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US Sanctions:
Who Pays for the Loss of Life in Iran?
By Kourosh Ziabari
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 6, 2010
Since the victory of Iran's Islamic Revolution in 1979 which
toppled the U.S.-backed regime of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Iran has
been facing with devastating and agonizing financial sanctions of the
United States and its European allies who didn't favor the
post-revolutionary Iran's doctrine of confrontation with the superpowers
and its denial of Western liberal democratic values. The 1979
revolution which put an end to 2,500 years of imperial monarchy in Iran
was pivoted on theocratic and ideological values which the sumptuous,
thrilling West usually tends to dislike and rebuff. Under the spiritual
leadership of Imam Khomeini, Iranians declared that they wouldn't need the
support of Western and Eastern superpowers, will stand on their own feet
and only seek to realize a political regime which establishes its bases
and principles in accordance with morality and Islamic solidarity.
Iran's ideological disagreement with the West and its efforts to fulfill
independence as an Islamic state, however, cost for the Iranian people
heavily. First of all, the United States spurred its regional puppet, the
late dictator Saddam Hussein, on to launch a massive, crushing war against
Iran so as to push the country's newly-established political regime to
annihilation. The 8-year war demolished Iran's infrastructures
irreversibly, caused irreparable damages to country's economy and left
more than 350,000 Iranians dead. The 8-year resistance of the
Iranian people, however, rendered the plans of the U.S. and its Baathist
ally futile. Iran rose from the rubbles of 8-year war with Iraq and set
out to emerge as a regional superpower gradually. Iranians recreated the
country's war-torn economy once again, renewed the obliterated
infrastructures, appeased the pains of the families of 350,000 martyrs
with compassion and brought hopes to the hearts of those who had come to
think that a political state with the ideological pillars of Islam would
be impossible to survive. The animosity of the United States and
its cronies, however, didn't seem to be ending. In 1984, the United States
approved its first set of sanctions against Iran which would prohibit
Washington from selling American weapons to Tehran. During the presidency
of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, the sanctions got tougher and broader. In
April 1995, President Bill Clinton issued a total embargo on U.S. dealings
with Iran, banning every kind of financial transaction with the war-hit
country.
In 1996, the United States Congress passed the Iran–Libya Sanctions
Act under which all the foreign firms and companies that provide investments
over $20 million for the development of petrochemical projects in Iran would
be penalized. The most inequitable and unreasonable sanctions against Iran,
however, were those which would were endorsed in 1995 and disallowed the
aviation companies around the world to sell aircrafts and repair parts to
the Iranian airlines directly. Iran's aviation fleet which is
chiefly comprised of Russian low-quality Tupelov and outdated Airbus and
Fokker planes is one of the most vulnerable fleets in the world which
suffers from increasing dilapidation and is considered to be highly at risk
due to the unjust sanctions which are imposed against the country.
In December 2005, BBC World published a report in which it was expressively
stated that Iran's civil and military aviation fleet is undergoing intense
safety setbacks. The report came after an Iranian Air Force C-130E military
transport aircraft crashed into a residential complex in Tehran, killing 128
people including 68 reporters and journalists that were supposed to cover a
military drill off the country's southern coast on the Persian Gulf.
Two years earlier, a Russian-manufactured Ilyushin Il-76 transporter plane
crashed in southeastern Iran, killing 302 passengers and cabin crew.
Iran has experienced several deadly air accidents in which hundreds of
innocent civilians lost their lives. On July 15, 2009, the Caspian Airlines
Flight 7908 heading from Tehran to Yerevan crashed near the village of
Jannatabad in northern Iran, killing 168 passengers and cabin crews. Among
the dead were all members of Iran's national youth judo team members and
several other prominent persons including a former parliament member and the
wife of Georgian Ambassador to Tehran. On July 24, 2009, another
deadly plane crash happened in Iran which cost the life of 16 people. While
attempting to land, the plane skidded off the runway and broke into a wall,
killing 16 out of 153 passengers and crew members who were aboard the plane.
Unfortunately, the frequency of deadly plane crashes in Iran has
been so high that made Iran's aviation fleets one of the most insecure and
unsafe ones in the world. Tens of people die each year as a result of a
childish altercation which seems to have no rational basis. The United
States has failed to dictate its political will to Iran and resorts to this
failure as a pretext for punishing its people. The United States
and its European allies who boast of themselves as being the harbingers of
human rights and liberty have obliviously forgotten that they are simply
human beings who lose their lives as a result of the sanctions which they've
devised.
The civilian passengers who are destined to die in the insecure flights
of Iran's aviation fleet are the victims of those who have long trumpeted in
our ears that they're the sole defenders of human rights. If the life of
each human being is respectable, then who is responsible for the lives of
these hundreds of people who pass away before the eyes of the so-called
international community which is always alert to caution about the violation
of human rights in Iran and other independent countries?
Isn't the life of these people who get in the dilapidated Russian planes
of Iran's fleet and embrace death to the most extreme point of imagination
respectable that you've deprived them of having the opportunity to
experience a safe and secure trip? If you're at loggerheads with the
government of Iran, what's the fault of its innocent civilians whom you're
punishing collectively?
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