Relatives Of Massacred Iranian Prisoners Push To Oust Professor From Ohio College
Mohammad Jafar Mahallati, a former Iranian UN envoy
Families of political prisoners executed in Iran’s in 1988 are meeting Ohio state legislators to push for the sacking of a college professor accused of being involved in the killings.
According to a statement released by relatives of the victims, they will meet with 10 state legislators to ask them to withhold state and federal funding to Oberlin College until Mohammad Jafar Mahallati, a former Iranian UN envoy who covered up the mass killings, is fired.
"On April 28 we will hold a protest at Oberlin College, and then we will participate in the Oberlin city rally to hail the courage of the Iranian people in standing up against the clerical regime," read the statement.
Mahallati, currently a professor of religion at Oberlin College, is accused of playing a role as an accomplice in the 1988 prison massacre.
The executions were carried out based on a fatwa by Iran's then-supreme leader, Ruhollah Khomeini, against the MEK which carried out a wave of bombings in Iran and struck an alliance with Saddam Hussein during the 1980-88 war.
The exact number of prisoners executed during the purge of prisoners is not known but according to Amnesty International, the Iranian authorities "forcibly disappeared" and "extrajudicially executed" around 5,000 between July and September 1988.
Mahallati maintains that he was unaware of the executions despite Amnesty International’s numerous urgent notices to Iran calling for an end to the killings which were widely reported by the media.
An Iranian lawmaker has warned about an impending medicine crisis following an inadequate budget allocation.
Homayoun Sameyah, a member of the Parliament's Health Commission, announced that the budget needed to procure medicine and medical equipment is 150 thousand billion tomans (nearly 3 billion USD), but the fund allocated by the government is less than half this figure.
“Our prediction is that in the coming months, the issue of medicine and medical equipment shortage will worsen,” he said on Monday.
Despite the warnings, Minister of Health Bahram Einollahi is underplaying the crisis, claiming that “most medicines are available, and there will be no problem regarding the supply of pharmaceuticals this year.”
Medicine shortages in more economically deprived areas of the country have already reached crisis point with medical staff at hospitals in the southeastern city of Zahedan citing shortages of IV fluid, insulin, and inhaler sprays.
In the last Iranian year, ending March 20, the medicine crisis intensified as people witnessed multifold increase in prices. The government scrapped an import subsidy for food and medications last year.
Although the national currency bounced back in the past month it is still down 50 percent compared to six months ago. The country imported around 100 million euros of medicines a month from Europe alone in 2022 and also large quantities from China and India.
Official figures show a major drop in Iran’s exports to China, India and Turkey in the first quarter of 2023.
Turkey's Official Statistics Center has reported that the country's imports from Iran have fallen to $450 million, a 22% drop. The numbers announced by the Indian Ministry of Commerce also show a 6% drop in imports from the Islamic Republic, hitting less than $162 million.
Official Chinese customs data also shows that imports from Iran were $2.9 billion in the first quarter of 2023, which is a decline of more than 41% compared to the first quarter of 2022. The reasons for the decline in trade with Iran's major Asian ally are not clear, but during recent months, Iranian economic experts and businessmen had said that Russian products are dominating the Chinese market.
Amin Ebrahimi, CEO of Iran’s Khuzestan Steel Company, claims that by supplying steel below global prices, Russia has captured the markets that Iran had created for itself during four decades of sanctions.
Meanwhile, Secretary General of the Petrochemical Industry Employers Association, Ahmad Mahdavi Abhari, told ILNA news agency on Saturday that the export of urea and methanol has decreased by 2.5 million tons since March 21, due to lack of natural gas needed at plants.
He said this will lead to a $700 million drop in exports because compared to last year the figure has decreased by 20-25%.
Israel reportedly shelled the positions of Iran-backed Hezbollah near its northern borders with Syria in Al-Quneitra province, near the Golan Heights.
More than 20 shells were fired Monday morning at a position controlled by the Lebanese Hezbollah, which has established many similar bases near the Israeli border.
So far, there is no official word from the Syrian or Israeli governments about the attack, that came barely three weeks after extensive terror and rocket attacks by Iran-backed Palestinian groups against Israel.
Times of Israel reported that artillery strike was reported by Sham FM, a Syrian radio station affiliated with the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Israel also reportedly dropped leaflets warning Syrian troops not to cooperate with Iranian militia and allow them to operate near its borders. Names and photos of Syrian army officers allowing these militias to operate in the area were printed on the leaflets.
“We are closely watching and aware of the ongoing intelligence cooperation with Hezbollah within the Syrian army’s positions in the region, including near the Israeli border. Your cooperation with Hezbollah has… brought you more harm than benefit. Cooperation with Hezbollah leads to harm!” the flyer read.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a London-based war monitor also reported the Israeli attack, saying that a similar artillery strike took place on April 17.
There are still no reports about possible casualties.
Iranian officials have boasted of having destabilized Israel by the early-April rocket attacks by the Palestinians and with a new vigor has vowed to help militant forces to continue the campaign, saying that Israel has become weaker and will succumb to the “resistance,” a term used to refer to Tehran’s proxies.
Concerns have been growing in Israel over a possible multi-front war, with attacks coming from Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. Army intelligence has warned of the danger, but Iran International's correspondent in Israel reported that the chairman of Israel's national security council Tzachi Hanegbi disagrees with the assessment for the near future.
