A Result Of U.S. Democracy Promotion?
Goudarz Eghtedari is a U.S.-based political analyst and a
colleague of Shakeri's. He told Radio Farda that he thinks the detention of
Iranian-Americans -- including Shakeri -- is connected to a February 2006
decision by the U.S. Congress to allocate a $75 million budget to promote
democracy in Iran.
"As far as we know, people and groups inside Iran have not
received that aid -- and neither Esfandiari's group nor Shakeri's group has
received this aid," Eghtedari said. "Iran's Intelligence Ministry is in fact
fishing. They arrest anybody to see what they can get out of it. As Americans
say, it's a fishing expedition. That means they make arrests to see later
whether they can obtain any proof."
Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi argued in a
commentary in the May 30 issue of the "International Herald Tribune" that the
U.S. democracy-promotion funds are a major factor in the arrests.
She wrote that this U.S. policy has backfired, and added
that the lack of transparency in distributing the $75 million has created
"immense problems" for Iranian democratic groups and rights activists.
But a U.S. government official who did not want to be named
told RFE/RL that there is no evidence that any of the recent detentions of
dual-citizenship native Iranians is linked to anything other than the Iran's
government's "repressive nature."
Calls To Make Funding Transparent
Ebadi and other prominent rights activists have urged the
United States to declare which organizations or groups have received
funds.
They argue that the spending has resulted in a growing fear
of a "velvet revolution" among Iranian hard-liners who are actively preventing
civil-society activists, intellectuals, and academics from having contacts with
the outside world.
The U.S. government official told RFE/RL said Washington
doesn't say how much U.S. government money goes to pro-democracy groups and
individuals in Iran, or even whether any of it does.
The United States has said that current funding supports
programs to assist defenders of civil liberties, women's rights, press freedom,
and greater political openness.
He acknowledged that some critics think the United States
should spend no money at all on such efforts to avoid accusations that leave all
dissidents under a cloud of suspicion.
Meanwhile, there is growing concern over the fate of the
detained Iranian-Americans, who are reportedly being held in a prison with
virtually no access to the outside world.
Last week, four international rights groups called on Iran
to release detained Iranian-Americans immediately and lift the effective travel
ban on Azima and Mehrnoush Solouki, a French-Iranian journalism student.
(RFE/RL Washington correspondent Andrew Tully contributed to
this report.)