IRÃ

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Re: Irã

#46 Mensagem por Rodrigoiano » Ter Nov 06, 2012 3:31 am

Será que antes do final do ano a m.... ocorrerá? Se Romney ganhar, tem grandes chances, afinal, é mais um senhor da guerra (esses dias na Virginia se me lembro bem, durante um discurso de campanha, quando o barulho de um caça passando sobre o lugar ocorreu, ele disse algo como amar ou gostar muito daquele som...)! Mas mesmo o Obama ganhando, passando a pressão das eleições, pode, finalmente apoiar o desejo israelense, com apoio francês.

==============================

Netanyahu reafirma prontidão de Israel para atacar Irã

05 de novembro de 2012 • 22h28 • atualizado em 06 de novembro de 2012 às 00h03

(...)

Fontes: Terra/AFP

http://noticias.terra.com.br/mundo/noti ... r+Ira.html




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Re: Irã

#47 Mensagem por FOXTROT » Ter Nov 06, 2012 8:07 am

Eita prontidão de anos, só falta a coragem! :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:

Saudações

Olha o 21/12/12 aí gente! :D :D :D :D :D :D




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Re: Irã

#48 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qua Nov 07, 2012 7:34 pm

WASHINGTON: From a suspected Israeli airstrike in Sudan to cyber warfare in the Gulf and a drone shot down over Israel, the largely hidden war between Iran and its foes seems to be heating up and spreading.

Despite months of speculation, most experts and governments believe the risk of a direct Israeli strike on Tehran’s nuclear program stirring regional conflict has eased, at least for now. But all sides, it seems, are finding other ways to fight.

For the U.S. and European powers, the main focus remains on oil export sanctions that are inflicting ever more damage on Iran’s economy.

But the Obama administration and Israel have also ploughed resources into covert operations – a campaign that now appears to have prompted an increasingly sophisticated Iranian reaction.

With Iranian hackers suspected of severely damaging Saudi oil facility computers and a suspected Hezbollah drone shot down over Israel, tactics and tools once seen as the sole purview of the United States are now clearly being used on both sides.

The mounting body count in Syria, some say, is also in part a consequence of the proxy war being waged there.

“In many ways it’s reminiscent of the Cold War, particularly the proxy conflicts,” says Hayat Alvi, lecturer in Middle Eastern politics at the U.S. Naval War College. “But unlike in the Cold War, there are now a much larger number of asymmetrical warfare techniques. Most of this is happening behind the scenes, but in the modern world we are finding it difficult to keep them secret for that long.”

Covert confrontation itself is, of course, nothing new. Foreign intelligence agencies have battled for decades to stop Iran and other states obtaining nuclear material, while Tehran and Israel have long needled each other and proxy battlegrounds, particularly in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

The U.S. and Israel are widely suspected of using the Stuxnet computer worm to target Iranian nuclear centrifuges. Meanwhile, most experts believe Israel’s Mossad was involved in assassinations of several nuclear scientists – attacks suspected to have prompted similar bomb attacks on Israeli diplomats in India, Georgia and Thailand and tourists in Bulgaria.

But it does seem to be escalating. What Tehran is trying to do now, most analysts believe, is in part further retaliation. But its rulers may also be indicating that the Islamic Republic now has a range of new and potentially damaging options in reserve should its nuclear facilities be bombed.

The penetration of Israeli airspace by an unmanned drone apparently operated by Lebanese militant group Hezbollah – a long-term Iranian ally – was, perhaps, one of the clearest examples so far. The drone was shot down by Israel’s military in the vicinity of its main nuclear facility at Dimona.

Iran has long been believed to be putting resources into a drone program and may have gathered useful tips after a classified U.S. Sentinel stealth drone came down in the country last year. While the Hezbollah drone was unarmed, a attack with multiple drones laden with explosives might prove harder to stop.

