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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Monday, July 25, 2016

150 boys and girls arrested near Iran capital for attending mixed-gender party

NCRI - Iran's fundamentalist regime arrested 150 boys and girls for attending a mixed-gender birthday party near the capital Tehran, the regime’s local police commander said on Monday.
Colonel Mohsen Khancherli
The arrests took place at an overnight party in a garden in the vicinity of Islamshahr, south-west of Tehran, according to Colonel Mohsen Khancherli, the regime's police commander for the west of Tehran Province.
Khancherli told the Tasnim news agency, affiliated to the regime's terrorist Revolutionary Guards Quds Force, on Monday (July 25): "After we obtained a report about a mixed-gender party in a garden in the vicinity of Islamshahr in the west of Tehran Province, an operation was carried out by the police and another organization, leading to the arrest of dozens of boys and girls."
"Some 150 boys and girls had gathered at the mixed-gender party under the guise of a birthday party in this garden which is situated next to a studio where unlawful music was produced and recorded. Upon arrival of the police, all those present were arrested and sent before the judiciary," he said.
Khancherli claimed that given the popularity of gardens in the west of Tehran Province, the regime's suppressive state security forces (police) are constantly monitoring venues and gardens in that area, with police commanders carrying out snap inspections of sites.
"With the arrival of summer, the police surveillance at these sites will be stepped up," he added.
This follows news last week that more than 50 young Iranians were arrested by the regime's suppressive state security forces at a party near Tehran.
The Tasnim news agency reported on Friday (July 22) the arrest of more than 50 young men and women at a party in the town of Davamand, east of Tehran.
Tasnim quoted Mojtaba Vahedi, the head of the regime's judiciary in Damavand, as saying that the organizers of the party had invited people to attend via online social networks.
Vahedi added security forces initially monitored the social sphere and after carrying out the necessary investigations obtained a warrant to clamp down on the party and arrest the party-goers.
Judicial files have been opened against those arrested at the party, Vahedi said. He added: "Families must be more vigilant regarding their children to make sure they do not end up in such circumstances."
Commenting on this development, Shahin Gobadi of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) said:
“The clerical regime has never been so isolated at home and loathed by the Iranian people, in particular by the youth and women. As such, it is resorting to more and more repressive measures to confront this growing trend. This once again proves that the notion of moderation under Hassan Rouhani is a total myth. But it also indicates the vulnerable and shaky state of a regime that cannot even tolerate private festivities of the people, particularly the youth. It is becoming more evident that the mullahs are totally paranoid of any social gathering in fear of a popular uprising.”
Some 35 young men and women were flogged in May for taking part in a mixed-gender party after their graduation ceremony near Qazvin city, some 140 kilometers northwest of Tehran, the regime's Prosecutor in the city said on May 26.
Ismaeil Sadeqi Niaraki, a notorious mullah, said a special court session was held after all the young men and women at the party were rounded up, the Mizan news agency, affiliated to the fundamentalist regime's judiciary, reported on May 26.
"After we received information that a large number of men and women were mingling in a villa in the suburbs of Qazvin ... all the participants at the party were arrested," he said.
Niaraki added that the following morning every one of those detained received 99 lashes as punishment by the so-called 'Morality Police.'
According to Niaraki, given the social significance of mixed-gender partying, "this once again required a firm response by the judiciary in quickly reviewing and implementing the law."
"Thanks God that the police questioning, investigation, court hearing, verdict and implementation of the punishment all took place in less than 24 hours," Niaraki added.
The regime’s prosecutor claimed that the judiciary would not tolerate the actions of “law-breakers who use excuses such as freedom and having fun in birthday parties and graduation ceremonies.”
Similar raids have been carried out on mixed-gender parties across Iran in recent weeks.

Gunmen Kill Mayor, 4 Others in Southeastern Mexico



MEXICO CITY – Gunmen killed the mayor and four other people in San Juan Chamula, an Indian town in the southeastern Mexican state of Chiapas, in a shooting that left 12 other people seriously wounded, state prosecutors said.

“The state Attorney General’s Office reports the start of an investigation into the death of the mayor of San Juan Chamula, Domingo Lopez, and councilman Narciso Lunes Hernandez,” prosecutors said in a statement.

The other three people killed in Saturday’s shooting were councilman Miguel Lopez, Ernesto Perez, who worked as the mayor’s driver, and resident Silvano Hernandez, the AG’s office said.

The mayor, who took office on Oct. 1 and belonged to the Mexican Green Party, or PVEM, had previously been a member of the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI.

