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Modeling, Evaluation, and Zoning of Marivan County Ecotourism Potential Using Fuzzy Logic, FAHP, and TOPSIS
ISSN 0354-8724 (hard copy) | ISSN 1820-7138 (online) Modeling, Evaluation, and Zoning of Marivan county Ecotourism Potential using Fuzzy Logic, FAHP, and TOPSIS Jahanbakhsh BalistA*, Hamideh HeydarzadehA, Esmail SalehiA Received: September 15, 2018 | Revised: December 14, 2018 | Accepted: February 26, 2019 DOI: 10.5937/gp23-18879 Abstract Among all the diverse regions of Iran, Marivan is considered one of the touring poles in the country thanks to its unique views which play an important role in providing ecotourism potential. Current- ly, despite the importance of the issue, no specific study and planning have been done to locate proper zones for an outing. In this regard, evaluation of the land potential for any kind of activity such as recre- ational planning is the first step in planning. In this study, we evaluated and zoned the ecotourism po- tential of Marivan in Kurdistan province with fuzzy logic, FAHP, and TOPSIS, based on 15 criteria and ap- plying GIS, where the outcome was zoning map of areas most suitable for ecotourism development. The results indicated that a total area of 3183 km2 (included in the study), classes 4 and 5, respective- ly, with 151 and 513 km2 constitute the most appropriate zones for ecotourism development. Among points with ecotourism attraction, the Zarivar Lake claimed the top priority while Anjiran Heights re- ceived the last priority. Keywords: Tourism; Marivan; Zoning; Fuzzy Logic; FAHP; TOPSIS Introduction Ecotourism has been categorized among new con- newest and best and indeed a perfect definition: “Ec- cepts which are still often misunderstood and not otourism is traveling to sensitive, unique, intact, and used correctly. -
My Speech-KNC-22-For Website
Violation of Kurdish Human Rights in Iran 22 nd Conference of Kurdish National congress of North America Soraya Fallah Under the authority of Islamic Republic of Iran several campaign of ethnocide has taken place. Kurds in Iran suffer tremendous discrimination, deprivation of resources, arbitrary arrests, and human rights violations . Amnesty International(AI), Human Rights Watch(HRW), The International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) , and several other local and domestic Kurdish human Rights organizations have reported the Islamic Republic’s atrocities against the Kurds, while calling “on the Iranian government to amend or abolish its security laws, press laws, and other legislation that allow the government to suppress the speech and activities of a range of individuals and to arrest them for exercising their rights to peaceful expression and association. Human Rights Watch also urges the Iranian government to respect its international obligations, as well as basic rights stated in declaration of human rights , in granting and respecting the social, cultural, and religious rights of the Kurdish people.” Unfortunately, historically, any International calls for the recognition of the human rights of the Kurds have fallen on deaf ears in Iran and we don’t expect this call to be any different. In the past several months, violations of human rights has increased more than ever in Kurdistan. Arrests, prosecutions, imprisonments, unjust executions, and executions of political prisoners have been common practice by the Iranian authority. There have also been numerous reports on suspicious deaths of political prisoners, contributing to the systematic and continuous violations of human rights that presently exist in Kurdistan. -
Tree Spatial Patterns in the Zagros Forests (Case Study: Kurdistan Forests; Western Part of Iran)
Available online a t www.pelagiaresearchlibrary.com Pelagia Research Library European Journal of Experimental Biology, 2013, 3(3):121-125 ISSN: 2248 –9215 CODEN (USA): EJEBAU Tree spatial patterns in the Zagros forests (Case study: Kurdistan forests; western part of Iran) Naghi Shabanian *1 , Soheil Soheili Esfahani 2 and Maziar Haidari 2 1Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Iran 2Department of Forestry, Sari University of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, Sari, Iran _____________________________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT This research was carried out in the Blake forests, Baneh region, Kurdistan Province, northern Zagros forest, western part of Iran conducted on oak forests. The main purpose of the present study was to determine the tree spatial patterns in Blake forests. We used the quadrate methods and inventory methods designed randomize- systematic methods applying the circle sample plots 1000 m 2 in the 100×100 meter net. In each plot some information included kind and number of woody species were recorded. To analysis of data for detect of forest spatial patterns was used quadrate method using variance/mean ratio, Green and Morisata indices applying Ecological Methodological software. The results showed that five tree species were found in the Blake forest while Quercus libani Oliv and Quercus infectoria Oliv were the most dominant woody plants in this area. Based on these results the quantity of Morisata, variance /mean ratio and Green indexes indicate the uniform spatial pattern for trees in the northern Zagros forests. This result may be because of intensive human utilization as has modified the spatial patterns of these forests. Key words: Spatial pattern, Baneh forest, Kurdistan province, Morisata, variance /mean ratio and Green index. -
