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Tabriz has been "unexpectedly quiet," the author says. |
By Ahmad, Tehran
It is becoming almost a daily routine to hear
and see new and extreme political developments in Iran. Ever since last Friday,
when Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani called for the release of prisoners
and for an acknowledgment of the people's vote, there has been a barrage of
attacks on him and his supporters.
Then Mohammad Khatami on July 19 called for a "referendum," although the real
question is, Who would oversee such a referendum? The sadistic Guardians
Council?
The reform movement is turning into a "referendum movement," and if it does
there is no turning back.
The government, or rather ruling elite, is using a tactic called "victory
through fear," an old method used by invading Arab armies 1,400 years ago, the
Vatican during the Dark Ages, Hitler during World War II, and most recently the
Israelis.
The text-messaging system is still disconnected in Tehran and the Internet is
extremely limited.
And the degree of ruthlessness shown by the guards and the police is becoming so
profound that confrontation is almost unavoidable.
Look at how many people are getting arrested, beaten up, or even killed on a
daily basis. It has become a routine event for all of us to join rallies, get
beaten, and then escape through the alleyways and then scream our lungs out at
10 p.m. every night with chants of "God is great."
Unexpected Twists
The other day was a friend's birthday and we were making our way through the
arresting armies and club-waving security guards west from Haft Tir Square into
Karimkhan Avenue and then north along Kheradmand Street.
I asked my friend what he wanted for his birthday and he said, "I want a basij;
I want to hear his bones crack; I want to see him bleed and remind him that this
would not remain a one-way street for long."
From Reform to Referendum; from peaceful demonstrations to violent
confrontation; from using Koranic proverbs and quotations to name-calling by the
supreme leader; from an unchoreographed civil-disobedience movement to a
potentially bloody revolution -- the situation in Iran is pregnant with
unprecedented events that may unfold in unprecedented ways.
The system appears to be breaking on a daily basis. The demagogues who believe
they are sent by God are increasingly becoming restless as things are not moving
forward in the way they envisaged.
There were rumors that 37 army officers who wanted to attend Friday Prayers,
dressed in full army uniform and in support of the people, were arrested.
There's also a story going around about a Revolutionary Guards officer who is
under house arrest and being forced to declare his allegiance to the leader
after he refused to order his troops to shoot at a crowd.
Question Marks
In the cities of Qom and Mashhad, the clergy -- once fractured but united -- are
drawing battle lines. There are two main groups, increasingly polarized: the
"Rohaniate Mobarez" and the "Rohanioun Mobarez" (both roughly meaning "combatant
clergy") -- the first grouped around the supreme leader and the second calling
for a referendum.
But will things come to a head? Will the movement be able to capitalize on these
divisions?
A big question mark hangs over the city of Tabriz. It has been the hotbed of
revolution for over 100 years. The breeding ground for the great leaders of the
Constitutional Revolution of 1905-11, such as Sattarkhan and Bagherkhaan, its
are people among the strongest supporters of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
But while the so-called green movement has been active in Tehran, Isfahan,
Shiraz, Kermanshah, Khoramabad, and several smaller cities, Tabriz has been
unexpectedly quiet.
Could it be that the brave Tabrizis have succumbed to the authorities' campaign
of fear?
My cousin is married to a Tabrizi and he once told me that "Iran without Tabriz
and Tabriz without Iran is unthinkable."
Maybe we have to wait until the dust settles.
Or maybe things are happening so fast that even as I write these words, my
history is changing forever.
Ahmad is a pseudonym for a journalist in the Iranian capital, Tehran, who
contributed this piece to RFE/RL's Radio Farda
Copyright (c) 2009 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 07/27/09 ... --
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