Posts Tagged ‘roozbeh farahanipour’

Farahanipour discusses situation in Iran on Pars TV

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

The clip below is from Roozbeh Farahanipour’s appearance on Pars TV on August 8, 2009.

Farahanipour discusses his recent clandestine trip to Iran and the situation in Iran in general on Rafi’s program.

The clip is roughly 30 minutes.

VOA censors MPG, but welcomes reformists with open arms

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

The fact that the Voice of Islamic Republic, er - sorry - Voice of America has been censoring Iranian opposition figures is not exactly news.

I remember when I was on their show as an IT expert they wouldn’t even introduce me as ‘Babak Namdar from Marze Por Gohar’ citing that the show was about technology and not politics.  If you are scratching your head wondering what that has to do with me being a member of MPG you are not alone.  The discussion of filtering software to prevent open communication is very a political matter.

Even the screenshots they had requested, which I stayed up late to furnish were not used - why?  Because I had watermarked MPG’s logo on them.

Ken Timmerman from Foundation for Democracy in Iran has written a great piece about VOA and censorship, and to what extent VOA is going to ensure MPG’s activities do not get mentioned and if they do that they strip the name MPG from it.

Here’s a excerpt:

Voice of America purposefully omited the name of the opposition Marzeporgohar party in its TV and radio reporting, or on its website. ” Iran’s official news agency says two photographers detained earlier this month have been accused of new links with an unnamed movement seeking the overthrow of the Iranian regime,” VOA reported. In fact, the official IRNA dispatch, quoted here, specifically mentioned Marzeporgohar (MPG)

Read the full story here

IRNA reports on MPG clandestine trip to Iran

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

The following is a translation of an article published on IRNA’s website.

http://www.irna.ir/View/FullStory/?NewsId=601916

IRNA, July 25, 2009 at 11:55:20 Tehran time; Item code: 601916

PRESS CONFERENCE BY AMERICAN ELEMENTS INVOLVED IN TEHRAN’S RECENT RIOTS

Roozbeh Farahanipour, Chairman of “Marz-e Por Gohar” group [MPG Party], one of the July 9, ’99 anarchists, held a press conference last Monday to describe the details of his trip to Tehran and his presence among the rioters.

Roozbeh Farahanipour who was the leader of the so-called student groups in the July 9th event of 1999 [18 Tir], traveled to Iran on the tenth anniversary of this event [University Row, in Farsi: "Ku-ye Daneshgah"] to join the ranks of the rioters and protestors rejecting the results of the tenth presidential elections, IRNA reports.

This press conference was held at “The Museum of Tolerance” in collaboration with the “Simon Wiesenthal” Center in LA. In an astonishing move, this center has set up on its website a page for Iranian citizens, asking them to post whether they voted for Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad or Mir Hosseyn Mousavi in the presidential elections.

This US center has set September 15th as the deadline for participation in this “election”, the opening day of the sixty fourth UN General Assembly in NY. It appears that these parties intend to cause a commotion and create a disturbance during the probable trip by the IR of Iran’s President to NY to partake in the UN General Assembly and are already planning it with help from their American friends.

End of news item / Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) / Item Code: 601916

Press Release: Protestors Defied the Regime’s Martial Law on the 10th Anniversary of the July 1999

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

LOS ANGELES, July 16, 2009 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ —-As the first wave of the Iranian movement characterized by huge mass rallies in June, receded following violent crackdown of IRI forces, a new wave of nationwide protests engulfed the country.

On July 9th as the whole country was almost shut down by an unprecedented deployment of Revolutionary Guards, riot police, the Basseej Islamic Militia and foreign terrorists training in Iran, tens of thousands of courageous young Iranians defied and surprised the regime by staging sporadic hit and run demonstrations in numerous Iranian cities and in particular in Tehran, Esfehan, Kermanshah and other cities. These series of demonstrations succeeded in attracting the participation of hundreds of thousands of other people along the routes who joined in the chants, encouraged the youth and even saved many from the hands of the evil forces.

