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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Iran Sentences Poets, Filmmaker To Prison, Lashings

Iran's revolutionary court has sentenced two poets and a filmmaker to a total of 26 1/2 years in prison and 421 lashes.
Poets Fatemeh Ekhtesari and Mehdi Musavi were sentenced to prison terms of 11 1/2 years and nine years after being convicted of charges that include "insulting sanctities."
Iranian poets Fatemeh Ekhtesari (left) and Mehdi Musavi were sentenced to prison terms of 11 1/2 years and nine years after being convicted of charges that include "insulting sanctities."
Their lawyer, Amir Raeisian, told RFE/RL's Radio Farda that the charges were brought against the two based on their poetry.
"None of the poems that were referred to in court include insulting terms, more importantly none of them were related to sanctities. Yet this is the court's interpretation," Raeisian said on October 13.
Ekhtesari and Musavi were also each sentenced to receive 99 lashes for "kissing [the cheeks] and shaking hands with unrelated members [of the opposite sex.]" Shaking hands in public with unrelated members of the opposite sex is forbidden in the Islamic republic.
Writing on social media, Musavi called the charges against him and Ektesari a "joke."
"I hope one day there will be such justice in this country that no one will be sentenced to heavy jail term for writing a poem and being a freedom lover," Musavi wrote on Instagram.
Meanwhile, award-winning filmmaker Keywan Karimi was sentenced to six years in prison and 223 lashes, the Iranian opposition website Kalame reported on October 12.
The report did not include the reason for the lashing sentence against Karimi.
In an interview with the Associated Press published on October 14, Karimi said the prison sentence was handed down against him on the charge of "insulting sanctities."
"I don't know what happened that I should go to jail for six years," Karimi said.
"I speak about the government, I speak about society, I speak about [graffiti], I speak about a laborer," he added.
Ekhtesari, Musavi, and Karimi have said they will appeal against the sentences.
Ekhtesari and Musavi were released on bail in 2013 after being detained and interrogated for more than a month by the intelligence branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
The heavy sentences come even as a group of Iranian rights advocates and activists expressed the hope that the nuclear agreement reached between Iran and world powers in July would ultimately strengthen Iranian President Hassan Rohani, who has promised to give Iranians more freedom.
The cases, however, appear to highlight the determination by Iranian hard-liners who control key institutions, including the judiciary, to resist any attempt to liberalize the political atmosphere and send a warning to dissenters.
In recent weeks, several other activists and artists have been sentenced to heavy prison terms, including writer and television producer Mostafa Azizi and cartoonist Atena Farghadani.
Amnesty International reported on October 9 that Farghadani, who is serving a 12-year prison sentence, was recently forced to undergo a "pregnancy and virginity test" for shaking hands with her lawyer.
Meanwhile, the fate of Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, who was put on trail on espionage charges in Iran earlier this year, remains unclear.
Judiciary spokesman Mohsen Ejei said on October 9 that a verdict had been reached in Rezaian's trial but did not provide details.
The Washington Post and Rezaian's family have rejected the espionage charges against him as absurd.
Rezaian, a dual Iranian-American citizen, has been in detention in Tehran for more than a year.

Monday, October 12, 2015

ISIL training children to kill

Police Destroy 300 Tons of Marijuana in Northern Mexico



MEXICO CITY – The Federal Police found and destroyed 300 tons of marijuana in Balleza, a city in the northern state of Chihuahua, the Mexican National Security Commission said.

“The plantations were spread out over a surface of approximately 94,629 sq. meters (23 acres), with a density of seven plants per square meter. The approximate weight of the 662,000 plants reached 300,000 kilos,” the commission said in a statement.

Federal Police officers conducted surveillance flights around Balleza after obtaining intelligence about marijuana plantations in the area.

Officers spotted eight plots of land planted with marijuana, the commission said.

Ground units confirmed the existence of the illegal plantations and the marijuana plants “were pulled up by the roots so they could later be incinerated,” the National Security Commission said.

Federal prosecutors oversaw the marijuana plants’ destruction and are investigating the illegal plantations.

Politician Gunned Down in Southern Mexico


MEXICO CITY – An Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, member of the city council in the Mexican Pacific resort city of Acapulco was gunned down this weekend, state prosecutors said.

Jesus de la O Gallardo was murdered on Saturday in the town of Tres Palos, the Guerrero Attorney General’s Office said.

“According to the report by investigators, the councilman was in the town of Tres Palos around 3:00 p.m. (on Saturday) when he was attacked by unidentified individuals carrying firearms,” the AG’s office said in a statement.

Guerrero Attorney General Miguel Angel Godinez went to the crime scene to personally oversee the investigation, the AG’s office said.

Acapulco, one of Mexico’s leading tourist destinations, has been plagued by a wave of drug-related violence that has claimed the lives of dozens of people.

Friday, October 9, 2015

MOSCOW- Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst wants to live in Crimea

MOSCOW, October 8. /TASS/. Fred Durst, best known as founder and frontman of the Limp Bizkit band, has sent an address to Crimea’s authorities saying he wants to live and work on the Black Sea peninsula, the Izvestia newspaper has reported.

Fred Durst
In mid-September, Crimea head Sergey Aksenov invited celebrities from around the world to come to Russia’s new republic saying he would welcome the creation there of a counterpart to the US iconic Beverly Hills.
The musician, whose wife Kseniya Beryazina was born in Crimea, said other American celebrities could also come to the Black Sea peninsula if the ambitious plans of authorities were implemented.
Durst said he plans to make films and TV series in Crimea and other TV products that will be famous around the world and bring Russia to a very high level in this business.

The American also plans to help organize a film festival in Crimea and launch a cinema studio. He also seeks to participate in events initiated by the republic’s authorities and help the world better understand Crimea and Russia.
The musician said he wants to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Aksenov said earlier the representatives of show business, athletes, actors and other celebrities would face no administrative or other barriers if they decide to buy any real estate on the peninsula, move for permanent residence or come for vacation.
The Crimean leader noted that the growing number of celebrities have expressed their wish to obtain Russian citizenship. Among them are famed US boxer Roy Jones and Samy Naceri, a French actor known for his roles in the Taxi movie.
French actor Gerard Depardieu also earlier received a Russian passport.