee the UK.

Additionally, a plot to kill two television presenters, including Fardad Farahzad, was thwarted in November 2023.

The experts warned that these attacks and threats could have a chilling effect on journalists both inside and outside Iran.

They cited a September 2023 incident in New York where Iran International journalist Kian Amani was assaulted by a member of Irans delegation to the United Nations.

Iran imposed travel and financial sanctions on Volant Media and Iran International in 2022 for supposedly supporting terrorism and, in 2019, froze the assets of the owners and their family members in Iran.

We deplore the blatant misuse of counter-terrorism law against journalists, which violates freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly, the right to travel, privacy, family rights, the right to reputation and due process and judicial safeguards, the experts said.

The experts noted that the incidents against Iran International were part of a pattern of threats and attacks against Persian language media and dissidents outside Iran, including journalists working for BBC News Persian, Deutsche Welle, Voice of America, IranWire and Radio Farda.

We urge Iran to refrain from violence, threats and intimidation against Iran International and its staff, online and offline, and other journalists and media workers reporting on Iran from abroad, and to investigate and prosecute those responsible for such acts, they said.

The experts raising the alarm included the Special Rapporteurs on the human rights situation in Iran, on rights protection while countering terrorism, on freedom of opinion and expression, on peaceful association and assembly, and on extrajudicial executions.

Appointed by the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council, Special Rapporteurs are mandated to monitor and report on specific human rights sectors and country situation. They are not UN staff and do not draw a salary for their work.

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Human rights experts highlight threats to journalists covering Iran - UN News

Global: Executions soar to highest number in almost a decade – Amnesty International

For the 15th consecutive year, the USA remained the only country in the region to carry out executions.

The number of executions carried out in the USA increased by 33%, rising from 18 in 2022 to 24 in 2023.

Florida carried out its first executions (6) and US federal authorities imposed their first death sentence since 2019.

For the seventh consecutive year, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and the USA were the only countries in the region that imposed new death sentences.

Asia-Pacific continued to be the region with the highest number of executions in the world.

In Asia-Pacific, six countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, North Korea, Singapore and Viet Nam) are known to have carried out executions in 2023, a decrease from eight in 2022.

No executions were recorded in Japan and Myanmar, countries which executed people in 2022.

A total of 948 new death sentences were imposed in the region, based on available information, a 10% increase from 2022, when at least 861 people were known to have been sentenced to death.

Malaysia repealed the mandatory death penalty for all offences and reduced the scope of this punishment; Pakistan abolished the death penalty for drug related offences; and the authorities of Sri Lanka affirmed their intention not to carry out executions.

Belarus remained the only country in Europe to use the death penalty, sentencing one person to death in 2023.

Russia and Tajikistan continued to observe moratoriums on executions.

The number of executions recorded in the Middle East and North Africa region increased by 30%, rising from 825 in 2022 to 1,073 in 2023.

Recorded death sentences also increased, from 827 in 2022 to 950 in 2023.

Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq were the top three executing countries in the region in 2023. They accounted for 97% of all recorded executions in the region: Iran (80%), Saudi Arabia (16%) and Iraq (1%),

In total eight countries carried out executions in the region in 2023 Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Palestine (State of), Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen.

Recorded executions in the region more than tripled from 11 in 2022 to 38 in 2023.

All 38 executions took place in one country Somalia.

Death sentences were recorded in 14 countries in 2023, compared to 16 in 2022.

Recorded death sentences increased sharply by 66%, from 298 in 2022 to 494 in 2023.

Four countries (Kenya, Liberia, Zimbabwe and Ghana) took positive legislative steps towards the abolition of the death penalty.

*When calculating global and regional totals, + has been counted as two.

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Global: Executions soar to highest number in almost a decade - Amnesty International

The Questions Lingering Around the Death of Iran’s President – TIME

When the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi went missing on May 19, initial reports said nine passengers were on board, including two bodyguards. But after the wreckage was finally found, the number of bodies was eight. Four days later, the mystery of the second bodyguard was revealed in social media posts: Javad Mehrabl is seen leaning disconsolately in the rear of the memorial service for Raisi. Press accounts said that, at the last minute, his boss, Mehdi Mousavi, had directed him from the Presidents helicopter to one of the two others moving in convoy that day.

