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168 feared dead in Iran plane crash

Wreckage in flames after airliner bound for Armenia crashes near Qazvin in north-west Iran

All 168 people on board a flight from Tehran to Armenia are feared dead after the plane crashed today in a rural area of north-west Iran.

Shortly after take-off flight 7908, operated by Iran’s Caspian airlines, came down in farmland near the city of Qazvin.

“It is highly likely that all the passengers on the flight were killed,” Hossein Bahzadpour, the Qazvin emergency services director, told the IRNA news agency.

“It’s a major disaster with pieces of aircraft spread over an area of 200 sq m,” a fire brigade official told state television. “There was an explosion which left an indentation 10 metres deep in the ground. There was nothing we could do. We tried to put out the fire as best we could.”

The Fars news agency quoted a senior provincial official, Sirous Saberi, as saying the aeroplane had technical problems and tried to do an emergency landing.

“Unfortunately the plane caught fire in the air and it crashed … different small parts of this plane can be seen on the ground,” Reuters reported, quoting Fars.

Caspian airlines is a Russian-Iranian joint venture founded in 1993. The Russian-built Tupolev plane had been on its way to the Armenian capital, Yerevan. It came down this morning near the village of Jannatabad in Qazvin province, about 75 miles north-west of Tehran, 16 minutes after taking off from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini airport.

The deputy chairman of Armenia’s civil aviation authority, Arsen Pogosian, told reporters in Yerevan there were 154 passengers and 15 crew members on board. Most are thought to be Iranians.

Television footage showed a smouldering crater strewn with mangled wreckage, with a large piece of wing lying in farmland. Most of the wreckage appeared to be in small pieces and included clothes, shoes and identity papers.

There were differing eyewitness accounts of what happened. One said: “I was about 300 metres away. The plane fell from the sky and exploded on impact.” But another told the ISNA news agency that the plane’s tail burst into flames and the plane circled in the air as if looking for a place to land before it crashed.

Serob Karapetian, the chief of Yerevan airport’s aviation security service, said the plane may have attempted an emergency landing, but reports that it caught fire in the air were “only one version”.

Bodies had been gathered from the crater, Press TV said. Those on board included eight members of Iran’s national youth judo team and three coaches. They were planning to train with the Armenian judo team before attending competitions in Hungary. Six Armenian citizens and two Georgian citizens were on the flight, and the rest were likely to be Iranians, Pogosian said.

At Yerevan airport, Tina Karapetian, 45, said she had been waiting for her sister and her sister’s two sons, who were due on the flight. “What will I do without them?” she said, weeping, before she collapsed to the floor.

Iran has frequent plane crashes, which it blames on US sanctions that prevent it from getting spare parts for aging aircraft. But Caspian airlines uses Russian-made planes whose maintenance would be less affected by American sanctions.

In February 2006, a Russian-made Tupolev TU-154 operated by Iran Airtour crashed during landing in Tehran, killing 29 of the 148 people on board. Another Airtour Tupolev crashed in 2002 in the mountains of western Iran, killing all 199 on board. Airtour is affiliated with Iran’s national carrier, Iran Air.

The Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has expressed his condolences to the victims’ families and called for an urgent inquiry.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Iran plane crash

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — An Iranian passenger plane crashed Wednesday in northwest Iran, killing all 168 people on board, state media reported.
Footage from the scene on state-run Press TV showed a deep trench smashed into an agricultural field by the impact, littered with smoking wreckage. It showed a large chunk of a wing, but much [...]

Iran boycott for Nokia ‘collaboration’

The mobile phone company Nokia is being hit by a growing economic boycott in Iran as consumers sympathetic to the post-election protest movement begin targeting a string of companies deemed to be collaborating with the regime.

Wholesale vendors in the capital report that demand for Nokia handsets has fallen by as much as half in the wake of calls to boycott Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) for selling communications monitoring systems to Iran.

There are signs that the boycott is spreading: consumers are shunning SMS messaging in protest at the perceived complicity with the regime by the state telecoms company, TCI. Iran’s state-run broadcaster has been hit by a collapse in advertising as companies fear being blacklisted in a Facebook petition. There is also anecdotal evidence that people are moving money out of state banks and into private banks.

Nokia is the most prominent western company to suffer from its dealings with the Iranian authorities. Its NSN joint venture with Siemens provided Iran with a monitoring system as it expanded a mobile network last year. NSN says the technology is standard issue to dozens of countries, but protesters believe the company could have provided the network without the monitoring function.

Siemens is also accused of providing Iran with an internet filtering system called Webwasher.

