http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126049484505086861.html

Thousands Flee Iran as Noose Tightens   
By STEVE STECKLOW and FARNAZ FASSIHI 
NEVSEHIR, Turkey -- Sadegh Shojai fled Iran after government agents raided his 
Tehran apartment, seizing his computer and 700 copies of a book he published on 
staging revolutions.

Now, he and his wife spend their days in this isolated Turkish town in a 
cramped, coal-heated apartment that lacks a proper toilet. But Mr. Shojai, 28 
years old, continues to churn out articles on antigovernment Web sites about 
Iranian political prisoners, and helps to link students in Tehran with fellow 
students in Europe.

"I feel very guilty that I have abandoned my friends and countrymen, so I make 
up for it by burying myself in activism here," he says.

He's part of a small but spreading refugee exodus of businesspeople, 
dissidents, college students, journalists, athletes and other elite Iranians 
that is transforming the global face of Iran's resistance movement.

 
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"Because of new technology and the Internet, prominent figures of the 
opposition can be more effective outside of Iran and do things they wouldn't be 
able to do there," says Hamid Dabashi, a professor of Iranian studies at 
Columbia University. People staying behind "are ridiculed and sidelined," or 
thrown in jail.

The United Nations says more than 4,200 Iranians world-wide have sought refugee 
status since Iran's controversial June presidential vote and bloody street 
violence. This provincial Turkish town -- near the famed carved-rock dwellings 
of Cappadocia that harbored outcasts in millennia past -- is home to 543 
Iranians seeking asylum.

After sometimes spending weeks hiding in and hopping between safe houses, 
Iranians have turned up in countries as far away as Australia, Canada and 
Sweden. They typically seek refugee status.

"What good can a lawyer do in Iran if she is in jail?" says Nikahang Kousar, an 
Iranian political cartoonist in Toronto who formed an "underground railroad" of 
sorts to advise and assist other Iranians trying to leave Iran.

A spokesman with Iran's U.N. mission in New York declined to comment on the 
refugees or their claims of repression or violence.

Iran's refugee exodus is exacerbating a brain drain that has stunted the 
country's development for years. Mr. Dabashi, the Columbia professor, says he 
has fielded hundreds of inquiries from students in Iran wanting to study 
overseas -- more than 20 times the rate of previous years. "It's mind-boggling 
how many extremely accomplished young people are trying to come abroad," he 
says.

 Steve Stecklow/The Wall Street Journal 
Maryam Sabri fled Iran in September after being jailed.

Not all defectors are necessarily politically active. Two athletes from the 
national wrestling and karate teams, a well-known anchor on state television 
and a young film director have applied for political asylum in Europe in recent 
months.

The most popular destination remains neighboring Turkey, which shares a long 
border with Iran. Turkey is one of the few countries that doesn't require 
Iranians to obtain a visa in advance, making it a relatively easy escape.

But not everyone can openly cross the border. About 20 individuals (mostly 
journalists) have escaped Iran illegally since June because they had been 
jailed or been blocked from leaving, according to Omid Memarian, a human-rights 
activist in San Francisco who is another participant in the loose-knit global 
underground railroad.

Hanif Mazroui, the son of a reformist Iranian politician, says he snuck across 
the border, leaving behind a wife and newborn baby he hasn't met. Today Mr. 
Mazroui is in Belgium where he is working as a journalist for reformist Web 
sites.

No matter the route, many Iranians arrive abroad carrying pictures or videos of 
themselves participating in post-election demonstrations in Tehran. Some also 
continue their antigovernment activities by blogging or distributing photos, 
videos, articles and news to Iranians inside and outside the country.

Relations between Turkey and Iran have warmed in recent years. Just last month, 
the two sides announced a trade agreement, including construction of new power 
plants and establishment of a free-trade zone on the border. Turkey also relies 
on Iran as a major supplier of natural gas.

 Steve Stecklow/The Wall Street Journal 
Sadegh Shojai operates in Turkey as an online middleman between Iranians at 
home and abroad.

Turkey also opposes U.S.-backed sanctions on Iran over Tehran's nuclear 
program. Just this past Monday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met 
with President Barack Obama at the White House. "We believe that the role of 
Iran can only be changed through diplomacy," Mr. Erdogan said afterward.

U.S. officials view Turkey as a central player in forging an international 
consensus on pressuring Iran, due to Ankara's expanding economic and diplomatic 
ties to Tehran and Mr. Erdogan's considerable influence across the Middle East. 
The Obama administration also sees Turkey as a crucial ally in addressing a 
range of regional security issues, including Iraq and Afghanistan.

A State Department official says the U.S. is prepared to accept more Iranian 
refugees provided the U.N.'s refugee agency makes the referrals. The official 
said there is a refugee quota of about 35,000 this year for the Near East and 
South Asia, so "there's enough wiggle room that we could increase the number of 
people we take out of Turkey."

Turkey is one of the world's only countries that bans refugees from taking up 
permanent residence within its own borders. The U.N. has found no evidence that 
Turkey is treating Iranian political refugees any differently than other 
refugees.

Still, there is fear among Iranian refugees in Turkey of being caught or 
harassed by Iranian intelligence agents. Many say they are afraid to call their 
families back home, believing the phone lines in Iran are tapped and that 
relatives there will face reprisal.

 Steve Stecklow/The Wall Street Journal 
Masoume Mohammadian is seeking work in Nevsehir.

