Author Archives: freeshahrokhandreza

May Day in Rejai Shahr prison

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On May Day prisoners in Karaj’s Rejai Shahr prison gathered to celebrate International Workers’ Day. During the ceremony Shahrokh Zamani, who had recently ended his 47-day hunger strike, made a speech that ended with the following paragraph:

“Workers, activists and labour organisations, we must learn the lessons of the history of our struggles and the struggles of the workers of the world. Together with the workers of the world let us turn this year’s May Day into the day of unity, struggle, empathy and camaraderie of all workers’ movements for organising resistance and struggle to destroy temporary contracts, blank-signed contracts and for establishing permanent jobs, imposing wages in line with inflation and decent living wages, imposing the right to strike, the right to form independent organisations and progressive labour legislation.”

Shahrokh then chanted the following slogans:

“The workers’ way out is unity and organisation!”
“Long live May Day, the day of International Workers’ Solidarity against the capitalist system!”
“Let us create a workers’ party and general workers’ unions!”

Plea to Iran over imprisoned trade unionist

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On Thursday the 1st of May, the Guardian published a letter signed by student activists pleading with the Iranian Government to release Shahrokh. The letter can be found on the Guardian’s website here: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/30/iran-imprisoned-trade-unionist

Student activists from across the UK demand release of Shahrokh Zamani

The National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts (NCAFC) is supporting the campaign to free jailed Iranian trade unionist Shahrokh Zamani. Just as we support students and workers’ struggles everywhere in the world, we stand in solidarity with those fighting to build independent trade unions and student organisations in Iran – both have faced massive repression from the Iranian state.

The following statement, initiated by NCAFC supporters, has been signed by student officers and activists from across the country, including almost half of the National Union of Students national executive. We’ll be sending it to the press soon as a letter. If you’d like to add your name, emailshreya.paudel2010@gmail.com or leave a comment below.

For the online petition which has been signed by hundreds of students across the country, see here.

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We the undersigned student union officers and student activists demand the release of imprisoned Iranian trade unionist Shahrokh Zamani, who has just ended a hunger strike of over forty days and whose health is seriously deteriorating. He has been in prison since 2011 for the crime of seeking to build independent unions in Iran.

