Skip navigation
Sidebar -

Advanced search options →

Welcome

Welcome to CEMB forum.
Please login or register. Did you miss your activation email?

Donations

Help keep the Forum going!
Click on Kitty to donate:

Kitty is lost

Recent Posts


What's happened to the fo...
Today at 12:54 AM

New Britain
Today at 12:49 AM

Qur'anic studies today
April 23, 2024, 06:50 AM

Do humans have needed kno...
April 20, 2024, 12:02 PM

Lights on the way
by akay
April 19, 2024, 04:40 PM

اضواء على الطريق ....... ...
by akay
April 19, 2024, 12:50 PM

Do humans have needed kno...
April 19, 2024, 04:17 AM

Iran launches drones
April 13, 2024, 09:56 PM

عيد مبارك للجميع! ^_^
by akay
April 12, 2024, 04:01 PM

Eid-Al-Fitr
by akay
April 12, 2024, 12:06 PM

Mock Them and Move on., ...
January 30, 2024, 10:44 AM

Pro Israel or Pro Palesti...
January 29, 2024, 01:53 PM

Theme Changer

 Topic: Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?

 (Read 59319 times)
  • Previous page 1 2 3 45 6 ... 12 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #90 - January 03, 2018, 02:54 PM

    “Death to the BBC”:

    https://mobile.twitter.com/rezaparchizadeh/status/948528261734260737

    https://mobile.twitter.com/rezaparchizadeh/status/948557704452288512

    ... and the latest report from the BBC:

    Iran protests: General declares 'sedition' defeated
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #91 - January 03, 2018, 04:48 PM

    Radio broadcast: https://www.wnyc.org/story/death-toll-rises-concerns-grow-over-iranian-protests/
    Quote
    Thomas Erdbrink, Tehran bureau chief for The New York Times, and Borzou Daragahi, Middle East correspondent for BuzzFeed News in Istanbul, share the latest updates from on the ground and discuss how the current unrest could potentially impact the stability of the region

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #92 - January 03, 2018, 07:02 PM

    This is claimed to be a version of the demands of the protesters. It isn’t clear who it represents.

    https://english.alarabiya.net/en/features/2018/01/03/Know-the-Nine-key-demands-of-the-Iranian-protestors.html
    Quote
    As protests across Iran look to surpass the one-week mark, demonstrators in at least 70 cities have begun formulating their demands as posters and list of their wishes began to spread both on the ground and on social media.

    This follows seven days of constant protests in major cities that have left 21 people dead and as Iran's Revolutionary Guards have deployed forces to three provinces to put down an eruption of anti-government unrest, their commander said on Wednesday.

    While the slogan of “bread, freedom and work” remains the overall theme of protests, one list appeared to showed nine specific demands:

    1) A referendum on founding the future regime, as most of the demonstrators called for a republican system similar to the developed countries and the overthrowing of the rule of of the Faqih.

    2) Undermining the ideology of the Faqih regime and the liberation of Iranian society from the illusion of leadership of the Shiite world and its incursion into the Islamic world and eliminate the slogan of exporting the revolution.

    3) Abolishing the forced veil and endorsing the principle of women's free choice of appearance and clothing.

    4) Freedom of the media, including free access to information, the Internet, social networks and the abolition of censorship.

    5) Separating religion from politics and removing religious institutions and estates from politics and handing the administration of state affairs over to a government of technocrats.

    6) An independent, just and impartial judiciary that is not subjected to any authority, power or political current.

    7) Equal distribution of wealth and development plans to eradicate poverty, unemployment and deprivation.

    8  Free, fair and transparent elections under international supervision.

    9) Equality between women and men and the rejecting all forms of discrimination, violence and abuse against women in all fields.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #93 - January 03, 2018, 07:20 PM

    Why Iran is protesting
    Quote
    This is the third mass uprising in Iran in my lifetime. In July 1999, the peaceful protest of students over freedom of speech spread into a considerable uprising. In June 2009, people took to streets to demand a recount of disputed votes in the presidential election, which began the Green Movement. Those were both pushes for civil rights, demanding more flexibility and accountability from the government. They took place largely in Tehran, and attracted the middle class and the university educated. Both were peaceful and persistently nonviolent.

