CRY FREEDOM.net
Welcome to cryfreedom.net,
formerly known as Womens
Liberation Front.
A website
that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for babout the 21th. century feminist revolution as well especially the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the
and the uprisings of our sisters in other parts of the Middle-east. This online magazine
that started December 2019 is published every week. Thank you for your time and interest. |
|
JINA MAHSA AMINI
The face of Iran's protests. Her life, her dreams
and her death.
In memory of Jina 'Mahsa' Amini, the cornerstone of the 'Zan.
Zendegi. Azadi revolution.
16 February 2023 | By Gino d'Artali
And also
Read all about the assasination of the 22 year young
Jina Mahsa Amini (Kurdistan-Iran) and the start of the Zan,
Zendegi, Azadi (Women, life, freedom) revolution in Iran
2022-'24
and the latest news about the 'Women Live Freedom' Revolution
per month in
2024:
2024:
Feb wk4 part2 --
Feb wk4 --
Feb wk3
--
Feb wk2 part2 --
Feb wk2 --
Feb wk1 - Jan wk5 --
Jan wk4 part2 --
Jan wk4 --
Overview per month
and 2023:
Dec wk 5 part 2 -- Dec wk 5
--
Dec
week 4-3 --
Dec wk3
--
Dec 17 - 10
--
Dec week 2 and 1
--
click here for a menu overview November - Januari
2023
|
|
And
For all topics below
that may hopefully interest you click on the
image:
February 19, 2024: Noteworthy by G. d'A.: concerning the below topics
from here on all news will be embedded in either the actual news
coverage or in a headlined title with a link to the full report or to '
The dance 'round the gallows' news.
'BIOLOGICAL |
'BLINDING |
CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE
Here we are to enter THE IRANIAN
WOMEN'S REVOLUTIONISTS against
Dear reader, from here on the 'Woman,
Life, Freedom' pages menu will look a bit different and this
to avoid too many pop-ups ,meaning the underlined period
in yellow tells you in what period you are and click on another
underlinded period to go there. However, when needed a certain
topic will be in yellow meaning it's a link to go that topic and
will open in a new window. If you dissagree about any change feel more than free to let me know what you
think at
info@cryfreedom.net
|
Please do read
the following articles even when they have a very
alarming content - click on the underlined topics - |
'The mullahs' regime / OHCHR* gallows' dance'
February 13 - 9, 2024
Click here for the latest news of the |
Noteable: my
opinion from here
on will be |
When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi
figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da
qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so
called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
Farshad Dastmardi
Center for Human Rights Iran - February 19 , 2024
<<Tortured Street Protester in Iran Faces Years of Imprisonment Without
Due Process
Case Reflects Severe Rights Violations Faced by Ethnic Minorities in
Iran
<For a long time after his release, [due to the torture] he forgot his
own name>
February 19, 2023 - There are grave concerns for Farshad Dastmardi, a
32-year-old welder and boxer and member of the Lur ethnic minority in
Iran, who is facing years of imprisonment in Iran after suffering severe
injuries and being profoundly traumatized by the torture and inhumane
treatment he endured while in state custody. The Center for Human Rights
in Iran (CHRI) condemns the egregious violations of Dastmardi's rights,
whose only <crime> was engaging in peaceful protest against the state,
and denounces the 3.7-year prison sentence imposed on him without
Dastmardi having a lawyer or any ability to present a defense in court.
CHRI notes that the crimes committed against Dastmardi are typical not
only of the way the Islamic Republic treats all those who engage in
peaceful protest, but also the particularly brutal way the state
violates the most fundamental rights of minority communities, committing
violence against them in the streets, in the detention centers, and in
the courts with impunity. CHRI calls upon the judicial authorities in
Iran to immediately annul the prison sentence imposed on Dastmardi, due
to the evidence of torture, which is forbidden under Iranian law, and
the blatant violations of due process during his legal proceedings. CHRI
urges the UN and world leaders to condemn the continued unlawful
prosecution of protesters in Iran, and the particularly harsh state
retribution that is reserved for members of Iran's minority communities.
CHRI asks that the UN's Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) on Iran, established
to investigate the Islamic Republic's killing of more than 500 men and
women participating in the protests that erupted across Iran in
September 2022 and other atrocities connected to the protests,
investigate Dastmardi's case and his torture by the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps' (IRGC) intelligence organization.
Tortured by Revolutionary Guard Intelligence Agents
<One day before the court hearing, judicial officials called the family
and said Farshad was with them and he was fine and they could come to
his trial,> said the source who spoke on the condition of anonymity for
security reasons. <When Farshad's family saw him after this long time,
his face was badly bruised, and his hands were bandaged,> added the
source. <He had been tortured so much that his hands and feet still go
numb sometimes.> Dastmardi, a member of the Lur ethnic minority group in
the Iranian city of Dehdasht, in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer Ahmad province, is
now deeply scarred, physically and psychologically, after being twice
detained and tortured in connection with protests in support of Iran's
peaceful <Woman, Life, Freedom> uprising, a source with detailed
knowledge of his case told CHRI. After protests erupted across Iran in
2022, triggered by the killing in state custody of Mahsa Jina Amini, 22,
days after her arrest for alleged hijab violations, the lethal violence
employed by state forces to suppress the protests was particularly
severe in cities inhabited by ethnic minorities, such as Dehdasht, where
Dastmardi resides. Dastmardi's case epitomizes the systemic injustice
and state violence endured by members of minority communities in Iran.
