A crackdown on the Iranian Baha'is in Isfahan has prompted German-Iranians to urge the mayor of the southwestern German city of Freiburg to pull the plug on its municipal partnership with Isfahan.
“Two days before the United Nations reviews Iran’s human rights record, it commits yet another senseless act against women who are completely innocent. Their so-called 'crime' was to serve their local communities, and now the Iranian government has detained them in violent home raids,” said Simin Fahandej, Representative of the Baha’i International Community to the United Nations in Geneva.
Iran International obtained a January 30 letter from Behrouz Asadi, the head of the Democratic Forum of Iranians in Mainz, to Freiburg’s mayor Martin Horn.
Asadi wrote “The municipal administration in Isfahan has actively cooperated with the security and intelligence forces to repress the Baha'is .” Asadi added that “You are setting an example that you are tolerating and overlooking the regime’s course of action and the human rights violations that are taking place there.”
Horn did not respond to requests by Iran International for comment. Freiburg is the only German city that has a twin city partnership with an Iranian city.
The German city of Weimar ended its attempted partnership with Shiraz in 2010 because Iranian officials on a trip to Germany refused to visit the Buchenwald concentration camp memorial in Weimar.
Freiburg launched its partnership with Isfahan in 2000.
Dr. Wahied Wahdat-Hagh, a German-Iranian political scientist, criticized Freiburg's partnership with Isfahan as hypocritical.
Iran, he said, has been oppressing women, crushing secular opposition, persecuting religious minorities and carrying out one of the highest execution rates globally.
“No one wanted to acknowledge at the time that Iran had already been a totalitarian dictatorship.”
Wahdat-Hagh, who is a Baha'i, is one of the world’s leading experts on the Baha'is in Iran. “The Freiburg Initiative did not want to know that Iran has wanted to destroy Israel since 1979 and had waged a war against Israel with the help of its proxies,” he added.
Assadi also noted in his letter to Horn that “Your partner city Isfahan is one of the places where the regime produces rockets, drones and bombs.” He noted that “the partnership is a status symbol of the regime with which it attempts to publicly whitewash its crimes.”
Iran’s military fired projectiles from Isfahan into Israel last year.
Michael Blume, the state commissioner tasked with fighting antisemitism, including Iranian government Holocaust denial, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, where Freiburg is located, has lashed out at Iranian dissidents opposed to Ali Khamenei’s government and has not called on Horn to end the partnership. Blume called Iranian dissidents “corrupt exiled nationalists.”
Ronai Chaker, a prominent activist from Germany’s Yazidi community who combats Islamism in the federal republic, told Iran International ”I find Freiburg's twin city partnership with Isfahan to be a scandalous betrayal of the values of democracy, human rights and Germany's historical responsibility toward the Jewish people."
"The systematic persecution of Baha'is, women, LGBTQ+ people and dissidents there is a clear human rights violation.”
In 2017, the Iranian authorities arrested more than 30 men suspected of being homosexuals at a private party last week in the Isfahan province.
Chaker said “The city of Freiburg must end this partnership immediately. Anyone who continues to cling to the relationship with Isfahan is complicit in the crimes of the mullahs' regime.”
She also took Blume to task for his reported enabling of the partnership. “Due to his silence and his lack of a critical attitude towards this twin city partnership, Blume has lost all credibility as an antisemitism representative. His resignation would be a logical step. Freiburg must clearly distance itself from Isfahan instead of giving the Iranian regime legitimacy through such partnerships.”
The Iranian dissident Sheina Vojoudi, who lives in Germany, previously said “Blume called people like me ‘corrupt exiled nationalists’ after I showed him leaked footage of Evin prison.”
An Iranian court has sentenced a protester arrested during the 2022 Women, Life, Freedom protest uprising to death and two others to lengthy prison terms, France-based Kurdistan Human Rights Network (KHRN) reported on Monday.
Pezhman Soltani, 32, was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to death under qisas, retribution-in-kind, which allows the victim’s family to demand execution under Islamic law, KHRN said.
Two other men, Rizgar Beygzadeh Baba-Miri, 47, and Ali Soran Ghassemi, 28, were sentenced to 15 years and 10 years and one day in prison, respectively, for "complicity in murder." A fourth defendant, Kaveh Salehi, 42, was acquitted.