    The current unrest looks different. So far, the middle class and the highly educated have been more witnesses than participants. Nonviolence is not a sacred principle. The protests first intensified in small religious towns all over the country, where the government used to take its support for granted. Metropolitan areas have so far lagged behind.

    Demands like freedom of speech and the rights of women and religious minorities have, for the most part, been either absent or vaguely implied. In one of the rare videos of protesters talking to the news media, they all mention unemployment, inflation and the looting of national wealth: A woman asks President Hassan Rouhani to live on only her salary of $300 a month; a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war says he considers himself among “the forgotten”; an elderly woman talks about her 75-year-old husband, who works long hours to make ends meet. The chants are also different this time. “Where is my vote?” and “Free political prisoners!” dominated in 2009. Today they have been replaced with “No to inflation!” and “Down with embezzlers!” and “Leave the country alone, mullahs.”

    Protests over economic grievances are hardly new in Iran: riots over inflation in Islamshahr and Mashad in the 1990s, frequent strikes by the bus drivers union in the 2000s, protests by schoolteachers over unpaid wages. Those voices were barely heard. They came from the bottom of society and were either stifled halfway through by the government or drowned out by civil rights activists with better access to the international media. They have now forced their way to the surface and emerged as a resonant, nationwide cry for justice and equality.

    Since the 1979 revolution, Iranian politics has been defined by a split between reformists and principlists, conservatives who say they are devoted to the principles of the revolution. During the 1999 and 2009 uprisings, the protesters enjoyed support from powerful reformists. This time, the dichotomy has been transcended. The demonstrators don’t want support from anyone associated with the status quo, including Mr. Rouhani, the reformist president. No wonder prominent reformist figures, even Ebrahim Nabavi, a dissident journalist living in exile, disparaged the protesters as “the potato-eating mob.”

    Iranian economists and intellectuals have long warned that something like this could happen. Even the figures relatively close to the government set off the alarm. In early 2015, Mohsen Renani, professor of economy at the University of Isfahan, wrote an open letter to the Guardian Council, Iran’s highest clerical body and one of the country’s most powerful institutions, expressing deep concern over rising inflation and government incompetence. Mr. Renani predicted that if issues like growing unemployment were not addressed within two years, Iran would face turmoil. Parviz Sedaghat, another prominent political economist, published an article just before the protests broke out discussing how Iran’s economic system has produced first-class and second-class citizens, and warning that some government institutions have become economic conglomerates more powerful than the state. A detailed study published last month by the BBC’s Farsi-language service demonstrated the alarming decline of household income over the past decade. Mr. Rouhani’s austerity budget, submitted to Parliament on Dec. 10, only poured fuel on the rising fire.

    Unlike during the first decades of the post-revolutionary Iran, the rich now heedlessly flaunt their wealth. Until the mid-2000s, the gentlemen’s agreement among the embezzlers held that they keep a modest appearance at home and launder their money in Dubai and Toronto. In the most famous case, Mahmoud Reza Khavari, the former managing director of Bank Melli, made off with hundreds of millions of dollars and became a real estate mogul in Toronto. That generation cared about appearances and never dropped the veneer of fealty to the ideals of the 1979 revolution. Their millennial offspring, on the other hand, hardly care. Wealthy young Iranians act like a new aristocratic class unaware of the sources of their wealth. They brazenly drive Porsches and Maseratis through the streets of Tehran before the eyes of the poor and post about their wealth on Instagram. The photos travel across apps and social media and enrage the hardworking people in other cities. Iranians see pictures of the family members of the authorities drinking and hanging out on beaches around the world, while their daughters are arrested over a fallen head scarf and their sons are jailed for buying alcohol. The double standard has cultivated an enormous public humiliation.

