Mohammad-Ali Ramin | |
Office1: | Vice Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance for Press Affairs |
Term Start1: | 1 November 2009 |
Term End1: | 25 December 2010 |
President1: | Mahmoud Ahmadinejad |
Minister1: | Mohammad Hosseini |
Predecessor1: | Alireza Malekian |
Successor1: | Mohammad-Jafar Mohammadzadeh |
Birth Date: | 4 February 1954[1] |
Birth Place: | Dezful, Khuzestan Province, Iran |
Spouse: | Sousan Safavardi |
Children: | 3 |
Alma Mater: | Clausthal University of Technology Karlsruhe Institute of Technology |
Party: | Coalition of the Pleasant Scent of Servitude |
Otherparty: | Front of Followers of the Line of the Imam and the Leader (before 2005) |
Mohammad-Ali Ramin (Persian: محمدعلی رامین, born 1954) is an Iranian politician, political analyst and writer who served as the Vice Minister of Culture and a presidential advisor under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.[2] He organised the International Conference to Review the Global Vision of the Holocaust, a conference involving Holocaust deniers, which took place in Tehran in 2006.
Mohammad-Ali Ramin was born in 1954, in Dezful, Khuzestan Province.[3]
He attended Clausthal University of Technology and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, studying Mechanical Engineering and Process Engineering.[4] Ramin lived in Germany from 1971 to 1994, until he was deported, allegedly for having close ties and links with the far-right National Democratic Party of Germany.[5] He speaks fluent German.[6] He founded the Islamische Gemeinschaft in Clausthal.[7]
Ramin heads the Society for the Defence of Muslims in the West and the founder of a group called The Cells of the Martyrs of the Velayat (velayat: the conversion of the dogma within Shia Islam).
In November 2009, the Minister for Culture Mohammad Hosseini appointed Ramin as his Deputy Culture Minister. He continued this position until December 2010.[8]
Sanctions were placed on Ramin on 23 May 2012 by the European Union for 'abuse of human rights'. The EU identified Ramin as having been complicit in censorship activities while he was in government.[9]
See main article: International Conference to Review the Global Vision of the Holocaust. in December 2006, Ramin organised the International Conference to Review the Global Vision of the Holocaust which took place in Tehran. Prominent attendees included far right political activist David Duke, revisionist historical scholar Robert Faurisson and Haredi Rabbi and anti-Zionist activist Yisroel Dovid Weiss among others. Ramin personally invited German psychologist Bendikt Frings, a member of the far-right National Democratic Party of Germany.[10] [5] The conference provoked international criticism.[11]
According to Aftab News, Ramin was the one who initiated the idea of "relocation of Israel" and also the idea that the "Holocaust is a myth". He himself accepted the full responsibility of this action, as Aftab News reported. In an interview with Financial Times, Ramin stated that he has also initiated the "Holocaust commission" and he is the founder of the Conference on Holocaust in Tehran.
Ramin suggested that former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad establish a committee for clarifying the "real extent" of the Holocaust.[12]
Ramin praised Ahmadinejad for having voiced his doubts over the Holocaust and the need for relocating the Jews to Europe if Europeans really did the massacre during the Second World War.[13]
Following his ideas and suggestions about the Holocaust, President Ahmadinejad appointed him as an advisor.[14]
Quotes:
Ramin is married to Dr. Susan Safaverdi. Together they have two sons and one daughter, Mohammad Yasin Ramin (born 1981),[17] Mohammad Amin Ramin (born 1987), and Salehe Ramin (born 1989). He is the father-in-law of Iranian actress Mahnaz Afshar.[18] [19]
He teaches at Payame Noor University in Tehran.