The verdicts were issued in December last year by a criminal court in Iran's West Azerbaijan Province and delivered to the defendants in prison on January 15, KHRN added.
A separate case against the four men and a fifth prisoner, Javanmard Mam-Khosravi, remains open at the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Orumiyeh in northwestern Iran on charges including enmity against God or moharebeh, armed insurrection or baghi and collaboration with hostile states.
KHRN said the case has been delayed due to complaints by the men that Ministry of Intelligence interrogators used torture to extract forced confessions.
On July 14, 2024, the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency broadcast what KHRN described as forced confessions from four of the prisoners.
The group said the men had been subjected to months of physical and psychological torture at an intelligence detention center in Orumiyeh before being moved to Orumiyeh Central Prison. During this time, they were denied access to lawyers and family visits.
The five were arrested in April and May 2023 after taking part in the nationwide protests in Bukan, West Azerbaijan Province, and Baneh, Kurdistan Province.
Last December, Amnesty International warned that at least 10 individuals in Iran remain on death row in connection with the Woman, Life, Freedom protests of 2022 sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini over an alleged hijab law violation.
The rights group said Iranian authorities had arbitrarily executed 10 others after "grossly unfair sham trials" and subjected many detainees to torture, including beatings, electric shocks, and sexual violence.
Amnesty raised concerns over further executions amid what it described as an "ongoing execution spree."
The British government has not funded Iran's influence network in Western countries, the UK Foreign Office told Iran International, rejecting remarks by a Swedish-Iranian scholar who said his involvement in the scheme was backed by the UK government.
"We have no record of funding for the IEI or any departmental work with them," the UK Foreign Office said in response to an inquiry about funding for the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI), a network linked to Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
In late January, a report by Sweden’s TV4 revealed Roozbeh Parsi, the director of the Swedish Institute for International Affairs’ Middle East program, was involved in the IEI, a network formed by Tehran to expand its influence in the West.
Parsi denied any cooperation with the Iranian government, saying his participation in the Iran-led initiative was backed up by the UK government.
"I was doing this on behalf of the British Foreign Office," he wrote in a response published by Expressen, one of Sweden's most prominent dailies, on January 31. "For the British Foreign Office, which financed our participation, and other governments in the West, it was about strengthening their positions ahead of the negotiations on [Iran's] nuclear program."
The Swedish media's investigation, which cited emails provided by Iran International, followed a 2023 joint exposé by Iran International and Semafor that detailed Tehran’s efforts to cultivate relationships with academics and analysts abroad to expand its soft power.
Inquiry into allegations
In 2023, a spokesman for the European Council of Foreign Relations (ECFR) also told Iran International that "the Iran Expert Initiative was a European-government backed initiative that ECFR staff sometimes took part in but did not lead on."
The ECFR spokesman declined to name the European government.
Sweden's Foreign minister Maria Malmer Stenergard saidon Thursday the country had launched an inquiry into allegations that Parsi was involved in the Tehran-led influence network aimed at shaping Western policy.
The top diplomat said the government had contacted the Swedish Institute of International Affairs for more information, calling the allegations “very serious.”
She warned that Iran, along with Russia and China, is conducting extensive intelligence operations in Sweden.
Iran's president was among the country's top leaders voicing opposition to dialogue with the United States during events marking the 46th anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Amid celebratory gatherings attended by state officials, President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Monday: “If the US were sincere about negotiations, why did they sanction us?”
Reflecting Tehran's concerns about returning to the negotiating table with President Donald Trump who, during his first term, pulled out of the 2015 nuclear accord and imposed crippling sanctions on Iran, Pezeshkian said: “He says, ‘Let’s have a dialogue,’ and at the same moment, he signs memos for all possible conspiracies against Iran.”
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian during rallies marking the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, February 10, 2024
Further casting doubt on recent hopes for rapprochement amid a mood of mistrust, Pezeshkian accused Washington of orchestrating conspiracies against Iran while proposing talks and claimed it was Tehran's archenemy Israel, not Iran, that destabilized the Middle East.
The comments followed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s recent statement that negotiations with the US are “unwise and dishonorable.”