The dramatic spike in suspected Iranian cyber attacks this year also has some in the U.S. distinctly worried. While direct denial of service attacks on U.S. banks – widely seen as retaliation for U.S. sanctions and attempts to freeze Iran from the international financial system – were seen relatively simplistic, attacks on U.S. allies in the Gulf were more complex.

The most worrying, experts say, were those on Saudi oil firm Aramco and Qatari gas export facilities. Last month, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta described the Saudi attack as the most sophisticated yet launched on a private company, effectively destroying tens of thousands of computers – although he stopped short of blaming Tehran directly.

Iranian officials have tended to deny involvement.

“The problem is that these are secret forms of warfare that are rarely, if ever, discussed publicly,” a veteran former CIA official and now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute told an event last month. “And yet the implications could be colossal. What do we do, for example, if it turns out the Iranians can shut down the entire Saudi oil production.”

In the absence of direct face-to-face negotiations, such actions can also be a diplomatic tool in their own right.

“The cyber attacks and Hezbollah drone both represent an escalation from the Iranian camp,” says Ariel Ratner, a former Obama administration political appointees at the State Department and now fellow for the Truman National Security Foundation. “But a lot of what is going on here is a matter of signaling to each other.”

That might also in part explain a suspected Israeli airstrike on the outskirts of the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Oct. 23 that caused a major fire at Sudan’s Yarmouk arms factory.

“Israel is flexing its muscles militarily and also sending a message to Tehran and Washington that it will not hesitate to use force to defend itself,” says Bilal Saab, director of the Institute for near East and Gulf Military Analysis based in the United Arab Emirates and Washington. “It was a show of force meant to send political messages and achieve precise and immediate military objectives, those being the prevention of Iranian shipment of sensitive hardware to its proxies.”

U.S. officials would not comment on what they believed happened, but spy agencies have long suspected Iran of smuggling weaponry into Eritrea and Sudan and across Egypt to Hamas militants in Gaza.

Last week’s four-day visit to Sudan by two Iranian warships – coming days after the arms factory attack – appeared an unusually public show of solidarity between two nations. Some suspect Israel is also raising its support for South Sudan, which gained its independence last year and has since teetered on the brink of conflict with Khartoum.

The much more significant proxy confrontations, however, remain in the region itself. Israel is taking something of a back foot in the conflict in Syria – its officials saying any support they might give for anti-Assad rebels would be counter-productive – but Iran’s Arab rivals are not.

For Washington, rolling back Tehran’s influence in Syria is seen as a distinctly secondary goal to stopping – or at least limiting – the bloodshed.

For Saudi Arabia and Qatar, however, arming the rebels, the prospect of replacing the Shiite Alawite rule of Bashar Assad with a Sunni majority government with no Iranian links is seen as a key motivation.

The Sunni leadership of almost all of the Gulf states have long suspected Iran of stirring up dissent among their Shiite populations, although Western diplomats suspect such claims are overstated. Some worry Washington is already being dragged onto one side in a growing regional blood feud.

Tehran may step up its attempts to destabilize neighbors, particularly if it believes its enemies are trying to do the same. Washington recently removed Iranian militant opposition group MEK from its list of terrorist groups, potentially opening the door to covert cooperation. To work with it on attacks within the country, however, might produce a violent response.

Last year, U.S. officials said they had foiled an Iranian plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to Washington by bombing a restaurant in Washington. That, some security experts said, suggested Iran was increasingly willing to take serious risks – although others said the entire tale sounded too far-fetched.

“It’s very easy to look at these events and tie them together in some kind of straightforward narrative,” says Henry Smith, Middle East analyst for London-based consultancy Control Risks. “But in reality, things are likely to be far more complex.”



Read more: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle ... z2BZiDKydN
(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)




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Re: Irã

#49 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qui Nov 08, 2012 2:21 pm

Along the recent Iranophobic attempts comes Argo (2012), a ‘nail-biting thriller’ which according to David Haglund, takes a few liberties with the history. A few liberties, indeed! The false façade of the movie and the glorification of CIA agent Antonio Mendez (the hero, played by Ben Affleck) in particular and the intelligence apparat in general in smuggling the escapees out of Tehran gives a flimsily larger-than-life flair to the movie on the one hand and a too-good-to-be-true feeling to the multitude of audience whose minds have already been hijacked by Western media about Iran.

