Feb 11th News/Discussions (22 BAHMAN)

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/112858.pdf


Statement by HR Catherine Ashton,
on demonstrations in Iran


Catherine Ashton, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice President of the Commission, issued the following statement today:

"On the anniversary of the Islamic revolution, which for many in Iran should symbolise progress in fundamental freedoms and rights, the European Union notes with great concern that a large number of Iranians have been prevented for expressing their views.
The EU is also concerned by reports that opposition leaders have been subjected to violence and intimidation and may have been arrested.
The scenes of violent repression today are part of a pattern over the past few months. Violent crackdowns on those calling for the fundamental right to freedom of expression and assembly have cost the regime the trust of its own people, as well as that of the international community.
The determination shown by protestors on Iran's streets clearly demonstrates the strength of their desire for democracy, human rights and fundamental freedoms. The EU reiterates its support for them.
The choices this regime is making vis-à-vis its people and the international community are the wrong ones. No amount of inflated rhetoric can hide that. The regime is letting its own people down; and they deserve better."
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
http://en.irangreenvoice.com/article/2010/feb/11/1114

Five European ambassadors boycott Ahmadinejad speech


created 02/11/2010 - 15:17

The ambassadors of the UK, France, Germnay, The Netherlands and Italy decided to boycott the speech delivered today by the head of the coup government Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during ceremonies marking the 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution.
A number of Basiji forces present in front of the embassies of these countries on Monday and had thrown eggs and stones towards the embas
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
خشونت برای همه؛ هیچ کس در امان نبود
یلدا آراسته

شبکه جنبش راه سبز(جرس): هنگامی که خبرها ی امروز از راهپیمایی 22 بهمن منتشر می شد، همه در انتظار خبری از میرحسین موسوی بودند

.

او که چند روز پیش مردم را به شرکت در این راهپیمایی به عنوان یکی دیگر از تجمعات اعتراضی پس از 22 خرداد دعوت کرده بود امروز به دلیل هجوم لباس شخصی ها نتوانست خود را به میان مردم برساند .



سران سبز در تهدید

از سوی دیگر میر حسین موسوی صبح امروز از خیابان آزادی و کنار سازمان حج و زیارت قصد پیوستن به خیل جمعیت را داشت که لباس شخصی ها ، گارد ویژه و افراد باتوم به دست او را محاصره کردند؛با این اقدام میرحسین موسوی نتوانست به خیل جمعیت مردم در میدان آزادی بپیوندد.

کلمه افزوده بود: خیابان آذربایجان تامیدان آزادی مسیر هر ساله نخست وزیر امام خمینی بود که از این طریق در راهپیمایی 22 بهمن شرکت می کرد، اما امسال افراطیون مانع از حضور وی شدند .

این در حالی است که پیش از این، خبرگزاری دولتی فارس نیز خبر از حضور موسوی ساعت 11 در خیابان رودکی داده بود. اما این خبرگزاری علت عدم پیوستن میر حسین به راهپیمایان را حضور میلیونی مردم ذکر کرده بود!

زهرا رهنورد نیز امروز قصد داشت از میدان صادقیه به جمع مردم بپیوندد که با حمله لباس شخصی ها مواجه شد و مورد ضرب وشتم قرار گرفت . به گزارش کلمه رهنورد به کمک مردم توانست از محاصره لباس شخصی ها خارج شود.

از طرف دیگر، امروز مهدی کروبی نیز مورد هجوم نیروهای لباس شخصی قرار گرفت وهرجند رسانه های دولتی خبر آسیب دیدگی کروبی را شایعه دانستند و اعلام کردند که خودروی وی توسط مردم انقلابی مورد هجوم قرار گرفته است ، اما محمدتقی کروبی، پسر مهدی کروبی در این مورد به بی بی سی فارسی گفت که مهاجمان به قمه و سلاح گرم مسلح بودند و گاز اشک آور را مستقیما به سوی صورت آقای کروبی پاشیده اند.

به گفته او آقای کروبی دچار مشکل تنفسی و سوختگی پوست صورت شده است و سنگی هم به سر او اصابت کرده است.

