Latest Updates: Iranian elections RSS

  • johnpi 12:23 am on February 12, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: enemies of God, , Iranian elections, mohareb, , , , ,

    Iran hanged two men at end of January.

    …whatever their earthly crimes were, the two men executed last month were also accused of another offense far more serious than simply protesting against a government.

    They were convicted of being “mohareb,” enemies of God.

    That is the worst possible crime in Shiite Muslim law, according to Abbas Milani, the director of Iranian studies at Stanford University.
    The legal implications are clear, he said.

    “A mohareb, according to Shiite law, is executed,” he said.

    That the regime is labeling its opponents enemies of God is a sign of how rattled it is by the protests, he said.

     
  • johnpi 8:15 am on January 8, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, ,

    Top news photo of 2009. The image of Neda Soltan at the moment of death was criticized by some bloggers, Muslim and otherwise, but it’s currently ranking as the best news image of 2009 over at Huffpo in their readers’ opinion.

    It will be interesting to watch how the professional journalism organizations rate the image.

     
  • johnpi 11:11 am on December 27, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , , ,

    Confirmed: Mousavi’s nephew shot dead.

     
  • johnpi 7:55 am on December 27, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , ,

    Reports of Iranian police disobeying orders, refuse to shoot protestors.

    An Iranian opposition website said police forces were refusing orders to shoot at opposition protesters during clashes on Sunday in central Tehran, where it was reported earlier that at least four demonstrators had been killed.

    “Police forces are refusing their commanders’ orders to shoot at demonstrators in central Tehran … some of them try to shoot into air when pressured by their commanders,” the Jaras website said.

    Four protesters have been killed by police elsewhere though.

    “Three of our compatriots were martyred and two were injured in clashes. The (website) reporter who was on the scene said these three were directly shot at by military forces,” Rahesabz.net reported.

    Rahesabz said a fourth protester was later killed near Vali Asr intersection on Enghelab.

    “The people are carrying the body of this martyr and are shouting slogans,” it said citing eyewitnesses.

     
  • johnpi 10:42 pm on December 26, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , , ,

    UK newspaper The Times names Neda Soltan the Person of the Year.

     
  • johnpi 8:44 am on December 20, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections

    Powerful Iranian opposition cleric Montazeri dies in his sleep.

    For years, Montazeri had accused the country’s ruling Islamic establishment of imposing dictatorship in the name of Islam, and he persisted with his criticism following June’s disputed presidential election.

     
  • johnpi 9:19 am on December 12, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , ,

    Hundreds of Iranian men don hijabs, veils and chadors in protest against attempted government propaganda smear of arrested student.

    Five days after renewed student protests across Iran showed that the dispute over the country’s presidential elections is from over, hundreds of Iranian men posted pictures of themselves wearing the Islamic headscarf on social networking website Facebook in solidarity with a detained student leader.

    Majid Tavakoli of Tehran’s prestigious Amir Kabir University was arrested on Dec. 7 during anti-government demonstrations and pictures of him wearing the chador, the women’s full-length black wrap, were published on the semi-official Fars news agency, which reported that Tavakoli attempted to flee Iran dressed as a woman.

    The pictures provoked a furious response from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s opponents who claim the government faked the photographs, which were also deemed derogatory to women, to embarrass him.

    A “Free Majid Tavakoli” group was created on Facebook, calling the student leader “a symbol of integrity and courage,” and more than 380 Iranian men have showed solidarity with him and posted pictures of themselves wearing a veil or chador with captions such as “I am Majid Tavakoli” or “It is not shame to be a woman, it is shame to be a man like you.”

     
  • johnpi 5:38 am on September 6, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , Iranian elections

    Iran’s universities punish students who disputed vote.

    More anti-hegemons:

    The new disciplinary actions came as officials reported that a presidential panel has begun an investigation of the humanities curriculums at universities, the semiofficial Mehr news agency reported. Although the panel was formed a year ago, it did not start work until after recent calls to purge universities of professors and curriculums deemed “un-Islamic,” based on the fear that the teaching of secular concepts helped fuel the political unrest following the June 12 election.

     
  • johnpi 4:39 pm on August 26, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections

    ‘No foreign link’ in Iran unrest.

    Iran’s supreme leader has said he does not believe opposition leaders blamed for the country’s post-election unrest were knowing agents of foreign powers.

    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s comments contradict accusations which have frequently been made by hardliners.

