Journalists boycott the official press day and step up their struggle
August 6th, 04
RSF
Reporters Without Borders voiced support today for the journalists who plan to hold a one-day hunger strike to protest against press freedom violations tomorrow - Press Day in Iran - and to boycott an official ceremony at which the minister of culture and Islamic guidance is to award prizes to the press.
"While staging a pseudo-homage to the work of journalists, the Iranian authorities try to strip them of their right to work and push forward day by day with their campaign of repression," the organisation said. "We reaffirm our support for the movement of Iranian journalists who bravely refuse to let themselves be gagged, and we call on the Iranian authorities to listen to their demands."
Tomorrow's protest will be a continuation of the movement begun on 26 July with a sit-in by more than 250 people outside the Journalists Association in Tehran. It will be a day of "mourning" for the closure of the major reformist newspapers and the threats hanging over the press. Tehran state prosecutor Said Mortazavi announced at the end of July that journalists who wrote for the closed newspapers will be banned from working altogether. They are appealing for international support and solidarity for their movement.
It is also tomorrow that Emadoldin Baghi - a figurehead of the reformist press - is due to appear before the Tehran prosecutor. No explanation had been given for this summons, the latest of many Baghi has received since his release in February 2003.
Baghi was sentenced in October 2000 to three years in prison for "threatening national security" and "dissemination false news." Following his release, he edited the reformist daily Jomhouriat, which was forced to close on 18 July. He also founded a group that defends prisoners' rights.
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=11103
If Iran helped...
Saturday, August 7, 2004
Albany Democrat Herald
One of the many revelations in the final report of the 9/11 Commission is that some of the hijackers got help - whether inadvertent or otherwise is unknown - from Iran.
As reported by the commission, in the months before the attacks, al-Qaida operatives frequently traveled through Iran. This was helpful to the terrorists because Iran did not stamp their passports.
"In sum," the commission said on page 241 of its report, "there is strong evidence that Iran facilitated the transit of al-Qaida members into and out of Afghanistan before 9/11, and that some of these were future 9/11 hijackers."
The commission found no evidence that Iran knew what al-Qaida was planning. But its habit of not stamping their passports helped the attackers get into the U.S. later. An Iranian transit visa in their passports might well have given U.S. immigration officers reason to question them at length, and perhaps the plot would have become clear.
As the commission concluded, "We believe this topic requires further investigation by the U.S. government." The big question is: What will we do if it becomes evident that Iran knowingly helped?
http://www.dhonline.com/articles/2004/08/06/news/opinion/edit02.txt