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Protests in Iran (2022)

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  • Protests in Iran (2022)

    Iranians protested in Tehran over Mahsa Amini's death in police custody : NPR
    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iranians took to the streets of the capital on Monday to protest the death of a young woman who had been detained for violating the country's conservative dress code.

    The semiofficial Fars news agency said students in many Tehran universities gathered in protest, demanding an investigation into the death of Mahsa Amini and the dismantling of the morality police, who were holding her when she died.

    Witnesses said demonstrators poured into Keshavarz Boulevard, a central thoroughfare, chanting "Death to the Dictator." They also chanted against the police and damaged a police vehicle. The witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity out of security concerns.

    Late on Monday, Associated Press reporters saw torched trash bins and rocks strewn across some downtown intersections as the smell of tear gas hovered in the air. Police closed roads leading to the central Vali-e Asr square. Plainclothes security forces and groups of riot police could be seen throughout the area, and mobile internet service was down in central Tehran.

    Dozens of protesters on motorbikes briefly appeared at a couple of junctions, where they overturned trash cans and chanted against authorities before speeding off.

    Demonstrations continued in other cities


    Videos circulating on social media meanwhile showed a third day of demonstrations in Kurdish cities in western Iran as well as the northern city of Rasht and a university in the central city of Isfahan. The Associated Press could not independently verify the authenticity of the footage.

    The morality police detained the 22-year-old Amini last Tuesday for not covering her hair with the Islamic headscarf, known as hijab, which is mandatory for Iranian women.

    Police say she died of a heart attack and deny that she was mistreated. They released closed-circuit video footage last week purportedly showing the moment she collapsed. Her family says she had no history of heart trouble.

    Amini, who was Kurdish, was buried Saturday in her home city of Saqez in western Iran. Protests erupted there after her funeral and police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators on Saturday and Sunday. Several protesters were arrested.

    Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi, who departed for New York on Monday to address the U.N. General Assembly, has ordered an investigation and vowed to pursue the case in a phone call with Amini's family. The judiciary has launched a probe, and a parliamentary committee is also looking into the incident.

    The hijab has been compulsory for women in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the morality police are charged with enforcing that and other restrictions. The force has been criticized in recent years, especially over its treatment of young women.

    Dozens of women removed their headscarves in protest in 2017. Iranians have also taken to the streets in recent years in response to an economic crisis exacerbated by Western sanctions linked to Iran's nuclear program.
    Rumors of military infighting and growing protests outside of Tehran. Along with the Ayatollah's health seemingly failing, things seem to be heating up in Iran.
    "Draft beer, not people."

  • #2
    The pictures of the courage displayed by hundreds; hell thousands, of girls and young women who are risking their well-being,
    maybe lives, simply demanding basic human rights is like déją vu!
    They bring back memories of when their mothers and grandmothers in the late 70’s demanded the same rights!
    When they were at amongst those forcing the Shah and his repressive regime from power.
    That they were cruelly misled, and that some of them lost their lives in proving the old saying: “Be careful in what you wish for, you might get it”!
    They took to the streets in demanding a regime change, they got it!
    They exchanged the chains of a political dictatorship, for those of a tyrannical theocratic regime.
    Today their daughters and granddaughters are in the forefront, fighting the same fight, at the same risk!
    Wish them better luck!!!
    When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Amled View Post
      The pictures of the courage displayed by hundreds; hell thousands, of girls and young women who are risking their well-being,
      maybe lives, simply demanding basic human rights is like déją vu!
      They bring back memories of when their mothers and grandmothers in the late 70’s demanded the same rights!
      When they were at amongst those forcing the Shah and his repressive regime from power.
      That they were cruelly misled, and that some of them lost their lives in proving the old saying: “Be careful in what you wish for, you might get it”!
      They took to the streets in demanding a regime change, they got it!
      They exchanged the chains of a political dictatorship, for those of a tyrannical theocratic regime.
      Today their daughters and granddaughters are in the forefront, fighting the same fight, at the same risk!
      Wish them better luck!!!
      All Iranian or Persian peoples that I ever met are just lovely people. How did their ancient cultured people come to this. I hope the people regain their land from these monsters.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Joćo View Post
        All Iranian or Persian peoples that I ever met are just lovely people. How did their ancient cultured people come to this. I hope the people regain their land from these monsters.
        https://www.iranintl.com/en/202211068924
        "Monsters" is too lenient a term to use against anyone who would send around a thousand young people to the gallows!
        And for what?
        Simply for demonstrating for basic civil rights!!!
        They go in for public executions in Iran don’t they?
        Well here’s a chance for them to show their contempt of the outside world!
        Mass executions in city squares, to the accompaniment of Billy Holiday’s rendition of “Strange Fruit” booming over loud-speakers!!!


        When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Amled View Post

          https://www.iranintl.com/en/202211068924
          "Monsters" is too lenient a term to use against anyone who would send around a thousand young people to the gallows!
          And for what?
          Simply for demonstrating for basic civil rights!!!
          They go in for public executions in Iran don’t they?
          Well here’s a chance for them to show their contempt of the outside world!
          Mass executions in city squares, to the accompaniment of Billy Holiday’s rendition of “Strange Fruit” booming over loud-speakers!!!

          The Shah also was a bad leader, but this young lady being treated in this way is beyond Forgiveness and for the authority to hide it is a cancer that must be removed. Again, Lovely people but bad leaders

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Amled View Post

            https://www.iranintl.com/en/202211068924
            "Monsters" is too lenient a term to use against anyone who would send around a thousand young people to the gallows!
            And for what?
            Simply for demonstrating for basic civil rights!!!
            They go in for public executions in Iran don’t they?
            Well here’s a chance for them to show their contempt of the outside world!
            Mass executions in city squares, to the accompaniment of Billy Holiday’s rendition of “Strange Fruit” booming over loud-speakers!!!

            Do they actually have the political will to carry out these executions?

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Archdude View Post

              Do they actually have the political will to carry out these executions?
              To be honest I don’t know.
              Resorting to public executions might be a tad too extreme even for theocratic extremists, that said…
              …there have been death sentences handed down, mass arrests, reports of beatings, torture and rapes of both men and women.
              In other words the usual panoply of evil associated with a Secret Police force, operating with the blessings of a sitting regime.
              Also an Autocratic Police State has been known to go to extremes when they feel their power threatened!
              Especially when the powers-that-are in Iran, must have in memory that the people of Iran have once before toppled an Autocratic regime from power!
              When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Amled View Post

                To be honest I don’t know.
                Resorting to public executions might be a tad too extreme even for theocratic extremists, that said…
                …there have been death sentences handed down, mass arrests, reports of beatings, torture and rapes of both men and women.
                In other words the usual panoply of evil associated with a Secret Police force, operating with the blessings of a sitting regime.
                Also an Autocratic Police State has been known to go to extremes when they feel their power threatened!
                Especially when the powers-that-are in Iran, must have in memory that the people of Iran have once before toppled an Autocratic regime from power!
                Thanks for educating me on this matter.

                Comment

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