After Mousavi died in the crash, his father told Iranian state television that he knew his son would not return from this trip. The night before the trip he visited us, the father says on camera. He said goodbye and got into his car but returned and stayed 20 minutes. Then he left but after a short drive he returned again and spent 10 more minutes with us. He grows choked up. The third time when saying goodbye he kissed his mother, he kissed his mothers feet, he kissed me, and then bent down and kissed my feet.

It was then I knew he would go and never return, I knew we would never meet again.

The bodyguards were members of a special unit of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the military force created in 1979 to replace an Iranian army distrusted by the countrys new theocratic government. Their unit, Sepah Ansar al-Mahdi, is responsible for the personal security of the regimes senior officials. To that end, its members carry phones specially equipped not only for secure communication, but also for location tracking. The device Mousavi carried on board presumably would have been useful in locating the helicopter, which went down in rugged terrain not far from Irans border with Azerbaijan. Yet it took 16 hours for rescuers to reach it.

The Sepah does not appear to be under suspicion, at least by Irans most senior official: In one photo from the funeral for Raisi and other victims, Sepah bodyguards account for a good two-thirds of the people arrayed behind Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. His throat is warmed, as usual, by the cross-hatched scarf of the IRGC that signals his closeness to the Guard.

More than a week after Raisi was killed, mysterious questions persist not only about the crash, but also about what will come next.

Some of the questions have explanations: The transponder on an aircraft carrying senior officials reportedly was switched off as a matter of routine, out of fear of tracking by hostile governments. When the helicopter went down, on a wooded hilltop in northwest Iran, one passenger survived long enough to retrieve the pilots ringing cell phone, tried to describe the area, and died awaiting rescue. Sparse cell coverage would have hampered efforts to locate it by triangulation.

Still other questions might be answered by forensic technical investigation. Raisis chief of staff, who was flying on another chopper, said that shortly before disappearing, the Presidents pilot ordered the other helicopters to climb in altitude in order to rise above clouds clinging to the hills. The other aircraft did so, but the Presidents helicopter was not heard from again.

And some information, while intriguing, is open to interpretation. Iranians might put the fathers story, for instance, to some premonition accessible to the devout.

But others will hear it as evidence of plotsomething not unprecedented in a regime known both for its opacity and its brutality. Raisis elderly mother added to the speculation when she appeared in a video, visibly upset and calling for the death of anyone who killed you other than God.

Her son was widely assumed to be in the running to succeed Khamenei, who is 85 and frequently reported to be in failing health. Raisi was supported in that effort by the most extreme faction of regime stalwarts, the Paydari Front. As President, Raisi had imposed the crackdown on modesty that in 2022 ensnared Mahsa (Jina) Amini, who died in the custody of the so-called morality police for allegedly improper hijab. He was also the face of the regimes brutal confrontation of the uprising her death inspiredand blamed for the brutal deaths of more than 500 Iranians in the spontaneous movement that took Woman, Life, Freedom as its slogan. That he died returning from the inauguration of a dam called Qiz-Qalasi, or Fort of Girls, struck some as poetic justice.

Human rights groups knew Raisi as a member of the so called Death Committee that in 1988 ordered the summary execution of thousands of dissidents, described by regime officials themselves as "the biggest atrocity of the Islamic Republic... for which we will be condemned by history.

Relatively unknown to the general populace just 10 years ago, Raisi had been fast tracked to national prominence just as the issue of Khameneis succession was gaining urgency. Rumors persist that the Supreme Leader has plans for his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, to succeed him. When, in a speech just hours after Raisis helicopter had gone missing, Khamenei prayed for his safe return but stressed that the people should be confident that there will be no disturbance in the affairs of state. His calm manner did not go unnoticed.

This would not be the first time that someone who did not share Khameneis vision for Irans future leadership had met a suspicious end. In 2017, former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani died in a swimming pool. A founder of the Islamic Republic, Rafsanjani had been instrumental in propelling Khamenei to the top job. But in the decades that followed, they fell out so thoroughly that, by the time of his death, Rafsanjani was known as the top opponent of the Supreme Leader within the regime. When Rafsanjanis family reported that his body recorded radioactive readings many times higher than safe levels, they requested an autopsy. The request was denied and, shortly afterwards, the case was closed.