In its idiotically crude manner, the movie attempts to describe Iranians as overemotional, irrational, insane, and diabolical while at the same, the CIA agents are represented as heroically patriotic. Argo is replete with historical inaccuracies and distortions. One might say that the titling of the film mentions it is loosely based on Antonio Mendez’s account of the incidents. However, the audience barely finds any slim chance to realize this and all he believes is all he sees. Aye, there’s the rub for in doing so, the moviemaker craftily sees an audience too engrossed in the movie to pay any attention to the titling.

Even if he does, the audience’s mind has already imbibed all the lies secretly and savagely dictated by the movie. This is done with incredible ingenuity. For instance, in one shot, morosely veiled Iranian women are shown to be in military uniforms, a falsity also depicted in an earlier anti-Iran movie titled “Not Without My Daughter (1991)”. After the elapse of thirty-odd years, you may find Iranian women in uniforms but only in female garrisons let alone on the streets. So, the depiction of Iranian women in military uniforms is but a figment of the writer’s imagination.

It appears that Argo owes enormously to Brian Gilbert’s Not Without My Daughter (1991) though the former is technically a step forward. Not Without My Daughter (1991) details the story of an American woman who is married to an Iranian doctor. They live happily in America but once they travel to Iran, the man (Alfred Molina) changes from a well-bred and highly educated man to a rustic boar who decides to force his wife Betty (Sally Field) to stay in Iran. No one knows the reason for such a drastic change in the man, and interestingly, no hiatus apparently takes place in the storyline.

Apart from the stereotyped and caricatured view of Iranians the filmmaker delivers, he consciously pokes fun at the very customs and traditions within the Iranian community. In one scene, when Betty arrives in Iran (the movie has been ironically filmed in Israel), they slaughter a sheep as a votive offering at the sight of which Betty falls into a swoon. This incident which is part of the Iranian tradition becomes a matter of scorn for the filmmaker.

Film critic Roger Ebert describes the film as vitriolic and spiteful and says, “If a movie of such a vitriolic and spiteful nature were to be made in America about any other ethnic group, it would be denounced as racist and prejudiced.”

Likewise, Argo is another dastardly attempt at fanning Iranophobia by continuing Brian Gilbert’s Not Without My Daughter (1991).

Though Argo achieves some degree of success in stereotyping and demonizing Iranians, the movie is at its best a propaganda flick barely worthy of the kudos it receives, not because it is nothing more than one big yawn but because it is poorly structured and frivolously written.

Strange as it might be, the film ingeniously seeks to sound balanced by inserting a voice-over at the beginning of the film describing how the popular government of Mossadeq was overthrown through a coup engineered by the CIA and how Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (who is erroneously referred to as Reza Pahlavi) tyrannized over people. However, the mere mention of a CIA-engineered coup is not enough to make the film sound balanced.

In fact, Argo is a far cry from a balanced narration. Everything is narrated one-sidedly. Everything is depicted in black and white. The escapees are good and have to be saved with the help of the CIA agent who ridiculously functions to bring about catharsis in the audience and the Iranians are depicted as demonic and hysteric. Thus, sympathy is easily wrung from the audience in favor of the CIA agent and the entire Iranian population is tragically plunged in a negative light.

In fact, authoring a coup in Iran is not CIA’s magnum opus. The intelligence apparatus has been notoriously instrumental in fomenting a war against Iran at the hands of the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and bringing about over one million casualties.