    A number of senior opposition figures are currently on trial in Tehran accused of conspiring with foreign powers to organise unrest.

     
  • johnpi 8:01 am on August 10, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections,

    Inquiry urged into Iran anti-government protesters’ rape claims.

    A previous post here about the utility of rape in marginalizing protesters.

     
  • johnpi 6:55 pm on August 2, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, , , , , , ,

    Remember this clarion call for (especially Western) silence and indifference in the name of privacy and respect toward the martyr Neda, and against those who would appropriate her as a “sign,” a symbol?

    Here’s Neda’s mother in a BBC interview thanking the world for its attention:

    I don’t want people to forget her. People – Iranians – have all been very supportive. They come to me and congratulate me for having had such a brave daughter.

    And now I want you to do something for me. I want you, on my behalf, to thank everyone around the world, Iranians and non Iranians, people from every country and culture, people who in their own way, their own tradition, have mourned my child… everyone who lit a candle for her – every musician, who wrote songs for her, who wrote poems about her… you know, Neda loved the arts and music. I want to thank all of them.

    I want to thank politicians and leaders, from every country, at all levels, who remembered my child.

    Her death has been so painful – words can never describe my true feelings. But knowing that the world cried for her… that has comforted me.

    I am proud of her. The world sees her as a symbol, and that makes me happy.

    Muslims ‘not of the West’ need as much protection from Western Muslims who will colonize them as they do from any other oppressor.

    Who among us will rush in and do the patroniz…err…protecting? ;-)

     
  • thabet 12:41 am on July 23, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, ,

    The right-wing response to the Iranian elections was fairly stupid.

    Some on the left didn’t fare any better. Here’s every British Muslim’s favourite politician, George Galloway:

    [T]here are absolutely no grounds for the cats’ chorus of criticism and allegations now emanating from some quarters after the cookie crumbled the wrong way.

    George Galloway, like Yvonne Ridley, works for the Iranian funded Press TV. That explains only part of the story for their seemingly uncritical adulation of the Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Iranian state (one can be critical of the Western media coverage without the need to start championing one side or the other, in what is largely an internal Iranian issue).

    By the way, I should remind British Muslim fans of Galloway that he supported the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

     
  • thabet 6:16 am on July 22, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Iranian elections, ,

    Leftist infighting over the Iranian elections: Hamid Dabashi versus As’ad Abu Khalil.

     
  • johnpi 11:36 am on July 21, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, ,

    The House of Representatives foreign affairs committee will hold hearings tomorrow on recent developments in Iran and implications for US foreign policy- and Nico Pitney reports that it has stacked the inivited guest list with hardcore millitarist neoconservatives.

    Attendees include Patrick Clawson and Michael Rubin.

    Pitney recommends Trita Parsi of NIAC. Here’s what you can do:

    This panel really needs some balance. If you’re interested in calling the committee and suggesting Trita Parsi (or someone else), you can reach them at (202) 225-5021. You can also call the offices of members of the committee — here are a few:

    – Rep. Gary Ackerman (Chairman, Subcommittee On the Middle East and South Asia): 202-225-2601
    – Rep. Donald Payne: 202-225-3436
    – Rep. Brad Sherman: 202-225-5911
    – Rep. Bill Delahunt: 202-225-3111
    – Rep. Lynn Woolsey: 202-225-5161
    – Rep. Barbara Lee: 202-225-2661
    – Rep. Keith Ellison: 202-225-4755

     
  • johnpi 11:19 am on July 19, 2009 | 3 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections,

    Iranians chant “Death to Russia” at Friday prayers.

    Traditionally at Friday Prayer, people are encouraged to chant “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” but today, they defiantly shouted “Death to Russia”, in referring to opposition accusations that Russia has been involved in training repression forces of the regime.

    In the following video, recorded from a short distance of the outdoor gathering, you can hear a male voice over the loudspeaker screaming “Death to America”, “Death to the hypocrites” and “Death to England”, while the crowd roars “Death to Russia!” in response EVERY time.

    Link.

     
  • johnpi 11:17 am on July 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, ,

    Another story of state-directed prison rape out of Iran – this time it’s a woman.

    Taraneh’s is not the first allegation of brutal raping of a post-election protester — according to the UK Guardian, an 18 year old boy in Shiraz was repeatedly gang raped by prison officials while in detention after being arrested for participating in the protests on June 15. That boy’s father won’t let him back in the family home.