“Iranians’ first choice has been Nokia cellphones for several years, partly because Nokia has installed the facility in the country. But in the past weeks, customers’ priority has changed,” said Reza, a mobile phone seller in Tehran’s Big Bazaar.

“Since the news spread that NSN had sold electronic surveillance systems to the Iranian government, people have decided to buy other company’s products although they know that Nokia cellphones function better with network coverage in Iran.”

Some Tehran shops have removed Nokia phones from their window displays. Hashem, another mobile phone vendor, said: “I don’t like to lose my customers and now people don’t feel happy seeing Nokia’s products. We even had customers who wanted to refund their new Nokia cellphones or change them with just another cellphone from any other companies.

“It’s not just a limited case to my shop – I’m also a wholesaler to small shops in provincial markets, and I can say that there is half the demand for Nokia’s product these days in comparison with just one month ago, and it’s really unprecedented. People feel ashamed of having Nokia cellphones,” he added.

News of the boycott has appeared on the front page of Iranian pro-reform papers such as Etemad-e Melli, owned by the reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi. Hadi Heidari, a prominent Iranian cartoonist, has published an image of a Nokia phone on a No Entry traffic sign.

A Nokia spokeswoman refused to comment on the company’s sales in Iran.

The Iranian authorities are believed to have used Nokia’s mobile phone monitoring system to target dissidents. Released prisoners have revealed that the authorities were keeping them in custody on the basis of their SMS and phone calls archive, which was at officials’ disposal.

One Iranian journalist who has just been released from detention said: “I always had this impression that monitoring calls is just a rumour for threatening us from continuing our job properly, but the nightmare became real when they had my phone calls – conversations in my case.

“And the most unbelievable thing for me is that Nokia sold this system to our government. It would be a reasonable excuse for Nokia if they had sold the monitoring technology to a democratic country for controlling child abuse or other uses, but selling it to the Iranian government with a very clear background of human rights violence and suppression of dissent, it’s just inexcusable for me. I’d like to tell Nokia that I’m tortured because they had sold this damn technology to our government.”

NSN spokesman Ben Roome said: “As in every other country, telecoms networks in Iran require the capability to lawfully intercept voice calls. In the last two years, the number of mobile subscribers in Iran has grown from 12 million to over 53 million, so to expand the network in the second half of 2008 we were required to provide the facility to intercept voice calls on this network.”

In other sectors, state-run TV has also been targeted by protesters who have listed products advertised on its channels and urged supporters to join a boycott. Companies are running scared, and viewers have noticed the number of commercials plummet.

“We don’t have many choices to show and continue our protests. They don’t let us go out, they have killed many, we are threatened to text people or distribute emails, they have summoned people who shout Allahu Akbar ['God is great'] on rooftops at nights, so we need to look for new ways,” said Shahla, a 26-year-old Iranian student.

“I can obviously see on the TV that they are facing an [advertising] crisis. This at least shows them how angry people are,” she added.

The SMS boycott, meanwhile, has apparently forced TCI into drastic price hikes. The cost of an SMS has doubled in recent days. Protesters view the move as a victory.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Reporters Uncensored: Behind the Scenes of the Global Web Series

There are unfortunately too many international issues that the MSM does not cover

Israel Warships Cross Suez In Possible Iran Signal

JERUSALEM — Two Israeli warships sailed through the Suez Canal on Tuesday, Israeli and Egyptian officials said, a move that appeared to be a new signal to Iran that Israel’s reach could quickly extend to its archenemy’s backyard.

The Su…

Iranians ‘execute Sunni rebels’

map

Iran is to execute in public 14 convicted members of a Sunni rebel group, state media report.

They say the convicts will be hanged in a park in the south-eastern city of Zahedan at 0630 local time (0200 GMT).

Tehran says the men are members of the Jundollah (God’s Soldiers) Sunni group, which is blamed for a series of attacks across the predominantly Shia country.

Amnesty International has appealed for a stay of execution, saying the convicts did not receive a fair trial.

Iran’s news agencies said the provincial judiciary in Zahedan, Sistan-Baluchistan province, invited residents and families of Jundollah’s victims to watch the executions.

Jundollah has claimed repeated attacks in the province, including a bombing in May in a Shia mosque in Zahedan that killed 25 people, Iranian media say.

Human rights groups accuse Iran of making excessive use of the death penalty but Tehran insists it is an effective deterrent that is used only after a lengthy judicial process. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Adam Elkus: Iran: It’s Not About Us

Acting on the belief that America can and should influence events on the ground in Iran will get a lot of people killed and gravely harm our regional interests.