According to Said K. Aburish, author of Saddam Hussein: the Politics of Revenge, Saddam made a visit to Amman in 1979 before Iran-Iraq War. There, he met King Hussein and three CIA agents. Aburish says there is considerable evidence that he discussed his plans to invade Iran with the CIA agents. As a political product of Washington’s mind, Saddam was on intimate terms with the US. Aburish says that it was “a relationship of cooperation, but never trust. Neither side ever trusted the other. And they helped him stay in power by providing him with electronic systems to guard against a coup d’état. They helped him stay in power by providing him with armament that he needed badly. They helped him stay in power by refusing to raise the issue of human rights. And they helped him to stay in power by supporting him during the war with Iran. So they really helped him, practically politically, practically financially, any way you can look at it.”

It is very probable that Ben Affleck and the screenwriter Chris Terrio are sorely ignorant of these facts or else they would have incorporated some of these facts in Argo to sound balanced.

Or would they?

Overal, Argo is an arrant instance of Hollywoodism. In point of fact, it is yet another attempt to foment Iranophobia not only in the USA but across the world as well.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/11/07 ... ranophobia
Propaganda para filme Argo...




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Re: Irã

#50 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qua Nov 28, 2012 12:02 pm

Apesar dos mísseis iranianos do Hamas, nem tudo é flores:

Educação: Mais de sete milhões de estudantes de todas as idades poderão sair da escola devido a dificuldades econômicas.

Rádio Zamaneh relatos de que os alunos estão saindo das escolas de embarque em Gilan, no norte do Irã por causa de problemas econômicos, com as famílias e as escolas incapazes de fornecer aos alunos com alimentação adequada.

Saúde:Em entrevista à Fars Notícias , o chefe da Sociedade de Anestesiologia do Irã e cuidados intensivos, alertou para a falta de anestésicos, "Nós temos que usar fontes desatualizados devido à escassez. Estamos preocupados com a saúde daqueles que necessitam de cirurgia. Infelizmente, as autoridades não dão a esta questão a atenção suficiente."

Inflação: A discussão do dia é sobre o leite e seus derivados estão em faltam na dieta de uma família média iraniana, porque eles não podem pagar. De acordo com o ministro da Saúde iraniano, consumo de leite e produtos lácteos é de 35% abaixo da taxa padrão desejado.

Desemprego: O aumento vertiginoso do custo das matérias-primas, resultante da queda no valor do rial iraniano, levou o governo a fechar 65 unidades de processamento de chá iranianos, o que levou a um desemprego de mais de 3.000 trabalhadores.




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Re: Irã

#51 Mensagem por rodrigo » Sex Nov 30, 2012 1:10 pm

Iran unveils new missile-launching warship

BANDAR ABBAS – Iran unveiled the main framework of a new domestically manufactured warship, named the Sina 7, during a ceremony held in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas on the shores of the Persian Gulf on Wednesday.

The Sahand destroyer, which is equipped with advanced systems, and a domestically designed simulator for submarines of the Ghadir class were also unveiled.

During a ceremony in Bandar Abbas on September 18, the hull of the Sahand destroyer was launched by order of Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

On Wednesday, two submarines of the Ghadir class and two hovercrafts, which had been overhauled by Iranian experts, were also delivered to the Navy.

The commander of the Iranian Navy said that one of the hovercrafts has been equipped with a missile-launching system.

Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari also said that the hovercrafts can be used to patrol the country’s coastal waters, carry out reconnaissance and search and rescue missions on land and sea, conduct offensive operations, and transport troops and equipment.

In addition, Sayyari said that the Sahand destroyer, which is more advanced than its predecessors, has been manufactured to increase the country’s deterrence capability.

http://www.tehrantimes.com/politics/103 ... ng-warship

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Re: Irã

#52 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qui Dez 06, 2012 10:52 am

Agora fica mais dificil de ter noticiais do Iran sem ser dos americanos ou oficial do irã, o navegante Sattar Beheshti infelizmente morreu.




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Re: Irã

#53 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Seg Dez 17, 2012 6:37 pm

Irã, o facebook é proibido para população, mas o líder Aiatolá Ali Khamenei tem e gosta [004]




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Re: Irã

#54 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qui Dez 20, 2012 8:33 pm

O gagatolá, agora ferrou com a presstv.