So it was that, in the first hours after the helicopter crash, a battle emerged to define its meaning. An analysis of social media showed that 22% of X accounts involved in the discussions of the crash were fake, operating within a sophisticated disinformation campaign with a potential to reach 6 million views in the first two days, according to the cyber-security company Cyabra.

Cyabra, which is based in Tel Aviv, says it documented a conspiracy theory circulating online that maintained a Mossad agent named Eli Copter had caused the crash. The name had been lifted from a joke posted on Hebrew social media, but Israels spy agency has killed several senior Iranian nuclear scientists and military figures in recent years. Though any role in Raisiss death was denied by Israel officials and discounted by Israeli analysts, the thought occurs.

Only two months earlier, in retaliation for an Israeli strike on an Iranian consulate building in Syria that killed two senior generals, Tehran launched some 300 missiles and drones toward Israelits first direct attack on Israeli territory. After Iraq launched Scud missiles into Israel during the 1991 Gulf War, Israel laid plans to assassinate Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, calling it off after a rehearsal ended in the accidental deaths of five Israeli commandos.

Another of the campaigns promoted by the fake accounts put forward the narrative that portrays Raisi as a national hero, using the same hashtags as his supporters did. Fake accounts were also involved in the narrative that criticized him, though the public outbursts celebrating his death were real enough. Clips that showed families of those killed by the regime shouting and dancing in joy became so bold that police began arresting anyone they deemed to have insulted Raisi online.

The authorities might have hoped that the death of a President while performing his duty would garner some sympathy for the Islamic Republic. But the divide between regime and society seems too deep to be bridged by Raisis death.

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The Questions Lingering Around the Death of Iran's President - TIME

Stockholm accuses Iran of using criminals in Sweden to target Israel or Jewish interests – Yahoo! Voices

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Sweden's domestic security agency on Thursday accused Iran of using established criminal networks in Sweden as a proxy to target Israeli or Jewish interests in the Scandinavian country.

The accusations were raised at a news conference by Daniel Stenling, the head of the SAPO agency's counterespionage unit, following a series of events earlier this year.

In late January, the Israeli Embassy in Stockholm was sealed off after what was then described as a dangerous object was found on the grounds of the diplomatic mission in an eastern Stockholm neighborhood. Swedish media said the object was a hand grenade.

The embassy was not evacuated and the object was eventually destroyed. No arrests were made and authorities did not say what was found. On May 17, gunshots were heard near the Israeli Embassy in Stockholm and the area was cordoned off. No one was arrested.

Stenling said, without offering specifics or evidence to back up his assertion, that the agency "can establish that criminal networks in Sweden are used as a proxy by Iran.

It is very much about planning and attempts to carry out attacks against Israeli and Jewish interests, goals and activities in Sweden," he said and added that the agency sees "connections between criminal individuals in the criminal networks and individuals who are connected to the Iranian security services.

Justice Minister Gunnar Strmmer and Hampus Nygrds, deputy head of the Swedish police's National Operations Department, were also at the online news conference with Stenling.

We see this connection between the Iranian intelligence services, the security services and precisely criminals in the criminal networks in Sweden," Stenling said. We see that connection and it also means that we need to work much more internationally to get to the crimes and be able to prevent them.

Stenling and the others made no mention of the recent incidents connected to the Israel Embassy and stopped short of naming any criminal groups or suspects.

Sweden has grappled with gang violence for years and criminal gangs often recruit teenagers in socially disadvantaged immigrant neighborhoods to carry out hits.

By May 15, police have recorded 85 shootings so far this year, including 12 fatal shootings. Last year, 53 people were killed and 109 were wounded in a total of 363 shootings.

Two main gangs the Foxtrot network headed by Rawa Majid, who lives in exile in Turkey, and its rival, Rumba have for years been involved in deadly feuds. Ankara had rejected Swedens request to have Majid, a Swedish citizen, extradited because he also holds Turkish citizenship.

Stenling said there was no reason to change the terror threat level in Sweden.

Last year, it was heightened to high, the fourth of five levels, for the first time since 2016 as the security deteriorated after public burnings of Islam's holy book, the Quran, that triggered protests in the Muslim world.

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Stockholm accuses Iran of using criminals in Sweden to target Israel or Jewish interests - Yahoo! Voices