Last week the revolutionary Guards announced that they were in charge of the country’s security. The regime , under the pretext of a sandstorm affecting parts of the country, had shut down schools and government offices encouraging close to a million to evacuate Tehran and millions to stay indoors. The government had also closed off all university grounds and dormitories, hoping to turn the capital city into and abandoned occupied city with major concentrations of storm troopers and network of spies. The large gaps left out due to lack of forces, revealed the regime’s weakness and provided opportunities for thousands to stage protests in unoccupied parts of the city, with minimum casualties and number of arrests. These demonstrations were frequently assaulted by riot forces who only succeeded in “dispersing” crowds to a different location. Democracy activists acquired tactical experience and organizational skills for their next round of protests by the end of July around the time of the selected president Ahmadinejad’s appointment to a second term.

Roozbeh Farahanipour is out of Iran following his entry into his beloved country earlier through free borders, exercising his right to participate in the democratic movement and contributing to the quality and the organizational aspects of the patriotic and secular parts of the youth movement. Mass singing of the patriotic anthem “O’Iran”(Ey Iran , Ey Marze Por Gohar) and demands for genuinely free and fair elections and freedom for the country have been encouraged by Marze Por Gohar party and on occasion were led by MPG activists. Such slogans and anthems have been discouraged in Iran, including by the so called reformist camp who have ordered their followers to separate their ranks from those of anti regime forces. In the meantime, even pro Moussavi crowds have picked up such slogans and have slowly inched closer to towards the Iranian opposition.

Leaders of patriotic and secular parties in Iran with whom Roozbeh Farahanipour has been ideologically associated had all been placed under surveillance hoping to ensnare Roozbeh if he tried to establish contact, and for preventing them from affecting the street protests in any way. Roozbeh avoided all such contacts and was able to evade security forces. In the meantime a number of regime agents in Los Angeles and agents calling from Tehran under different guises have attempted to find his location through his associates in California.

The MPG will issue statements and hold a press conference upon the return of Roozbeh Farahanipour to the US next week.

FOX Business

American Thinker interview with MPG Spokesman Nikbakht

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Here’s a very informative interview with Faryar Nikbakht, with a brief history of opposition leader Roozbeh Farahanipour.

Here’s a an excerpt:

AAL: Will MPG repudiate requirements that non-Muslim women wear veils, and protect all women — especially Muslim women — from coercive attempts to enforce veiling?
FN: Coercive veiling is against our beliefs. Women should be free to go without a hijab or wear a hijab if they like. However women want to [dress], they should be free.
AAL: Persia was once predominantly Zoroastrian. Would MPG encourage a Zoroastrian revival?
FN: A government should not, and may not, advocate or discourage any religion. Everyone should be free to practice their religion. The government should not fund or propagate any religion. Such a government would [only] replace the present one…. Iran’s government now funds their own leaders and even population increase. So long as people support them, [the mullahs] engineer demographics. If any government were to encourage a different religion, that would be equally unfair.
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/a_true_iranian_reformer_and_hi.html

MPG’s Farahanipour excellent explanation of [s]elections

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Frontpage magazine conducted a very interesting and detailed interview with Roozbeh Farahanipour, head of Marze Por Gohar Party.

I recommend everyone read it as it contains information that’s rarely, if ever, disclosed about the regime’s [s]elections.

One specific piece I liked, since the American government is turning a blind eye to illegal activities the Islamic Republic is conducting within the United States:

The regime tries to have it both ways: they try to discredit Iranians living outside of Iran who support boycotting by claiming they [boycott supporters] are detached and out of touch, while at the same time they provide logistical support to pro-regime entities living outside Iran to help promote the elections.  The latter is in fact illegal: it is illegal for the Islamic Republic to place ballot boxes in foreign states with which it has no official relations.  Meaning, it is illegal for the Islamic Republic to place ballot boxes in the Unites States and count the votes cast here in the states for the elections in Iran.

But hey, Obama wants to engage the Islamic Republic, so it’s okay if the Islamic Republic breaks American laws within America.