Israeli death squads involved in Sandy Hook bloodbath: Intelligence analyst

Days later, the Sandy Hook Massacre, the iconic slaughter of twenty small children, is now looking like a terrorist attack, not a “murder suicide.” Was “lone gunman” Adam Lanza a “patsy,” the same word Lee Harvey Oswald used to describe himself before being “silenced” in November 1963?


Today, Michael Harris, former Republican candidate for governor of Arizona and GOP campaign finance chairman, in an internationally televised news broadcast, cited “Israeli revenge” in, what he called, “the terrorist attack in Connecticut.”

Harris cited Israeli “rage” against the US and against President Barack Obama. By “Israel,” we mean “Netanyahu.”

The mission was to teach America a lesson, knowing that “America would take the punishment, keep “quiet,” and let a ‘fall guy’ take the blame.”

A “fall guy” is another word for “patsy.”

Harris, citing the flood of inconsistencies in the “cover story,” pointed out the following, “The facts are now becoming obvious. This is another case where Israel has chosen violence and terrorism where their bullying in Washington has failed. Israel believes the US “threw them under the bus,” particularly after the recent Gaza war, allowing Israel to be humiliated in the United Nations. Their response was to stage a terror attack, targeting America in the most hideous and brutal way possible, in fact, an Israeli “signature attack,” one that butchers children, one reminiscent of the attacks that killed so many children in Gaza?”

Washington is terrified of Israel, their powerful lobby and its relationship with organized crime. Now, a key former Senator, Chuck Hagel, who has helped expose this fact, is likely to be nominated as the secretary of defense, despite vocal protests from Israel.

Today, Israeli news gave further credence to Harris’ analysis when they issued the following statements regarding the probable nomination of Hegel:

“Chuck Hagel’s statements and actions regarding Israel have raised serious concerns for many Americans who care about Israel,” said the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) Executive Director, Matt Brooks. “The Jewish community and every American who supports a strong US-Israel relationship have cause for alarm if the president taps Hagel for such an important post.”

“The appointment of Chuck Hagel would be a slap in the face for every American who is concerned about the safety of Israel,” he asserted

Citing a 2006 interview with Hegel, the news continued, “The political reality is…that the Jewish lobby intimidates a lot of people up here. I have always argued against some of the dumb things they do because I don’t think it’s in the interest of Israel. I just don’t think it’s smart for Israel.”

Hagel also said he didn’t think he had ever signed one of the letters the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) regularly circulates to demonstrate support for Israel or tough stands against parties such as Iran.

“I didn’t sign the letter because it was a stupid letter…I’m not an Israeli senator, I’m a United States senator.”

During his interview today, Mike Harris explained his rationale for looking to Israel as responsible for Sandy Hook, saying “This is exactly what Israel did in Norway; the political party that voted sanctions against Israel was retaliated against by a “lone gunman” who killed 77 children. This is what Israel always does, they go after the children. It is what they do in Gaza every day. It is what was done in Norway. It is what happened at Sandy Hook. Nobody buys the “lone gunman” story anymore, not with the Gabby Giffords’ shooting, not with the Aurora “Batman” shooting, certainly not with Breveik, and certainly not in Connecticut.”

After Harris’ broadcast, key members of the military and law enforcement community contacted Veterans Today in full support of Harris’ analysis.

One three star general is quoted as saying, “Harris hit the nail right on the head and it is about time someone spoke up.”

As days have passed, key issues involving the Sandy Hook terror attack have been cited as “debunking” the “lone gunman” cover story: From a viral email that is growing every hour with more reasons to doubt the official story: According to the official story, Adam Lanza was found with his older brother’s ID, and it was not stolen. However, older brother Ryan - whom officials say is very cooperative - claims not to have even seen his brother since 2010. Where would Adam get this ID? And why does such use not qualify as a theft?

According to the official story, Adam Lanza was wearing a black outfit with a mask and bulletproof vest. Why would he want to hide his identity, and why would he wear a bulletproof vest if he planned to kill himself?

