Sunday, 24 January 2016


در تاريخ ايران تنها يك بار زندان اوين تعطيل شده است ،آن هم در آبان و دي ماه 1357 است ، جوانان اصفهان و تهران كه دل در گروي آزادي و تكرار همان روزها دارند, براي تكرار آن روزها وشعله ور كردن آن اينچنين فعاليت مي كنند 

   كانال تلگرام كمپين ”براي آزادي ايران”  https://www.telegram.me/for_free_iran
اينستاگرام كمپين ”براي آزادي ايران”  https://www.instagram.com/4FREEIRAN

Saturday, 13 June 2015

interview with Fox News the President-elect of the NCRI

Maryam Rajavi: Iran regime “cannot and should not be trusted”

In an interview with Fox News the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran said the current regime in Iran ‘cannot and should not be trusted’ and is calling on the U.S. and world powers to recognize Tehran’s intentions in advance of a deadline on the interim nuclear framework agreement.

"Nuclear negotiations should compel the Mullahs' regime to abandon its nuclear weapons program. This is the desire of the Iranian people who oppose this program. The Mullahs need the bomb for their own survival," warns Maryam Rajavi.




Friday, 12 June 2015

a different solution for regime change

Over 622,000 Syrian refugees languish in squalid conditions just across the border from the homeland in Jordan.  They have almost nothing, they lack the most basic of possessions, they have no opportunity to work, and their futures have been robbed of them.  What they do have is time – time to think about what drove their country into madness.

While Syrian refugees are stuck, Iranian troops are on the move, 15,000 more to Syria to join the fighting against IS.  After IS’s well-publicized destruction of artifacts, torture, and mass executions, some might even be rooting for Iran and its proxy, the Assad regime.  But how can we root for a regime that tortured and killed indiscriminately and whose policies directly fueled the rise of IS?

In Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, and beyond, the fingerprints of Iranian extremism have left only destruction and fueled the other side of the coin when it comes to global terror.  This same regime, whose practices on its own soil and through its proxies mirrors IS, is driving ever closer toward the world’s most dangerous weapon, the nuclear bomb.
By Ken Blackwell





read more:



an article about nuclear by Raymond Tanter

Most people would wish that President Obama succeeds in striking a deal with Iran that will see it shut down its nuclear centres, halt uranium enrichment and give up permanently the goal of obtaining a nuclear weapon. Iran however has shown next to no signs that it will forgo its nuclear weapons program. What most of us don't know is how ordinary Iranian citizens opposed to the mullahs' regime would feel about a "bad deal" that would see Tehran cheat its way to the bomb as it stalls world powers.

source




Sunday, 31 May 2015

A nuclear-armed Iran seems almost inevitable if.....

“We are not at the point where we can say that negotiations will be completed quickly -- they will continue until the deadline and could continue beyond that,” Abbas Araghchi, a senior Iran envoy, told state news agency IRNA, adding that the negotiations may not be completed by the June 30 deadline.
Nuclear talks must be coupled with holding the religious dictatorship to account for the flagrant violations of human rights in Iran and the genocides in Syria and Iraq. Nuclear concealment, human rights abuses, and the export of fundamentalism and terrorism are three indispensable attributes of the regime.
If pressure worked to bring the faltering and loathed regime into the negotiating room, more pressure will be even more effective in thwarting the nuclear threat. The U.S. has significant diplomatic or non-military leverage that it has not tapped. Washington can make life miserable for the mullahs and compel them to give up their weapons program by helping to further empower the organized democratic opposition to the Iranian regime.
The current policy is clearly not working to Washington’s favor. A major shift in U.S. policy on Iran is long overdue. Without it, a nuclear-armed Iran seems almost inevitable.





Can a strong agreement be possible when there are doubts about nuclear program in Iran?

Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Your own destiny in the Future of Iran...

At first when you come familiar with a group or movement,
the first question that comes to your mind is, their main cause. What are they fighting for?

Is it nescecary   do all this sacrifice?
In the case of an oppressive tyrrany rejim in iranican  say for my part , it is.

I don't know how much you've heard about the iranian clerical  rejim. Who opressed his own people ...who has the most hangings in a year.... no freedom of expression... of gathering
or parties....
In iranyou feel you cant be  nothing more than a slave of the system!
Just think one minute to this and imagine yourself in this situation... what would you do?
Who would you go to?  Was there anyone to listen? would anyone care about your rights?

Now, imagine in this dark and completly helpless situation you come known with
this great resistance movement!! Who stands for your right!!
With this great leader : Maryam rajavi....
Who says one thing, we can and we must!
 We can stand against this tyranny ! Yes we can  resist and fight back to this dict
atorship! And even though the iranian rejim wants to tell you that you cant fight back...you're too weak...all this hangings and oppressions what can you do about it?
mind your own bissness and take care of yourself, you cannot change anything!
But thats a big lie!!
Maryam rajavi and her movementtell us that you can make a change!
Every single act is effective in our strugle to freedom!
You can make a differ... join us in the garnd gathering in paris!

For more knowlege about the iranian resistance you can read Maryam Rajavi's Ten Point Plan for the Future of Iran.

 In a meetingat the Council of Europe in April 2006, Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the Iranian Resistance, elaborated on the movement's vision for a future Iran:
1. In our view, the ballot box is the only criterion for legitimacy. Accordingly, we seek a republic based on universal suffrage.
2. We want a pluralist system, freedom of parties and assembly. We respect all individual freedoms. We underscore complete freedom of expression and of the media and unconditional access by all to the internet.
3. We support and are committed to the abolition of death penalty.
4. We are committed to the separation of Religion and State. Any form of discrimination against the followers of any religion and denomination will be prohibited.
5. We believe in complete gender equality in political, social and economic arenas. We are also committed to equal participation of women in political leadership. Any form of discrimination against women will be abolished. They will enjoy the right to freely choose their clothing. They are free in marriage, divorce, education and employment.
6. We believe in the rule of law and justice. We want to set up a modern judicial system based on the principles of presumption of innocence, the right to defense, effective judicial protection and the right to be tried in a public court. We also seek the total independence of judges. The mullahs’ Sharia law will be abolished.
7. We are committed to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and international covenant and conventions, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture, and the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women.
We are committed to the equality of all nationalities. We underscore the plan for the autonomy of Iranian Kurdistan, adopted by the National Council of Resistance of Iran. The language and culture of our compatriots from whatever nationality, are among our nation’s human resources and must spread and be promulgated in tomorrow’s Iran.
8. We recognize private property, private investment and the market economy. All Iranian people must enjoy equal opportunity in employment and in business ventures. We will protect and revitalize the environment.
9. Our foreign policy will be based on peaceful coexistence, international and regional peace and cooperation, as well as respect for the United Nations Charter.
10. We want a non-nuclear Iran, free of weapons of mass destruction.

Maryam Rajavi is the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), a coalition of some 500 Iranian opposition groups and personalities, committed to a democratic, secular and non-nuclear republic in Iran. Half of NCRI’s members are women. As a Parliament-in-exile, the Council’s primary task is to hold free and fair elections for a Legislative and National Constituent Assembly in Iranno more than six months after the ouster of the ruling theocracy.