محمدتقی کروبی گفت که پدرش تحت مراقبت پزشکی است.خودروی حامل سید محمد خاتمی هم مورد حمله قرار گرفت که سایت سحام نیوز سایت رسمی حزب اعتمادملی افراد حمله کننده را « یگان ویژه سپاه پاسداران » اعلام کرد .در این یورش آسیبی به خاتمی وارد نشد . به این ترتیب، با هجومی که انجام شد، حکومت موفق شد که از حضور سران جنبش سبز در راهپیمایی جلوگیری کند .



تو تنها نیستی

اما این خشونت ها به سران محدود نشد و به مردم معترض نیز کشیده شد. مردم امروز در سراسر ایران مورد هجوم لباس شخصی ها قرار گرفتند .

به گفته یک شاهد عینی ماموران حتی اجازه درآوردن نمادهای های سبز را هم به مردم نمی دادند . تصاویر ارسالی حکایت از درگیری شدید میان مردم و نیروهای ویژه در میدان صادقیه تهران داشت . همینطور شعار های « مرگ بر دیکتاتور » و «رفراندوم سیاسی » و شعار هایی از این دست که توسط مردم معترض داده می شد، با واکنش شدید لباس شخصی ها مواجه می شد .

در مشهد ،اصفهان ،اهواز نیز خبرها حکایت از دستگیری تعداد زیادی از معترضان دارد . به گفته شاهدان عینی موج خشونت و دستگیری امروز بسیار زیاد بوده است و کسانی به عنوان نفوذی در میان سبزها بوده اند که آنها را شناسایی کرده اند.

در حوالی پارک لاله نیز با تیرهای رنگی به معترضان شلیک کردند تا شناسایی انها آسانتر باشد. امروز تعداد زیادی از ماموران با صورت های پوشیده از مردم فیلم برداری می کرده اند . این اقدام در حالی است که پلیس ایران امروز در هفته نامه « امین جامعه » تصاویری را از کسانی منشر کرده است و آنها را آشوبگر روز عاشورا خوانده و از مردم خواسته است که آنها را شناسایی کنند .

پیش از این نیز یک بار دیگر این تصاویر منتشر شده بود و اسماعیل احمدی مقدم فرمانده نیروی انتظامی اعلام کرده بود که از این طریق 70 درصد آنها را دستگیر کرده اند. این اقدام های امنیتی در کنار پخش گسترده پوسترهایی با سوالات و تذکراتی به میرحسین موسوی بود. به گزارش خبر آنلاین امروز عده زیادی پوسترهایی را با خود حمل می کردند که حاوی سوالات انتقادی از میرحسین موسوی بود.

به گزارش همین وبسایت امروز تراکت هایی هم تحت عنوان «چشم شیطان » در میان مردم توزیع می شد که تصاویری از سید محمد خاتمی ،علی رضا بهشتی،مهدی و فائزه هاشمی،عماد الدین باقی،محسن آرمین،اکبر گنجی، محمد رضا خاتمی،حجاریان و سروش روی آن به چشم می خورد.

در قسمت بالایی این برگه تصویری به نمایش در آمده که نشان می داد میرحسن موسوی و مهدی کروبی به عنوان عروسک های خیمه شب بازی اوباما و نتانیاهو در انتخابات عمل کرده اند. دربخش دیگر این تراکت هم برخی اظهارات سید محمد خاتمی،فائزه هاشمی،محسن کدیور، محمد قوچانی،عبدالکریم سروش،ذکرشده است و آنان متهم به اهانت به شعائر مذهبی و ائمه اطهار شده اند.



روزی که پایان نیافته

خبرها اما حکایت از پایان این روز ندارد .مسیرهایی در تهران و سایر شهرستان ها برای تجمع سبزها اعلام شد.ویدئوهای موجود بر یوتیوب خبر از درگیری در این تجمعات و دستگیری معترضان دارد . در آریا شهر و صادقیه نیز صدای تیر اندازی حکایت از پایان نیافتن این ماجرا دارد.