    The people today at the top of power pyramid in Iran were involved in the 1979 revolution and witnessed firsthand how when the shah decided he had “heard the voice of the revolution,” he marked the beginning of his end. That impression has been reinforced by the Arab Spring: Zine el-Abedine Bin Ali of Tunisia and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt tried to appease protesters and were forced from power. Bashar al-Assad of Syria never even recognized the existence of opposition and he remains in office.

    Iran has lived through multiple convulsions. The government has mastered the art of survival through crises. They may well survive this round as well but something has fundamentally changed: The unquestioning support of the rural people they relied on against the discontent of the metropolitan elite is no more. Now everyone seems unhappy.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #94 - January 03, 2018, 08:07 PM

    Here’s why Iran’s middle class is mostly sitting out the protests
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #95 - January 03, 2018, 08:13 PM

    The massive new protests in Iran, explained
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #96 - January 03, 2018, 10:13 PM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/IranWonk/status/948670109568176128
    Quote
    RE Narrative that #Tehran/middle class is not(/less) involved in #IranProtests: How do you tell socio-economic status from videos? I've been through 40 videos said 2b from yesterday. Having trouble determining numbers & gender-balance for most, let alone socio-economic makeup.

    Seriously if someone has way(s) to determine I would love to learn. I can see how journalists might assume since reformist/Green Movement leaders & activist contacts are out of loop & tell them this. I just haven't been able to tell through my crude methods.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #97 - January 04, 2018, 09:50 AM

    Southern California's Iranian diaspora watches protests from the edge of their seats
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #98 - January 04, 2018, 10:05 AM

    Why the other Iran is taking to the streets
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #99 - January 04, 2018, 11:51 AM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/rezaparchizadeh/status/948882680732667905
    Quote
    For those who wonder why #IranianProtesters chant "death to BBC [Farsi]" I recommend reading this petition against that organization's abuse of freedom of speech which was drafted by my friends six months ago.


    Petition: https://www.change.org/p/tony-hall-director-general-bbc-bbc-should-stop-advocating-iri-and-to-band-hosting-ali-alizadeh-and-other-pro-regimes
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #100 - January 04, 2018, 12:00 PM

    Maryam Namazie and Fariborz Pooya - A new dawn for Iran and the world: "We don't want an Islamic regime!"
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=ry_yDEklGMc
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #101 - January 04, 2018, 01:27 PM

    In crackdown on protests, Iranian regime targets freedom to inform
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #102 - January 04, 2018, 07:20 PM

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/IranWonk/status/948944559530225666
    Quote
    Have #IranProtests dropped off? Whether or not this is the case its nature & implications will continue 2b debated. Now that I'm no longer traveling, have regular Internet access & little bit of free time I'm doing quick & dirty analysis of Iran Protest Day 06 (02 Jan) videos.

    Quote
    First few days of #IranProtests appear to have largely taken place in small cities, towns & villages (what some have taken to calling #Iran's "flyover country"). By Day 06 majority (at least according to video set) appear to have taken place in medium-to-large urban area.

    Quote
    A prominent narrative about #IranProtests is that they're about socio-economic grievances of #Iranian working class. Whatever micro-grievances of individual protestors or their socio-economic background, this narrative isn't reflected in Day 05 & Day 06 videos "reviewed".

    Quote
    If #IranProtests are mainly about socio-economic grievances, which are real & major issue in #Iran, I feel like I should have seen at least ONE clear slogan on it. And at least from videos can't say much about socio-economic background or gender balance of protests.

    Quote
    But even if #IranProtests are suppressed, doesn't mean won't be very consequential, either in domestic political competition b/w principlists/#IRGC & moderates/#Rouhani (who will both try to co-opt) or as rumble of larger earthquake to come.

