Saturday, June 20, 2009

Iranian People Defy The Ayatollah Today, Protests Hit Hard By Iranian Security Forces


The Ayatollah of Iran, just yesterday, told the people of Iran that they better accept the elections and stop the protesting...today, those people told him basically to fuck off as they took to the streets and unfortunately for them, they were met with beatings, tear gas and some shots fired by security forces. I am pretty surprised, quite frankly, that these protests have continued - even in the most emotional of times, these things wane down and when you throw in police action, they often fizzle very quickly but this whole thing is continuing. My prediction is that if we see even one more day of this, there are going to be some serious actions taken by the Iranian security forces and with it, I'm guessing we will see bodies start to stack up. I've looked, but no word from President Obama today.

Here's the story from Breitbart:


Fierce Tehran clashes between police, protesters

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Police beat protesters and fired tear gas and water cannons at thousands who rallied Saturday in open defiance of Iran's clerical government, sharply escalating the most serious internal conflict since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Witnesses described fierce clashes after some 3,000 protesters, many wearing black, chanted "Death to the dictator!" and "Death to dictatorship!" near Revolution Square in downtown Tehran. Police fired tear gas, water cannons and guns but it was not clear if they were firing live ammunition.

Some protesters appeared to be fighting back, setting fire to militia members' motorcycles, witnesses said. There were no immediate confirmed reports of fatalities and the head of Iran's police said his men had been ordered to act with restraint.
"We acted with leniency but I think from today on, we should resume law and confront more seriously," General Esmaeil Ahmadi Moghadam said on state television. "The events have become exhausting, bothersome and intolerable. I want them to take the police cautions seriously because we will definitely show a serious confrontation against those who violate rules."
Police and militia were blocking protesters from gathering on the main thoroughfare running east from Revolution Square to Freedom Square, the witnesses said.
A massive rally in Freedom Square Monday set off three consecutive days of protests demanding the government cancel and rerun June 12 elections that ended with a declaration of overwhelming victory for hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi says he won and Ahmadinejad stole the election through widespread fraud.
Mousavi has not been seen since a rally Thursday, but late Saturday he repeated his demand for the election to be annulled.
In a letter to Iran's Guardian Council, which investigates voting fraud allegations, Mousavi listed violations that he says are proof that the June 12 vote should be annulled. He said some ballot boxes had been sealed before voting began, thousands of his representatives had been expelled from polling stations and some mobile polling stations had ballot boxes filled with fake ballots.
"The Iranian nation will not believe this unjust and illegal" act, Mousavi said in the letter published on one of his official Web sites.
But Mousavi did not say whether he endorsed ongoing street protests or the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who sternly warned opposition leaders to end rallies or be held responsible for "the bloodshed, the violence and rioting" to come.
Khamenei's statement during Friday prayers effectively closed the door to Mousavi's demand for a new election.
As reports of street clashes became public, Iran's English-language state TV said that a suicide bombing at the shrine of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of central Tehran had killed one person and wounded eight. The report could not be independently confirmed due to government restrictions on independent reporting.
The channel also confirmed that police had used batons and other non-lethal weapons against what it called unauthorized demonstrations.
Amateur video showed dozens of Iranians running down a street after police fired tear gas at them. Shouts of "Allahu Akbar!"—"God is Great"—could be heard on the video, which could not be independently verified.
Helicopters hovered, ambulances raced through the streets and black smoke rose over the city.
The witnesses told The Associated Press that between 50 and 60 protesters were hospitalized after beatings by police and pro-government militia. People could be seen dragging away comrades bloodied by baton strikes.
Police clashed with protesters around Tehran immediately after the presidential election. Gunfire from a militia compound left at least seven dead, but further force had remained in check until Saturday.
Eyewitnesses said thousands of police and plainclothes militia members filled the streets to prevent rallies. Fire trucks took up positions in Revolution Square and riot police surrounded Tehran University, the site of recent clashes between protesters and security forces, one witness said.
Tehran Province Police Chief Ahmad Reza Radan said that police would "crack down on any gathering or protest rally which are being planned by some people." The head of the State Security Council also reiterated a warning to Mousavi that he would be held responsible if he encouraged protests.
Tehran University, which sits in the heart of downtown Tehran, was cordoned off by police and militia while students inside the university chanted "Death to the dictator!" witnesses said.
Shouts of "Viva Mousavi!" also could be heard. Witnesses said protesters wore black as a symbol of mourning for the dead and the allegedly stolen election, with wristbands in green, the emblem of Mousavi's self-described "Green Wave" movement.
All witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared government reprisals for speaking with the press. Iranian authorities have placed strict limits on the ability of foreign media to cover recent events, banning reporting from the street and allowing only phone interviews and information from officials sources such as state TV.
"I think the regime has taken an enormous risk in confronting this situation in the manner that they have," said Mehrdad Khonsari, a consultant to the London-based Center for Arab and Iranian Studies.
"Now they'll have to hold their ground and hope that people don't keep coming back. But history has taught us that people in these situations lose their initial sense of fear and become emboldened by brutality," he said.
Mousavi and the two other candidates who ran against Ahmadinejad had been invited to meet with Iran's Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 clerics and Islamic law experts close to Khamenei that oversees elections. Its spokesman told state TV that Mousavi and the reformist candidate Mahdi Karroubi did not attend.
The council has said it was prepared to conduct a limited recount of ballots at sites where candidates claim irregularities but Mousavi's supporters did not withdraw his demands for a new election.
Both houses of the U.S. Congress approved a resolution on Friday condemning "the ongoing violence" by the Iranian government and its suppression of the Internet and cell phones.
The government has blocked Web sites such as BBC Farsi, Facebook, Twitter and several pro-Mousavi sites that are conduits for Iranians to tell the world about protests and violence.
Text messaging has not been working normally for many days, and cell phone service in Tehran is frequently down.
In an interview taped Friday with CBS, Obama said he is very concerned by the "tenor and tone" of Khamenei's comments. He also said that how Iran's leaders "approach and deal with people who are, through peaceful means, trying to be heard" will signal "what Iran is and is not."
A spokesman for Mousavi said Friday the opposition leader was not under arrest but was not allowed to speak to journalists or stand at a microphone at rallies. Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf told the AP from Paris it was even becoming difficult to reach people close to Mousavi. He said he had not heard from Mousavi's camp since Khamenei's address.

