UK firm ‘facilitating Iran’s human rights abuses´ (JERUSALEM POST) By JOANNA PARASZCZUK 06/14/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=273797
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A US-based pressure group accused a British company this week of
facilitating Iran’s human rights abuses by providing broadcasting
services to the Islamic Republic’s state media.
United Against a Nuclear Iran (UANI) said it has ramped up its
campaign to get UK communications infrastructure company Arqiva to
stop broadcasting and transmitting networks operated by the state-
controlled Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB).
Iran uses international companies to provide the infrastructure for
its broadcasting and telecoms services, even as it ramps up its
attempts to prevent civilian Internet use and jams broadcasts from
international news networks, including the Voice of America and BBC
Persian.
Arqiva facilitates the regime-controlled IRIB’s Persian television
transmissions as well as its English-language outlet Press TV and Al-
Alam in Arabic, according to UANI.
In January, the UK revoked Press TV’s license to broadcast in
Britain, after the channel aired an interview of Iranian journalist
Maziar Bahari obtained under duress during his 118-day detention in a
Tehran prison.
In March, two months after that decision, the European Union added
IRIB’s director, Ezzatollah Zarghami, to its sanctions list, stating
that IRIB had broadcast forced confessions of detainees as well as a
series of “show trials” in August 2009 and again in December 2011.
In a recent letter to Arqiva, UANI president Kristen Silverberg
warned the British company that it could run afoul of recent US
sanctions legislation if it continues to provide services to IRIB.
The most recent legislation, passed in April, sanctions entities that
have sold or provided goods, services or technologies to Iran or
Syria likely to be used to facilitate computer or network disruption,
monitoring or tracking.
The pressure group also accused Arqiva of acting contrary to the
position on Iran of the British government, which opposes human
rights abuses.
“By facilitating IRIB’s broadcast of libelous programs and hate
speech against religious minorities, forced confessions of peaceful
dissidents and civil society activists, and “show trials” of
political prisoners, Arqiva is serving to further the Iranian
regime’s campaign of persecution and repression against its own
citizens,” Silverberg wrote.
In a response to a query from The Jerusalem Post regarding its
continued operations in Iran, an Arqiva spokesman said the company
supplied satellite services to a “wide range of international
customers,” provided their transmissions were “legal and licensed.”
The company was in “regular dialogue with the UK government and
associated regulatory bodies in other jurisdictions to ensure all
legal criteria are complied with,” the spokesman added.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday, UANI spokesman Nathan Carleton slammed
Arqiva’s response, saying it did not address the pressure group’s
concerns.
“It is irresponsible of Arqiva to treat the Iranian regime the same
as it does its other international customers, given the regime’s
abysmal human rights record and sponsorship of terrorism,” Carleton
told the Post.
He added: “Arqiva should cut all of its ties to Iran, and comply with
international sanctions that bar the suppression of free speech.” (©
1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 06/14/12)
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