گفتنی است قرار است امشب فریاد « الله اکبر» و «مرگ بر دیکتاتور» ساعت 10 شب از فراز بام ها شنیده شود
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/2010/02/201021014518463761.html

Break the silence on Iran

Three decades ago, the Iranian revolution inspired generations of Arabs and infused in them a spirit of resistance to foreign intervention. It came at a time when many Arabs had been disheartened by the 1979 Camp David agreement between Israel and Egypt, and sparked hope in a regional power that could stand up to Israel.
Egypt's exit from the equation of the Israeli-Arab conflict was a blow to the Palestinian and Arab struggle to end Israeli occupation and achieve self-determination for the dispossessed Palestinian people.
But 'the Islamic Revolution' transformed Iran from a gendarme for US interests in the region into an ally of Arab causes, thereby dramatically altering the Middle East landscape.
The historic reception Yasser Arafat, the late Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) chairman, received in Tehran in March 1979, signalled an end to the Iranian-Israeli pact and the beginning of Iran's role as a supporter of the Palestinian national liberation movement.
Hundreds of thousands of Iranians turned out on the streets of Tehran to give a hero's welcome to Arafat who later inaugurated a Palestinian embassy in the building that had previously been the Israeli embassy.
Tainted image

Many Arabs see Iran's strong military as the only deterrent to Israel [AFP]
Three decades later, Iran is still viewed as the only serious deterrent to Israeli power, but its image as an expression of people power has been marred by its backing of sectarian Iraqi Shia political parties and ruthless repression of Iranian opposition. Its silence and inaction during the 2003 invasion of Iraq was tantamount to complicity that facilitated the US-led occupation of the country. It was a position dictated more by its regional interests - asserting influence in Iraq - and vengeance for an eight-year war that was started by Baghdad in 1980.
But its backing of Hezbollah during its liberation of South Lebanon from Israeli occupation and during the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon reinstated its status as a real and effective supporter of Arab resistance.
A majority of Arabs also admire Iran's refusal to compromise or negotiate on its right to develop nuclear power - in sharp contrast with weak and impotent Arab governments.
Mooted Arab reactions
The current US and Israeli threats against Tehran only boost its status among the majority of Arabs and thus explain to a great extent the mooted Arab reaction to the regime's harsh treatment of intellectuals and dissidents.
Very few columnists have been critical of Iran's human rights records and many Arab writers appear, or choose, to believe the Tehran's allegations that the imprisoned or even executed dissidents are cronies of - if not spies for - Western capitals.
The dilemma of many Arab intellectuals, and political activists, is that while many, especially secular writers, may be critical or even resent Iran's increasing theocracy, they are wary of being used - wittingly or unwittingly - to justify Israeli and American agendas against Iran.
This dilemma is not new. Most writers refrained from taking the government of Saddam Hussein, the late Iraqi president, to task over repression of the Iraqi people in the years leading up to the 1991 and 2003 wars.
Those who did, were frequently accused of pandering to Western agendas which used human rights issues to justify the bombardment, a cruel embargo and later the occupation of a key Arab country.
Legitimate grievances
But silence over human rights abuse in Iran is also problematic - especially for those of us who claim commitment to universal values and are relatively aware of the Iranian political landscape and the nature of the ongoing political struggle.
Yes, there may be supporters for the reformists in Iran who may be associated with the West. It is also possible that the West, especially Washington, may be interfering and manipulating some of the protests.
But the fact remains that the opposition has legitimate grievances and that some of the best sons and daughters of the Iranian revolution - that inspired millions of Arabs - are being persecuted.
The late Great Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri was the most important example of how the regime managed to punish and isolate those who challenged the increasing consolidation of power in the hands of the supreme leader.
Montazeri, who was then the most important living expert on the concept of Velyat-el- Faqih, rule by jurisprudence, did not provide absolute power to the Supreme Leader.

