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Iranian Official Threatens Reporter For Asking About IRGC’s Tax Evasion

Feb 6, 2023, 11:50 GMT+0
The logo of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC)
The logo of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC)

The head of Iranian National Tax Administration (INTA) has threatened a reporter who asked him why a sub-branch of the Revolutionary Guard does not pay taxes.

In a press conference on Sunday, ILNA reporter asked Davoud Manzour how Khatam al-Anbiya Construction Headquarter has not paid taxes since 2017.

In response, the INTA chief threatened the reporter, saying he has to provide documents to back up his question, and if the documents are not presented, the prosecutor will indict him.

In the published video of the press conference, the reporter's voice can be heard telling Manzour that this was a statement made by Hossein Houshi al-Sadat, the commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya.

Many semi-public business and “charity” outfits in Iran run by regime insiders are exempt from paying taxes and some even receive assistance from the government.

IRGC’s Khatam-al Anbiya Construction Headquarters is the engineering arm of the IRGC and one of Iran's largest contractors in industrial and development projects. Khatam al-Anbiya was created during the 1980–88 Iran–Iraq War to help rebuild the country, but diversified over the years into companies dealing with mechanical engineering, energy, mining, and defense.

Involvement of the IRGC in business began in earnest two decades ago and has become a highly controversial issue in the country. Former president Hassan Rouhani in 2017 publicly criticized the practice and met a quick reaction by hardliners. He had to retract his statements at the time.

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Political Prisoners Call For Aid To Iran Quake Victims

Feb 6, 2023, 09:18 GMT+0

Several political prisoners in Iran have called for providing aid to the people of Khoy in Azarbaijan province where an earthquake last month devastated the city.

“On the one hand, the people are suffering from numerous earthquakes, extreme cold and lack of bread, food, and tents, and on the other hand, they are suffering from inefficient governance that blocks domestic and international humanitarian aid,” reads the statement.

Meanwhile, Hamid Mahboubi, Head of the West Azarbaijan Red Crescent Society, reported a fire in a tent used by the earthquake victims, saying "In this incident, two tents caught fire."

Head of Iran’s National Medical Emergency Organization Jafar Miadfar also said that one of the health concerns is the risk of contracting influenza and Covid-19. He asked the earthquake victims to "go to the health and treatment centers" if they see symptoms of a cold and wear a mask if a sick person is present in their tent.

Miadafar also added that 165 cases of carbon monoxide poisoning have been reported so far.

The government is widely criticized for its inability to provide aid to the quake-hit people. Reports from Khoy, the epicenter of the January 29 quake say one week after the event, people still do not have access to basic necessities.

An earthquake with a magnitude of 5.9 hit northwest Iran near the border with Turkey, killing at least three people and injuring over 800.

Iran Offers Aid To Syria's Aleppo After Large Quake In Turkey

Feb 6, 2023, 07:30 GMT+0

Iran’s Consul General in Syria’s city of Aleppo pledged full support to the people in the wake of a magnitude 7.8 earthquake in Turkey, north of the Syrian border.

Early reports indicate hundreds of people have died in Turkey and in Syria and the number of casualties is increasing as search and rescue crews search destroyed buildings.

Salman Navvab Nouri is quoted by the official IRNA news website as saying “The Islamic Republic of Iran will be beside the people of Aleppo as it was in the past and all will deploy all its capacities to assist the victims…”

Israel has offered assistance to Turkey that has declared a high-level alert, requesting international assistance.

The government in Tehran has not yet issued a statement offering aid, but it is expected that Iran will focus any assistance on Syria, its regional ally.

Tehran might face a difficult political question if it commits large resources to Syria, since the victims of an earthquake in northwest Iran last week are still in a desperate situation, complaining of lack of shelter and food amid winter cold.

Most Iranians are also critical of the Islamic government's decade-old military intervention in Syria and the expenditure of tens of billion of dollars in the war.

The offer by the Iranian diplomat to help Aleppo comes as the city was mostly destroyed in 2015-2016 when Russia and Iran used overwhelming and indiscriminate bombardment to force Syrian rebels out of the area. Thousands of civilians died in the battle.