    Despite its agitations for reform, Iranian society remains traditional, according to Iranian-British blogger Potkin Azarmehr, and it’s the stigma of rape that is being used as a weapon against the protesters. “By killing protesters, the government makes martyrs of them, but by raping them and allowing them to live, it makes them shunned in society,” Azarmehr said….

    Prison abuse and torture is also about marking these victims as defiled human beings — it’s like a scarlet letter of social isolation against them, to deny them the community support and strength which they need to move past those memories and not be defined by them. This is where others can step in and change the very attitudes toward abuse which so many institutions count on when they commit these crimes.

    That last sentence is very important for the rest of us, wherever and among whoever we make our community.

     
  • johnpi 8:21 pm on July 12, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, , , ,

    A warning about Facebook.

    As reported at NIAC:

    A scary anecdote from Iran. A trusted colleague – who is married to an Iranian-American and would thus prefer to stay anonymous – has told me of a very disturbing episode that happened to her friend, another Iranian-American, as she was flying to Iran last week. On passing through the immigration control at the airport in Tehran, she was asked by the officers if she has a Facebook account. When she said “no”, the officers pulled up a laptop and searched for her name on Facebook. They found her account and noted down the names of her Facebook friends.

    Anyone concerned about something like this happening to them should be aware that Facebook has extensive privacy controls.

     
  • johnpi 4:49 am on July 9, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections,

    A group called Voice of the Voiceless based in Southern California has produced an ad called, “I am Neda.”

    Here’s the ad, and here’s the casting call for the ad:

    Neda was the face of the faceless. She is just one of the thousands of unnamed people who simply vanish without a trace in Iran and around the world.

    In Farsi, Neda means “voice”– so those of us who have been blessed with the freedom to use it, will communicate the words of those are unable to to. We will be taking the words of Iranians, their wants and desires, and we will become their voice.

    Join us this Saturday anytime from 9:30 A.M.-2:00 P.M. to show your support and get their voices heard.

    This project is meant to show universal support–we want to see all races, ages (18 & up) and genders. So pass this along to all your friends, family and coworkers.

     
  • johnpi 7:54 pm on July 7, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Iranian elections,

    More arrested journalists/bloggers in Iran.

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 9:08 am on July 6, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections

    The Los Angeles Times is reporting that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards has announced that it has taken over the country. The actual quotes in the article show the Guards commander only saying that they have taken over control of responsibility for the nation’s security (which is not the same thing). Only in the Times paraphrase are the words “takeover of the country” used.

    I support the protesters and this assertion tends to confirm their worst fears, but this looks like twisted information/dishonest framing and I call bullshit.

     
  • johnpi 6:01 am on July 4, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Fourth of July, , Iranian elections

    Juan Cole has put together a remembrance of the recent (and ongoing) Iranian protests in pictures and film on the occasion of the American celebration of its Declaration of Independence.

    Also he posts this response from Fareed Zakaria to a a question put to him on CNN about whether the US should bomb Iran…

    Zakaria: It would be bizarre to bomb Iran– which means bombing Iranians — now that we have seen the inside of that country. Moussavi and his supporters want a less confrontational approach to the world. So do many members of the establishment.

    Moussavi attacked Ahmadinejad repeatedly for his aggressive foreign policy. So we now know the answer to the question, “Are there moderates in Iran?” Yes, millions of them.’

    Happy Fourth of July everyone…

     
  • johnpi 10:24 pm on July 2, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Iranian elections,

    Neda’s death inspires UC Irvine teach-in on Iran – more than 1,000 people attend 12-hour event.

    It would be nice to have such a well-attended teach-in on the Palestinian issue, however the US media seems to have graciously decided to practice the adab we Muslims demand of them and protect the Palestinians ‘privacy’ and not show any images of what actual happens to Palestinians. Palestinians everywhere and the entire Muslim world breathe a collective sigh of relief…

    A note about the teach-in: Many of the attendees expressed solidarity with the Iranians over shared values to protect human rights, which some of us have said there is “great wisdom hikma” in resisting…

     
  • johnpi 9:45 pm on July 2, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , , , ,

    Max Blumenthal praises the “courageous decision” of the US media for broadcasting Neda’s killing “vividly and repeatedly.” Wishes they would do the same for Palestinian victims.

    The outpouring of American public sympathy for Iranian demonstrators might never have occurred had cable news outlets not made the courageous decision to broadcast Neda’s killing vividly and repeatedly.

