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Nasrin | The most important film you will watch this year

lol, evidences are discussed in the curt, not in a random forum. she had access to everything both in the curt and in the prison, lots of her husband's propaganda materials are creatd by her when she was in prison (such a brutal condition!) ,espionage related trials are always confidential.


Sure espionage ,

It is well known that spies usually keep a low profile and hide themselves by mingling in the crowd , as we clearly see in the following pictures. Look how she trying to hide behind the sign so no one can recognize her ! ! !


Nasrin-sotoodeh-saham-news1-e1434539301452.jpg


10959774_841548602568423_916148656003208664_n.jpg
 
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Sure espionage ,

It is well know that spies usually keep a low profile and hide themselves by mingling in the crowd , as we clearly see in the following pictures. Look how she trying to hide behind the sign so no one can recognize her ! ! !


Nasrin-sotoodeh-saham-news1-e1434539301452.jpg


10959774_841548602568423_916148656003208664_n.jpg

Am I the only person not sure to understand what exactly this user is trying to get at here?

Anyway, famous spy working for the German Democratic Republic's Ministry of State Security, Günter Guillaume, seen "keeping a low profile and hiding himself by mingling in the crowd. Look how he's trying to hide behind the sunglasses so no one can recognize him!!!"

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brandtguillaume101_v-contentgross.jpg


 
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Sure espionage ,

It is well know that spies usually keep a low profile and hide themselves by mingling in the crowd , as we clearly see in the following pictures. Look how she trying to hide behind the sign so no one can recognize her ! ! !


Nasrin-sotoodeh-saham-news1-e1434539301452.jpg


10959774_841548602568423_916148656003208664_n.jpg
I don't see "I work for CIA" or "I teach deceiving techniques to terrorists" in her hands!

Even vice president of Yugoslavia was a CIA spy, the only role which CIA gave him was to appoint incompetent people for government seats.

Yes, we do know all the dirty techniques of West!
 
some irrelevant nonsense cause i cant handle the truth, or worse i know the truth very well but pretend to be blind

More nonsense and twisting of reality cause i am biased



Nasrin was first imprisoned in 2010 , there where no espionage charges brought than.

Do you really want to lie to the people here and explain to them that after her release and being constantly watched , she was able to engage in spying ?

espionage charges where brought only in her second arrest in 2018.

And what top secret information was she able to pass on in her situation ? ( unlike the examples you brought of those two who maneuvered themselves into position of power ) , info on woman not wearing hijab ?


iran_-_nasrin_sotoudeh.jpg


I suspect the inscription on her hijab must be some hidden massage she tries to pass to Iran's enemies . Any of you care to translate what it says ?


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We Israelis like to lie and deceive constantly


Spot the differences

An unprejudiced honest person , knows there is good and bad in everyone , certainly true when you talk about a whole nation.

I have nothing against Iranians , and would certainly never refer to all Iranians in an inclusive way . My criticism was aimed directly at you . You however found it appropriate to refer to all my people. Something that shames only yourself.

But what can you expect from someone who is willing to see one of his own people thrown into prison , just because he does not agree with her views.

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Spot the differences

An unprejudiced honest person , knows there is good and bad in everyone , certainly true when you talk about a whole nation.

I have nothing against Iranians , and would certainly never refer to all Iranians in an inclusive way . My criticism was aimed directly at you . You however found it appropriate to refer to all my people. Something that shames only yourself.

But what can you expect from someone who is willing to see one of his own people thrown into prison , just because he does not agree with her views.

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All Israelis are shared in the crime of their regime, in torturing the Palestinians, in stealing their land and homes and of course serving to their military, there is no sheep in the pack of wolves.
 
Spot the differences

An unprejudiced honest person , knows there is good and bad in everyone , certainly true when you talk about a whole nation.

I have nothing against Iranians , and would certainly never refer to all Iranians in an inclusive way . My criticism was aimed directly at you . You however found it appropriate to refer to all my people. Something that shames only yourself.

But what can you expect from someone who is willing to see one of his own people thrown into prison , just because he does not agree with her views.

~

An Israeli with an Indian mythology avatar.

Truly a sight to see.
 
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Insulted Other Member/Nationality
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Do you know that the Israelis consider the Indians as ugly,dark and smelly people? They will never accept them as friends.

I have nothing against Indians personally and I think they can be very great people (like anyone else has the capacity to be so) but the way they get shit on by others especially those they look up, in this case Israel, is just straight up sad but hey, everyone makes fun of everyone sometime xD.
 
All Israelis
Indian mythology avatar.
India and Israek


All irrelevant nonsense , that have nothing to do with the topic of this thread.

One thing is for sure , this woman have 100 times more courage than all those who responded so far in this thread.

How many here can say they scarified something for the sake of others ?

This woman sacrificed her freedom and her health for what she believes is the best interest of her people. You do not have to agree with her views , but you you can show respect and appreciate her brave stand.

This is the hijab she wore on the day she out of prison the first time , the inscription on her hijab reads "


“ I will greet the sun again ”


a quote from the famous Iranian poet Forough Farrokhzad.