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi echoed similar sentiments, saying, “What they mean by negotiation is surrender. Iran negotiated in good faith, but the other side failed to fulfill its commitments and withdrew from the [2015 nuclear] agreement. Why should we trust them?”
Donkeys draped with US, Israeli, and UK flags are displayed at a state-sponsored rally marking the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, February 10, 2024
Defense Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh also rejected talks under current conditions, saying, “We will not negotiate under sanctions and threats, and we do not recognize the new US administration.”
IRGC Aerospace Commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh mocked Trump’s threats, saying, “He does not have such courage. A powerful Iran does not submit to coercion.”
Like previous years, a statement was released by the government after the ceremony stressing that as the Supreme Leader said it is not wise or honorable to hold negotiations with the US.
“The government must strengthen security and intelligence structures to prevent the infiltration of enemy agents and divisive movements within the country’s institutions,” added the statement
The document also called for a stronger military. "We expect national officials to take decisive action against those disrupting the nation’s psychological security," it continued, "who, by aligning with the enemy, attempt to distort the truth.”
As officials rallied in support of the Islamic Republic, protests erupted in Tehran and other cities on Sunday night, where citizens chanted slogans such as “Death to the dictator” and showed anger at Supreme Leader Khamenei during state-organized fireworks displays.
The ongoing public unrest underscores the tensions within Iran as it faces mounting international and domestic challenges in the midst of its crushing economic crisis.
People carrying banners mocking (from left) Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Saudi Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud and Syria's interim leader Ahmed al-Sharaa during rallies to mark the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, February 10, 2024
Nasser Seraj, a senior Iranian judiciary official accused of abuses by rights groups, has been appointed as the secretary of Iran's High Council for Human Rights and the judiciary's deputy for international affairs.
According to US-based Human Right Activists In Iran (HRAI)'s Spreading Justice website which documents rights abuses in Iran, Seraj "was directly involved in the issuance of death sentences for corruption and consequently is responsible for the violation of the right to life."
Mizan News Agency, the judiciary’s official outlet, reported Saturday that judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei appointed Seraj to replace Kazem Gharibabadi, who had held the position since 2021.
Seraj, formerly the judiciary chief’s political deputy, has held key judicial roles, including Tehran’s military prosecutor, judiciary advisor, head of the General Inspection Organization, Supreme Court deputy, and deputy justice minister.
As a judge, Seraj presided over the trial of the 2011 $3 billion embezzlement case, sentencing four men to death. One of those convicted, businessman Mahafarid Amir Khosravi, was executed in 2014 without prior notice to his family or defense attorney.
HRAI's Spreading Justice website says that the rushed execution was intended to prevent Amir Khosravi from exposing the names of government officials involved in the corruption scandal.
The rights group also says Seraj played a key role in restricting press freedom by overseeing the selection of the Press Supervisory Jury, which has been involved in shutting down newspapers and censoring media.
Iranian people marked the 46th anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution with cries of "Death to the Islamic Republic" and "Death to the Dictator" ringing through several cities across the country on Sunday night.
Videos obtained by Iran International show people chanting against the clerical establishment during official fireworks to commemorate 22 Bahman (11 February), the day the Pahlavi dynasty was overthrown, giving way to what is now known as the Islamic Republic.
People in Tehran, Karaj, Arak, Mashhad and Kermanshah, among other cities, chanted "Death to Khamenei the Murderer", "Death to the Islamic Republic" and "Death to Dictator", videos recorded on mobile phones show.
Mashhad is Iran’s second-most populous city in the northeast; Karaj, the third-most populous city, located west of Tehran; Arak, an industrial hub and the fourth-most populous city in central Iran; and Kermanshah, the country’s ninth-most populous city.
The cries were heard in Tehran's Ekbatan, Tehranpars, Jannatabad, Ekhtiarieh and Enghelab (Revolution) neighborhoods, each with different demographic and social characteristics - from middle class to poor districts.
"Death to Execution Republic" was heard in a video from Jannatabad, referring to the Islamic Republic's hanging spree over the past few years.
"No one is chanting Allahu Akbar in this big city," one Tehran resident is heard saying in a video sent to Iran International, referring to the slogan that the Islamic Republic's supporters used to chant during the revolution anniversaries in the past.
In Kermanshah, people chanted slogans like "This year is year of blood, Khamenei falls with a thud."