Israel has been extensively conducting air and missile strikes against Iran’s military presence across Syria at least since April 2017. Thousands of attacks have targeted weapons depots, and other military positions controlled by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.
Iran ships large quantities of arms to Syria and maintains up to 30,000 Afghan, Pakistani and Iraqi militiamen in addition to Hezbollah fighters to turn Syria to a new front against Israel.
Israel has not taken responsibility for the great majority of these attacks but has vowed never to allow Iran to get entrenched in Syria.
Iranian officials have intensified their anti-Israeli rhetoric since the military confrontation earlier this month, with claims of victory and threats of annihilating Israel coming on daily basis.
Iranian media reported Monday that Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian spoke with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh by phone, reiterating Tehran's "spiritual and political support" for Palestinians. Haniyeh reiterated "the serious will of Palestinian groups" to continue "the resistance".
The Hamas leader also welcomes a Saudi Iranian agreement in March to restore diplomatic relations.
As more and more workers of Iran’s energy sector are going on strike, Iran International has obtained information that sheds light on their inhumane working conditions.
In an audio file sent to Iran International and verified by our contacts, a man recounts the ordeal of contract workers in the companies active in oil, gas and petrochemical industries.
The worker especially talked about the case of himself and his colleagues working under contract by the Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industries Corporation, aka Persian Gulf Holding, where a $170-million embezzlement case at one of its subsidiaries put the company on spotlight last winter.
Persian Gulf Holding is a large Iranian quasi-governmental company that claims to be an independent entity but practically it is a large part of the government-controlled energy industry with 15 subsidiaries. Regime insider Abdolali Ali-Asgari – a former head of the country’s state broadcaster is the current CEO of the company.
Abdolali Ali-Asgari, the CEO of Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industries Corporation
Describing their situation as “stuck in hidden slavery,” the worker says the problems stem from the special status of a few well-connected senior managers and systematic corruption in the energy industry.
“Iran’s oil industry mafia takes advantage of the workers, especially project and contract workers, and forces them to work in terrible conditions," he said.
With double-digit unemployment and ever-falling currency, workers have little choice to find other employment paying them more than the minimum wage of $120 a month.
Workers' lives are not important for managers; wages are meager and are paid with delays; there are no weekend breaks; the managers are selected from those with links to senior officials and do not do anything but sit in their ivory towers with their laptops; and when workers go on strike to demand changes, the security forces threaten the them and their families to break their strikes. These are just some of the gravamina of the worker in his audio file.
He went on to say that several workers have died in the past few months due to non-compliance of companies with safety issues, but the authorities do not let such incidents to be reflected in mainstream media.
The worker claimed that the firms which employ them sign contracts with the government in euros and dollars but pay workers in rials and often two or three months late.
One of the main reasons that the information about the plight of oil industry workers does not make news is that their workplaces are usually located in remote areas with poor connectivity to big cities, making them vulnerable to pressure by their employers.
In an interview with Iran International on Sunday, journalist Reza Hajihosseini described the situation of these workers as a case of “dehumanization,” noting that the way the employers treat the workers reminds us of a leaked video showing how jailors treated prisoners in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison.
Javad Abbasi Tavallali, a journalist with firsthand experience about the working conditions in Asaluyeh -- a city in Bushehr province and home to the majority of the country’s energy plants and refineries – told Iran International that almost all these government contractors, such as Petro Sina Arya, PetroPars, and Petro Paydar Iranian, are affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard.
“These companies make the best use of a lack of media coverage about their actions and a lack of workers unions,” he said, adding that “the exploitation and the disasters that are taking place in Asaluyeh are known to the government thanks to regular reports by Khatam-al Anbiya Construction Headquarters – the engineering wing of the IRGC – for decades.”
The worker's statement comes on the backdrop of a renewed round of strikes by Iranian factory workers, including workers in the country's oil industry.
Since Saturday, workers of more than 30 oil, gas, steel and petrochemical companies in Asaluyeh and Kangan in Bushehr province, Dehloran in Ilam province, Gachsaran in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province, and many more started another round of strike demanding wage increases in the face of more than 50 percent annual inflation.
In a move to denounce the arbitrary incarceration of a Belgian aid worker in Iran, his niece locked herself in a cage in the western city of Tournai on Saturday.
Olivier Vandecasteele was detained in 2022 on trumped-up charges and sentenced to 40 years in prison by the judiciary of the Islamic Republic.
He also received a sentence of 74 lashes for alleged “spying and cooperation with the United States, money laundering and currency smuggling.”
The symbolic move by Manon Vandecasteele, however, was aimed at denouncing any progress for the release of her uncle and godfather.
Approximately a hundred people gathered on the Grand Place where Manon locked herself in a small steel cage.
Putting on a white jumpsuit and a blindfold, the 19-year-old knelt on the ground while the crowd applauded.
Increasing public awareness and mobilizing the public are two objectives Manon hopes to achieve through her campaign for the release of the humanitarian worker.
Belgium and Vandecasteele’s family believe he is innocent and a victim of hostage taking by the Iranian regime.
Belgium's justice minister said in January that Vandecasteele had been imprisoned "for a fabricated series of crimes" and had been sentenced as retribution for a 20-year jail term Belgian courts imposed on Iranian diplomat Assadollah Assadi in 2021.
Assadi, 50, a former attaché at the Iranian embassy in Austria, was convicted of plotting to bomb a gathering of the exiled opposition group Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK) near Paris on June 30, 2018.