The medical examiner asserts that all wounds were caused by a rifle or other long weapon, and police/FBI say that the school was littered with 223 (rifle) casings. However, Adam Lanza was found dead at the school with only handguns - a rifle was found in the trunk of his car. Then he could not have possibly been firing the rifle, and could not have committed the murders. Who did then?

According to the official story, the killings was tightly confined to two classrooms. Then why were so many children told to close their eyes while leaving the building?

Joanne Didonato, the principal’s secretary, called in sick on Friday - something she rarely does. So presumably, she must have been awfully ill. Yet she then felt well enough to give an interview. “Of all days,” she said, emphasizing the strange coincidence.

Why were there such persistent reports that Mrs. Lanza was a kindergarten teacher, and that she died at the school when the new official story is that she was not connected to the school and was killed at home?

What happened to the report that Adam Lanza’s girlfriend and another friend were missing in New Jersey?

What happened to the woodsman in a black jacket and camo pants who was arrested and handcuffed outside the school? He actually shouted to parents, “It wasn’t me.” Who was he and what was he doing there?

What happened to the dark van or SUV that the police surrounded in the parking lot or the maroon sedan with a blown-out back window they were on the lookout for?

The official story is that Nancy Lanza was a gun collector, who obeyed the law. But since 20-year-olds are not permitted to buy guns or ammo or carry guns in Connecticut, why would she give her “autistic” son access to both guns and ammo?

A child asserts that he/she heard someone say, “Put your hands up,” followed by the reply, “Don’t shoot.” This indicates that the police took a suspect into custody inside the school. But if that was Adam Lanza, how did he kill himself after that point?

Another child asserts that he/she saw a man pinned down to the ground with handcuffs on. Again, this indicates that the police took a suspect into custody. If that was Adam Lanza, how did he then kill himself?

Is it reasonable for a geeky 20-year-old to carry two pistols and hundreds of rounds of ammunition while wearing a bulletproof vest and a mask?

Did the school have one or more security cameras? What do they show?

Why did a police officer specifically mention on radio that “they’re coming at me through this wood” followed by a fellow officer saying, “This is it”?

One officer at the school said, “We’ve got one suspect down.” Who was that? Down in this situation generally means in custody (on the ground and cuffed) not dead.

Why is Adam Lanza reported to be a loner when a teenager said (oxymoronically), “[Lanza and his friends] always gathered alone in a corner in school”?

Why are Ryan Lanza and his roommates still in custody, and why are the police pretending that it is for their own benefit?

Is it a coincidence that Nancy Lanza’s brother is Kingston Police Officer James Champion, who lives next door to the former Lanza home?

---

This is only a small percentage of the irregularities noted in what now seems to be more of a cover-up than investigation.

In truth, the public may well just be sick of hearing stories about “lone gunmen.” Of all possible horrors, this one, even more than the Benghazi killings, is loaded with political implication, not just “gun control,” but a clear attack on the security of every American family.

The simplest thing would be to sit back and accept what we are told without examining who gains, who loses and “why now?”

Is Harris right? Would Israel order the deaths of twenty tiny children to make a political point? Have they done this before?

Is Harris right about that too?

Moments ago, Harris phoned me. I asked him if, hours later, he was still willing to back up his statements.

His answer was simple: “You murder children as part of ‘business as usual,’ you shouldn’t be surprised that when children are murdered, people look to you.”




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Re: Irã

#55 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Ter Dez 25, 2012 2:26 pm

Iran is paying Russian women working as technicians at its sole nuclear power plant to adhere to the Islamic dress code, an Iranian lawmaker told the ISNA news agency on Tuesday.
Women in Iran, regardless of their nationality or religion, are required to cover their hair and much of the body. Those who do not abide by the rule -- known as hijab -- may face arrest or other punishment.

"Based on contracts signed with female Russian employees at the Bushehr (nuclear) power plant, they receive a hijab payment," MP Mehdi Mousavinejad, who represents a constituency in southern Bushehr province, told ISNA.

