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Iran’s Supreme Court rejects retrial for Kurdish woman sentenced to death

Feb 6, 2025, 18:58 GMT+0
Pakhshan Azizi
Pakhshan Azizi

Iran’s Supreme Court rejected a motion for a retrial in the case of Pakhshan Azizi, a Kurdish political prisoner and humanitarian worker on death row, her lawyer said on Thursday, sparking fears among rights groups that her execution is imminent.

In a post on X, Azizi's lawyer Amir Raisian said they will submit another retrial request and appeal to the judiciary chief in a final effort to halt the sentence.

Azizi was arrested in August 2023 and sentenced to death for “armed rebellion against the state”, or baghi, following a trial before a Revolutionary Court in Tehran in July last year.

Rights groups say her conviction is politically motivated and linked to her humanitarian work, including assisting women and children displaced by Islamic State attacks in northeast Syria.

Reacting to the Supreme Court’s decision, Amnesty International’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa, Diana Eltahawy, urged the international community to act immediately to stop her execution.

“The Iranian authorities must halt the execution of arbitrarily detained humanitarian aid worker Pakhshan Azizi, who was sentenced to death following a grossly unfair trial,” Eltahawy said.

She added that the case highlights how Iran uses the death penalty as a tool of political repression and highlighted allegations that Azizi was tortured and subjected to gender-based violence in detention.

“The death penalty is abhorrent in all circumstances, but imposing it after a grossly unfair trial … shows the Iranian authorities’ shameless disregard for the right to life,” she said.

Amnesty International has called on governments worldwide to speak out urgently to stop Azizi’s execution.

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After Trump directive, new US sanctions target Iran's oil exports to China

Feb 6, 2025, 16:55 GMT+0

The United States announced sanctions on networks involved in shipping Iranian oil to China on Thursday, two days after President Trump reinstated the so-called maximum pressure policy on Iran from his first term.

The coordinated actions by the Treasury Department and the State Department span multiple countries, including China, India and the United Arab Emirates and involve several vessels linked to Iran's exports.

Trump's directive on Tuesday aims to drive oil sales by its top Middle East adversary down to zero.

“The Iranian regime remains focused on leveraging its oil revenues to fund the development of its nuclear program, to produce its deadly ballistic missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, and to support its regional terrorist proxy groups,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

“The United States is committed to aggressively targeting any attempt by Iran to secure funding for these malign activities,” he added.

China is by far the biggest buyer of Iranian oil and Trump has repeatedly lambasted his predecessor Joe Biden for allowing sales to creep back up.

Iran's economy is teetering under the pressure of US-led sanctions, which Washington hopes will cut off funding to Tehran's armed allies in the Middle East.

The State Department also released a statement announcing sanctions on companies it says funnel oil revenue to Iran’s military.

“I applaud President Trump’s return to maximum pressure on the Iranian regime and willingness to confront both Iran and (China),” said Senator James Risch, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

“After years of Biden refusing to enforce oil sanctions on Iran, I enacted the SHIP Act to force sanctions on Chinese purchases of Iranian oil,” he added, referring to the 2024 Stop Harboring Iranian Petroleum (SHIP) law.

The treasury's move focuses on state firm Sepehr Energy, previously designated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control in late 2023 for its alleged ties to Iran’s Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics.

"Sepehr Energy and its affiliate companies ... use deceitful evasion methods such as falsification of maritime documents to obfuscate the Iranian origin of the oil that it trades and transports to overseas buyers, including (China)." the Treasury said in its press release.

The new sanctions aim to disrupt Iran’s use of foreign-based brokers and front companies to bypass restrictions and sustain its oil exports, the treasury said.

Iran unveils its first drone-carrier warship

Feb 6, 2025, 15:09 GMT+0

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) inaugurated its first drone-carrier warship in a ceremony in the Persian Gulf port city of Bandar Abbas on Thursday, state media reported.

The vessel, called the Martyr Bahman Baqeri, could mark an advance in the Islamic Republic's ability to project force in the strategic waterway through which much of the world's energy exports pass and beyond.

"The addition of this warship to the IRGC Navy fleet is a significant step in increasing Iran’s defensive and deterrent capabilities in distant waters and securing the country’s national interests," said Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri, commander of the IRGC navy.

General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri, chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces, said the vessel would help assure the country of "decisive victory" should conflict be imposed upon it.

"Development and progress on the coasts, islands, across the country, and at sea requires protection against the greed and threats of foreigners and enemies of this nation, and the armed forces bear this heavy responsibility.”

General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri, chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces
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General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri, chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces

A joint statement by the European Union (EU) and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) urging Iran to relinquish control of three islands in the Persian Gulf Iran has possessed since 1971 stoked outrage in Tehran.

IRGC vessels have taken control of several ships traveling in the waterway in recent years as tensions over US-led sanctions have simmered.

Iran has been conducting multiple military exercises in recent weeks to project strength following months of punishing military blows by Israel.

The maneuvers include air defense drills near nuclear sites including Natanz and a 110,000-strong mobilization in Tehran of Basij militiamen who have repeatedly quashed protest uprisings which threatened clerical rule.

Iranian president says verifying nuclear program will be 'easy'

Feb 6, 2025, 14:38 GMT+0

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday that proving the peaceful aims of its nuclear program would be easy, in an apparent bid to address US President Donald Trump's increased emphasis on achieving a deal.

"Verifying (the nuclear program) is an easy task. They have come and verified every time they wanted to do so and they can come verify a hundred more times," Pezeshkian said in remarks carried by state media.

Iran does not seek nuclear weapons because the principles of the Islamic Republic prohibit the mass killing of innocents, the relatively moderate president added in a televised meeting with foreign ambassadors in Tehran.

Iran has denied seeking a nuclear weapon, but its Mideast foe Israel has long contended Tehran wants a bomb and that it poses an existential threat.

The decision-maker on critical matters of state is not Pezeshkian but Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who issued a religious ban on weapons of mass destruction which some observers believe is not permanent and could be revisited.

Trump said on Tuesday he hoped for an agreement denying Iran nuclear weapons.

"They cannot have a nuclear weapon," he told reporters at a press conference held after signing a memorandum to restore his so-called maximum pressure policy against Iran.

"If ... they can convince us that they won't, and I hope they can," Trump continued, "It's actually very easy to do, I think they're going to have an unbelievable future."

Tehran has maintained its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes but has accelerated its uranium enrichment to up to 60% — close to the 90% threshold that is considered weapons-grade, according to the UN nuclear watchdog.


Security forces jail, torture brother of woman paralyzed by police

Feb 6, 2025, 14:34 GMT+0

Iranian security forces are torturing the brother of a young woman shot and paralyzed by police while driving without a hijab after he publicly campaigned for her treatment, according to a close family member.

Despite officials saying they had given Arezoo Badri treatment, the source told Iran International she was discharged from hospital in early January, two months before her stay was due to be completed.

Her brother Benham was detained by the Ministry of Intelligence on January 28 after trying to secure treatment for his sister and was beaten in custody in a bid to make him sign a statement denying his arrest.

He was subsequently transferred to a prison in the northern Iranian city of Sari.

The July shooting that left 31-year-old Arezoo paralyzed occurred in the Caspian Sea city of Noor after police stopped her while she drove without a mandatory Islamic head covering.

Although she complied, officers fired at the car, hitting Badri in the spine.

In August, Iran International learned that security forces had pressured her into a forced confession while she was suffering from severe pain.

Iran’s Law Enforcement Command defended the shooting, saying the driver had disregarded police orders, prompting officers to open fire in accordance with regulations

At the Davos conference in Switzerland last month, Mohammad Javad Zarif, deputy to President Masoud Pezeshkian, said authorities were easing their enforcement.

“If you walk on the streets of Tehran, you will see that some women are not wearing the hijab, and despite this being illegal, the government has decided not to put pressure on women.”

Meanwhile, authorities continue to seize vehicles and fine passengers violating the mandatory hijab law.

Publicly, Iranian officials continue to deny the hijab crackdowns, which rights groups have branded "gender apartheid".

Sweden launches inquiry into scholar’s alleged links to Iran influence network

Feb 6, 2025, 14:08 GMT+0

Sweden has launched an inquiry into allegations that Rouzbeh Parsi, an Iranian-Swedish Middle East scholar at a prominent thinktank, was involved in a Tehran-led influence network aimed at shaping Western policy.

Foreign minister Maria Malmer Stenergard said on Thursday that the government has 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.

Parsi has denied collaborating with Tehran.

Swedish TV channel, TV4 Nyheterna, reported on January 29 that Parsi communicated with authorities in Tehran who actively sought to amplify official Iranian foreign policy talking points in Western policy circles.

The discussions, TV4 reported, aimed to shape Western perceptions of Iran during critical nuclear negotiations.

TV4 said Parsi had held meetings with Iranian diplomats, including former Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, and worked alongside senior figures who were closely affiliated with the IRGC.

In 2023, a joint investigative report by Iran International and Semafor combed through thousands of emails from Iranian diplomats, revealing a network of academics and think tank analysts cultivated by Iran's foreign ministry to extend Tehran's soft power.

Members of the grouping, called the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI), were guided by Iran's Foreign Ministry in their public writing and media appearances. They were key voices in Western thinktanks and policy institutions helping promote Iran's stances.

Parsi, listed in the leaked emails as an IEI member, attended its inaugural meeting in May 2014 at Vienna’s Palais Coburg hotel, coinciding with international nuclear talks. Documents indicate that Iran’s foreign ministry covered the event’s costs.

While Parsi acknowledges his participation, he denies collaborating with Tehran.

“My purpose was to observe how Iranian officials reason and act in real-time,” he told TV4.

The Swedish Institute of International Affairs defended Parsi, saying it has “full confidence” in his work.