Ibrahim Vurgun, project coordinator for a Turkish nonprofit that is under 
contract with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR, to assist 
refugees, says Iranian intelligence operatives have infiltrated the ranks of 
asylum seekers.

"It's very easy to get into Turkey, and you can't differentiate between an 
Iranian intelligence agent and a real refugee," he says.

Maryam Sabri, a 21-year-old refugee in Kayseri, an industrial city home to more 
than 1,000 fleeing Iranians, says two Iranian men she believes were security 
agents chased her in Ankara, but she ran into Turkish police and her assailants 
fled. She says her hope is that she can leave Turkey as soon as possible. "I am 
not safe here," she said.

Ms. Sabri came to Turkey in early September, shortly after spending two weeks 
in a Tehran prison, she says, after being arrested while protesting the killing 
of Neda Agha-Soltan, the young woman whose videotaped shooting on the street in 
Iran became a rallying cry for the protest movement.

A miniaturist painter, Ms. Sabri says she had produced fliers for opposition 
presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi. In prison, Ms. Sabri says, her 
interrogator repeatedly raped her and warned her that she would be tracked 
after release. "If you do not do everything we want, we are going to finish you 
off somewhere, very easily," she says she was told.

The Iranian government has denied that any prisoners have been raped and has 
called the allegations propaganda by opposition groups.

The Turkish government requires refugees to live in remote locations far from 
big cities like Istanbul. This is how many wind up here in Nevsehir, about a 
five-hour bus ride south of Ankara. A community of Iranian asylum seekers has 
sprung up in a dusty hillside neighborhood of stone streets and cinder-block 
dwellings known as "350 Houses."

That's where Mr. Shojai, the Iranian publisher of revolutionary materials, 
lives with his wife, Fateme Faneian, a 25-year-old blogger who worked at an 
opposition Web site in Iran before the government shut it down.

They arrived in Turkey in August after hiding in Iran for more than a month 
while participating in demonstrations. She says that during one protest in 
Iran, police kicked her in the stomach, causing her to have a miscarriage.

It's their first time outside Iran. They arrived by train with four suitcases 
of belongings, including several bags of rice.

Mr. Shojai says he now spends eight to 10 hours a day online, acting as an 
intermediary for a large network of student activists within Iran to get 
updates on arrests, interrogations and jailings back home. He then distributes 
what he learns globally on Facebook, Twitter and Balatarin, an Iranian news and 
social-networking site.

Because of Turkey's strict rules for refugees, Iranians can find themselves in 
a bureaucratic limbo that can last for years.

Once here, Iranians must wait for the U.N. to approve their status as refugees, 
which can take several months. If approved, they then next wait for assignment 
to another country (typically the U.S., Canada or Australia), which can take 
two years because of immigration quotas. If they're rejected as refugees, they 
can appeal, extending the process.

"Time can be the best torturer," says Kiumars Kamalinia, an Iranian Christian 
living in Nevsehir who says he was forced to flee Iran two years ago because of 
evangelical activities. He says the U.N. recognized him as a refugee a year ago 
but he's still awaiting resettlement.

An official with Turkey's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who declined to be 
named, said the refugee issue "is very complex and should be addressed by the 
international community." Noting that 67,000 people have sought refuge in 
Turkey since 1995 -- nearly half of them from Iran -- the official said Turkey 
wants to avoid a "mass influx" of additional refugees.

The 1,000 or so Iranians who have arrived in Turkey since the June elections 
joined more than 3,000 others already waiting to be declared refugees or to be 
resettled. They include Christians and members of the Bahai faith who say they 
fled to escape religious persecution. There also is a sizable community of gay 
and lesbian Iranians. Homosexuality is punishable by death in Iran.

 
UNHCR officials say the number of refugees in Turkey has increased in recent 
years, largely because of an influx of Iraqis. Waiting periods for resettlement 
have also grown.

Last year, there were only about 5,000 placements for 18,000 refugees. The U.S. 
accepted 1,099 Iranians from Turkey. An additional 486 went to six other 
countries.

While refugees wait, Turkey charges them the same residential-permit fees as 
any foreigner, about $200 per adult and $100 per child, every six months. The 
fees have stirred up resentment, since Turkey also prohibits refugees from 
finding legal employment if Turkish citizens are qualified to do the job. Many 
work illegal, $10-a-day jobs like housepainting.

Hossein Salman Zadeh, an Iranian news photographer who fled to Turkey in 
September to avoid arrest for taking pictures of demonstrations, says he was 
fined $50 for failing to pay the residential-permit fees on time, even though 
the office that collects the money was closed for a holiday.

"The fee itself is a serious burden, every six months having to come up with 
that money in a country where you cannot work legally," says Brenda Goddard, a 
refugee-status determination officer at UNHCR in Ankara.

The Turkish foreign-ministry official said the government is considering 
changes in the permit fees to benefit the refugees.

However, Turkish unemployment is fairly high at around 11%, and because of 
that, it's "not really an option to allow these applicants to work in Turkey," 
another government official said. The official added that Turkey is worried 
that if it allowed refugees to remain, the country would soon become "a huge 
warehouse for asylum seekers from European Union countries."

Write to Steve Stecklow at steve.steck...@wsj.com and Farnaz Fassihi at 
farnaz.fass...@wsj.com 


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