US imposes sanctions on eight Iran officials

The head of the Revolutionary Guard, top security officials and prosecutors taken to task

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Washington: The Obama administration on Wednesday sanctioned eight senior Iranian officials for alleged human rights violations as it sought to increase pressure on President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's regime while reaching out to his opponents in Iran.

The eight — who include the head of the Revolutionary Guard, top security officials and prosecutors — are responsible for a number of abuses since the disputed presidential election of 2009, US officials said.

"On these officials' watch, or under their command, Iranian citizens have been arbitrarily arrested, beaten, tortured, raped, blackmailed and killed," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in announcing the sanctions.

Any US assets held by the eight officials will be frozen, and they will be barred from receiving visas or doing business in the US.

Although none of the Iranians officials are known to have sizable financial ties to the US, American officials said they hoped that the sanctions would further discourage international businesses from doing business with Iran.

The US and its allies have imposed a series of economic sanctions on Iran over the last several months in hopes of persuading it to scale back its nuclear programme.

Conflict of interest

The US and many other nations believe that Iran's nuclear programme is aimed at acquiring the ability to build a bomb. Iran insists its goal is power generation.

The eight officials sanctioned include Mohammad Ali Jafari, commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, which controls much of the Iranian economy, and one of his top deputies, Hussain Taeb.

The names appear to target one faction of Iran's elite: conservative hard-liners close to Ahmadinejad who are believed to have been behind the months-long crackdown against mostly peaceful Iranian protesters last year.

Left off the list is Ahmadinejad himself, as well as conservatives perceived as more moderate, such as parliament Speaker Ali Larijani or former conservative presidential candidate Mohsen Rezai.

The announcement represented the first time the US has sanctioned Iranians for human rights abuses, and it marked another move by the Obama administration to show support for opponents of the regime.

On Wednesday, US authorities also put into effect a prohibition on imports of Iranian rugs and carpets.

Also barred are Iranian pistachios and other foods. US officials would like to see opposition groups in Iran build pressure for reform from within.

But they have moved carefully out of concern that reaching out could be read as a sign that the dissenters were collaborating with the US.

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