America engages

By Michael Zubrow

Barack Obama shakes hands after addressing Ghana's parliament in Accra, 11 July

With a series of rousing international speeches, President Barack Obama has definitively recast American foreign policy, shunning the Bush administration’s leadership-centric diplomacy and engaging directly with the people of the world.

In Prague, in Cairo, in Moscow and now in Accra, Mr Obama has translated his campaign message of shared values, hopes and dreams into an ambitious foreign policy agenda.

He has rejected calls from within the US for an inward turn.

Even as the international economy deteriorates and challenges to American power loom ever larger, Mr Obama has chosen to vigorously push for two grand goals – a world free of nuclear weapons, and the spread of good governance and development.

This, then, is the bold but simple approach of the Obama administration – rally the people of the world to take on the most challenging issues of our generation.

Public diplomacy

Barack Obama’s weapon of choice is public diplomacy, speaking plainly and persuasively, directly to the people.

While President George W Bush was well known for relying on close relationships with heads of state, President Obama’s rhetoric is aimed at the ruling elite and the common citizen alike.

In Cairo and Moscow, Obama spoke at prestigious local universities to highlight the importance of future generations that are growing more interconnected and interdependent by the day.

In Prague he referred to the strength of the people of a different generation, exclaiming: "That’s why I’m speaking to you in the centre of a Europe that is peaceful, united and free – because ordinary people believed that divisions could be bridged, even when their leaders did not."

Mr Obama’s outreach has not been limited to international speeches.

His use of public diplomacy has included a message to the Iranian people on Nowruz (the New Year holiday) and the vastly expanded use of technology to communicate with the world.

New emphasis

The focus of Mr Obama’s ambitions is also a marked change from the Bush administration.

While the Bush administration was consumed by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mr Obama’s major international speeches have largely ignored those deeply unpopular conflicts, instead focusing on the grand vision of reducing nuclear weapons and spreading good governance.

In Prague, Mr Obama spoke of the path to a nuclear-free world and his determination to foster "the right of people everywhere to live free from fear in the 21st Century".

"President Obama has made one thing overwhelmingly clear – America’s participation in solving the most challenging issues of our day is not optional"

In Cairo, he directly took on the issue of an Iranian nuclear programme, linking non-proliferation to America’s responsibility to draw down its own nuclear arsenal.

In Moscow, Mr Obama turned his words into action, securing further progress on joint Russian-American nuclear reductions.

The challenge of nuclear proliferation is hardly new, but rarely has it received such sustained presidential attention since the Reagan-Gorbachev era.

Mr Obama’s attention to global governance is another departure from President Bush’s freedom agenda.

Instead of the former administration’s overwhelming focus on elections as a panacea for better governance, Mr Obama stresses the importance of institutions.

In Accra, Mr Obama called for institutions that are transparent and reliable, noting that good governance is "about more than holding elections – it’s also about what happens between them".

Indeed, the administration’s choice of Ghana for the president’s first trip to sub-Saharan Africa was instructive.

Bypassing Kenya, the homeland of his father, Mr Obama cited Ghana’s institutions and stability as a model for Africa.

Shared values

Even without these two bold goals, Mr Obama’s plate is more than full.

He faces two wars, nuclear challenges from Pyongyang and Tehran, a continually evolving extremist threat and a daunting set of domestic problems.

The administration’s ambition (and focus) extends beyond these challenges to diverse issues like Middle East peace and global climate change.

But President Obama has made one thing overwhelmingly clear – America’s participation in solving the most challenging issues of our day is not optional.

These problems threaten the peace and stability of the world and we simply cannot pass them off to the next generation.

The future President Obama describes is one where America leads through example, not intervention.

His approach emphasises the emergence and importance of local organisations and institutions contributing to solving global problems.

With the US tied down in two wars and beset by economic hardship, Mr Obama envisions a different type of American leadership.

By emphasising shared values and interests he hopes to spark a renewed interest in mutual responsibility and coordinated global action. In these complex times only global action can bring global results.

Michael Zubrow is a foreign policy expert at the Center for a New American Security, a non-partisan, independent, national security think tank in Washington, DC.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Iran: students tell of police invasion

• Victims tell of arrests, threats and beatings
• Two women among five killed by officers

They came in the small hours, just as the dormitories were settling down for the night. Outside, Tehran was still in ferment, a city gripped by fury two days after a “stolen election”. Inside the dorms on Amirabad Street, students were trying to sleep, though nerves were jangling; just hours earlier several had been beaten in front of the main gate to the university.