Shreya Paudel, National Union of Students International Students Officer-elect
Dom Anderson, NUS Vice President Society & Citizenship
Daniel Stevens, NUS International Students Officer
Piers Telemacque, NUS VP Society & Citizenship-elect, Bradford College SU President
Joe Vinson, NUS Vice President (Further Education)
Hannah Paterson, NUS Disabled Students Officer
Sky Yarlett, NUS LGBT Officer (Open Place)
Finn McGoldrick, NUS LGBT Officer (Women’s Place)
Gordon Maloney, NUS Scotland President
Steph Lloyd, NUS Wales President
Megan Dunn, NUS Vice President (Higher Education)-elect
Kelley Temple, NUS Women’s Officer
Shelly Asquith, SUArts President and NUS London Chair
Omar Raii, University College London Union External Affairs and Campaigns Officer-elect
Rachel O’Brien, University of Birmingham Guild of Students
Deborah Hermanns, University of Birmingham Guild of Students
Chantel Le Carpentier, University of Essex SU President-elect and NUS NEC
Tom Flynn, University of Bristol Union VP Education and NUS NEC
James Potter, Essex University SU VP Education
Grace Skelton, Manchester SU General Secretary
Jamie Green, Royal Holloway SU VP Communication and Campaigns
Kelly Rogers, NUS Trustee Board-elect
Edd Bauer, NUS Trustee Board
Beth Redmond, National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts
Tom Rutland, Oxford University SU President
Roshni Joshi, Ruskin College SU
Robert Eagleton, Cardinal Newman College SU
Hamish Yewdall, Northumbria SU Councillor
Elliot Folan, Union of UEA Students
Michael Chessum, University of London Union President
Daniel Cooper, University of London Union Vice President and NUS NEC-elect
Hattie Craig, Birmingham University VP Education
Becca Anderson, Gateshead College SU President
Kirsty Haigh, Edinburgh University Students’ Association VP Services
Emma Barnes, NUS Part-Time Students Representative
Josh Rowlands, NUS Mature Students Representative
Jawanza Ipyana, NUS NEC Disabled Students Member
Rosie Huzzard, NUS National Executive Council
James McAsh, NUS NEC
Charles Barry, NUS NEC
Peter Smallwood, NUS NEC
Rhiannon Durrans, NUS NEC
Jessica Goldstone, NUS NEC
Chris Clements, NUS NEC
Amy Smith, NUS NEC-elect
Robert Foster, NUS NEC Scotland Representative
Afreen Saulat, Bath University SU
Chris Pagett, Bath University SU
Freya Martin, Sheffield Hallam SU
Emma Booth, Kent University Labour Students Chair
Miguel Costa Matos, Warwick SU
Roza Salih, Vice President Diversity & Advocacy at Strathclyde Students’ Association and NUS Trustee Board-elect
Alannah Ainslie, Aberdeen University Students Association
James Elliott, NUS NEC Disabled Students Member-elect.
Xavier Cohen, Environment & Ethics Officer, Oxford University Student Union
Christopher Rawlinson, Harris Manchester College JCR President, University of Oxford
Vonnie Sandlan, NUS SEC and NUS NEC-elect
Hannah Webb, UCLU External Affairs and Campaigns Officer, NCAFC NC
Helena Mika, JCR Secretary, Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford
Abdi-aziz Suleiman, NUS NEC-elect
Dario Celaschi, President of Stanmore College Students’ Union and NEC (elect)
Clifford Fleming, Manchester SU Campaigns and Citizenship Officer, NUC NEC (elect) and co-chair of Young Greens
Zarah Sultana, NUS Black Students’ Committee and NUS NEC-elect
Andy Forse, Milton Keynes College SU
Kelly Teeboon, Liverpool Students’ Union Womens’ Campaign Officer

To sign email shreya.paudel2010@gmail.com or leave a comment below.

An NCAFC caucus at the National Union of Students 2014 conference (8-10 April, Liverpool) shows solidarity with Shahrokh Zamani

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Via: anticuts.com

Tube Strikers Support Shahrokh

RMT union activists on London Underground, currently engaged in an industrial dispute to stop a bosses’ cuts plan, have signed the petition to demand freedom for Shahrokh. Recent signatories include: 

• Mark Harding, an RMT activist currently facing victimisation and legal sanction for his role in the strikes (see <a href=https://www.facebook.com/DefendMarkHarding>the Defend Mark Harding campaign for more</a>)

• Leon Brumant, RMT London Transport Region Young Members’ Officer

• John Reid, RMT London Transport Region President, also facing victimisation

• Carol Foster, RMT London Transport Region BME Officer

The Free Shahrokh Zamani campaign sends its unconditional support to the RMT in its current fight to save jobs and ticket offices.

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Statement from Amnesty International

DOCUMENT – IRAN: TRADE UNIONIST PUNISHED FOR HUNGER STRIKE: SHAHROKH ZAMANI

UA: 89/14 Index: MDE 13/019/2014 Iran Date: 16 April 2014

URGENT ACTION

TRADE UNIONIST PUNISHED FOR hunger strike

Iranian trade unionist Shahrokh Zamani, a prisoner of conscience, has ended a hunger strike after 38 days, which has left him in poor health. He is facing reprisals for demanding prisoners’ rights inside Raja’i Shahr Prison.

After ending his “wet” hunger strike (taking water but not food) on 14 April, trade union activistShahrokh Zamani was transferred to a ward for violent or dangerous prisoners at Raja’i Shahr Prison, in Karaj, north-west of Tehran, after his initial transfer to Ghezel Hessar Prison, also in Karaj, shortly after he started his hunger strike. Ghezel Hessar Prison is known for its poor prison conditions and does not have a ward for political prisoners. During this transfer on 14 April, Shahrokh Zamani was reportedly hit in the face by prison guards and his eyeglasses were broken. On the morning of 16 April, Shahrokh Zamani was taken outside of the prison for questioning and returned back later the same day. He has been told that he may be charged with “disturbing public order” in relation to his activism from inside prison including his hunger strike and open letters he wrote about prison conditions.

