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Thursday, 06 October 2005 |
 Reuters, OTTAWA - Canada will put forward a resolution at the United Nations for the third year in a row accusing Iran of human rights violations, Foreign Minister Pierre Pettigrew said on Wednesday.
"Iran has not lived up to its international human rights obligations and has not conformed with past U.N. resolutions on this matter. We believe this must change," Pettigrew said. |
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Thursday, 06 October 2005 |
 By Anton La Guardia, Diplomatic Editor
Daily Telegraph, October 6 - For the past two years, the Foreign Office has done its utmost to defend Iran from American accusations that Iranian mullahs were stirring trouble in Iraq.
"On the contrary," British diplomats retorted, "Iran is being very helpful in the political process. It has an interest in stability in Iraq." |
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Wednesday, 05 October 2005 |
 Jonathan Shaw, MP and PPS (Parliamentary Private Secretary) to Ruth Kelly, secretary of state for Education and Skills.
Andrew (MacKinlay, MP) mentioned that there are more people joining in support of the NCRI and I would count myself as one of those people. I have been very impressed by the organisation and the determination to see improvement for the life of people in Iran. |
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Wednesday, 05 October 2005 |
 By David R. Sands
The Washington times, October 5 - Iran's new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has placed the military firmly in control of his nation's nuclear program, undercutting his government's claim that the program is intended for civilian use, according to a leading opposition group.
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Wednesday, 05 October 2005 |
 FT.com, October 5 - When Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, Iran's fundamentalist president, recently met other senior leaders in Tehran, he suggested they should not worry unduly about growing western pressure. |
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Tuesday, 04 October 2005 |
 NCRI, October 4 – The following are remarks by Lord Slynn of Hadley on Article 21c of the Iraqi constitution concerning refugees with particular reference to PMOI members in Iraq. He presented his remarks to a meeting jurists and parliamentarians in London on September 13. I am going to say something on the purely legal aspects of article 21 of the draft constitution as I see it as a lawyer. Let me just read it to you. I am sure you have already seen it and read it and probably reacted to it. It is quite important to keep the actual words in mind. Article 21 reads...firstly an Iraqi should not be handed over to foreign bodies…that is no concern of ours…political asylum in Iraq should be regulated by law…and political refugees should not be turned over to a foreign body or forcefully returned to the country from which he has fled. This is the interesting part…the part we are concerned with today is the subparagraph C of article 21. political asylum shall not be granted to those accused of committing international or terror crimes or to anyone who has caused Iraq harm.
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Tuesday, 04 October 2005 |
 By Colum Lynch
The Washington Post, UNITED NATIONS, October 4 - The Bush administration Monday tried to increase pressure on Russia to halt the supply of nuclear energy technology to Iran, citing a recent finding by a U.N. board that Tehran is in violation of its commitment to disclose its nuclear activities.
Stephen G. Rademaker, the acting U.S. assistant secretary of state for international security and nonproliferation, said governments needed to rethink their nuclear trade policies in light of the Sept. 24 decision by the board of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The 35-member board declared Tehran in "noncompliance" with its obligations to report advances in its nuclear programs.
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Tuesday, 04 October 2005 |
 NCRI, October 4 - On October 2 the first part of a report from Iranian prisons by Mostafa Naderi was published on this page. This is the second and final part of his report:
After about two and a half months, they transferred us in a meat truck to Gohardasht Prison in Karaj, west of Tehran. They locked me up in solitary confinement, once for three years and another time for two years. I was kept in a 2 by 1.5 m cell.
In the first five or six months, I thought about the past. I could remember people and names. But after about one year, I seemed to have forgotten everything. The main hall there had 40 cells, 20 on the right and 20 on the left. A few cells away from mine, one of the prisoners, Reza Shiradian told me he had been raped and they intended to execute him. When arrested, he was only 16. When I got of prison, I heard he had been executed. |
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Monday, 03 October 2005 |
 Addressing the issue of Iran in a meeting organized on the fringes of the Labour Party annual conference in Brighton on September 28, Andrew Mackinlay, member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the British Parliament emphasized, among other things, the need to remove the People’s Mojahedin Organisation of Iran, a member of the NCRI coalition, from the British and the EU list of proscribed organizations. Excerpts of his speech follows: |
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