    Quote
    And remember take all of this with grain of salt. I am studying #IranProtests through a single primary source (videos) that I can't independently authenticate in terms of time and location. Thread mainly intended to question existing narratives & not to draw any firm conclusions.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #103 - January 04, 2018, 07:37 PM

    I’m not sure if this is confirmed, and if it is whether it’s clearly connected to the protests. Incidentally one effect of the protests has been to send oil prices up to their highest since 2015 as markets price in the uncertainty.

    https://mobile.twitter.com/Raman_Ghavami/status/948964216425402374
    Quote
    Workers in #Asaluyeh and South Pars/North Dome Gas-Condensate field started their #cross_country_strike this afternoon at 1pm. Other oil and gas companies' workers will also join the strike on Saturday.

    Edit: also https://mobile.twitter.com/AmirToumaj/status/948946206272753665
    Quote
    Unverified report that workers in Oslaviyeh and South Pars oil and gas facilities have gone on strike. They have previously gone on strikes to protest unpaid salaries.


    Video: https://mobile.twitter.com/KafirFajirFasiq/status/949042312902053890
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #104 - January 04, 2018, 07:50 PM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/farnazfassihi/status/948987382778310656
    Quote
    #Iran starts arresting student activists. Reports coming in of students getting picked up at home.

    https://mobile.twitter.com/farnazfassihi/status/949003001125056514
    Quote
    #IranProtests twist: Security officials says a number of arrested are children of affluent big name families of #Qom. New generation turning against old?

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/maryamnayebyazd/status/948964851594022912
    Quote
    The wave of arrests of university students continues in Iran.

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/Omid_M/status/949002605140807681
    Quote
    Dozens of student activists have been arrested in the past few days in Iran. Here are some of them:

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #105 - January 04, 2018, 08:07 PM

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/ntabrizy/status/948958970391212032
    Quote
    Here’s how Iranian newspapers are covering what’s going on in the #IranProtests.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #106 - January 04, 2018, 09:12 PM

    The slow destruction of Iran’s water supply

    https://mobile.twitter.com/nikahang/status/949017210550448133
    Quote
    It's very interesting that #IranApologists don't mention how the Islamic regime destroyed water resources and farmlands because of bad governance that led to unemployment & mass migrations from rural areas to ghettos and blame sanctions.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #107 - January 04, 2018, 10:04 PM

    Interview with Armin Navabi | https://mobile.twitter.com/ArminNavabi
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=share&v=tJ1HNT8Q5nU
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #108 - January 04, 2018, 10:17 PM

    https://iranwire.com/en/features/5073
    Quote
    After six days of anti-government protests that have caught Islamic Republic authorities off guard, a series of pro-regime (and regime-staged) demonstrations took place around the country on January 3, while the arrests of anti-regime protesters continued.

    The Islamic Republic’s top reformist politician, former president Mohammad Khatami, angered many when he presided over a meeting held by the reform-oriented Assembly of Militant Clerics. During the meeting, there was strong language condemning the anti-government protesters. But while much of the reporting on the protests in recent days has focused on reactions from top political figures, security forces have still been busy arresting hundreds of people around the country for taking part in anti-regime rallies.

    Speaking to police forces, the country’s police chief, Hossein Ashtari, claimed that 70 percent of the protests' organizers have been arrested, though he stopped short of giving a specific number. According to IranWire reports and analysis and statements issued by governors and security officials in several provinces, more than 1000 people have been arrested in provinces all over the country since protests began on December 28.

    In the province of Tehran, more than 450 people had been arrested by Tuesday, January 2 according to Ali Asghar Naserbakht, the province’s deputy governor-general. Officials in the province’s Malard County also said they arrested the “admin of a social media page that was creating rumors” — revealing the true nature of some of the arrests. This is one of many cases where officials have boasted about tracking people’s digital footprints and arresting them on the sole basis of their posts on social media.

    In Karaj, a large suburb of Tehran, more than 20 people have been arrested.

    In the holy city of Mashhad, where the protests began, the deputy prosecutor said 138 people had been arrested. In the central province of Isfahan, which was the epicenter of the protests on Monday, January 1, more than 100 people were arrested in different cities. Authorities had also arrested more than 100 in Markazi province, which includes the major city of Arak.

