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MIDDLE EAST AND MAGHREB<br />

On November 2, IRGC arrested at least three oppositional<br />

journalists in Tehran, accusing them of belonging to an infiltration<br />

group connected to the USA and the United Kingdom.<br />

According to Reporters Without Borders, by the end of the<br />

year a total of 37 journalists were in detention. On March<br />

3, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon criticized the Iranian<br />

government for repeated human rights violations in a report<br />

to the UNHRC. In response, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad<br />

Javad Zarif rejected those claims referring to double<br />

standards and politicization of those issues. jko<br />

IRAN (PJAK / KURDISH AREAS)<br />

Intensity: 3 | Change: | Start: 1979<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

PJAK vs. government<br />

autonomy<br />

The conflict over autonomy in Iran's Kurdish areas between<br />

the Party of Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK) and the government<br />

escalated to a violent crisis.<br />

While PJAK's armed wing, the East Kurdistan Defense Units<br />

(YRK), and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) repeatedly<br />

clashed in August, combats receded in the following<br />

months.Throughout the year, the government executed several<br />

Kurds allegedly linked to PJAK. On February 20, the brothers<br />

Ali and Habib Afshari, two alleged PJAK members, were<br />

hanged in the Orumiyeh prison, West Azerbaijan province,<br />

for ''spreading corruption on earth'' and ''acting against God's<br />

will.'' Kurdish political activist Sirwan Nejawi was executed on<br />

August 9 in the Tabriz prison, East Azerbaijan, on charges of<br />

collaboration with PJAK. In response to the execution, YRK attacked<br />

military barracks near the city of Sanandaj, Kordestan<br />

province, on August 12. While the government reported that<br />

five soldiers died in the fighting, the Kurdish group claimed<br />

having killed twelve. eth<br />

IRAN USA, EU (NUCLEAR PROGRAM)<br />

Intensity: 2 | Change: | Start: 2002<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

Iran vs. USA, EU<br />

international power, other<br />

The non-violent crisis over international power and Iran's<br />

nuclear program between the USA and the EU, on the one<br />

hand, and Iran, on the other, continued.<br />

On April 2, Iran and the P5+1/E3+3 group consisting of the<br />

US, Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom, and Germany<br />

agreed on the key points of a Joint Comprehensive Plan<br />

of Action (JCPOA) related to Iran's nuclear capabilities, for<br />

instance nuclear enrichment facilities, international inspections,<br />

and transparency standards. Furthermore, it stated<br />

that the EU and the US would lift sanctions after inspections<br />

by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) confirmed<br />

Iran's compliance with JCPOA. However, US sanctions imposed<br />

after the 1979 Iranian Revolution remained in place<br />

[→ Iran USA]. On July 14, the P5+1/E3+3 group reached<br />

a final agreement with Iran over its nuclear program, calling<br />

it JCPOA. It was announced by EU High Representative<br />

for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini and Iranian Foreign<br />

Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in Vienna. The final agreement<br />

was based on the Joint Plan of Action of 11/24/13, in<br />

which Iran had made major technical concessions regarding<br />

the function of its civilian nuclear program in exchange for<br />

moderate sanctions relief, and on the framework agreement<br />

from April.The deal demanded Iran to reduce its stockpile of<br />

low-enriched uranium, to redesign and transform the nuclear<br />

facilities at Fordo, Natanz, and Arak, as well as to grant the<br />

IAEA access to facilities for enrichment, centrifuge production,<br />

and storage throughout the country. In return, if Iran<br />

complied with those requirements, the arms embargo would<br />

be lifted for conventional weapons after five and for ballistic<br />

missiles after eight years. Furthermore, sanctions concerning<br />

financial restrictions and energy could be lifted in early 2016.<br />

A large number of restrictions imposed by JCPOA, however,<br />

will be lifted after a period of 15 years. On December 2,<br />

the IAEA issued a final report on the Iranian nuclear program.<br />

It stated that after 2009, there was no evidence for<br />

activities concerning the development of nuclear weapons.<br />

In response, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi<br />

claimed that the Iranian nuclear program only had peaceful<br />

aims, denying any research related to the development of nuclear<br />

weapons. By the end of the year, all sanctions imposed<br />

on Iran remained in place. krk<br />

IRAQ (SHIITE MILITANT GROUPS)<br />

Intensity: 2 | Change: | Start: 2004<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

Al-Mukhtar Army, Asaib Ahl al-Haqq,<br />

Mahdi Army, Shiite militias vs. government<br />

system/ideology, national power<br />

The conflict over system and ideology as well as national<br />

power between Shiite militant groups such as al-Mukhtar<br />

Army, Asaib Ahl al-Haqq, Hashid al-Shaabi, Harakat al-Nujaba,<br />

and Mahdi Army, on the one hand, and the government, on<br />

the other, de-escalated to a non-violent crisis.<br />

After the Islamic State (IS) had launched its offensive beginning<br />

in June 2014, the government turned to Shiite militias to<br />

bolster their security forces. The militias, backed by Iran, were<br />

essential for strengthening Iraqi forces and helped to retake<br />

areas in Iraq. In January, the government started to form<br />

three brigades of Shiite militias in the Kirkuk Governorate<br />

under the directive of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. Since<br />

then, IS frequently targeted Shiite areas across the country.<br />

The US Department of Defense stated that it would support<br />

operations involving both the Iraqi army and those militia<br />

forces operating under command and control of the Iraqi<br />

government. Shiite militias mobilized to help the army to<br />

fight IS gained more military and political influence [→ Syria,<br />

Iraq et al. (IS)].<br />

Shiite militias reportedly singled out and killed 72 people on<br />

January 26 in the Barwana area in Muqdadiyya, a predominantly<br />

Sunni region in Diyala Governorate. Local residents<br />

remained apprehensive about returning to their homes for<br />

fear of the armed militia groups, which allegedly operated<br />

outside governmental control and was accused of resorting<br />

to vigilante justice by Sunnis. Shiite militias reportedly<br />

destroyed civilian buildings in the aftermath of the retake<br />

of Tikrit, Salah ad-Din Governorate, in March and April. On<br />

June 17, Muqtada al-Sadr, leader of Mahdi Army, warned<br />

the group's primary target would become US troops if they<br />

were redeployed to Iraq, expressing their distrust of American<br />

forces since the 2003 US-led invasion.<br />

The head of Asaib Ahl al-Haqq confessed to the kidnapping<br />

173

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