"Unfortunately, they do not properly observe what is (asked of them), which is mentioned in the contracts," he said, while criticising authorities for a lax oversight on Russians working at the plant.

Mousavinejad also called on Russians to fulfil their "commitments".

"When one party accepts to pay an amount for a commitment, it is important for the other party to fulfil its commitments."

He did not how much money was paid, or how many female technicians are working at the Bushehr nuclear plant.

Russia took over as the main contractor at Bushehr in the mid-90s, but the plant is yet to be fully operational and connected to Iran's national grid.

A defining element of Iran since the Islamic revolution in 1979, the hijab has translated into women wearing long, loose clothing to conceal their figures.

http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent ... r-pla.aspx




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Re: Irã

#56 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qua Dez 26, 2012 10:51 am

Irã começou o maior exercício naval do ano perto do Estreito de Ormuz.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/mid ... story.html




"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
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marcelo l.
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Re: Irã

#57 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Qua Dez 26, 2012 12:44 pm

Farsnews tem uma notícia curiosa, os voos estão proibidos durante a Azan. traduzindo mal e porcamente o texto:

Ali Taheri, o porta-voz do Comitê de Cultura do Parlamento, disse que voos serão proibidos durante os cinco chamadas para a oração de cada dia.

"De acordo com a nova diretiva, os aviões serão proibidos de voar durante Azan, especialmente a da a chamada para as orações da manhã", disse Taheri.

O chefe da Organização de Aviação, Hamid Reza Pahlevani, disse que as aeronaves só serão autorizados a decolar 30 minutos após a a oração da manhã para que os passageiros terem tempo para realizar seus deveres religiosos".

http://farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=13911005001511




"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
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marcelo l.
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Re: Irã

#58 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Sex Dez 28, 2012 9:30 am

A demissão Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi, ministra da Saúde, na quarta, aumenta a crise entre Congresso e Executivo, Dastjerdi que vivia sob pressão política por meses, expôs que a falta de medicamentos devia-se ao Banco Central recusar a liberar US $ 2 bilhões em moeda estrangeira, para a compra de importações necessárias.

As negativas começaram no final de 2011, quando as reservas eram estimadas em US $ 80 bilhões.

A Farnews que é anti-Ahmadinejad, entrevistou Gholam Ali Haddad-Adel, ex-presidente do Congresso* e importante deputado que criticou fortemente o governo pelo descalabro da saúde e considerou um erro a demissão.
http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=13911007000944

* foi o primeiro não clérigo. E sua filha é casada com Mojtaba Khamenei.




"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
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Re: Irã

#59 Mensagem por lelobh » Sáb Dez 29, 2012 12:46 pm

marcelo l. escreveu:Irã, o facebook é proibido para população
Acho que essa informação não está correta.




Dom Pedro II, quando da visita ao campo de Batalha, Guerra do Paraguai.

Rebouças, 11 de setembro de 1865: "Informou-me o Capitão Amaral que o Imperador, em luta com os ministros que não queriam deixá-lo partir, cortou a discussão dizendo: " (D. Pedro II) Ainda me resta um recurso constitucional: Abdicar, e ir para o Rio Grande como um voluntário da Pátria."
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Re: Irã

#60 Mensagem por marcelo l. » Sáb Dez 29, 2012 12:58 pm

lelobh escreveu:
marcelo l. escreveu:Irã, o facebook é proibido para população
Acho que essa informação não está correta.
O SmartFilter para inglês caiu? Pelo que me lembro, eles bloqueavam o conteúdo vindo de Inglês, no caso da página do glorioso Aitolá não. Para acessar se utilizava de subterfúgios, claro quem não é do governo, como o caso.

Existe, também, uma discussão sobre a autoria da página do aitolá aqui na Mehsnews
http://www.mehrnews.com/fa/newsdetail.a ... ID=1770405
deve ter em inglês mas eu não encontrei.




"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
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