    In Hamedan, the governor said 150 had been arrested, mostly people aged between 17 to 25 and some of whom authorities said “had connections with networks and media abroad.”

    The northern province of Golestan, located on the shore of the Caspian, has also seen many arrests. According to its governor-general, 150 people were arrested for chanting slogans against the regime and for "disrupting the public order and security.”

    Officials in the provinces of Qom, Kermanshah, Mazandaran, Kerman, Zanjan, Ardabil, Lorestan and North Khorasan separately made claims about widespread arrests in their provinces.

    In the Lorestan city of Borujerd, a local official made international news by claiming to have arrested “a European citizen.”

    “This person was leading and directing the chaos and had been trained for this by espionage organizations in Europe and had come to Borujerd to run the riots,” said Hamidreza Bolhasani, Borujerd’s judiciary chief, in interviews with local media. Other officials noted that the arrested suspect is originally from Borujerd but has been naturalized as a citizen of a European country.

    Ali Sabzevari, Lorestan judiciary’s head of public relations, said the suspect had been arrested “while carrying a camera and other equipment.”

    As the protests continued, authorities kept up their harassment of civil society. As previously reported, a number of student activists have been arrested in the capital, and followers of the minority Shia religious order the Gonabadi Dervishes have also born the brunt. Adding to the previous arrests, Mehdi Azadbakht, a webmaster for the dervishes’ website Majzooban-e Noor, was reportedly arrested in Arak by Ministry of Intelligence forces.

    On January 3, Iranian state TV broadcast the confessions of some of those arrested. Iran is notorious for broadcasting torture-induced confessions on its official outlets. Run by the country’s hardliners, the state broadcaster is blamed — even by many establishment figures — for adding insult to injury by not reflecting people’s grievances. In his remarks on the protests, President Rouhani chided the broadcaster for not genuinely reflecting all sections of Iranian society.

    Iranians abroad have organized an active network of human rights organizations to respond to the events of the last week, and to report arrests. Monitoring the fate of more than 1000 arrested citizens is a heavy responsibility they now face. 

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #109 - January 04, 2018, 10:45 PM

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/LadaneNasseri/status/949012369744826369
    Quote
    1/ Foreign media reporters are concentrated in the capital, most are traditionally based in northern #Tehran where the more affluent Iranians also live. Less crowded, less traffic, cleaner air – but that’s not where the working class is

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #110 - January 05, 2018, 12:53 AM

    “Death to Khamenei” - Tehran tonight
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8llAfKIufm4&feature=youtu.be https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=hNNVlONyNGs
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #111 - January 05, 2018, 01:04 AM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/KafirFajirFasiq/status/949062207899426817
    Quote
    Video from the funeral of two protesters who were shot to death by basij/police. They were shot in Masjed-e Soleiman while protesting against the Iranian Regime.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #112 - January 05, 2018, 10:22 AM

    Iran protests: What Iranians in Turkey think
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #113 - January 05, 2018, 11:59 AM

    Armin Sadeghi - Iran: Bread. Jobs. Freedom.
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #114 - January 05, 2018, 12:12 PM

    Narges Bajoghli - Behind the Iran protests
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #115 - January 05, 2018, 02:11 PM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/almanshour/status/949234927404552194
    Quote
    The #Iranian regime is now targeting #Leftist students, esp. the new student-centered group at #Tehran Uni , which has a strong influence on this movement, in steering its demands & slogans towards Leftist demands for social justice, equality & freedom.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #116 - January 05, 2018, 02:21 PM

    http://forhumanliberation.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/2788-irans-streets-again.html
    Quote
    Those of us who have followed the news of workers’ strikes in Iran don’t need various kinds of conspiracy theories to interpret the recent protests. An example of such workers’ strikes is this speech by Khadijeh Nissi during the strike of Haft Tapeh Sugar Cane Plantation and Mill Complex about 2 months ago. There Nissi protests against several months of unpaid incomes and she demands that there be structural changes to how their workplace is managed. The conspiracy theories used to interpret the recent protests are typically built on a conservative official Raeisi plotting against the administration of Rouhani, and imperialistic interventions to create chaos in Iran. There has also been a tendency to condescendingly emphasize the increase of the price of eggs as the main trigger of the protests. Thus the protesters are considered to be manipulated against their own political interests while fighting for their rights to reasonably priced eggs.  The conflict between the conservative and the reformist factions of power in Iran is true, and the proxy wars in the region are also factual, and the price of eggs has increased—but the compound of politics and the economy is much more complex than such essays suggest.