"One who acts on God's behalf is not a dictator," Montazeri reportedly argued during the constitutional debate in 1986. Montazeri was arrested and humiliated but he refused to be silenced and was placed under house arrest between 1997 and 2003.
While in Tehran in the 1990s, I met many of his students and followers - or at least those influenced by him - some of whom later became prominent leaders or voices of the reformist movement.
The revolution's failures

Tehran has been accused of a brutal crackdown on protesters since the June elections [AFP] Shams O-Vaezen, who was a journalist back then, later became a familiar face to Arab audiences, appearing frequently on Al Jazeera especially since the recent wave of protests triggered by opposition reservations about the Iranian presidential elections. While obviously espousing a reformist agenda, Vaezen, who speaks fluent Arabic, eloquently exposed the failure of the regime without falling into the trap of pandering to the US-Israeli led campaign against his country.
His imprisonment in Ivin prison - and later release in 2003 - for demanding freedom of speech pained him but did not stop him from believing in the main goals of the revolution he joined when he was only 19.
Vaezen, like many Iranians I met and have been following since, has himself been deeply affected by the Palestinian struggle. Like many young leading participants of the Iranian revolution, Vaezen was particularly inspired by the PLO, which was then involved in training and supporting the first cadres of the Shah's opponents.
When the Iranian leadership shifted its support from Fatah and the PLO to Hamas, it nevertheless continued its backing for Palestinian national rights - something it shared with reformists like Vaezen.
Enemies of the state
A few weeks ago, however, Shams was arrested - an event reported by Al Jazeera - and became one of many detainees collectively branded as "enemies of the revolution".
He has neither been released nor indicted. But like many of his Arab friends, I fear the day when he is formerly accused of charges that could slander his life-long struggle, let alone lead to his execution.
A Lebanese friend of Shams's recently told me that families of the detainees have complained to him of their dismay and sadness over the silence of Arab writers.
With few exceptions, most Arab and leftist columnists in the West have been exclusively focused on debunking Western and Israeli arguments for war against Iran - ignoring reports of the arrests, torture and execution of dissidents or critics in the Islamic Republic.
This has left the reporting and commentary wide open for pro-Western government columnists and news outlets to control the spin and expropriate the agenda of the reformists in the service of the gathering campaign for war against Iran.
On the anniversary of the Iranian revolution it is time for Arab and progressive writers as they rightly oppose the calls for war on Iran to break the silence on the state's abuse of human rights and harassment and repression of the opposition.

Just as the Western governments cannot cynically exploit the opposition to justify their aggressive measures against Iran we cannot allow our commitment to Palestine, and what we view as just causes to silence us against abuse of the Iranian people.
 

masoudA

Legionnaire
Oct 16, 2008
6,199
22
The goal was to show the world we don't want IR - and we did.
Those of you who are seeking victory in the NUMBER of people - are wrong. The world has seen enough dictatorships to know numbers are maeningless - so long as the unarmed population can cause a widspread disturbance......
Besides - Read Catherine Ashton's report to EU posteds by Nilou again (#921) - When a government does not let even a portion of the population to express themselves - the government is considered a failure by the democratic world.

BTW - dame eerooni haye Sweden Garm. It is just starting.
 

spanx

Bench Warmer
Dec 19, 2005
1,310
0
I wonder what Sazgara is going to say, it was his quote that "the regime imports are going to evaporate in the masses of greens" ... i hope he stays realistic and offers a solution to move forward as oppose to sugar coating it ...
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35345722/ns/world_news-mideastn_africa/

Iran’s show of force quashes protest attempts

‘It means they won and we lost,’ opposition supporter says

TEHRAN, Iran - A massive Iranian security presence, including riot police and gangs of motorbike-riding militia, appeared to snuff out attempts Thursday by anti-government protesters to orchestrate counter-demonstrations on the anniversary of the revolution that created Iran's Islamic republic. Police clashed with protesters in several sites around Tehran, firing tear gas to disperse them and paintballs to mark them for arrest. Gangs of hard-liners also attacked senior opposition figures as they tried to attend the rallies — including the wife of the head of the reform movement.
Plainclothes Basiji militiamen beat 65-year-old Zahra Rahnavard with clubs on her head and back until her supporters formed a human ring around her and whisked her away, according to the Web site of her husband, Mir Hossein Mousavi.