    Yet when Palestinians employ direct action tactics to protest Israeli oppression, and when Israeli forces respond with wanton brutality, they are ignored by the US media, even when footage is already available through online sources.

     
  • johnpi 5:17 pm on July 2, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , , ,

    Israel and American military planners foiled by Western media images of Muslim women (and men).

    NEW YORK — In the weeks since moderate Iranians threw down the gauntlet to the conservative clerics who run their lives, Israel has watched the unfolding drama with trepidation….

    …As long as the vacant stare of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Hilterian rants of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad embodied “Iran,” Israel could avoid thinking too seriously about what military types call “collateral damage.” Many suspected Iranian nuclear facilities were located in busy suburbs, some beneath busy cities.

    Now, however, Iran has donned a very different face — not just that of Neda, the young protester whose tragic death has been watched by millions on YouTube. The new face Iran has turned to the world is a composite. Yes, the mullah and Ahmadinnerjacket are still in there, but so are hundreds of thousands of people risking their skin to repudiate them.

    This is not a minor issue for Israel, nor for American military planners who might have harbored hopes of reviving the idea of a preemptive strike on Iranian nuclear sites.

    Heard it here first.

     
  • johnpi 2:28 pm on July 1, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, ,

    At the same time that [some] actual Iranians are authenticly trying to protect their political rights, some Western right-wingers are attempting to co-opt their efforts.

    A website called nedanet.org has been formed by a network of [probably mostly] right-wing hackers who are offering bandwidth for communication and Internet identity-obscuring technologies to assist “the Iranian revolutionaries.”

    Who is nedanet? All of it’s participants are super-secret deep cover ‘interested citizens’ who wish to remain anonymous, but one brave man (turn on the fan so the wind blows in his hair) has opted to be the public face of nedanet: Eric S. Raymond.

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 8:32 pm on June 30, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, , , , , , ,

    A pejorative comment about ‘what Western media manipulation has done’ to Neda:

    Her image is no longer that of a woman in death but rather a sign of Iran’s oppressive regime.

    Some facts about who has acted to make Neda a sign of Iran’s repressive regime, and some facts about who has acted vigorously in defense of Neda’s ‘privacy.’ From Wikipedia:

    * After being pronounced dead at Shariati hospital, Agha-Soltan was buried at the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran; she was denied a proper funeral by government authorities.

    * On June 23, it was reported that government authorities directed Agha-Soltan’s family to remove the black mourning banners that were hanging outside their residence in the Tehran neighborhood of Tehranpars in order to prevent the home from becoming a place of pilgrimage.

    * On June 24, The Guardian reported the results of interviews of neighbours who claimed that Agha-Soltan’s family was forced to vacate their apartment some days after her death.

    * The Iranian government has issued a ban on collective prayers in mosques for Agha-Soltan in the aftermath of the incident.

    * Soona Samsami, the executive director of the Women’s Freedom Forum, who has been relaying information about the protests inside Iran to the international media, told the foreign press that Agha-Soltan’s immediate family were threatened by authorities if they permitted a gathering to mourn her. Samsami stated, “They were threatened that if people wanted to gather there the family would be charged and punished.”

    * On June 22, Iranian riot police dispersed a crowd of between 200 and 1,000 protesters with live ammunition and tear gas who had gathered in Tehran’s Haft-e Tir Square after online calls for protesters to pay tribute to Agha-Soltan and others killed during the demonstrations.

    * On that same day, about 70 mourners gathered outside Niloufar mosque in Abbas Abad, where the Agha-Soltan family attended services. A leaflet posted on the mosque’s door read, “There is no commemoration here for Neda Agha Soltan.” Many in the crowd wore black. Some recited poems. After about ten minutes, 20 Basij paramilitary arrived on motorcycles and dispersed the attendees.

    Embedded in these various bullets points are reports of lots and lots of non-Western Muslims – real people, with real feelings and real rights trying to take control of their own destinies and identities, but some Western Muslims clearly seek to diminish or ignore them. Therefore ‘Muslim sources’ and ‘feminist sources’ should be deconstructed of the license these labels give them to speak with authority about non-Western and female perspectives.