    A recent earthquake in Kermanshah devastated the local population.  Images of victims of the earthquake exposed to the cold without homes and without access to the basic necessities of life demonstrated the government’s incompetence and corruption to the entire nation; it resulted in the crisis of authority or the crisis of the state as a whole, as Gramsci would have put it. Because of the economic sanctions, it was considered a crime to send aid from the US to the victims of the earthquake in Iran. That’s why any message of solidarity (with the recent protests) from US officials (and other advocates of the sanctions against Iran) are hardly to be taken seriously.  The helplessness of the victims of the earthquake are to be considered amongst the causes that fomented the collective urgency to protest against political-economic corruption, and the collective sense of closeness and mutual compassion.  In addition, the recent earthquakes in several cities brought people into the streets for safety measures. In Iran, taking over public spaces for a particular event often creates a place for protesting against the corrupt sociopolitical conditions.

    In a comprehensive essay in Persian, Parviz Sedaghat has explained that structural inflation and structural economic corruption are inherent to Iran’s economic system, and that changing them would require structural reforms that neither of the political factions, reformists or conservatives, show a willingness to conduct while  in power. The accumulation of wealth that has been taking place through the limitation of labour wages and the exploitation of nature, along with the intensification of deregulation policies, have had devastating consequences for the working and underclass sections of the society.  Para-governmental foundations, as actors above the laws of the state, along with budgets dedicated to ideological and geopolitical gains of the government, are part of the structural corruption.  Protesters have targeted the Iranian government’s “humanitarian” interventions in the region in their slogans such as “leave Syria alone, give Iran some compassion,” (soorieh ro raha kon, fekri be haal-e maa kon).  While nationalist views (which happen to echo Iran’s governmental discourses) explain geopolitical expenditures through discussions about national security and Iran’s self defense in a war-torn region (and the importance of war against terror)—the practical experience of marginalized people as a result of these expenditures is poverty and the inaccessibility of resources. As if it is the height of luxury for people of a war-torn region to call for anything other than security.

    For many of us the current protests began with a video of a girl who removed her headscarf in a solo-protest against forced hijab, while at Enqelab (Revolution) square in Tehran. Several Iranian social media commentators called her Iran’s statue of freedom.  It is important to consider all the components of inflation, economic corruption, social-political repression as the important factors against which people have recently protested.  This is the reason why one slogan keeps being repeated in various cities:  “employment, bread, freedom,” (kaar, naan, aazaadi).  It is ironic, therefore, that many commentators only emphasize inflation as the cause of the recent protests, while the president of Iran Ayatollah Hasan Rouhani has stated: “People aren’t in the streets merely for financial issues. They are not there only for bread, water, and money.  They also want us to open up the space for them.”

    The statement of several independent workers’ organizations in support of the street protests explains the reason for the recent demonstrations as follows:

    “Today, we see the eruption of the accumulation of working class people’s rage due to, on the one hand, looting and defalcation of milliards by highest officials, people, and financial institutions that are related to the government and, on the other hand, poverty and misery of millions of people, unemployment of millions of workers and youths, the beatings of street vendors and the killings of Kurdish koolbars [porters who carry commodities on their backs commuting between Iran and Iraq border], the imposition of wages several times below poverty level on workers, and the  imprisonment and torture in response to any demands of social justice and freedom.”

