Skip to Content

Ali Khamenei

Muslims must quit British Forces, says Iranian envoy Abdolhossein Moezi

Ayatollah-Abdolhossin.jpg

The Iranian Supreme Leader’s representative in Britain has told Muslim servicemen and women to quit the Armed Forces, saying that their involvement in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars is forbidden by Islam.

The cleric, personally appointed by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to be his special envoy to the UK, also urged Muslims to defeat the opposition to the Iranian regime and keep the 30-year-old Islamic Republic alive.

...More...


The Ted Bundy of the Middle East

By Alan Caruba

People are always fascinated by serial killers. How, they ask, could Ted Bundy have managed to convince so many women to trust him long enough for him to kill them? True, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s president, does not have the good looks of Bundy and he lacks the charm that enabled Bundy to murder dozens of victims.


Ahmadinejad: Muscular Style

Ahmadinejad: Muscular Style  


by Amir Taheri
Arab News
July 9, 2005

While the outside world is trying to size up Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and decide whether or not he was involved in terrorist operations, the people of Iran are witnessing an impressive build-up of power around the newly elected president.

Ahmadinejad has hit the ground running.

What brought you here?: 
Will Mahmoud Ahmadinejad be good for Iran? How much power does he actually have?

I wed Iranian girls before execution

 By SABINA AMIDI, SPECIAL TO THE JERUSALEM POST 

Iran Tries to Suppress Rape Allegations

[caption id="" align="alignleft" width="600" caption="Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, in a sermon at Tehran University on Friday, denounced claims that protesters had been raped."]Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, in a sermon at Tehran University on Friday, denounced claims that protesters had been raped.[/caption] BEIRUT, Lebanon — 

The Islamic Republic of Iran Reality Check

The Iranian people are calling for help and much of the world either turns a deaf ear or feels it has its own priorities to worry about. Then, the horrors keep playing out, unabated, in the streets, prisons and dungeons of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Iran opposition figure plans a new political group

Defeated presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi says he hopes to 'lay the groundwork for a large-scale social movement.'

Iran election dispute escalates to new phase

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI and LEE KEATH (AP) –   TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's election dispute has moved beyond the drama of mass street protests to a new phase: a fight for power within the ruling religious establishment itself. The conflict escalated as the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, backed by hard-line clerics and the Revolutionary Guard, issued a warning to the opposition in general and powerful cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani in particular. "The elite should be watchful, since they have been faced wi


Syndicate content