What happened next developed into one of the seminal events of Iran’s post-election unrest: police broke locks and then bones as they rampaged through the dormitories, attacked dozens of students, carted off more than 100 and killed five. The authorities still deny the incursion took place. But the account pieced together from interviews with five of those present tells a different story.

“We were getting ready to go to sleep when we suddenly heard them breaking the locks to enter our rooms,” said one of the 133 students arrested that night. “I’d seen them earlier beating students but I didn’t imagine that they would come inside. It’s even against Iranian law.”

Forty-six students from one dorm were arrested and taken to the basement of the interior ministry on nearby Fatemi Street. It was there, on the building’s upper floors, that the vote-counting and – claim opposition supporters – the rigging, was going on. Another 87 were taken to a security police building on Hafez Street. Students spoke of torture and mistreatment.

Five died: they were Fatemeh Barati, Kasra Sharafi, Mobina Ehterami, Kambiz Shoaee and Mohsen Imani – buried the following day in Tehran’s famous Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery, reportedly without their families being informed. Their names were confirmed by Tahkim Vahdat, a student organisation.

Witnesses said the two women and three men were repeatedly beaten on the head with electric batons. Their families were warned not to talk about their children or hold funerals – like the parents of Neda Soltan, whose face became synonymous with the protest movement after she was filmed being shot dead in the street.

Under Iranian law, police, revolutionary guards and other militia are not allowed to enter universities – a legacy of the 1999 student riots. Until last month those riots were the most serious unrest the country had seen since the Islamic revolution.

But with the country convulsed by protests at the 12 June elections, there was no holding back that Sunday night. “The police threw teargas into the dorms, beat us, broke the windows and forced us to lie on the ground,” one student recalled. “I had not even been protesting but one of them jumped on me, sat on my back and beat me. And then, while pretending to search me for guns or knives, he abused me sexually. They were threatening to hang us and rape us.”

Another described the scene: “The riot police stood in two lines, formed a tunnel with their shields as its roof, and made us run through it again and again while beating us and banging on their shields. “One of my roommates had a broken leg but they still made him run.”

Others spoke of similar experiences at the hands of the Basij (paramilitary militia). “The Basiji was on my back and told me: ‘I have not fucked anyone for the past seven years, you cute boy! I’ll show you what I can do to you when we arrive.’ They were harassing us and claiming we insulted them or the supreme leader.”

Before being taken away on a bus the students were made to stand in front of a dormitory block with plastic bags over their heads, their hands bound with plastic ties – known there as “Israeli handcuffs”.

“I had a second to recognise that it was the main building of the interior ministry in Fatemi Street,” said another student, weeping. “I just couldn’t believe it, there were senior politicians, members of parliament and investigators on the upper floors and we were in the basement. I have no doubt that they were busy rigging the votes upstairs.”

One detainee was abused by guards after he lost control of his bladder. Hours later they were given bread and cheese that had been placed on a dirty floor and warned they would be punished if they refused to eat. A Basiji called Ali filmed them with his mobile phone, ordering the captives to say “I am a donkey”.

Injuries were ignored. One student who had lost an eye after being hit by a plastic bullet was not given medical attention. “We were begging them to transfer these two who were suffering more than others to the hospital but they just said ‘let them die’,” a witness said.

Later, gas was pumped into the cells when all the students were being held in the security police building. Their ordeal ended 24 hours later when the president of Tehran University, Farhad Rahbar, and Alireza Zakani, a Tehran MP, spoke to the detainees. Rahbar told them that he had given the police permission to enter the dormitories to control the situation – but denied it a few days later.

Before being released the students were ordered to put on fresh clothes supplied by the police. “They didn’t want there to be any evidence of what had happened,” one of them said. “But what’s stronger than 133 students who were there, who saw everything, and suffered?”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


David Paul: Who Will Win the Next Phase in Iran, Ahmadinejad or Iraq’s Ayatollah Ali Sistani?

We have yet to see what the Iranian regime will be prepared to do in the face of real opposition. After all, the leaders of…

Muted opposition

By Lina Sinjab
BBC News, Damascus

In a quiet neighbourhood in the centre of Damascus Michel Kilo sits in his small flat sipping coffee as his wife shells beans for lunch.

Syrian sits in a cafe as US President Barack Obama speaks in cairo 04.06.09

His TV is tuned to an Arabic news channel, his reading glasses sitting on his nose as he catches the latest developments from Tehran.

Weeks after finishing a three-year prison sentence, Mr Kilo dedicates his time to family life, while the enthusiasm that characterised his writing before his arrest is now directed solely at articles focusing on pan-Arab and regional issues, rather than local ones.