    Reformist discourses consider electoral politics as the only venue to relatively liberalize the state’s domestic policies and to pave the road for negotiations with the US for removing or lessening the economic sanctions against Iran.  While the reformists’ claims as being the only faction of the government in favor of nuclear negotiations is not entirely true, their more liberal sociopolitical policies (compared to the more conservative section of the government) is considered legitimate in Iran. Siding with the reformists is to favor the strengthening of liberal values. People legitimately find the space created by rupture between reformists and conservatives as a safer place for a critical stance towards the status quo.  Their demands, however, soon surpass what reformists are willing to undertake both ideologically and pragmatically.  Nevertheless, reformist discourses similar to conservative factions of the government are dedicated to full deregulation (neoliberalization) of the economy regardless of the impoverishing repercussions of such policies.  Furthermore, the redistributive demands and policies are considered to belong to a bygone era and such demands are relegated to society’s false consciousness.

    The reformist thinker Abbas Abdi has demanded that the Iranian government implements harsh tactics against the protesters, suggesting that the protesters are similar to the MKO armed activists of the early 80s and that they are organized by the revenge sensibilities of the governments of the region.  Abdi has asked why the Iranian government was harsh on the MKO armed activists in the 80s but is not harsh on the current protesters.  Another reformist thinker Mohammadreza Jalaeipour has suggested that political expression must be articulated through the ballots and not the streets.  He has suggested further that there cannot possibly be a space for politics now given that it is not time for elections.  Ebrahim Nabavi, a reformist satirist, tweeted:  “the movement of potato eaters is about to join the masses’ lines , […] bring your red baskets […].”  The term potato eaters refer to the impoverished neighborhoods that Ahmadinejad had tried to manipulate by distributing potatoes among them.  He calls protesters potato eaters given that the protesters have economic concerns, and he considers them manipulated perhaps because they’re not in the streets for the political benefits of the reformers.     

    The current protests do not enunciate their politics through the language of one of the factions of government. One of the slogans has been: “reformists, conservatives, the story is over,” (eslaahtalab, osoulgara, dige tamoome maajera).  The social class contrast that is made between the current protests (as working class) and the 2009 Green movement (as middle class) is groundless. The most active areas in the recent protests however, have been cities and villages long treated as peripheral. The prospect of a movement demanding transformation towards social justice, not expressing their demands in a state-oriented language nor through the discourses of the reformists, has horrified commentators who were formerly proponents of reform in Iran.

    There is a joke in Persian that goes as follows:  a man, mourning the death of his friend, is crying at his friend’s grave, when the dead friend suddenly emerges from the grave alive and well and and asks for a drink.  The mourning man is horrified by the return of his dead friend, hits him on his head with a shovel, and sends him back to the world of the dead.  The reaction to the recent protests in Iran by many progressive activists, who cry at the grave of meaningful change and transformation, has been similar to that of the mourning friend. Horrified by the class consciousness of the slogans shouted in the streets, and by the unfamiliarity of the political expressions which are not articulated in the language of the reformist faction in power in Iran, some political commentators have tried to hit these latest aspirations for change on the head in an attempt to keep the status quo intact in fears of dangers.

    The statement of several independent workers’ organizations states: “this time around it is us, the workers and people of Iran, who, with solidarity and coalition and continuation of our protests, will set our own destiny.” It remains to be seen how these protests continue, but it is plausible to think that we are watching the beginning of a collective movement for meaningful structural transformations in Iran.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #117 - January 05, 2018, 02:36 PM

    The Guards’ conspiracy theory about the protests
  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #118 - January 05, 2018, 02:42 PM

    Thread: https://mobile.twitter.com/IranWonk/status/949271049887211522
    Quote
    Has "Allah-o-Akbar" been big part of #IranProtests? With what frequency has it come up on each day? I am still building data set but haven't heard once. "Allah-o-Akbar" might be powerful for those who operate under IRI framework but not sure IranProtests is that kind of protest.

  • Iran uprising - is the end in sight for the Islamic regime?
     Reply #119 - January 05, 2018, 02:52 PM

    Bild talked to protesters in Iran: why the Iranians are so angry
  • Previous page 1 2 3 45 6 ... 12 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »