P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M

P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Friday, August 7, 2015

Gen. Hugh Shelton: Don’t empower Iran’s tyrants


Thursday, August 6, 2015

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

IRAN: Tehran Central Prison inmates continue hunger strike

A hunger strike by prisoners in Tehran Central Prison (Fashafouye) in protest to pressures on prisoners and the medieval conditions of this prison that began on July 30 is continuing. Prisoners recently transferred from Evin Prison to Phase 4 of this prison are among those staging this strike.
This strike began when prison henchmen severely battered a prisoner by the name of Ahoonabar that had gone on hunger strike and shaved off his hair. This barbarity that aimed at creating an atmosphere of terror in the prison and frighten other prisoners resulted in a hunger strike by 500 prisoners in Phase 4 of Tehran Central Prison.
Recently built in the deserts of Tehran-Qom road, Tehran Central Prison has medieval conditions. Henchmen keep prisoners under the hot summer sun from 9 am till 1 pm. Hygiene in this prison is dreadful and a large number of prisoners have nowhere to sleep and spend the nights sleeping near toilets and in the corridors of the wards. Lack of medical services, constant cutoff of gas and water and lack of air-conditioning is placing a lot of pressure on the prisoners. Any protest against these harsh conditions by prisoners is met by an iron fist by prison guards.
In this prison which is also known as Fashafouye or Hassanabad Qom Prison, prisoners are forced into unpaid labor. Around 600 prisoners work in shifts in a camp called “Cultivation and Industry” and its subsidiary units. Another 450 prisoners work in Prison Organization’s workshops that are totally controlled by the revolutionary guards (IRGC) and the Intelligence Ministry with no pay.
The hasty transfer of prisoners to this location with incomplete infrastructures is in line with Iranian regime’s plan to destroy Evin Prison and transfer prisoners to a desolate place. Head henchman Sohrab Soleimani, the General Director of Tehran Prisons, had previously stated that by 20 March 2016, 3500 prisoners will be transferred to Tehran Central Prison from Evin, Gohardasht (Rajai Shahr) and Ghezel Hessar prisons (Tasnim News Agency, affiliated with the terrorist Qods Force – July 13, 2015).
The interrogators and torturers have numerously threatened the resistive prisoners that by transferring them to Tehran Central Prison they will be slaughtered and no one will notice it.
By destroying the Evin Prison and transferring the prisoners to the deserts outside of Tehran, the clerical regime plans to isolate the families of the prisoners who assemble in front of prisons in protest to regime’s suppression and tyranny so that their cries for justice gets nowhere. Moreover, the families and relatives of prisoners have to bear more hardship and incur higher costs in going to this desolated place and this in turn will further isolate the prisoners and place them under pressure.
Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
August 3, 2015

NCRI- Top U.S. lawmaker introduces legislation rejecting Iran nuclear deal

U.S. Rep. Ed Royce, Chairman of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, on Tuesday introduced H.J.Res. 64, legislation that would prevent the implementation of the Obama Administration’s nuclear agreement with the regime in Iran.
The legislation was introduced consistent with the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act, passed and signed into law in May.
Upon the legislation’s introduction, Mr. Royce (R-CA) said: “I wish the Obama Administration had negotiated a verifiable, enforceable, and accountable agreement. While a tremendous amount of effort was put into these negotiations, the result falls well short of this standard. That’s the only conclusion I can come to after dozens of hearings with independent experts who have expressed extreme misgivings about this deal, especially the lifting of the arms embargo on Iran’s ICBM program. The agreement gives Iran permanent sanctions relief, but in exchange only temporarily restrains Iran’s nuclear program."
Nuclear talks with the regime in Iran have touched off a fierce debate in Washington over the nature of the accord and its review by Congress.
“If this agreement goes through, Iran gets a cash bonanza, a boost to its international standing, and a lighted path toward nuclear weapons. By granting sweeping sanctions relief, we have lessened our ability to challenge Iran’s conduct across the board," said Royce who has chaired several Foreign Affairs Committee hearings on the issue since the July 14 deal was announced.
“Yes, passage of this legislation would roil some diplomatic waters. But the U.S. still wields the most powerful economic sanctions in the world – sanctions Iran desperately needs relief from – sanctions that would continue to deter countries and companies from investing in Iran."


“I do not relish in introducing this consequential legislation. But the consequences for global security from this agreement are too great. This deal gives up too much, too fast, to a terrorist state – making the world less safe, less secure, and less stable,” he added.