Friday, 6 May 2011

انسانهای بیگناه را ببینید بدون عدالت برای تر س و وحشت  حکومت چند روز خود چطوری اعدام می کنند ایا این جنایتگاران از خدا نمی ترسند که روزی نزد خدا میرونند وباید پاسخگوی این کارهای کثیفشان  باشند

Political Motives behind Iran's Abuses

In January 2009, 22 Iranians were publicly hanged in two days.

For years the officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran have feared and battled human rights activists, labeling them as a political threat to the national (or more accurately the regime's) security, and for years we journalists and analysts have tried hard to dismiss the allegations, calling them merely baseless accusations. Well, in this case we were proved wrong.
The recent Green Movement of Iran proved that human rights activism is indeed a threat to the security and existence of the Islamic Republic. In the summer of 2009, the movement managed to utilize an unprecedented social force against the regime, shaking its pillars.
Now the question is, how does the Islamic Republic look at the human rights issues, and what aspects of activism or belief does it see as a political threat? While some areas like freedom of press might be more apparent as a political threat, others might be harder to digest. For example, how do demands to abolish stoning as a sentence for adultery, or execution of minors, turn into a political issue for the rulers of Iran?

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