Foreign media, including NBC News, were only allowed to cover the official ceremonies in Freedom Square, where hundreds of thousands of Iranians gathered to mark the revolution's 31st anniversary. NBC's Ali Arouzi reported that he and the handful of other accredited reporters in Iran were bused into the official rally in Freedom Square, penned into a certain section, barred from talking to even the government supporters and then bussed out of the area. He said they were told that they were absolutely prohibited from going out independently to film activities on the streets of Tehran.
The anniversary celebrations were an opportunity for Iran's clerical regime to tout its power in the face of the opposition movement, which has persisted in holding mass street protests since disputed presidential elections in June in defiance of a fierce months-long crackdown.
Based on the reports out of Tehran, the security clampdown appeared to have succeeded in preventing a major opposition turnout. Their numbers were not immediately known — but opposition Web sites spoke of groups of protesters in the hundreds, compared to thousands in past demonstrations.
Official media made no mention of clashes or arrests and state television said "tens of millions of people" attended rallies in support of the revolution across the country of 70 million.
One protester told The Associated Press she had tried to join the demonstrations but soon left in disappointment. "There were 300 of us, maximum 500. Against 10,000 people," she told an AP reporter outside Iran.
"It means they won and we lost. They defeated us. They were able to gather so many people," she said. "But this doesn't mean we have been defeated for good. It's a defeat for now, today. We need time to regroup." She spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation by authorities, who have jailed protesters for talking to foreign media.
Internet disruptions
Tehran residents also reported Internet speeds dropping dramatically and e-mail services such as Gmail being blocked in a common government tactic to foil opposition attempts to organize.
Heavy numbers of riot police, members of the Revolutionary Guard and Basij militiamen deployed at key squares and major avenues in the capital to prevent protests from marring the annual mass rallies for the revolution's anniversary.
State television showed images of thousands upon thousands carrying often identical banners marching along the city's broad avenues toward the central Azadi, or Freedom, Square. There, the massive crowds waved Iranian flags and carried pictures of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic state, and his successor as supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
In a nationally televised address in the square, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proclaimed that Iran has produced its first batch of uranium enriched to a higher level, reiterating that Iran is now a "nuclear state."



'Death to the dictator'
Ahmadinejad made no mention in his speech of Iran's political turmoil.

For days ahead of the anniversary celebrations, anti-government Web sites and blogs have called for a major turnout in counterprotests. Groups of opposition protesters gathered Thursday in several locations around Tehran, wearing green clothes and waving green balloons — the opposition's signature color. Meantime, opposition Web sites sought to gather as much information as possible from the protests.

  • "Security forces fired tear gas to disperse a group of protesters who were trying to march toward Azadi Square as they chanted 'death to the dictator,'" the Web site Rahesabz said, reporting an unknown number of arrests. Police and Basijis on motorbikes swept toward central Tehran, where protesters and security forces clashed in several locations, it and other opposition Web sites reported.
  • The Web site, Iran's Green Voice, said security forces fired shots and teargas at supporters of opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi staging a rally in central Tehran. Mousavi and his wife attended one of the rallies, it said.
  • Another opposition site, Norooz, said 30 people were arrested in one Tehran square.
  • The various sites, many run from outside of Iran, also featured videos allegedly taken during protests. The Website, IranNewNow, had a live blog based on reports from the streets with many of the uploaded YouTube videos.
While msnbc.com can not confirm the provenance, date and other information about these clips, we are posting some here as there is no other source of video from the street protests.



Security forces also briefly detained the granddaughter of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the architect of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and her husband, who are both senior pro-reform politicians, according to the couple's son, Ali. The granddaughter, Zahra Eshraghi, and her husband Mohammad Reza Khatami, who is the brother of a former pro-reform president, were held for less than an hour before being released, their son told the AP.
Text messaging, Internet service hobbled
Iranian authorities again tried to squeeze off text messaging and Web links in attempts to cripple protest organizers. Internet service was sharply slowed, mobile phone service widely cut and there were repeated disruptions in popular instant messaging services such as Google chat, though some were sporadically accessible.
Many Internet users said they could not log into their Gmail account, Google's e-mail service, since last week.
"We have heard from users in Iran that they are having trouble accessing Gmail," Google said in a statement. "We can confirm a sharp drop in traffic and we have looked at our own networks and found that they are working properly."
Opposition members went on roof tops late Wednesday and shouted Allah-u-Akbar ("God is greatest") in protest — echoing similar cries after the disputed June election as well as anti-shah protests more than three decades ago.
The opposition claims that Ahmadinejad's victory in the June 12 election was fraudulent and that the true winner was pro-reform leader Mir Hossein Mousavi. Hundreds of thousands marched in the streets against the government in the weeks after the vote, prompting a massive wave of arrests.
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
businessweek-

http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...osition-clash-as-rallies-mark-revolution.html