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2007 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 11, 2008
Iran Page 1 of 25 Iran Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2007 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 11, 2008 The Islamic Republic of Iran*, with a population of approximately 70 million, is a constitutional, theocratic republic in which Shi'a Muslim clergy dominate the key power structures. Government legitimacy is based on the twin pillars of popular sovereignty-–albeit restricted--and the rule of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution. The current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was not directly elected but chosen by a directly-elected body of religious leaders, the Assembly of Experts, in 1989. Khamenei dominated the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government. He directly controlled the armed forces and indirectly controlled the internal security forces, the judiciary, and other key institutions. The legislative branch is the popularly elected 290-seat Islamic Consultative Assembly, or Majles. An unelected 12-member Guardian Council reviewed all legislation passed by the Majles for adherence to Islamic and constitutional principles and also screened presidential and Majles candidates for eligibility. In 2005 hardline conservative Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad won the presidency in an election widely viewed by the international community as neither free nor fair. The civilian authorities did not maintain fully effective control of the security forces. The government's poor human rights record worsened, and it continued to commit numerous, serious abuses. The government severely limited citizens' right to change their government peacefully through free and fair elections. There were reports of unjust executions after unfair trials. Security forces committed acts of politically motivated abductions; torture and severe officially-sanctioned punishments, including death by stoning; amputation; flogging; and excessive use of force against and imprisonment of demonstrators. -
Print This Article
European Online Journal of Natural and Social Sciences 2014; www.european-science.com Vol.3, No.4 Special Issue on Architecture, Urbanism, and Civil Engineering ISSN 1805-3602 Geo-mechanical Consideration in Research Project of Constructing Sheikh Besharat Dam in Bijar County with Gamma-Gamma Methods Hamid Kaykhah Shoushtar Branch, Islamic Azad University, Shoushtar, Iran & Instructor at Technical University of Shahid Chamran, Ahvaz *E-mail: [email protected] Abstract Undoubtedly, preliminary geological studies are among the most important and most fundamental principles of designing and constructing big constructions such as dams in different regions. As a comprehensive template, geo-mechanical studies related to geological studies have been able to provide invaluable information regarding surface properties and features of soil such as texture and structure, and permeability. Different methodologies have been exploited in estimating geo-mechanical studies, among most novel of them is gamma-gamma method. This study, in a practical way, conducts a geo-mechanical consideration in research project of constructing Sheikh Besharat Dam in Bijar County with gamma-gamma methods. Results of the study showed that in two tests, a total of 12 experiments has been performed in soil depths ranging from 0.075 m to 35 m which showed that except experiment 9 in test 1 and test 2 in experiment 2 where porosity level is more than other tests, porosity level in other considered tests and regions have been in levels close to one another. Density level of each of tests taken from 12 points in dam construction lands showed that this has been reported normal for 12 test cases, which is quite similar and close to normal conditions. -
Urgent Action
UA: 125/11 Index: MDE 13/047/2011Iran Date: 06 May 2011 URGENT ACTION STUDENT ACTIVISTS HELD IN IRAN Two members of the Confederation of Iranian Students (CIS), an independent group of current and former students, have been arrested. Shiva Kamalipour Azad was arrested in Iran’s capital, Tehran, on 26 April 2011 and Mohammad Reza Fakhravar (known as Arash) was reportedly arrested at Tehran Airport on or around 29 April. They are at risk of torture or other ill treatment. Journalist Shiva Kamalipour Azad, aged 29, was initially arrested on 17 April 2011 by security officials at the Imam Khomeini International Airport in Tehran, as she was leaving to attend a conference about journalism in the Muslim world in the USA via Dubai. Her passport, camera, computer and phone were confiscated and she was taken to Evin Prison, Tehran, where she reportedly appeared before a Revolutionary Court. Shiva Kamalipour Azad was held in incommunicado detention, until her release on bail on 24 April 2011. She is believed to have been ill-treated during interrogation. She was arrested again at her grandfather’s residence, in the middle of the night two days later by six security officials believed to be from an intelligence body. She was blindfolded and taken back to Evin Prison where she is still held. Nineteen-year-old student activist Arash Fakhravar was reportedly arrested on arrival in Tehran after returning from France where he was an asylum-seeker. The circumstances of his departure from France are unclear. His current whereabouts are unknown, and he may have been subjected to enforced disappearance. -
Chronology of Events in Iran, May 2004*
Chronology of Events in Iran, May 2004* May 1 Three Iranian dissidents given week's leave from prison. (Islamic Republic News Agency / IRNA) Three members of a dissident Iranian group, who are held for acting against the Islamic Republic, have been granted temporary leave. Taqi Rahmani, Reza Alijani and Hoda Saber, members of the so-called religious-nationalist group, were granted a one-week leave from Evin prison by Tehran general and revolutionary court, the head of the court's public relations office, Mohammad Shadabi said. Rahmani faces 11 years in prison, while Saber has been given nine years and Alijani six years. They were among a group of 14 dissidents who received their punishment from the Revolutionary Court in May 2003 for attempting to topple the Islamic establishment. May 2 Iranian judiciary allows four dissidents to go on leave. (Agence France-Presse / AFP) Iranian judiciary authorities allowed seven prominent dissidents jailed for speaking out against the regime and students jailed during unrest in 1999 to go on leave. According to the paper, Akbar Ganji, who was jailed in 2000 after he alleged top regime officials were behind a spate of grisly serial murders of dissidents, was given seven days of leave. Ahmad Batebi, Nasser Zarafshan and Akbar Mohammadi were each given five days out of prison. Batebi had been initially condemned to death for his participation in the demonstration in 1999 where he was featured on a famous photograph holding aloft a blood-soaked T-shirt. His sentence was revised to 13 years imprisonment. In August 2002, Zarafshan, a prominent lawyer was sentenced to five years in prison and 50 lashes for "distributing secret information". -
Fraser2013.Pdf (3.034Mb)
This thesis has been submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a postgraduate degree (e.g. PhD, MPhil, DClinPsychol) at the University of Edinburgh. Please note the following terms and conditions of use: • This work is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, which are retained by the thesis author, unless otherwise stated. • A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. • This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the author. • The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the author. • When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given. Life and Limb Irreversible hadd penalties in Iranian criminal courts and opportunities to avoid them Antonia Fraser Fujinaga Doctor of Philosophy The University of Edinburgh 2013 Declaration I, Antonia Fraser Fujinaga, declare that this thesis is exclusively my own work and based entirely on my own research, and has never been submitted for any other degree or professional qualification. Antonia Fraser Fujinaga. April 2013. i ii Abstract. This is a study of hudud - Islamic 'fixed penalties' - as they appear in Iranian law and courts. It first presents the codified laws and underlying elements from Twelver Shi‘i law (as interpreted by the Iranian legal community) governing the penalties of stoning for adultery, amputation of four fingers for theft, and execution for sodomy and certain variants of fornication (illicit carnal congress between unmarried males and females). -
Iran March 2009
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN INFORMATION REPORT IRAN 17 MARCH 2009 UK Border Agency COUNTRY OF ORIGIN INFORMATION SERVICE IRAN 17 MARCH 2009 Contents Preface Latest News EVENTS IN IRAN, FROM 2 FEBRUARY 2009 TO 16 MARCH 2009 REPORTS ON IRAN PUBLISHED OR ACCESSED BETWEEN 2 FEBRUARY 2009 TO 16 MARCH 2009 Paragraphs Background Information 1. GEOGRAPHY ......................................................................................... 1.01 Maps .............................................................................................. 1.03 Iran............................................................................................. 1.03 Tehran ....................................................................................... 1.04 2. ECONOMY ............................................................................................ 2.01 Sanctions ...................................................................................... 2.13 3. HISTORY ............................................................................................... 3.01 Calendar ........................................................................................ 3.02 Pre 1979......................................................................................... 3.03 1979 to 1999 .................................................................................. 3.05 2000 to date................................................................................... 3.16 Student unrest ............................................................................. -
Alternative Report Submitted to the UN Committee on Economic, Social
Alternative Report submitted to the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights for the consideration of the Second Report of the Islamic Republic of Iran during the 49th Pre-Sessional Working Group SUBMITTED BY: Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization FOCUS ON: Ahwazi Arabs Iranian Kurdistan Southern Azerbaijan West Balochistan Alternative Report to CESCR – Iran E/C.12/IRN/2 CONTENTS OF THIS REPORT SECTION A: Introduction to the Report .......................................................................... 3 SECTION B: Introduction to Ahwazi Arabs, Azeris, Baloch, Kurds .......................... 5 SECTION C: Compliance with CESCR ................................................................................ 6 Article 1 – Right to self-determination .................................................................................................... 6 Article 3 – Right of women’s equal status ............................................................................................... 7 Article 6, 7, 8 – Right to employment rights and to form and participate in trade unions .................... 8 Article 11 – Right to adequate housing ................................................................................................. 10 Article 12 – Right to high health standards and improvements of environmental and industrial hygiene ................................................................................................................................................. 11 Article 13 – Right to education ............................................................................................................. -
Ahmad Batebi (M) Aged 28, Former Student Activist
PUBLIC AI Index: MDE 13/103/2006 20 September 2006 Further Information on UA 215/06 (MDE 13/089/2006, 09 August 2006) Fear for safety/Medical concern/Torture IRAN Ahmad Batebi (m) aged 28, former student activist Former student activist Ahmad Batebi is now known to be held in Evin prison in the capital, Tehran. His relatives have been permitted to visit him there three times. He called off his hunger strike shortly after his family's first visit to him in detention on 21 August. However, he is still said to be seriously mentally and physically ill. Prison authorities are reportedly denying him access to the medical treatment he needs. Ahmad Batebi was re-arrested on 27 July after failing to return from a period of temporary leave from prison, which began around March 2005. He is serving a 10-year sentence in connection with involvement in student demonstration in 1999. Following his re-arrest his family was not told where he was detained until 12 August, when he was permitted to telephone his wife, Somaie Baiienat, and confirm that he was held in Section 209 of Evin prison. His family have only been permitted to visit him three times. During their first two visits, Ahmad Batebi's family were accompanied by four prison guards, although their third visit, on 18 September, was reportedly less heavily supervised. Ahmad Batebi is not permitted to see his lawyer. Ahmad Batebi is reportedly in poor physical and mental health, which is said to be deteriorating. He suffers from a number of medical problems as a result of being tortured and ill-treated during his previous period of detention, including stomach and kidney problems. -
Kurds in Iran
DIAC-IN-CONFIDENCE ISSUES PAPER Iran Kurds in Iran January 2010 REF: IRN12012010 COUNTRY RESEARCH SECTION, ONSHORE PROTECTION BRANCH This document has been prepared by the Country Research Section (CRS), Onshore Protection Branch of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship, Canberra, ACT. The document does not purport to represent the views of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship on any matter with which it deals. The purpose of this paper is to assist decision makers in rapidly familiarising issues through a brief that has a specific focus on the Refugees Convention and other key human rights elements in the country of reference. The information is compiled from Government and publicly available sources. However, CRS does not guarantee that the information is exhaustive or conclusive as country conditions are subject to change. This document must not be cited directly. Case managers must form their own views based on the original information and refer to the original source documentation. Any request to access this document under the Freedom of Information Act 1982, should be referred to CRS for decision on release. DIAC-IN-CONFIDENCE Issues Paper 2010 DIAC-IN-CONFIDENCE Table of Content Executive Summary ....................................................................................... 3 Acronyms and Abbreviations ........................................................................ 3 1. Background and Current Situation ............................................................ 4 1.1 Population and Geographic