Saturday, August 23

Stop the execution of teacher unionist Farzad Kamangar

From Education International
Dear colleagues,

Farzad Kamangar, a 33-year old teacher and former trade unionist from the Kurdistan Province of Iran, is at risk of execution following the ruling issued at an unfair trial.

In recent weeks, EI has written to the Iranian Government to request a fair trial for Farzad Kamangar and other union activists who are under arrest. In spite of joint efforts from various national and international organisations to have death sentence of Farzad Kamangar communted, it was upheld by the Supreme Court on 11 July 2008. In addition, Iranian trade union colleagues and human rights activists who show solidarity with Farzad are being subjected to pervasive intimidation by the Iranian authorities.

The arrest, detention and condemnation of trade unionists because of their human and trade union activities are not only serious violations of trade union rights, but also create an atmosphere of fear prejudicial to trade union development in Iran.

Background Information

Farzad's story

On 25 February 2008, the Tehran Revolutionary Court sentenced Farzad Kamangar to death on charges of "endangering national security" and "enmity against God" (moharebe). The death penalty was confirmed by the Supreme Court on 11 July. Click here to read more about Farzad.


Kamangar, who worked as a teacher in rural areas and was a human rights activist, is accused of being a terrorist through his alleged affiliation to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, PKK. According to his lawyer, Khalil Bahramian, there is no evidence to justify the judgement that Kamangar has “endangered national security”. His lawyer, who was not permitted to defend him, says Farzad’s trial was not in accordance with article 168 of the Iranian Constitution: “Political and press offences will be tried openly and in the presence of a jury, in courts of justice.” In this case, only one judge reviewed the case within five minutes and the defendant was not allowed to speak.

A support committee composed of members of the Teacher Trade Association, former colleagues of Kamangar and human rights attorneys, including Nobel Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, was established on July 21, 2008 to defend the civil rights of Farzad Kamangar and to undertake legal actions to have his death sentence commuted. Following the first meeting of the Committee, three teachers were arrested and taken to the Intelligence Detention Centre in Sanandaj, in the Iranian province of Kurdistan. Two – Hassan Ghorbani and Kaveh Rostami– are still in detention, while the third, Ahmad Ghorbani, was released on bail after two weeks. Farzad’s supporters and their family members are regularly intimidated through phone calls by the Ministry of Intelligence and National Security.

In addition to opposing the death sentence, EI condemns the torture of Farzad Kamangar while in detention and the subsequent denial of medical treatment. When his family was last allowed to visit him in prison, his injuries were such that he was unable to walk. EI has urged the Iranian authorities to investigate the reports of torture and to ensure that, in future, no detainee is subject to torture or ill-treatment.

To date, EI has no affiliate in Iran. However EI has received an application for membership from the Iranian Teacher’ Trade Association and a representative of that organisation was invited as a guest to the last EI Congress in Berlin in 2007. Upon his return from the EI Congress, Mohammad Khaksari was harassed by the security forces. Mr Khaksari is also an active member of the ‘Committee to Save Farzad’ and he is among those who are being harassed by the Ministry of Intelligence.

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Thursday, May 22

Mehdi Kazemi granted asylum

On Monday Mehdi Kazemi, the Iranian gay teenager threatened with deportation back to Iran (where his boyfriend was executed) was granted unconditional asylum in the United Kingdom.

This is clearly excellent news for all of those solidarity activists who campaigned against his deportation and against racist and homophobic immigration laws. It is a slap in the face to the homophobic Iranian regime.

Unfortunately, the government has not taken any broader stance in favour of the right to asylum for persecuted LGBT people. Commenting on Mehdi's case the Home Office stated "We keep cases under review where circumstances have changed, and it has been decided that Mr. Kazemi should be granted leave to remain in the UK based on the particular facts of this case".

We will continue to fight against all deportations and in favour of the right to asylum.

