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Mostafa Tajzadeh

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Mostafa Tajzadeh
Minister of Interior
Acting
In office
21 June 1998 – 22 July 1998
PresidentMohammad Khatami
Preceded byAbdollah Nouri
Succeeded byAbdolvahed Mousavi Lari
Advisor to President of Iran
In office
21 November 2004 – 3 August 2005
PresidentMohammad Khatami
Political Deputy of Minister of Interior
In office
29 August 1997 – 2 May 2001
PresidentMohammad Khatami
MinisterAbdollah Nouri
Abdolvahed Mousavi Lari
Succeeded byMorteza Moballegh
Deputy Minister of Culture for International Affairs
In office
1984–1988
PresidentAli Khamenei
Prime MinisterMir-Hossein Mousavi
MinisterMohammad Khatami
Personal details
Born
Seyyed Mostafa Tajzadeh

(1956-11-22) November 22, 1956 (age 68)
Tehran, Iran
Political partyIRMO (since 1979)
Other political
affiliations
IIPF (since 1998)
SpouseFakhri Mohtashamipour
Children2
Alma materUniversity of Tehran

Seyyed Mostafa Tajzadeh (Template:Lang-fa) is an Iranian reformist politician and a senior member of Islamic Iran Participation Front, as well as Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization.[1]

He is imprisoned at Evin Prison since 2009.

Tajzadeh was briefly Acting Minister of Interior under administration of President Mohammad Khatami after impeachment of Abdollah Nouri, advisor to President Mohammad Khatami in his last two years of administration, a deputy at Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Culture.[1]

He is also a member of Association of Iranian Journalists.

Political career

In 1975, Tajzadeh went to the United States to study and became an member of Muslim Students Association, active against Shah of Iran. With the start of the Iranian Revolution in 1978, he left university and returned to Iran.[1]

Tajzadeh served as the Political deput of the Ministry of Interior of Iran in the government of Mohammad Khatami, and under the Minister Abdollah Noori, since 1997, after being introduced to Noori by Gholamhossein Karbaschi and Mohammad Atrianfar. The first Iranian elections for the City and Village Councils of Iran happened under Tajzadeh. Later, he became an Adviser to the President of Iran, Mohammad Khatami, from November 21, 2004 until the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.[1]

He started working in the Islamic Republic government as an employee of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance in May 1982. He went up to became a vice minister when Mohammad Khatami was the Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance. He left the ministry after a while, and worked for the newspaper Hamshahri until 1997.[1]

Tajzadeh was one of seven leading reformists who filed a lawsuit against several commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) for their alleged intervention in Iran’s rigged presidential elections.[2]

Government work ban

In March 2001, while he was Political deputy at Ministry of Interior faced with charges of election fraud at Iranian legislative election, 2000 after a clash with Guardian Council. He was barred from all government employment for three years, but did not appeal the verdict.[1]

Imprisonment

Amnesty International reported that he was arrested in June 2009, amidst the 2009 Iranian election protests.[3] He was convicted of “assembly and collusion against national security” and “propaganda against the regime”, sentenced to 6 years in prison and a 10-year ban on political and press activities by Branch 15 of the Tehran Islamic Revolutionary Court. He is imprisoned in Evin Prison since 2009. In 2014, while still in prison, he faced new charges and was cnvicted of another 1 year in prison.[4]

Personal life

Tajzadeh is a Ph.D. student in political science at University of Tehran and has two daughters. His wife is Fakhrossadat Mohtashamipour, the cousin of cleric Ali Akbar Mohtashami-Pur. He has also lived in the United States for 31 months.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Patriots and Reformists: Behzad Nabavi and Mostafa Tajzadeh". Tehran Bureau. August 11, 2009. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  2. ^ http://www.iranian.com/main/2012/mar/mostafa-tajzadeh-prisoner-day
  3. ^ "Opposition Leaders Detained in Iran". Amnesty International. June 19, 2009.
  4. ^ "Mostafa Tajzadeh Faces New Charges in Prison". International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. October 17, 2013.