About 35 residents from nearby villages gathered in the town’s plaza around 7:00 a.m. Saturday to meet with the mayor and other officials.

“The protesters were expressing unhappiness with various issues when some armed subjects opened fire, hitting the mayor,” the AG’s office said.

Chiapas Gov. Manuel Velasco condemned the attack in a Twitter post and said the AG’s office would conduct a thorough investigation of the shooting.

Friday, July 22, 2016

War correspondent and photographer, Abdelqader Fusuq, KILLED in Libya

At Least 22 Libyan Government Militants Killed in Fighting IS in Sirte

TRIPOLI - At least 22 militia supporting the Libyan unity government were killed and 175 wounded in the latest clashes with the Islamic State terrorist group in the Libyan city of Sirte, military sources told EFE on Friday.

War correspondent and photographer, Abdelqader Fusuq, is among the victims who died on Thursday while covering the clashes in Sirte.

A military source told EFE that air strikes targeted positions of Islamic State on Thursday and heavy artillery was used to destroy three trucks and other jihadists' vehicles during the attacks.

Since the fall of the regime of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, Libya has been plunged into chaos and civil war.

Six Bodies Found in Mexican State of Veracruz



VERACRUZ, Mexico – Six bodies bearing signs of torture have been found on a road in the Mexican Gulf coast state of Veracruz, police said Thursday.

The entirely nude bodies of four men and two women, whose feet and hands had been tied, were discovered on the Limones-Tenenexpaen highway in the municipality of Manlio Fabio Altamirano.

A message alluding to a confrontation between two rival cartels and the start of a purge of state police with organized-crime links was found at the scene.

The initial investigation indicates the victims include a state police officer and his wife, who were reported missing Saturday after being abducted by an armed group while leaving a party in the port of Veracruz.

The discovery of the bodies comes just hours after a pair of gunmen killed journalist Pedro Tamayo at his home in the town of Tierra Blanca, Veracruz; Tamayo, a crime reporter, had fled the state for security reasons but subsequently returned,

His last published article was a story on the police officer’s disappearance.

Veracruz has been racked since 2007 by gangland violence involving the Zetas, the Gulf cartel and the Jalisco Nueva Generacion mob, which have been battling for control of that region and of drug- and immigrant-smuggling routes.

Journalist Shot Dead in Mexican State of Veracruz



VERACRUZ, Mexico – Journalist Pedro Tamayo has been shot dead at his home in the Mexican Gulf coast state of Veracruz, the Aztec nation’s deadliest for members of the media, officials said Thursday.

Two assailants arrived late Wednesday in a vehicle at the crime reporter’s home in the town of Tierra Blanca, fired at him in front of his family and then fled the scene.

The 43-year-old journalist died of his gunshot wounds at a local hospital, the Veracruz Attorney General’s Office said in a statement, adding that a special operation has been launched to locate and apprehend the suspects.

Tamayo had fled Tierra Blanca after being linked this year to businessman Francisco Navarrete Serna, whom authorities accuse of being the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion’s boss in Tierra Blanca and the person behind the kidnap-murder in January of five youths in that municipality.

Authorities have arrested Navarrete Serna, Tierra Blanca police chief Marcos Conde Hernandez and seven other officers for the alleged forced disappearance of the youths.

Navarrete Serna wanted to enter the media business and expand his influence in the area by opening a newspaper and had contacted Tamayo with that purpose in mind.

Security forces located the journalist in the neighboring state of Oaxaca, and Veracruz’s State Commission for the Attention and Protection of Journalists, or CEAPP, then transferred him to Tijuana and provided him with protection.

But CEAPP, which condemned Tamayo’s murder in a statement, said the reporter had renounced the protection provided him some time ago and decided to return home of his own accord and at his own risk.

Tamayo’s death brings the number of journalists killed in Veracruz state since 2010 to 19.

Germany - injured on the ground (Video)

IRAN: Clashes between repressive police and people in Sardasht

NCRI - A group of people in Sardasht, north-western Iran, attacked a police station last weekend and after several clashes with the regime's suppressive state security forces (police), they set on fire a police car, according to reports sent from the town.
The conflict began on Saturday, July 16 when the repressive police forces attacked the tradesmen of Doupaze Bazaar located at the Gheladzi border and they confiscated the goods and properties of the sellers.
The merchants and a group of ordinary people attacked the police station to retake the goods in Sardasht. The angry protesters did not pay attention to the aerial firing by the police force.
They attacked the police station, retook the goods, and set on fire a police car.