Iran Police, Opposition Clash at Revolution Rallies (Update2)


By Ladane Nasseri and Ali Sheikholeslami
Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Tens of thousands of Iranians joined a rally in Tehran today to mark the Islamic regime’s 31st anniversary, and security forces clashed with opposition leaders and protesters who used the occasion to defy the government.
Zahra Rahnavard, the wife of presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, was beaten by security forces and another candidate, Mehdi Karrubi, was tear-gassed and his car windows smashed, opposition Web sites and activists said. Security forces fired guns and used tear gas in a square in west Tehran where demonstrators were gathered, Rahesabz.net said.
State television showed pictures of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad joining crowds of marchers in Tehran, and addressing a rally in the central Azadi Square, where he said Iran has completed its first enrichment of uranium to 20 percent. Marchers carried pictures of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the republic’s founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Karrubi and Mousavi, who accuse Ahmadinejad of winning June’s election by fraud, had urged their supporters to show dissent today. Their movement marks the biggest challenge to the Islamic regime, prompting Ahmadinejad and Khamenei to authorize a crackdown that has seen dozens killed and thousands detained.
Video posted on YouTube today showed hundreds of protesters, their faces concealed by sunglasses or surgical masks, chanting for the release of political prisoners. Some tore up pictures of Khamenei and shouted “death to the dictator.” Karrubi was attacked by security forces as he greeted supporters on the streets, and tear-gassed at close range, his son Hossein said by phone from Tehran.

Death Sentences

Two people were executed two weeks ago for their role in earlier demonstrations and another nine have been given death sentences. Official figures show 44 people killed since the election in clashes between security forces and protesters since the election, and Amnesty International says the actual toll is at least twice as high.
Protesters clashed with police in cities across Iran today, with at least 100 arrests in the north-eastern city of Mashhad and more than 20 in Shiraz in the south, Rahesabz said.
The commemoration of the Islamic revolution takes place against the backdrop of an international row over Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. The U.S. and its allies have increased pressure on the Persian Gulf state to send its uranium abroad for enrichment, as a way of allaying concerns that the material may be used for building nuclear weapons.
Tensions with Iran have boosted oil prices. Crude has risen almost 5 percent this week, trading at $74.50 at 3:30 p.m. in London today, and has more than doubled in the last 12 months.

Sanctions in ‘Weeks’

This week Iran started enriching uranium to 20 percent, saying it will use the fuel in a medical-research reactor in Tehran. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said new sanctions should be imposed on the Persian Gulf nation within “weeks not months.” China’s government said today that the dispute should be resolved through dialogue.
At today’s rally, Ahmadinejad attacked Western efforts to hinder Iran’s development of nuclear technology.
“We oppose your bullying policies that are filled with discrimination,” he said. “You want to dominate the region and the Iranian nation will not allow you to do so.”
The government has taken steps to make it harder for protesters to organize. It yesterday announced a suspension of Google Inc.’s e-mail services, and the company confirmed there was a “sharp drop” in Gmail traffic in the country.
State media in the last few days have urged people to join the “heroic march,” and authorities have also warned against any expressions of dissent.

‘Pushed Aside’

“If there is any voice or color other than those of the Islamic revolution, it will be pushed aside,” the Revolutionary Guard Corps said on its Web site on Jan. 31.
The Guards have played a key role since June in quelling protests by opponents of Ahmadinejad, who have become known as the Green Movement and use the color at rallies. The U.S. yesterday said it would freeze assets of four companies and one individual connected with the Revolutionary Guards.
As well as political protests, Ahmadinejad must tackle an economy that’s been “teetering on the edge for quite a few years,” as the lack of external help left its oil industry in “a pretty dire state,” said Mohammed Shakeel, who covers Iran for the Economist Intelligence Unit in London.
Unemployment rose to 11.3 percent in the three months through Dec. 21, from 9.5 percent a year earlier. The government had pledged to reduce it to 7 percent this Iranian year, which ends in March.