Ethnic minorities are disproportionately targeted for lethal state
violence, subjected to blatant judicial violations that routinely
include torture, and are also disproportionally executed after sham
trials. His family's economic hardship, typical amongst minority
communities who also face deep economic discrimination, compounds their
suffering, leaving them unable to afford legal representation to mount a
defense or appeal his sentence.
First Arrest: Tortured by IRGC Intelligence Agents
Dastmardi was initially arrested amid anti-state protests in October
2022, held for months, then re-arrested in September 2023. <In [October
2022]. Farshad was at the home of one of his relatives when the agents
stormed the house and arrested him,> a source told CHRI. <At first, they
took Farshad to the Special Forces Barracks. Two rows of soldiers and
officers stood with batons and threw him to the ground and beat him so
much that he was on the verge of losing consciousness. That’s when he
suffered a serious head injury. After a few hours, Farshad was
transferred to the detention center of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) Intelligence Organization.> According to the source,
Dastmardi was not given any food for about five days and despite the
severity of the injuries caused by torture, no treatment or care was
provided. He developed amnesia, and for a long time after his release,
he forgot his own name, said the source who added this was also due to
drugs that were given to him in the IRGC detention center in the city of
Yasouj. Dastmardi does not know what drugs were given to him. Destmardi
was later transferred to the Yasouj Central Prison and charged with <leading
the criminal gang.> In late January 2023, after nearly four months in
detention, he was released on bail set at approximately $50,000.
Second Arrest: Held Incommunicado for 100 Days, Then Sentenced to Prison
After Two-Day Trial with No Lawyer
As the anniversary of nationwide protests approached, state security
agents increased pressure on Dastmardi and his family to prevent him in
engaging in further peaceful dissent by joining more protests that were
anticipated around that time. His family was pressured to deliver
Dastmardi to prison to ensure he did not join protests; that's when
Dastmardi, fearing for his life and safety, fled the city. The source
with extensive knowledge of his case told CHRI: <One month before the
anniversary of the protests in Dehdasht, Mr. Bagheri, the head of the
Ministry of Intelligence office, went to Farshad's father and said
Farshad should report himself to prison and stay there until after the
anniversary of the protests. He told Farshad's father that he had been
closely monitoring Farshad’s movements and activities for the past month
and claimed that during this time Farshad was instigating people to
cause chaos in the city on the anniversary of the protests. That's when
Farshad ran away and left the city.> Meanwhile, a week before the
memorial for Pedram Azarnoush, a 16-year-old protester killed by Islamic
Republic forces in Dehdasht in September 2022, security agents went to
Dastmardi's home and put a gun to his mother's head and demanded that he
report to prison, said the source. On September 22, 2023, at a memorial
for Pedram Azarnoush (who was killed at age 16 by state forces in 2022
in the village of Dareh Labak, near Dehdasht, security forces attacked
the attendees and arrested several people. It was during this crackdown
that Dastmardi was located and re-arrested. A source close to Dastmardi
said: <The following day, around 6 a.m., security forces went to
Farshad's hideout in his family's village and arrested him after beating
him up. Farshad's family had no news of him for more than a hundred days.
They didn't even know which agency had arrested him or where he was
being held.> Dastmardi was held incommunicado until early February 2024,
when his family was suddenly told the location of his trial, during
which he did not have a lawyer and had no time or ability to prepare a
defense. Without the presence of his lawyer, Dastmardi was tried on
several charges, including inciting people to engage in war and murder
with the intention of disrupting national security. The rapid court
proceedings were in complete violation of judicial regulations. The
source close to Dastmardi told CHRI: <Farshad was released from prison
in very bad physical and mental condition and just two days later, a
court verdict was delivered to his family stating he had been sentenced
to prison <for propaganda against the Islamic Republic with the
intention of disturbing public opinion and national security.> According
to the verdict, a copy of which was obtained by CHRI, Dastmardi was
sentenced to three years and seven months in prison based on reports
submitted by the IRGC's intelligence organization, screenshots of his
social media posts and so-called <confessions in court.> Yet Dastmardi
was not given a chance to speak during the trial and made no confession,
the source told CHRI. Now confronting additional charges and potential
incarceration, the specifics of Dastmardi's case remain undisclosed to
his family, who harbors grave concerns about his well-being,
particularly if he is subjected to imprisonment. Dastmardi is currently
home trying to recover from his injuries sustained in state custody yet
could be taken to prison at any moment to serve his sentence.>>
Source:
https://iranhumanrights.org/2024/02/tortured-street-protester-in-iran-faces-years-of-imprisonment-without-due-process/
Women's
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2024