May she greet again and walk the sandy beaches of her birth place.


kaveh_rostamkhani_nasrin_portrait_001s.jpg






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Iran must stop using long-term detention to silence human rights defenders, says UN expert

GENEVA (6 July 2021) — A UN expert today criticised the Islamic Republic of Iran's practice of sentencing human rights defenders to long-term detention, and called on the Government to release all those detained for their human rights work.

"It is too easy for human rights defenders in Iran to find themselves condemned to 10 years or more in prison for carrying out work that is legitimate in the eyes of human rights law," said Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders.

"Defenders of women, of children, of prisoner rights, of labour rights, of freedom of expression, of freedom of association, of minorities, of the right to receive a fair trial and of the right not to be tortured — they all run the risk of being detained in dire conditions for long periods of time," she said.

Lawlor referred specifically to the cases of four human rights defenders currently serving long sentences: Nasrin Sotoudeh, Esmail Abdi, Soheil Arabi, and Mohammad Najafi. Lawlor noted that most of them had multiple convictions and sentences, as long as 10 or 15 years. This means that even if they had their longest sentence struck down, they would still have to serve their next longest, which in some cases would be just shy of 10 years. On 13 June 2021, human rights defender and lawyer Amirsalar Davoudi was temporarily released on bail of 20 billion IRR from Rajaie Shahr prison in Alborz province pending a retrial, due to irregularities in his first trial.

"When human rights defenders are put in prison, some of the rights of the general population are left unprotected," she said. Human rights defenders perform a vital service in any country, but in Iran they are accused of harming national security.

"All States should constantly challenge themselves to keep their human rights record spotless," Lawlor said, "so why does Iran lock up anyone who holds it to account?"

She described the provision of medical care in Iranian prison as "wholly inadequate". She said the security, health and livelihood of prisoners was under threat from a prison system that systemically denied them adequate medication and care. Visits and phone calls are also often restricted, and prisoners are sometimes transferred to areas far from their homes so that their families are never fully sure of their wellbeing, she said.

Women human rights defenders face particular risk. Unveiling in public places, for example, was often prosecuted by stretching the scope of an already overbroad provision which bans the promotion of prostitution, as happened to Mojgan Keshavarz, Monireh Arabshahi, Yasaman Aryani and Saba Kord Afshari. Mothers also face specific risk: Raheleh Ahmadi and Farangis Mazloum were punished for continuing the human rights work of their detained children.

Lawlor said she was deeply troubled by reports that woman human rights defender Narges Mohammadi was sentenced in May to a further two and a half years in prison, 80 lashes, and two fines just seven months after her release under the Sentence Reduction Law. The alleged new offences are related to human rights campaigns she carried out in prison.

"Until all human rights defenders are released, and laws are made that specifically protect them, this grim cycle of detentions will not be broken," Lawlor said.
The expert is in contact with the authorities on this matter. The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran denied the above-mentioned information.

The expert's call was endorsed by: Mr. Javaid Rehman , Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran; Ms. Dubravka Simonovic , Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences; Ms.Melissa Upreti (Chair), Ms.Dorothy Estrada-Tanck (Vice Chair), Ms.Elizabeth Broderick; Ms.Ivana Radačić, and Ms.Meskerem Geset Techane; Working Group on discrimination against women and girls; Ms. Tlaleng Mofokeng, Special Rapporteur on the right to physical and mental health; Mr. Diego García-Sayán , Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers; Mr. Clément Voulé , Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association.


 
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Iran Releases Rights Lawyer Sotoudeh For Five-Day Health Treatment Leave

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Nasrin Sotoudeh (masked) poses with her husband and children after her release from prison on July 21.


Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, whose health has "seriously deteriorated" since her arrest three years ago, has been granted a five-day treatment leave from prison.

Sotoudeh will undergo various medical examinations, according to a post her husband, Reza Khandan, wrote on his Facebook page,

"Nasrin has come home on treatment leave for five days," he wrote in the post, which also showed a picture of Sotoudeh and her two children after her temporary release from the Gharchak women's prison in Tehran.

Activists have pressured Iranian authorities for months to release Sotoudeh. Instead, last year they transferred her to another prison that was farther away from her family.

Sotoudeh was arrested in June 2018 after representing opposition activists including women prosecuted for removing their mandatory headscarves.

She was later sentenced to a combined 38 1/2 years in prison and 148 lashes on charges including spying, spreading propaganda, and insulting Iran's supreme leader. Under Iranian law, she will need to serve 12 years in prison, the longest of her sentences.

Late last year she was granted a temporary release, but was returned to prison in December 2020.

UN experts have said the Gharchak women's prison is "overcrowded" and has "serious" sanitary issues.

Khandan said in November 2020 that Sotoudeh had contracted COVID-19 while in the prison, where he said conditions were particularly "catastrophic."

Khandan has also been targeted for challenging compulsory veiling laws, having received a six-year prison sentence in a ruling that can be enforced at any time.

 

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