     
  • johnpi 8:28 pm on June 30, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Iranian elections, , , , , , ,

    Silence and invisibility for the sake of Neda:

    Her image is no longer that of a woman in death but rather a sign of Iran’s oppressive regime. Neda’s agency is denied, and in her passing we cannot afford her privacy but continually reproduce an image of her death which to me resembles a Warhol pop art print. Neva Mwiti writes a really strong analysis of Stolen and the controversy surrounding it. She asks whether or not “film producers, brand gurus and marketers from the West will realise and respect that the third world is not fodder for their notoriety, but actually made up real people, with real feelings and real rights over their own destinies and identities.” I think her comments can be applied to the majority (if not all) representations of women like Faitim and Neda. When will these women be given the respect they deserve?

    Neda’s agency is denied by limiting the scope of her possible desires to one – “privacy,” a state of silence and invisibility.

    Next we should examine what we know about Neda’s thoughts on the political behavior she was engaged in and was killed for. From Wikipedia:

    * Her music teacher, Hamid Panahi, who was accompanying Agha-Soltan during the protest, told the media: “She couldn’t stand the injustice of it… All she wanted was the proper vote of the people to be counted. She wanted to show with her presence that, ‘I’m here, I also voted, and my vote wasn’t counted’. It was a very peaceful act of protest, without any violence.”

    * Caspian Makan (Agha-Soltan’s fiancé) told BBC: “Neda had said that even if she lost her life and got a bullet in her heart, she would carry on”.

    She was engaged in an act of expression when she died, in a public place for all to know and see. She stepped out of anything that was part of her normal regular life to be public and to be heard. To then say that the highest respect we can pay her is “privacy” is to steal the agency – the meaning that she ascribed to the last few minutes of her life.

    Speaking of non-Western perspectives, this commenter at Racialicious was fairly bursting with respect for them:

    If I am not mistaken…it is the Iranian dissidents who are pimping Neda Soltani’s blood-ridden face all over the Internet. It is a certain political group of Iranians who are dying for attention from the Western corporate media.

    Paraphrased thusly: “I just hate non-Westerners who won’t get with my program and let me colonize them…”

     
  • johnpi 4:00 pm on June 30, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Iranian elections, , , , , ,

    It only seems like women are playing a central role in the Iranian election protests because of Western media manipulation – not.

    Reports have surfaced that there is no more space left for women in Tehran’s official prisons. Human rights’ activists report on unsanitary and inappropriate conditions for imprisoned women protesters in Iran’s overcrowded jails. At least 60 of imprisoned women are in the public wards and have only been given a blanket and are forced to sleep in corridors.

     
  • johnpi 8:49 pm on June 29, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Iranian elections, ,

    More pictures and profiles of journalists and bloggers that have been arrested in the post-election crackdown in Iran after the jump.

    Why pay attention to Muslim bloggers and journalists there that have been arrested? Because they asked for and appreciate the support from those of us here in the West…Here’s Omidreza Mirsayafi, an Iranian blogger who was arrested for his blogging activities and died in Evin prison in March writing to a western reporter:

    “When I see your post on the mentiond [sic] website, I became so happy that a journalist in other corner of world writes about the situations of Iranians journalist & bloggers and is concerned about us.”

    Please ignore fellow Westerners – Muslim or otherwise – who accuse you of exploitation, appropriation, practicing ‘Western gaze’ (“a voyeuristic glimpse into the post-revolutionary real”) or any other diversions and stay focused on the events unfolding there, and the people caught up in them, some of whom are taking great risks “to present an unaverted gaze on political unrest for the world outside Iran.”

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 2:22 pm on June 29, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Iranian elections, ,

    In Egypt, police shut down Iran solidarity march.

    An attempt by Egyptians to march in solidarity with Iranian protesters and to honor Neda-Agha Soltan — whose death earlier this month made her the icon of Iran’s opposition movement — was halted by security forces in Cairo over the weekend.

    The Cairo rally was called by democracy activist and opposition leader Ayman Nour and was scheduled to be held in Talaat Harb square in the Egyptian capital’s downtown. But dozens of security vehicles surrounded Nour and his fellow protesters upon their arrival at the square. Police arrested four protesters belonging to Nour’s party and prevented reporters from covering the event.

    “It is very ironic how Egyptian authorities, who earlier expressed their dismay against the Iranian regime’s oppressive means of handling protesters, are now banning us from a march that shares the same perspective,” Nour said at a news conference at his party’s headquarters. “Such acts only prove one thing and it is that the Egyptian and Iranian regimes are quite the same when it comes to their autocratic path and rejection of democracy.”

     
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