‘Gridlock’

Both Mousavi and Karrubi called on their supporters to avoid violence today. At least eight people were killed during the last street protests on Dec. 27, the Shiite Muslim holy day of Ashura.
“The internal discontent has not waned,” said Farideh Farhi, an expert on Iranian politics at the University of Hawaii, Manoa. “The Iranian state is faced with a gridlock or stalemate that has prevented the country from functioning.”
Iran has banned media coverage of the protests, making it hard to assess how many took part. The country is holding 65 journalists in prison, “a figure without precedent,” the Paris-based press freedom group Reporters Without Borders said on its Web site on Feb. 9.
 

IranZamin

IPL Player
Feb 17, 2006
3,367
2
While I'm a bit disappointed, I'm not defeated in the least. I remember September and October when things really seemed to have died down. I remember the discouraging turnout on Qods day. Privately, I was beginning to lose hope. Then came December and the epic events on Student's Day and Ashoura. Remember, this is going to take a while. There will be ups and downs.

Having said that, it's pretty clear now that the strategy to 'conquer' Azadi was misguided. The aim should have been to concentrate elsewhere through the city and make our presence felt, although the regime seemed to have over-prepared for this particular day, which leads me to the next point.

An emerging problem is that the regime can somewhat afford to bring in maximum force once every few weeks or months. That won't cause much demoralization or attrition among their ranks. In the absence of strikes, the movement needs to escalate protests from the sporadic occasions on 'official' days to a more regular schedule. I know my own neck isn't on the line and I'm not the one risking my life, but especially after today's mediocre turnout we can't just wait another few months for the next government-sponsored occasion. Mousavi and Karoubi need to get more aggressive.
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-407569

Female protesters arrested in Vali Asr and Haft-e Tir


February 11, 2010

In today’s clashes, government agents have targeted their attacks on female protesters. In Haft-e Tir Square four women were arrested and taken to an unknown location.
A large crowd tried to pursue the forces and rescue the women but were unsuccessful.
In other reports, two women were arrested on Vali Asr Avenue for not wearing their headscarves. Violent clashes are ongoing in the area.
Translation by: Banoo Sabz
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
Security Forces Opened Fire on the Crowd /Several Injured in Aryashahr

RAHANA – Security forces attacked the crowd of protesters in Arya-Shahr, opening fire on them. Several people have reportedly been injured during the shooting. However, the crowd has not dispersed and keeps chanting slogans. Security forces are firing directly on the masses of protesters.
There is a heavy presence of military and intelligence forces in Tehran streets.
 
May 12, 2007
8,093
11
I wonder what Sazgara is going to say, it was his quote that "the regime imports are going to evaporate in the masses of greens" ... i hope he stays realistic and offers a solution to move forward as oppose to sugar coating it ...
It is the idea of peacefull demonstration that is something wrong with. It will never work against IRI. People are frustrated!
If people are crazy enough to demonstrate against IRI risking their life they can aswell go to war. Peacefull demonstrations is meaning less. All over the world people know IRI is minority.
 

Niloufar

Football Legend
Oct 19, 2002
29,626
23
هشدار ! آیه یأس خوانان در رابطه با حضور جنبش سبز در تظاهرات گماشته های ” فرهنگی ” رژیم کودتا هستند


 
Oct 18, 2002
11,593
3
While I'm a bit disappointed, I'm not defeated in the least. I remember September and October when things really seemed to have died down. I remember the discouraging turnout on Qods day. Privately, I was beginning to lose hope. Then came December and the epic events on Student's Day and Ashoura. Remember, this is going to take a while. There will be ups and downs.

Having said that, it's pretty clear now that the strategy to 'conquer' Azadi was misguided. The aim should have been to concentrate elsewhere through the city and make our presence felt, although the regime seemed to have over-prepared for this particular day, which leads me to the next point.

