WSJ: Protests Build in Tehran .

Wall Street Journal

By FARNAZ FASSIHI
Thousands of Iranians gathered in several locations across Tehran Monday, heeding calls in recent days by opposition leaders to demonstrate in solidarity with Egyptian and Tunisian protesters, who recently toppled their own regimes.

About 4,000 people had gathered in Azadi Square, in central Tehran, and more were streaming in, with dozens of police on motor bikes circling the square, according to eyewitnesses, opposition websites and Internet posts. Witnesses said a few thousand protesters had also gathered at Imam Hussein square, sitting down on the ground and breaking out in chants when police tried to disperse them.

By mid-afternoon, witnesses said crowds were swelling in central Tehran, with people silently marching in large numbers toward Azadi Square. Shopkeepers and restaurants along the route have been shut down, and security forces surrounded the campus of Tehran University, preventing students from entering.

Read More
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Security forces cut phone lines and blockaded the home of an Iranian opposition leader Monday in attempts to stop him attending a planned rally in support of Egypt's uprising, a reformist website reported.

Iranian authorities have poured police and militiamen onto the streets of Tehran to challenge any pro-Egypt marches, which officials worry could turn into demonstrations against Iran's ruling system.

The security clampdown is reminiscent of the backlash that crushed a wave of protests after the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in June 2009. But opposition supporters revived a tactic from the unrest, shouting "Allahu Akbar," or God is Great, from rooftops and balconies into the early hours Monday in a sign of defiance toward Iran's leadership.

The reformist website kaleme.com said police stationed several cars in front of the home of Mir Hossein Mousavi ahead of the demonstration called for Monday in central Tehran.

Mousavi and fellow opposition leader Mahdi Karroubi have been under house arrest since last week after they asked the government for permission to hold a rally on Feb. 14 in support of the uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.

The government rejected the request and warned of repercussions if demonstrations take place.

On Sunday, the opposition renewed its call to supporters to rally, and accused the government of hypocrisy by voicing support for the Egyptian and Tunisian uprisings while refusing to allow Iranian political activists to stage a peaceful demonstration.

"These elements are fully aware of the illegality of their demand and know that they won't get permission for revolt," Interior Ministry official Mahdi Alikhani was quoted by the official IRNA news agency as saying late Sunday.

Esmaeil Gerami Moghaddam, spokesman for Karroubi's National Confidence Party, countered on the party's website that under Iran's constitution there is no need for government permission to hold a peaceful rally.

Across central Tehran, riot police, many on motorbikes, fanned out to prevent any demonstration, witnesses said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of fears of reprisals from authorities.

The uprising in Egypt opened a rare chance for the political gambit by Iran's opposition.

Several opposition activists and aides to Mousavi and Karroubi have been arrested in recent days as part of government efforts to intimidate the opposition and undermine its resolve to hold a rally.

Ahmadinejad claimed the Egyptians who toppled President Hosni Mubarak took inspiration from Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, which brought down a Western-backed monarchy. Iran's opposition movement used the comments to push the government into a corner and request permission to march in support of Egypt's protesters.

Iranian officials quickly backpedaled and said no pro-Egypt rallies were allowed — bringing sharp criticism from the White House and others.

On Thursday, White House national security spokesman Tommy Vietor said: "For all of its empty talk about Egypt, the government of Iran should allow the Iranian people the same universal right to peacefully assemble and demonstrate in Tehran that the people are exercising in Cairo."

Karroubi and Mousavi have compared the unrest in Egypt and Tunisia with their own postelection protest movement. Mousavi said Iran's demonstrations were the starting point but that all the uprisings aimed at ending the "oppression of the rulers."

Turkish President Abdullah Gul, who is on a visit to Iran, urged governments in the Middle East to listen to the demands of their people.

"When leaders and heads of countries do not pay attention to the demands of their nations, the people themselves take action to achieve their demands," IRNA quoted Gul as saying Monday.

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians peacefully took to the streets in support of Mousavi after the June 2009 vote, claiming Ahmadinejad was re-elected through massive vote fraud.

A heavy government crackdown suppressed the protests. The opposition has not been able to hold a major protest since December 2009.

Tehran

Picture from Al-Arabieh site


Tehran
Vali Asr: Sever clashes between Special forces and people in place. Forces beat people but , get reaction back as people fight with wood and stone. Chants of Down with Khamenei is heard from a distant.