4 comments:

Esquerita said...

As much as I would love to see some young Iranians rise up and smash the state we will probably have to endure four more years of Ahmedinijad. The Revolution of 1979 has run its course and lost all credibility - even some of the powerful clerics are pulling for Moussavi. Some of the same people who marched in 1979 to put this regime in power are out marching for Moussavi.

This is very encouraging - the days are numbered for Iran's version of the religious right.

sofa said...

is that DHS attacking protestors?

or are these the training videos for DHS vs america?

sofa said...

rita - the problem isn't right vs left: The problem is facists/statists vs individual freedom. When the state needs to control what people think and say and do. You are free to say stupid things, and we are free to belittle you and/or ignore you. It's not right/left, except to the lefties; because it's your fairy tale distortion. It is rather about statists vs individuals. Re-read the declaration of independence, and the constitution. It's not right/left - It is people vs statists. In Iran today, and America today, as it was in the 1700s. Samo-Samo.

Being killed by a facist marxist government (120 million killed by their own lefty governments in last century) is the little different than being killed by muslim collectivists (LEFTIES by your tired catagories). Either way, individuals are victims.

When Iranians hear the Iraqis discussing voting and representation and inalienable rights - It gets folks all across that region thinking... and this is how the philosophy of those inalienable rights gets spread into a region that desparately needs them. Injecting our western meme into their society (a strategy sometimes called "the long war").

What the Iranians want is some of those in-alienable rights they heard about. A very "right" thing. But statists in power don't want the people to have any power... sounds familiar. It's a recurring problem throughout the world, and throughout time.

When Saudis want elections, and then force them to be meaningful - Is when the jihad can be reigned in. It's a wise approach in a long war (if we don't stupidly kill ourself first). Those inalienable rights are a powerful idea IF and WHEN the people decide to stand up for them. Jefferson thought about once every generation would be necessary to beat back the collectivist/statists. We are due. And the Middle East is long overdue.

Esquerita said...

I know Iran does not fit in to our modern American Right/Left paradigm, but if the religious right got everything they wanted in this country you'd better believe that there would be some controls in individual freedoms - big time. I see the Mullahs/Taliban as having many of the same goals that the "Religious Right" do in America. Call it a "fairy tale distortion" if you want but there are politicians on both sides who would take away freedom to hold on to power.

As for the DHS - imagine if Liberals had taken to the streets after 2000 to protest, or Conservatives had taken to the streets in Nov. 2008. Sofa - you and I don't agree on much but I think we both know that our own government would not wait a week before mowing down protesters to "restore order". I don't believe either election was stolen, luckily our election process in pretty transparent (I do prefer paper ballots vs. electronic voting machines) so in America power is transferred peacefully.

This country does NOTHING when it comes to changing Saudi Arabia - we kiss their ass because they fuel our "way off life" literally.

I would not go so far as to say Iraq has influenced what is happening in Iran. There is a demographic shift in Iran toward people who have come of age since the revolution who are sick of the silly religious rules. The wealthy, powerful, ruling elites in Iran also see Amedinijad as something of an ignorant, anti intellectual, redneck - they have hated him since day 1.