Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran nuclear fuel facilities – Yellow cake production line – Video


Iran nuclear fuel facilities - Yellow cake production line
December 9, 2014 (Persian calendar 1393/9/18) Iran nuclear fuel facilities - Yellow cake production line ...

By: Persian_boy

See the original post here:
Iran nuclear fuel facilities - Yellow cake production line - Video

A light on Iran's dark powers

Within Iran these days, telling the truth about its autocracy is usually found only on social media. But when President Hassan Rouhani does it, the rest of the world can hope Iran may finally start to honor the dignity of the individual through self-governance and democracy.

On Monday, Mr. Rouhani boldly stated that Iran should eliminate the consolidation of power in a single body. Right now, almost all religious and secular authority in Iran lies with an unelected supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his network of agents, such as the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. Candidates for Irans controlled elections must meet the ayatollahs approval.

In the 2013 election, for example, Rouhani, who was the closest candidate that could be called a reformer, was the supreme leaders least favorite. Yet Rouhani, a Scottish-educated Muslim cleric, won the vote. Now governing as the peoples choice, the president felt courageous enough to call for a separation of powers. That universal principle is necessary, he said, to keep power under control.

Whatever in the society is not competitive and is monopolistic with monopolized management, is wrong, he said.

He might as well have been quoting James Madison. The American constitutionalist created a democratic system in the United States to prevent government abuses by balancing the legislative, executive, and judicial branches. Until men act like angels, Madison asserted, they need controls over their ambitions for power.

Iran, like China, has discovered that corruption grows in high places when power becomes too personal and too absolute. Each country ranks high on Transparency Internationals index of the most corrupt countries. The leaders in each country now worry that their legitimacy is eroding as young people resent the fact that wealth and promotions are achieved more by connections than by merit. Corruption also dampens private investment.

The continuation, the deepening and the expansion of corruption is endangering ... the Islamic Revolution, said Rouhani. In China, President Xi Jinping said in 2012 that the Communist Party must curb corruption or else corruption would lead the Party and the nation to perish.

In Iran, former Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi was recently convicted and sent to prison. In China last week, powerful former domestic security chief Zhou Yongkang was arrested on criminal charges. The official Peoples Daily suggested the party has failed to oppose cliques of power like those run by Mr. Zhou.

Anticorruption campaigns, however, are often futile unless a government also ensures the equality of all citizens before the law or the principles that govern society. If rights and freedom are inherent to the individual, they must be preserved by distributing power and allowing voters to yank someone from office in elections.

In China, power is still flowing to Mr. Xi. In Iran, Rouhani may have limited ability to change Irans power structure. But telling the truth is a start.

Read more here:
A light on Iran's dark powers

Iran wants to see draft nuclear agreement develop

VIENNA, March 18 (UPI) -- Iran wants to work toward a draft agreement on a comprehensive solution to a lingering nuclear row with Western powers, the foreign minister said Tuesday.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met Tuesday in Vienna with Catherine Ashton, the foreign policy chief for the European Union, to discuss prospects for a comprehensive nuclear agreement.

Iran agreed to curb its nuclear research activity in exchange for relief from Western economic sanctions in November. Zarif said Tuesday enrichment issues, peaceful nuclear cooperation and the removal of sanctions were among the items on the table during talks in Vienna.

"We hope that in this round and next rounds we could be able to prepare the draft of the comprehensive plan," he was quoted by Iran's semiofficial Mehr News Agency as saying.

Zarif said Monday he wasn't optimistic about this week's talks. Negotiations later this week may be at the deputy level, the Iranian government said.

Ashton frustrated Iranian officials when she met with female dissidents during her trip last week to Tehran.

Her spokesman, Michael Mann, was quoted by Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency as saying Tuesday's talks were constructive.

"Good progress" was made Tuesday and there is "no reason to believe" negotiations wouldn't continue in good faith, he said.

Related UPI Stories

2014 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Continued here:
Iran wants to see draft nuclear agreement develop

Editorial: Iran should free Post correspondent Jason Rezaian now

By Editorial Board December 8 at 8:43 PM

FOR MONTHS, senior Iranian officials have tacitly acknowledged that the imprisonment of The Washington Posts Tehran correspondent, Jason Rezaian, is unjust. The secretary of Irans Human Rights Council, Mohammed Javad Larijani, called it a fiasco; in early November he expressed the hope that the case would be dropped in less than a month. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said in September that he knew Mr.Rezaian to be a fair reporter and had hoped all along that his detention would be short.

That makes it particularly shocking that Mr.Rezaian would have been charged by a court on Saturday in Tehran. The nature of the charges has not been disclosed, nor has any evidence against Mr.Rezaian been publicly presented by Iranian officials. As of Monday he had been imprisoned for 139 days, longer than any Western journalist who has been detained in the country.

As Mr.Rezaians family and the State Department have pointed out, the conditions in which he has been held violate Irans own laws. He has been denied access to a lawyer as well as bail. He has not been allowed any visitors other than his wife, who was arrested with him on July22 and released in early October. His physical and psychological health are suffering; his family says he suffers from high blood pressure, an eye infection and back pain.

Most important, Mr.Rezaian should never have been arrested and imprisoned in the first place, as Post Executive Editor Martin Baron recently put it. A dual U.S.-Iranian citizen, Mr. Rezaian returned to Iran as a journalist because he hoped to promote understanding between the two countries. Since 2012 he has reported for The Post not just on political developments in Tehran but also on social issues and cultural developments, including a nascent Iranian appetite for baseball.

As Secretary of State John F. Kerry put it in a statement Sunday, Jason poses no threat to the Iranian government or to Irans national security. Haleh Esfandiari, a Washington-based Iranian American scholar who was imprisoned in 2007, pointed out last week that the very fact Mr.Rezaian was held for so long without charge suggests that Irans Intelligence Ministry has been struggling to concoct a case that would hold up even in Iranian courts.

Mr. Kerry said that he was personally dismayed and disturbed at reports of Mr. Rezaians prosecution as I have repeatedly raised Jasons case ... directly with Iranian officials. Separately, Mr.Kerry said in an appearance at a conference Sunday that an agreement with Iran over its nuclear program could be reached in three or four months. That assertion was jarring in light of Mr.Rezaians case, along with the disclosure than Iran may have illicitly sought equipment for a nuclear reactor. If Iranian officials are unresponsive in the case of Mr.Rezaian, how can they be expected to deliver on commitments they make with respect to the nuclear program?

View original post here:
Editorial: Iran should free Post correspondent Jason Rezaian now

How to slaughter a cow in Iran – slaktar ko – – Video


How to slaughter a cow in Iran - slaktar ko -
How to slaughter a cow in Iran Hur man slaktar en ko .

By: MAZI Computer

Continue reading here:
How to slaughter a cow in Iran - slaktar ko - - Video