Sadeghieh: people are chanting Down with dictator

Nabsh Fatemi, Jamalzade, in front of Ministry of Labour; there are clashes between protesters and so called security forces.

Aboo Reyhan Birooni junction to Enghelab: Potesters chant "Sec forces support support" (NIROOYE ENTEZAMI HEMAYAT HEMAYAT) , and offer flowers . One of the security forces reaced and shook his hand and sided to let the crowd pass.

Semnan:
Up till now, around 50 people have gahtered in the centre . No chanting yet

Esfahan:
people have gathered in charbagh.
Freedommessenger -Twits from 1pm to 5 pm today in Iran

۲۵ بهمن؛ تظاهرات در کرمانشاه
http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150098749364590
Kermanshah Protests today !

.استفادهٔ نیروهای امنیتی از سلاح گرم برای متفرق کردن مردم
http://fb.me/UzE2BSH3
Forces use weapons to siperse crowd

.درگیری شدید نیروهای سرکوبگر و مردم در خیابان آزادی
http://fb.me/ORAEvsYX
Sever clashes in Azadi St. between pple and plain cloth agents

Around 10 protesters has been arrest around Enghelab sqr #iranelection

Video: New Clip:A protester lifting picture of Martyrs at a Crane in Tehran -14 Feb 2011
#iranelection http://fb.me/SW5niAId


گزارش كوتاهي از تظاهرات 25 بهمن در شيراز و اصفهان ودرگيري ميان نيروهاي انتظامي و مردم http://fb.me/voqiNzzB
Short report of Esfahan and Shiraz protests

Gun-fire heard in Enghelab sqr -Regime forces tries to scare ppl. Do not work!!! #iranelecction

.حمله مزدوران رژیم به مردم در تظاهرات اصفهان http://fb.me/PW7ihSEz
Regime agents attack ppl in Esfahan

.ضرب و شتم مردم در خیابان انقلاب تهران http://fb.me/Rmvo29cL
Pple beaten in enghelab St.

Rasht City: Steert are crowded Regime forces are using tear-gas to divide people #iranelection

Video: Iran - 14 Feb Tehran - Iranian regimes Radio #iranelection http://fb.me/UFvA1BoV

.تجمع تعدادي از دانشجويان دانشكده فني دانشگاه تهران http://fb.me/UMH5dgXi
Tech Uni students have gathered

Video: MUST SEE: Tehran 14 Feb 2011 - Basiji forces are heading to central part of Tehran #iranelection http://fb.me/Cn08x67j

شعار مرگ بر خامنه اي در ميدان انقلاب و هراس نظام با بلند كردن هلي كوپتر بر فراز شهر http://fb.me/KiQHdY6e
Enghelab Sq. ppl chant Death to Khamenei , Helicopters seen above

اولین شلیک های گاز اشک آور شروع شده - در ۴ راه ولیعصر
Regime forces are shooting tear gas and attacking people with batons #iranelection

Latest from Tehran: Heavy clashes in Tehran Right now!!!! #iranelection

اعتراضات گسترده مردم تهران با شعار مرگ بر دیکتاور در نقاط مختلف تهران http://fb.me/zSIOMgjK
people potest starts with Down with Dictator

Helicopters in the sky of Tehran - The Iranian regime are scared VVV #iranelection
about 1 hour ago via Facebook .People chant Death to Khamenei at Enghelab Sqr in Tehran #iranelection
AFP
TEHRAN, February 14, 2011

Hundreds of Iranian protesters on Monday attempted to stage scattered demonstrations in Tehran said to be in support of Arab revolts as scores of policemen moved to disperse them, witnesses said.
A witness said crowds of protesters were seen at Tehran's key areas such as Haft-e Tir Square, Karim Khan Avenue, Ferdowsi Square, Hafez street, while another said similar crowds were walking from Imam Hussein Square to Enghelab Square.
"They are being silent and trying to keep a low profile," a witness said about demonstrators walking from Imam Hussein Square to Enghelab.
Another witness said around 1,000 policemen were deployed at Haft-e Tir Square, Karim Khan Avenue, Ferdowsi Square and Hafez.
"Some policemen are chasing the protesters away in order to disperse them," he said.
Around 1,000 anti-riot policemen were also deployed in and around Imam Hussein Square, a witness said.
Several groups claiming links to Iran's opposition movement have called for rallies to be staged in support of Arab revolts after an application by opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi to hold such a demonstration was rejected by Iran's interior ministry.
The foreign media has been banned from on-the-spot reporting of the gatherings.