An emerging problem is that the regime can somewhat afford to bring in maximum force once every few weeks or months. That won't cause much demoralization or attrition among their ranks. In the absence of strikes, the movement needs to escalate protests from the sporadic occasions on 'official' days to a more regular schedule. I know my own neck isn't on the line and I'm not the one risking my life, but especially after today's mediocre turnout we can't just wait another few months for the next government-sponsored occasion. Mousavi and Karoubi need to get more aggressive.
Well said on every point. Personally, I am amazed that after eight months and thousands of arrests and regime's promise every time that "this time it will be the last nail on the coffin of the green", again next time people show up (regardless of the numbers). My friends in Tehran also report the heaviest police/bassij presence ever seen (unprecedent for any 22 Bahman rally, which is typically very relaxed), which shows the amount of fear in regime's heart. So no, I am not disheartened at all.

This regime is on the way out because that is a historical inevitablilty, however as IZ pointed out, different strategies can speed it up or slow it down. The startegy of trying to take over occasions worked for a while. New strategies must be discovered.

And most importantly, remember that our countrymen in Iran have a job to do, and we have our own. We cannot dictate to them what to do; they are the ones on the ground. Let's do our task: finding ways to expose this regime and putting pressure on it from outside, anything else that could help our brothers and sisters back home. Let's get creative on what we can do from here.
 

mowj

National Team Player
May 14, 2005
4,739
0
رژيم نظامي-پليسی غارتگر فاشيست مذهبی بعد از هشت ماه زدن، گرفتن، زندان، شکنجه، تجاوز، و دار و کشتار چند ماه برنامه ريزی کرده بود تا امروز صورت مسئله را حفظ کند و باز هم موفق نشد. کشوری که 47 ميليون از هفتاد ميليونش زيرخط فقرند و يکی دو درصدی از انها دست بدامان دولت غارتگر باز هم مجبور به انواع تهديد و تشويق عده ای شد تا به خيال خود ميدان آزادی را پر کند و دژخيمانش را بسراغ اکثريت بفرستد تا بتواند فقط صورت مسئله را حفظ کند.
امروز هم پيروز ميدان مبارزه مردم قهرمانی بودند که در نبود تلفن و اينترنت و هيچ نوع وسيله ای برای سامانده ای بلکه هرچه بود فقط باتوم و گاز اشک آور و تجربه هشت ماه شکنجه های اعمال شده همرزمان باز هم سرافراز ميدان بودند تا ميدان بعدي. امروز به يمن اين فداکاری ها پرچم جنبش سبز در اقساء نقاط ايران برافراشته بود
پس تظاهرات امروز در خلال چنين سناريوئی جای تبريک گفتن دارد.
درود وتبريک به مردم قهرمان ايران که با تمام مکر و حيله وتهديدات رژيم فاشيست و غارتگر ولايت وقيح و سپاهيان پاسدار جنا يت و شناعت روز 22 بهمن را هم از آن خود و روز نجات ايران ثبت کرد.
روز آزادی و نجات کشور عزيزمان ايران و مردم قهرمانش بسيار نزديک است.
 
Jan 29, 2004
2,735
0
دروازه بان سابق تيم ملي ايران گفت: امروز با حضور در ميان مردم، آمده ام تا از حماسه بزرگ انقلاب اسلامي دفاع كنم.
به گزارش خبرنگار ايرنا، احمد رضا عابدزاده هدف از حضور خود و خانواده اش در راهپيمايي يوم الله ‪ ۲۲‬بهمن را حمايت از مقام معظم رهبري، آرمان***هاي مردم و امام راحل ذكر كرد.
عابدزاده،گفت: من هم مثل همه مردم به همراه تك تك ايرانيان وظيفه خود مي دانم كه در كنار آنان بوده و از آرمان***هاي بلند انقلاب اسلامي پشتيباني كنم دروازه بان سابق تيم ملي فوتبال ايران كه در جمع راهپيمايان خيابان آزادي حضور داشت، افزود: همه آحاد مردم وظيفه دارند از اين امانت و يادگار گرانبهاي امام خميني(ره) حمايت كنند.