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Monday, April 7

Mahmoud Salehi freed

According to the Committee in Defense of Mahmoud Salehi, Mahmoud Salehi, a well known and one of the most courageous labour leaders in Iran, was finally released today, Sunday, April 6, 2008 at 3:00 PM from the City of Sanandaj‘s central prison, where he had finished one-year jail term for his labour activities on March 23, 2008 but the authorities had refused to release him until today

http://mahmodsalehi.blogfa.com/

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Tuesday, March 25

Mahmoud Salehi's life is in danger

You might have already been informed that Mahmoud Salehi, one of the well-known worker leaders in Iran, has been in prison since April 9, 2007. He is in prison for organising May Day celebrations in the city of Saqez and defending workers’ rights. Mahmoud Salehi is not in good health and his life is under threat. Salehi’s one-year prison term ends on March 23, 2008. However, yesterday Branch 4 of the Public Prosecutor's office of the city of Sanandaj summoned Mahmoud Salehi. Salehi is accused, this time, of communicating with outside of prison, of publishing messages in support of workers and students. The prosecutor’s office has issued a new temporary arrest for Mahmoud Salehi.

The Islamic Republic’s decision to keep Salehi in prison despite his grave health conditions is a criminal act. To protest this decision, Mahmoud Salehi has gone on total hunger strike (food and drink). Mahmoud Salehi’s life is under even greater danger now that he has made such a decision.

Neither celebrating May Day, nor issuing messages of solidarity with workers’ and students’ struggles is a crime. Mahmoud Salehi should be freed immediately and unconditionally and should be provided with necessary health-care.

To save Mahmoud Salehi’s life, immediate international action is required. This is the only way to put powerful enough pressure on the Islamic Republic regime in order to release Mahmoud Salehi, so that he would not have to continue with hunger strike and risk his life even further.

We request all workers’ organisations to act immediately on an international scale to save the life of Mahmoud Salehi and secure his immediate and unconditional release.

*Shahla Daneshfar,* *Coordinator, International Labour Solidarity
Committee of WPI*

Bahram Soroush**, Public relations*

*www.kargaran.org www.wpiran.org
www.rowzane.com*

*International Labour Solidarity Committee of the Worker-communist Party
of Iran (ILSC-WPI)*

*Head office:*

Co-ordinator: Shahla Daneshfar shahla_daneshfar@yahoo.com

Public Relations: Bahram Soroush bahram.soroush@gmail.com

*Around the world:*

*Australia*: Arsalan Nazeri ilscaustralianb@optusnet.com.au
*Belgium*: Hossein Pishehesan
workersiniran_belgique@yahoo.fr
*Canada*: Mehran Mahbobi workersiniranca@yahoo.ca
*Finland*: Abdol Golparian
workers_iniran@yahoo.com *Germany*:
Reza Nouri workeriniran_de@yahoo.de
*Norway*: Saber Rahimi workeriniran@yahoo.no
*Sweden*: Mamad Amiri
workersiniran_se@yahoo.se *UK*: Shiva
Mahbobi workersiniranuk@yahoo.com

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Sunday, March 23

150 at protest to defend Mehdi Kazemi

Over 150 people turned out on Saturday 22nd for a protest against the deportation of Iranian gay 19-year-old Mehdi Kazemi. Even though the Iranian regime has already executed his boyfriend, Mehdi is in limbo, with the Dutch government and the UK Home Office refusing to let him stay. The protest also highlighted the cases of Pegah Emambakhsh - an Iranian lesbian woman - and Jojo Yakob - a Syrian gay man - also under threat of deportation.

This turnout was particularly pleasing in that it came despite snowy weather and bitter cold. Dozens of activists came from outside London, including groups of students from Edinburgh, Leeds and Manchester.

Speakers such as Sofie Buckland (NUS NEC and Feminist Fightback) and David Broder (Middle East Workers' Solidarity) highlighted the inherent racism of the immigration system and called for the abolition of borders. Similarly, demonstrators chanted slogans including "No borders, no nations, stop deportations!" and "Mehdi must stay!"

They furthermore pointed to the homophobia of people like George Galloway who call themselves left-wing but have refused to back Mehdi Kazemi, instead leaping to the defence of Iran's theocracy. Opposing war does not mean we have to whitewash the Iranian regime - the anti-war movement needs to be honest if it is to deserve support.

Other speakers at the demonstration opposite Downing Street included Peter Tatchell, Scott Cuthbertson (NUS LGBT), Chris Strafford (Hands Off the People of Iran) and Dave Landau (who advertised next Saturday's conference of trade unions against immigration controls)

Middle East Workers' Solidarity will continue to defend Middle Eastern asylum seekers from deportation and highlight the issue of immigration controls, as well as opposing war and supporting unions and social movements in the region.

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Saturday, March 22

Action to defend Mehdi Kazemi March 22nd

On Saturday March 22nd at 2pm Middle East Workers' Solidarity will be staging a protest opposite Downing Street in defence of Mehdi Kazemi, a gay Iranian asylum seeker who the British government plans to send back to Iran on the grounds that if gay Iranians are "discreet about their sexuality", they will not get in trouble.

In fact, Mehdi Kazemi's boyfriend in Iran has already been executed for being gay, and the regime knows about Mehdi Kazemi and will likely kill him if he returns. We are demonstrating to demand that he should not be sent to his death in Iran, and that he should be allowed to stay in Britain if he so chooses.

Saturday March 22nd, 2pm, Downing Street. Nearest tube Westminster/Charing Cross

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Thursday, March 20

Mahmoud Salehi declares hunger strike

Monday March 17, 2008- According to the Committee in Defense of Mahmoud Salehi, Mr. Salehi was taken from Sanandaj Prison to branch 4 of the department of justice in Sanandaj on March 17, 2008. After making Mahmoud waiting for hours, they ordered a temporary arrest against him. They charged Mahmoud with communication and contacts with outside prison and issuing solidarity messages such as the one to those on hunger strike on Tir 27th 1386 (July 18, 2007) and also supporting freedom and equality seeking university students. This order was issued while Mahmoud’s one-year prison term was going to end on Farvardin 4th, 1387 (March 23, 2008), and his family and friends were expecting his release soon.

Immediately after this unjust order of arrest, Mahmoud went on dry hunger-strike to protest these unjust actions of government authorities to keep him in prison.

The Committee in Defense of Mahmoud Salehi has strongly condemned this new order to keep Mahmud in prison and demanded the unconditional and immediate release of Salehi.

Salehi’s health got seriously deteriorated last week while in jail. He completely passed out and was taken to hospital for a short period but was sent back to jail again. Salehi’s health does not allow him to be on hunger strike and his life would be at great risk; however, it is very clear that the government authorities are determined to keep him in prison and deny his freedom.

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Tuesday, March 18

Stop the War demonstration 15 March

At the Stop the War demonstration on 15 March, the Middle East Workers’ Solidarity campaign gave out leaflets for the 22 March Mehdi Kazemi protest, copies of the 4-page news bulletin Workers in Struggle and furthermore collected almost £200 for Freedom and Equality Seeking Students in Iran.

Freedom and Equality are a group of socialist students opposed both to war and sanctions and to the Ahmedinejad regime, and many of their number are among the 81 students in prison following December’s protests at campuses across Iran.

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Friday, March 14

Mehdi Kazemi review

The UK government has announced that it is to review the case of Mehdi Kazemi, which offers hope for anti-deportation activists who have campaigned in defence of the young Iranian gay man.

However, the fight is not over. Mehdi is not yet safe, and neither is Pegah Emambakhsh, the Iranian lesbian woman threatened with deportation. Neither has the government sorted out the racist and homophobic immigration system which has repeatedly sent LGBT people and others back into perilous situations in their 'home' countries.

We will be demonstrating as planned at 2pm on March 22nd opposite Downing Street.

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Thursday, March 13

George Galloway's comments on Mehdi Kazemi

Middle East Workers' Solidarity have called a demonstration for March 22nd in defence of Mehdi Kazemi, and support the international campaign against his deportation to Iran.

We were therefore extremely disappointed to hear today the comments of George Galloway MP on a Channel 5 talk show, playing down the homophobic nature of the Iranian regime and slandering Mehdi Kazemi's boyfriend. Among other comments, Galloway alleged that Mehdi's boyfriend had not been hanged because he was gay, but instead because of "sex crimes with young men".

Galloway went on to insinuate that those who defend Kazemi are adding to "propaganda against Iran", implying that they support a war drive against that country.

Galloway's claims are ill-informed and non-sensical, even beyond the obvious fact that Iran has repeatedly executed men for being gay, since "sodomy" is a capital offense, and does not even spare under-18s who commit this "crime".

It is also nonsense to claim that criticising the British government for planning to deport a man whose life is in danger in some way amounts to supporting its imperialist ambitions. Indeed, what activists including Middle East Workers' Solidarity campaigners are doing is highlighting the government's contempt for democracy and human rights.

Nor do we accept that opposing war and sanctions against Iran - which we do, wholeheartedly, since it can bring no progress - means whitewashing the Ahmedinejad regime and pretending that it is a bastion of democracy. The anti-war movement needs to tell the truth if it is to deserve to get a hearing. Opposing war is part of our solidarity effort, but not to the exclusion of our other principles.

The video of Galloway's comments is here

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Pegah Emambakhsh faces deportation to Iran

An Iranian lesbian who fled to Britain after her girlfriend was arrested and sentenced to death faces being forcibly returned after losing the latest round in her battle to be granted asylum.

From the Independent

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Wednesday, March 12

New website for Mehdi Kazemi campaigners

There is a new website for the international campaign to defend Mehdi Kazemi, the young Iranian gay man who is being threatened with deportation back to Iran and execution.

The site is at www.medhikazemi.com

Yesterday a Dutch court decided to reject Mehdi's application for asylum, on the grounds that his case is a matter for the UK government to which he originally applied for asylum.

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Saturday, March 8

Mehdi must stay – No deportations to Iran

Peter Tatchell speaks out in defence of gay Iranian asylum seeker Mehdi Kazemi

Gay Iranian asylum applicant Mehdi Kazemi is in detention in the Netherlands. He is fighting attempts by the Dutch government to return him to the UK.

Mehdi fled Britain and sought asylum in the Netherlands because the British government wants to deport him back to Iran. The gay human rights group OutRage! campaigns on asylum issues and supports Mehdi Kazemi’s claim for refugee status. OutRage! spokesperson Peter Tatchell said

"The Home Office decision to deport Mehdi back to Iran is shameful and reckless. If returned to Tehran, he will be at risk of imprisonment, torture and execution. Gay men in Iran are hanged from public cranes using the barbaric method of slow strangulation, which is deliberately designed to cause maximum suffering. This deportation order borders on a criminal decision. It violates the government's legal obligations under the Refugee Convention. The Home Office country report on Iran ignores the true scale of homophobic repression, in order to justify the deportation of lesbian and gay Iranians. I have been tipped off by a senior Home Office official that government orders are to cut asylum numbers at almost any price. Staff are encouraged to assume that all asylum applicants are bogus and to play down the merits of individual cases, such as Medhi’s".

Background

Here is the Everyone organisation’s link about Medhi's case. Please scroll down to read Mehdi’s own statement, as given to the Iranian Queer Rights Organisation:

Need to reform the handling of LGBT asylum claims


“The Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith MP, must urgently remedy her department's five failings with regard to the treatment of LGBT asylum claimants,” added Mr Tatchell.

“Currently, the Home Office stands accused of:

- No training on sexual orientation issues for asylum staff and adjudicators
- No explicit official policy supporting the right of refugees to claim asylum on the grounds of sexual orientation
- No action to stamp out the abuse of LGBT refugees in UK asylum detention camps
- No accurate, up-to-date information on the victimisation of LGBT people in violently homophobic countries
- No access to adequate legal representation for LGBT asylum applicants

“These are systemic failings by a callous and indifferent government that is more interested in cutting asylum numbers than in ensuring a fair, just and compassionate asylum system,” concluded Mr Tatchell.

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"workers in struggle" issue one

The first issue of the Middle East Workers' Solidarity newsletter Workers in Struggle has been produced.

It features articles on the strike wave in Egypt, the imprisonment of trade unionists and student activists in Iran, the plan of US dockers to strike against the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, the Israeli assault on Gaza and other short news pieces about strikes in the Middle East.

We will be handing this out at the March 15th Stop the War demo as well as the March 8th Palestine protest at Downing Street.

Click here for the pdf file

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Mahmoud Salehi’s message for the March 6th Global Day of Action


Mahmoud Salehi is the founding member of the Trade Association of Bakery Workers in Saqez, Iranian Kurdistan, and has been locked up by the regime for his organising efforts, despite his significant heart and kidney problems. He sent this message from his cell in reaction to international protests for his release.

The International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) and the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and their affiliates along with colleagues of the Global Union Federation are organising an international action day on March 6th for workers’ rights in Iran and the freedom of Mansour Osanloo and me (Mahmoud Salehi). For my part, I gracefully appreciate such militant actions.

We must not part from the struggle for the creation of independent workers’ organisations!

A workers’ movement has grown in the context of aggravation of economic crisis, factory close downs, mass dismissal of workers, excessive increase of inflation that lowered the working people’s purchasing power, and generally widening of the class gap… as the result of all this workplaces have turned into a battle field of class struggle for workers in order to meet their demands. Worker activists were raised and taken their roles within such struggles.

The close relationship between these fed-up masses and progressive workers has helped labour activists to adapt their views and behaviour to the realities of life and struggles of workers. Consequently, they have conveyed the proper ways of thinking and acting towards mass workers. Living and working with their co-workers, activists are telling them that the only way out of this terrifying misery, from poverty and starvation, from unemployment, from collective dismissal, and so on, is to fight with the capitalist system and to organise independent workers’ organizations. They tell their colleagues that an independent worker’s organisation will empower them against the harsh onslaught of capitalism; that with their labour organisation, they will be in a better position in their battle with capitalists; that they can set their wages up from a powerful position. Through their independent organisations, workers can make gains through struggle, step by step.

Dear honorable and hard-working colleagues and fellow workers!

As the result of the efforts of honest labour movement activists, international rights’ organisations are now recognizing us as a working class with legitimate demands. As one of the labour activists, who is imprisoned in this capitalist country, I am proud to see such a day in the name of workers in Iran because I now know that the world’s working class has never easily accepted the imprisonment of these activists and has always fought for their freedom. They will not let the persecution and imprisonment of workers to become an obstacle or barrier in their rightful struggle.

On March 6th, I will be joyful, even behind the bars of my cell, dreaming of unity and solidarity amongst workers. At this day, workers in Iran should be cheerful while their enemies would grieve!

I will see myself among you, arm in arm, by your side and fighting with you; and I, along with you, will emphasise that we must not part from the struggle for the creation of independent workers’ organisations!

Mahmoud Salehi - Central Prison of the City of Sanandaj, Iran
March 04, 2008

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Friday, March 7

Iran’s trade unionists call out from the prison cells

Iranian trade unionists Mansour Osanloo and Mahmoud Salehi are experiencing terrible conditions in prison, with the regime showing the utmost contempt for their welfare. The pair, alongside almost a hundred of student activists, have been locked up by an unpopular regime cracking down on a rising tide of popular discontent.

While the media in Britain portrays Iranian politics as a battle between Islamist ‘conservatives’ and more liberal ‘reformists’ like former president Mohammad Khatami, in fact the divisions in Iran go deeper than disputes between different sections of the elite. A new left is shaking Iranian society.