Families fear for Baha’is jailed in Iran - Lead

AFP

Prison conditions are worsening for seven leaders of Iran's Bahai community who are staying in cramped cells with poor sanitation alongside common criminals, US-based relatives said Wednesday.
Iran drew international condemnation in 2008 for arresting leaders of the Bahai faith, which has no clergy. The religion was founded in Iran in 19th century and is anathema to the nation's Islamic clerical regime.
Relatives said the seven Bahai were each given 20 years in prison and that the sentences were later lowered to 10 years, although the reduction was made known verbally and not through any official statement.
Iraj Kamalabadi, whose sister Fariba Kamalabadi is among the seven, said the Bahai leaders were transferred last year to Gohardasht prison where violent criminals stay in lice-infested cells next to overflowing sewers.
‘I don't think that there is any light at the end of the tunnel at this point of time,' Kamalabadi said in a meeting with the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, an autonomous government body.
‘Their condition continues to deteriorate and there is no improvement so far that we have seen,' he said.
Kamal Khanjani, the brother of jailed 77-year-old Bahai leader Jamaloddin Khanjani, said that five prisoners were crammed into each cell measuring three by five meters (10 by 16 feet).
Khanjani said he was allowed to speak by telephone once with his brother and, 'because of his age and the condition of his prison, I knew his health was deteriorating’.
‘But when he was talking to me, his voice was wonderful and strong,' Khanjani said.
The relatives were optimistic on one point -- they believed the Bahai have won sympathy among prisoners through their deeds and backgrounds. Jamaloddin Khanjani is a successful businessman, while Fariba Kamalabadi is a developmental psychologist.
‘In general, the Iranian people have developed further respect and are a lot more sympathetic to their plight,' Iraj Kamalabadi said.
Iran tried the Bahai leaders on charges of spying for foreigners, spreading corruption, undermining Islam and cooperating with Israel…
The Bahai faith now has seven million followers around the world, including 300,000 in Iran -- where its members are barred from higher education and government posts.
Leonard Leo, the chair of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, called Iran's treatment of the Bahai community 'outrageous' and supported intensified pressure by the United States.
Leo pointed to the Iran Sanctions Act signed last year by President Barack Obama. The law takes aim at Iranians involved in human rights abuses, adding the issue to US concerns with the Islamic republic such as its nuclear program.
‘There are many other things, hopefully, that we can do in waging a broad-based campaign to stop the repression and to defend the rights of not only your family members and brethren but any other Bahais,' Leo said.




خانواده‌ها نگران بهاييهاي زنداني در ايران هستند
خانواده‌هاي مستقر در آمريکا روز چهارشنبه گفتند، شرايط زندان براي 7 رهبر جامعه بهايي ايران که در وضعيت بدي در سلولهاي تنگ در کنار مجرمين عادي به‌سر مي‌برند رو به وخامت است.
دستگيري رهبران دين بهائيت توسط ايران در سال 2008، که هيچ روحاني ندارند، به محکوميت بين‌المللي منجر شد…
خويشاوندان گفتند که اين 7 بهايي هر يک 20سال زندان گرفته‌اند و اين‌که اين احکام بعدتر به 10سال کاهش يافتند، گرچه اين کاهش شفاهاً گفته شد و نه از طريق يک بيانيه رسمي…
ايرج کمال عبادي [که خواهرش از جمله زندانيان است] در ملاقاتي با کميسيون آزادي مذاهب بين‌المللي آمريکا، يک ارگان دولتي خودمختار گفت، ”من فکر نمي‌کنم در اين لحظه در انتهاي اين تونل روشنايي وجود داشته باشد. “
او گفت، ”وضعيت آنها هم‌چنان وخيم‌تر مي‌شود و تا جايي که ما ديديم هيچ بهبودي وجود نداشته است. “
کمال خنجري، برادر جمالالدين خنجري، يک رهبر بهايي 77ساله که در زندان به‌سر مي‌برد گفت، 5 زنداني در سلولي به ابعاد 3 در 5 متر چپانده شده‌اند… (خبرگزاري فرانسه 20/11/89)
top