In 2006, Mr Kilo and 10 other activists were arrested after signing the Damascus-Beirut declaration.

The statement, backed by Lebanese and Syrian intellectuals, called for normalising bilateral relations after decades of Syrian domination of its smaller neighbour Lebanon.

International thaw

At the time, with Syria under severe international pressure, the authorities’ tolerance of the move was very limited.

Damascus faced accusations of supporting insurgency in Iraq, and involvement in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

Dissident Syrian writer Michel Kilo

But today, the situation has changed. The country is no longer isolated by the West and key Western leaders have approached Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to help stabilise the region.

The country has attracted both foreign investment as well as tourism – signs it is beginning to come in from the cold.

But the authorities show no sign of relinquishing the tight control which the Baath Party has exerted since it took power in a 1963 coup and banned all opposition.

"The priority is not to have any opposition or independent voices and it is successful in oppressing this scene," says Yassin Haj Saleh, a writer and human rights activist.

Clampdown

A campaign of arrests has left an estimated 6,000 people in jail as political prisoners.

Meanwhile, about 400-450 people are subject to official travel bans, although the real number could be in the thousands, human rights groups say.

The measures are extended to young bloggers and some internet users, as well as civil society activists and some artists.

"Civil society needs to be revived and reactivated and this is only in the hands of the authorities""

Mohannad al-Hassani
Lawyer and human rights activist

"There is a continuous deterioration in the human rights situation in Syria," says lawyer and head of Syrian Human Rights Organization Mohannad al-Hassani.

But the worst situation is suffered by the Islamists, according to Yassin Haj Saleh.

"There are many young people who are arrested for their Islamic affiliation, but they are not organised. They are mostly villagers and their families are being harassed and pressured," he says.

The crackdown has attracted little media attention, especially in suburbs and rural areas.

Last year, riots erupted in Sadnaya prison. A number of prisoners were reported killed. The government said then the prisoners were Islamists.

Human Rights Watch recently called on the Syrian government to provide information on the incident.

"The Syrian government should end the anguish of the prisoners’ families, disclose the names of those injured or killed, and immediately grant them access to their loved ones," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

‘Lack of vision’

There is no organised opposition in Syria, just individuals who oppose government policies.

And even these figures are fragmented and lack vision says Omar Amirallai, an intellectual and filmmaker.

Syrians pass under poster of President Bashar al-Assad

"The opposition in Syria is in need of self-criticism, reform and reconciliation," he says.

But others believe that even with more vision and organisation, their efforts will come to nothing under current government restrictions.

The streets of Damascus have the feel of a relaxed and bustling city.

Around cafe and restaurant tables, discussions are heated about global and regional politics – but no one talks about the political situation in Syria.

Mohannad al-Hassani believes the country should embrace international and regional changes with its own progress on the level of civil and human rights.

"Civil society needs to be revived and reactivated and this is only in the hands of the authorities.

"They should look into these needs seriously as it is difficult for Syria to continue in isolation from what the whole world is moving towards."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Iran to offer West ‘new package’

Iranian technician works at Bushehr nuclear plant, 25 February 2009

Iran’s government says it is preparing a new package of proposals to put to the West.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said it would concern "political, security and international issues".

He was speaking in Tehran hours after G8 leaders said they were appalled at Iran’s disputed presidential election.

US President Barack Obama said global leaders were also "deeply troubled" by Iran’s nuclear programme. Iran denies it is trying to build a nuclear bomb.

Mr Mottaki played down international concerns, saying there had been "no new message from the G8".

"We are going to present our package which will be a basis to negotiate all regional and international issues," he told a news conference in Tehran, without giving further details.

"The package can be a good basis for talks with the West."

The US has threatened tough sanctions if Iran rejects offers of engagement over its nuclear programme.

Iran says its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes, but has been accused by Western countries of seeking nuclear weapons.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Obama Suggests Sanctions For Iran: Analysis

WASHINGTON — After a half-year of extending patient feelers to Iran, President Barack Obama has set a timeline _ warning Tehran it must show willingness to negotiate an end to its nuclear program by September or face consequences.

If th…

Kian Tajbakhsh: Iran Arrests First American Citizen

NEW YORK — An Iranian-American scholar whom Iran once accused of fomenting political unrest has been arrested by authorities there for the second time in two years, his family said Friday.

Security forces arrested Kian Tajbakhsh late Th…

Holly Cara Price: Michael Jackson: The Love We Save

Death. It’s a whole new media strategy for success. The only problem is, you’re not around to enjoy the spoils.