Independent trade unions and social movements have rejected both the politics of the regime and the empty ‘democratic’ promises of US imperialism, and are waging a desperate struggle for a democracy enshrining workers’, women’s, LGBT and minority nationalities’ rights.

It appears that repression has stepped up in the last few months, with massive reprisals against the student movement. Hundreds bravely demonstrated at sites including Tehran University in December, raising slogans such as “No to imperialist war, death to the dictator “ and “The university is not an army garrison!”. After mass arrests, it is feared that as many as 81 of these students are still in jail.

One of those arrested, law student Ebrahim Latif Allahi, was murdered in Sanandaj prison. His family were told that “he had committed suicide in prison”, and that “his body has already been buried” – but they are convinced that he died during torture.

This assertion seems highly likely, given the similar brutal treatment of Mansour Osanloo, Iran’s best known trade unionist, who has repeatedly been kidnapped, assaulted and imprisoned for “attempts to jeopardise national security”. Currently serving a five-year sentence after leading bus workers’ strikes in Tehran, he has been blinded in one eye in prison.

The same goes for Mahmoud Salehi, the founding member of the trade Association of Bakery Workers in Saqez, Kurdistan. Imprisoned for his attempts to organise a union, he has fallen seriously ill in jail. But despite having been diagnosed with a blocked blood vessel in his heart, and the doctor’s recommendation that he be kept under medical supervision for at least a week, the prison authorities have sent Salehi back to his cell and denied him even the right to stay in the prison’s medical unit. In hospital Salehi's leg was cuffed to the bed, while his wife was threatened with arrest for protesting when a prison guard tried to assault her.

On March 6th Middle East Workers’ Solidarity activists participated in the international day of solidarity with Iranian trade unionists, which in Britain included mass leafleting at King’s Cross station in London (backed by the RMT railworkers’ union) as well as a demonstration at the Iranian Embassy.

Responding to the call of the International Transport workers’ Federation, trade unionists protested in solidarity with Osanloo and Salehi across the globe – from Australia to Ethiopia, from India to Indonesia, the international labour movement is slowly waking up to the cause of working-class resistance to the dictator Ahmedinejad.

► Part of our solidarity with our comrades in Iran is opposition to any war, bombing raids or sanctions, which can only serve to undermine the workers’ movement. MEWS activists will be leafleting the Stop the War demo on March 15th and collecting money for Iranian student organisations. Contact middleeastworkerssolidarity@googlemail.com
for more info – why not join us?

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Wednesday, March 5

International day of action for trade unionists in Iran

Demonstrate for Mansour Osanloo, Mahmoud Salehi and union rights in Iran

On Thursday 6 March there will be a trade union demonstration outside the Iranian Embassy in London as part of a worldwide day of action against the repression and harassment of trade unionists in Iran.

The RMT railworkers' union has called for activists to meet for leafletting King's Cross station from 7:30am, hopefully covering as many of the exits as possible.

Furthermore, a demonstration will be held from 12:30 to 1:30pm outside the Iranian Embassy at 16 Prince's Gate, London SW7 1PT.

The international day of action has been called by the International Transport Workers' Federation (ITF). Here is a location map for the event.

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Tuesday, March 4

Iranian Workers' Bulletin

The January/February issue of the Iranian Workers' Bulletin, which features in-depth coverage of the Iranian labour movement, is now available.

This month's issue features extensive coverage of the situation of imprisoned trade unionists such as Tehran Bus Workers' Union leader Mansour Osanloo as well as Mahmoud Salehi, organiser of the Bakery Workers' Trade Association. Both are suffering severe health problems due to the negligence of the Iranian regime as the two are kept in captivity.

The bulletin also has news of 5,000 workers at the state owned Haft Tapeh Sugar Cane Company taking repeated strike action and forming a new independent union, along with the one-day action action of 3,000 Alborz tyre factory workers who had not been paid for four months.

Click here to see the bulletin

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