A source close to Amnesty International has said Shahrokh Zamani, who is 49, is weak after his hunger strike, but he has not been examined by a doctor. He lost about 22 kilos during his hunger strike.

Shahrokh Zamani, a painter and decorator, started his hunger strike on 8 March in solidarity with imprisoned Sufi Gonabadi Dervishes, who went on hunger strike in protest at poor prison conditions and being ill-treated by prison guards. Shahrokh Zamani had been transferred from Raja’i Shahr Prison to Ghezel Hessar Prison on 11 March apparently to punish him for his continued peaceful activism from prison. Shahrokh Zamani has said he continued his hunger strike in protest at being taken to Ghezel Hessar Prison.

Please write immediately in Persian, English or your own language:

Calling on the Iranian authorities to release Sharokh Zamani immediately and unconditionally as he is a prisoner of conscience held solely for his peaceful trade union activities;

Urging them to ensure that he is protected from torture and other ill-treatment and receives any medical attention he may require;

Calling on them to end the harassment and arrest of trade unionists, and allow workers to exercise their right to form and join independent trade unions.

 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 28 MAY 2014 TO:

Leader of the Islamic Republic

Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei

The Office of the Supreme Leader

Islamic Republic Street- End of Shahid

KeshvarDoust Street

Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Twitter: @khamenei_ir

Email: info_leader@leader.ir

Salutation: Your Excellency

 

Head of the Judiciary

Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani

c/o Public Relations Office

Number 4, 2 Azizi Street intersection

Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

(Subject line: FAO

Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani)

Salutation: Your Excellency

 

 

 

And copies to:

President of the Islamic Republic of Iran

Hassan Rouhani

The Presidency

Pasteur Street, Pasteur Square

Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email: media@rouhani.ir

Twitter: @HassanRouhani (English) @Rouhani_ir (Persian)

Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. Please insert local diplomatic addresses below:

Name Address 1 Address 2 Address 3 Fax Fax number Email Email address Salutation Salutation

 

Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date.

URGENT ACTION

TRADE UNIONIST PUNISHED FOR hunger strike

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Shahrokh Zamani has written at least 14 open letters to the prison authorities but his concerns have not been addressed. In one of the letters addressed to the judge overseeing the prison, Shahrokh Zamani explained that he was transferred to Ghezel Hessar Prison after his protests against the closure and demolition of Raja’i Shahr Prison’s library for prisoners and the beating and other ill-treatment of death row prisoner Loghman (or Loqman) Moradi, a member of Iran’s Kurdish minority.

Shahrokh Zamani had been arrested on 8 June 2011 along with fellow painter Mohammad Jarahi, both from Tabriz and members of a group campaigning for the establishment of independent trade unions in Iran. Shahrokh Zamani spent 32 days on hunger strike in protest at his arrest, in the Ministry of Intelligence detention centre where he was held in Tabriz. In August 2011 Branch One of the Tabriz Revolutionary Court sentenced Shahrokh Zamani to 11 years in prison and Mohammad Jarahi to five years, after convicting them of charges including “acting against national security by establishing or being a member of groups opposed to the system” and “spreading propaganda against the system” for their peaceful trade union activities. In November 2011 an appeal court upheld Shahrokh Zamani’s sentence. Mohammad Jarahi is serving a five-year prison sentence for his peaceful trade unionist activities stemming from the June 2011 arrest.

Shahrokh Zamani was released on bail on 19 October 2011, but was to begin serving his sentence in the Central Prison of Tabriz on 14 January 2012. He was transferred to Raja’i Shahr Prison on 13 October 2012.

The UN Minimum Rules on the Treatment of Prisoners states that prisoners should be in accommodations with other prisoners who have been “selected as being suitable to associate with one another”.

Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, of which Article 22 (1) states: “Everyone shall have the right to form and join trade unions for the protection of his interests”. Iran is also a state party to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Article 8 of which guarantees the “right of everyone to form trade unions and join the trade union of his choice”.

http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE13/019/2014/en/4b6f0712-ec74-43a6-bce7-aee5a4e01b61/mde130192014en.html

Shahrokh Zamani on 30th day of hunger strike

Yesterday we received a press release from the Iranian Workers Solidarity Network:

Shahrokh Zamani on hunger strike after transfer to Ghezel Hesar Prison

Shahrokh Zamani, a member of the Painters’ Union, was charged with “endangering national security” and “participating in an illegal organisation” by the Iranian regime after he attempted to build an independent trade union.

While in prison he has been physically and psychologically abused, denied medication and denied access to visitors. Following his recent transfer to the notorious Ghezel Hesar prison he has been on hunger strike for over 29 days.

We appeal to all trade unionists, socialists, women’s, students’ and LGBT activists, to call on the blood-soaked Iranian regime to release Shahrokh Zamani and all other class-war prisoners immediately and unconditionally. We hold the Iranian regime’s officials responsible for the well-being of imprisoned labour activists like Shahrokh and they will one day be held accountable for their crimes against the working class.

Iranian Workers’ Solidarity Network
5 April 2014

The Alliance for Workers’ Liberty reports:

Human Rights Activist News Agency (HRANA) has reported that the imprisoned Iranian trade unionist Shahrokh Zamani, has just entered his 30th day of a hunger strike.

The agency reports that his initial 3 day strike which was made in solidarity with imprisoned and persecuted Gonabadi Dervishes was extended after being exiled to the infamous Ghezel Hesar prison, a jail notorious for abysmal conditions, torture and executions. Shahrokh was jailed in 2011 for his organising of the painters and decorating union.

Another political prisoner – the student Arash Mohammadi, has joined Shahrokh’s hunger strike in solidarity.

Socialists must use this urgent time to bring the awareness of Shahrokh’s imprisonment to the attention of the wider public to gather solidarity.

There has been a petition campaign to Free Shahrokh Zamani since 2013. It can be signed online at Change.org here, and paper copies of the petition can be printed from here, as well as leaflets, from here.

Bob Crow backs our call to free Shahrokh Zamani

We’re delighted to announce today that we have received the backing of the leader of the RMT union Bob Crow. Bob’s solidarity comes alongside that of other activists and union officials who are calling for the release of Shahrokh, who has been in prison for attempting to organise trade unions, since July 2011.

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RMT activists show support for Shahrokh

Recently a number of high-profile trade unionists and activists have put their weight behind the campaign.

One activist, formerly an executive officer of the Rail, Maritime and Transport workers union (RMT), Janine Booth, speaking to the Free Shahrokh Zamani Campaign said: 

“Every trade unionist in the world needs to take a stand for every trade unionist in the world who faces repression and persecution. An injury to one is an injury to all.”

Other recent signatories include:

Peter Pinkey, RMT National President

Mike Sargent, RMT Executive, South East region

Nick Quirk, RMT Executive, South West region

Derrick Marr, RMT Executive, London and Anglia region

Janine Booth, RMT Executive, London Transport region

Sean Hoyle, RMT Executive, Wessex region

Glenroy Watson, Chair, RMT Finsbury Park branch

The online petition can be found here:

While we have several thousand signatures on paper, we still short of the 10,000 we believe will be needed to make an impact on the Iranian authorities, so please sign and share! Online petition here: http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/the-iranian-government-free-shahrokh-zamani

Iranian Workers’ solidarity: no more excuses

From: http://marxist.cloudaccess.net/camp/576-solidarity-no-excuses.html

This is a transcript of the first part of Amin Kazemi’s speech at the Alliance for Workers’ Liberty conference on Sunday October 27. The second part is about rebuilding a revolutionary international.

Comrades, thank you for inviting me to your conference and I hope you’ve had a good conference so far. I’m going to talk about Iran quite briefly and then move on to the very important subject of building a revolutionary international.