Tehran, Moscow To Build Factory In Russia To Make More Drones: WSJ

Feb 5, 2023, 22:40 GMT+0

The Wall Street Journal reports that Moscow and Tehran are cooperating on plans to construct a new factory in Russia that could make at least 6,000 Iranian-designed drones to be used in the war on Ukraine.

The WSJ quoted officials from a country aligned with the US as saying that a high-level Iranian delegation traveled to Russia in early January to visit the site for the factory and decide on details to kick off the project.

The Iranian delegation was reportedly led by both sanctioned Brigadier Geneneral Abdollah Mehrabi, head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Aerospace Force Research and Self-Sufficiency Jihad Organization, and Ghassem Damavandian, the chief executive of Iran’s Quds Aviation Industry.

The Islamic Republic has already provided Russia with hundreds of drones it has used to hit military and civilian targets in Ukraine.

The officials say the drone factory is part of a $1 billion deal between the two allies. Moscow has provided Iran with weapons seized on the battlefield in Ukraine that they are trying to reverse engineer, the officials added.

The Biden administration has warned that Russia and Iran are developing a “full-fledged defense partnership.” The White House says Moscow was training Iranian pilots to fly Russian jet fighters, with the intent of providing Tehran with the fighters by year’s end.

Prominent Political Prisoners Support Proposal For Constitutional Change

Feb 5, 2023, 21:43 GMT+0

Seven political prisoners in Iran issued a statement supporting the proposal by opposition figure Mir-Hossein Mousavi for constitutional change through a referendum.

They announced that "they will do their best to advance this proposal and a peaceful and non-violent transition to a completely democratic and developed Iranian structure."

Leading reformist politician, Mostafa Tajzadeh and the daughter of Iran former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Faezeh Hashemi, who are behind bars, are among the signatories.

“The only way out of the impasse for the government is to surrender to the right of the people to determine their own destiny,” reads he statement.

In a statement on Saturday, Mousavi, a presidential candidate in 2009, who has been under house arrest since 2011, said Iran needs “fundamental change” based on “Woman, Life, Freedom” and a referendum on the constitution.

Referring to government violence against protesters, he said the rulers of the Islamic Republic are not willing “to take the smallest step to meet the demands of the people.”

Mousavi in his statement implicitly repeated what exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi has been saying for years, and other opposition activists have echoed in the past five months – transition from the Islamic Republic.

Iranians have been hotly debating the need to form an opposition council to manage the protest movement and plan for transition to a new form of government. So far, there are no signs that prominent activists abroad are about to untie.

Regime Insider Rebukes Iran's Liquidation Of Public Assets

Feb 5, 2023, 21:23 GMT+0

Iranian hardliner politician Ahmad Tavakkoli has rebuked the government for its plan to liquidate public assets with no supervision or a clear process.

In a letter addressed to the heads of the three government branches published Sunday, Tavakkoli, who is a member of the Expediency Discernment Council, said that the measure is in obvious violation of the country’s constitution. 

He argued that this manner of running the government is similar to the behavior of a drug addict who cannot afford to buy his drugs and decides to sell off its belongings to support his addiction. 

"At the beginning of the addiction, the addict spends his income on buying drugs, but after the income is not enough, he starts selling his properties and furniture," Tavakkoli said. 

Tavakkoli, himself considered a regime insider, criticized the plan despite Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s full-fledged support for the scheme.

The Islamic Republic has recently embarked on a journey to raise capital by selling public properties, a move that has people, experts and politicians concerned about possible corruption. Similar past schemes implemented without proper rules and transparency have ended in scandals.

It involves the liquidation of billions of dollars of assets belonging to the government and its affiliated entities including banks under the supervision of a seven-man team with extraordinary powers and immunity from prosecution.

Khamenei has approved the plan, which is not a real privatization scheme. Well-connected and powerful buyers who are often secretive funds and endowments run by powerful officials are lined up to gobble up the prize.