I’m sure you’ve read in the newspapers about Rohani going to New York, talking to Obama on the phone and various other initiatives taking place, including then a meeting in Geneva where the 5+1 powers have talked to the Iranian regime’s representatives and there is going to be another meeting in about two weeks’ time; to try start finding a resolution to this long-running crisis and disagreement about Iran’s nuclear energy or weapons’ programme.

There is a lot of talk about Rohani being a new, fresh and open person who wants to deal with the powers. That is true. But also there’s a lot of talk about him representing something new internally, some kind of a liberal who has somehow got in and is going to change things for the ordinary workers, the other layers, women and so on. But that’s not the truth. The truth is that Rohani is very much a central figure in the regime, dating right back to when Khomeini was in Paris waiting to return to Iran. He was also the main negotiator during the Iran-Contra affair, he was negotiating with Oliver North and Robert McFarlane in 1986 during Reagan’s presidency. So he’s an important figure in the regime, he’s no liberal, he’s no moderate really and his record as far as saying anything about the massacre of political prisoners after the war in 1988, or any of these abuses, there is nothing there. He’s never done anything to question anything that the regime, the majority of the regime, has been doing.

The reason they are appearing very moderate now is the very dire situation economically. On top of their own many failures, their own theft – basically, of the assets that belong to the workers – we’ve seen that the sanctions, especially the ones that were put in place about a year and a half ago, have hit the regime very hard, and of course they’ve hit the workers very hard. The poverty rate during the eight Ahmadinejad years has gone from 22% to 40%, this means that 40% of the population is below the poverty line. Youth unemployment is very high, even according to the official figures that are always underestimating what is really happening. Youth unemployment is about 26% and unemployment generally is 12.2%. The economy shrank by 5.4% last year, inflation officially is 42% and for foodstuffs is 60% – and there is a $28 billion budget deficit.

This is why they’re here trying to make a deal with the Americans and the other imperialist powers so they can save their own skin. There’s nothing for the workers in this, or any of the other oppressed layers and classes. In fact, for example, just yesterday they executed 16 people that they accused of being rebels. There are always executions going on in Iran. There’s a new law that’s about to be passed, where they’re proposing that a man can marry his step-daughter – and you know what that really means in a place like Iran – there is a whole load of these initiatives going on, and this man is basically there to present a face that’s acceptable to public opinion in Europe and America. It’s to let the regime get off the hook.

When I went to a CWU [Communications Workers’ Union] branch meeting about 8-9 years ago in East London, I went on behalf of IWSN, the Iranian Workers’ Solidarity Network. When I was talking about defending Iranian workers, Iranian labour activists, an SLP [Socialist Labour Party] member there denounced me for helping the American imperialists to weaken the regime in the face of imperialism and so on. Given what is happening now, given what they themselves are saying, of course, there could some upsets, it could take 6-12 months to resolve this issue.

We can see clearly that any activity we do in terms of defending Iranian workers is not going to endanger this relationship that they have developed with the imperialist powers. So anybody that you know, in your trade union branch, student union or whatever, who in any way tries to say that we can’t do anything against the regime, you can say to them that this is a ridiculous thing, this nonsense can stop now, look at them, look at what they’re doing now with the imperialist and look at what they’re doing to the workers and the other oppressed and exploited layers in society.

So this is the time to really put pressure on your workmates, other people you’re in contact with, to really roll up their sleeves and get involved with solidarity work where Iranian workers are concerned. This is when they really need it and all excuses have gone out of the window now.

The comrades of AWL have been very active in supporting Iranian labour activists. Recently they started a petition campaign to collect 10,000 signatures in support of Shahrokh Zamani.

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Striking workers at Bandar Imam’s Fajr Petrochemical Company stop production

Striking workers at Bandar Imam’s Fajr Petrochemical Company stop production

“On Sunday October 20 workers at Bandar Imam’s Fajr Petrochemical Company, in Khuzestan province (south-western Iran), protested against “not receiving any heavy work bonus, the short duration of their contracts and the unfair disciplinary policy of RAMPCO, the contracting company.” Their strike brought production to a standstill.”