Iran: MPs demand execution of opposition leaders

[image: Members of the Iranian parliament shout slogans in Tehran yesterday]
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-mps-demand-execution-of-opposition-leaders-2216122.html?action=Popup>

*REUTERS*

Members of the Iranian parliament shout slogans in Tehran yesterday

   - [image: Photos] enlarge
   
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-mps-demand-execution-of-opposition-leaders-2216122.html?action=Popup>

Conservative Iranian parliamentarians yesterday called for the country's
main opposition leaders to be put to death after protests in Tehran in
solidarity with the revolt in Egypt.

About 50 marched through the central hall of parliament waving their fists
and chanting: "Death to Mousavi, Karroubi and Khatami."


Reporting from Iran proved extremely difficult Monday -- foreign journalists
were denied visas, accredited journalists living in the country were
restricted from covering the demonstrations and internet speeds slowed to a
crawl in an apparent attempt to both limit protest organizing and restrict
information from being transmitted out of the country.

At least one person, and possibly two, died in the protests, as Al Jazeera
reports<http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/02/20112158387191255.html>
:

Two people were killed at a banned opposition rally in Iran, a member of
parliament has told the Iranian Student News Agency.

"At Monday's rally...two people were martyred and many were wounded; one
person was shot dead," said Kazem Jalali.

It's unclear how the second protester died.

In a statement carried by the official IRNA news agency, conservative
parliamentarians said: "Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi are corrupts
on earth and should be tried."

The charge "corrupt on earth" has been levelled at political dissidents in
the past and carries the death penalty in Iran.

Earlier, thousands of opposition supporters had gathered at Tehran's Azadi
Square in solidarity with the popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, in
their first major show of dissent [since] December 2009, when eight people
were killed.

They chanted: "Death to dictators."

But the BBC's Mohsen Asgari, who was at the rally, says it was not long
before riot police fired tear gas, while men on motorbikes charged the crowd
with batons.
25 Bahman and the Green
Revival<http://riseoftheiranianpeople.com/2011/02/15/25-bahman-and-the-green-revival/>

Posted by Admin on February 15, 2011

It appears that up to 350,000 people turned out on the streets of Tehran for
the 25 Bahman protests. The reason so many people came out was the relative
restraint shown by the security forces and the fact that mobile phones
worked till 4 p.m. — once the first few thousand people showed up, they were
able to inform many others that the anti-riot cops and Basijis were not, in
general, acting as viciously as was widely feared.

The Basij mostly refrained from violently engaging with the protesters. I
did see two people beaten to a pulp — one by Intel Ministry officers, the
second by Sepah, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Overall, people
worked hard to stop beatings by the regime forces. Once in a while, the
anti-riot police would try to disperse the crowd by firing tear gas.

Traversing the city both by foot and on the rapid transit buses, crowds
could be seen *everywhere.* Several thousand people walked from Imam Hossein
Square toward Enghelab Square. This is the first time ever such a large
crowd came from that direction — Imam Hossein Square is in the middle of a
working-class area. After being dispersed, the crowd walked peacefully on
the sidewalks of Enghelab Avenue and some of the parallel roads

Following a lull for the Green Movement that lasted over a year, Monday’s
march has reinvigorated things tremendously. People were smiling in joy for
the first time in a long while. Likewise, many Basijis and NAJA (state
police) officers looked positively confused and crestfallen.

This marks the first time in a year and a half that so many protesters have
congregated together. Ostensibly, the events in North Africa were the
proximate cause. Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi had called for the
march in solidarity with the Egyptian and Tunisian citizens whose uprisings
led to the removal of those two countries’ dictators. The day for which the
march was called also coincided with a visit by Turkish President Abdullah
Gul. The regime was clearly put in a catch-22 situation. If it cracked down
hard, with the world media’s gaze focused sharply, it would be seen as a
despotic regime much like Mubarak’s. Moreover, it would have lost the moral
high ground that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had claimed was
inspiration for the Northern African scene two Fridays ago. It didn’t help
the regime that Gul was in town. The result was a day that was largely not
characterized by the brutal suppression meted out last year. Apparently, the
regime felt this was the least costly approach.

Karroubi told the *New York Times* three days ago that Monday’s events would
be decisive both for the regime and the Green Movement. In other words, he
and Mousavi took a big gamble. Had the march fizzled out, it could have been
a crushing setback. The pair’s track record over the last two years shows
that they are not reckless risk-takers. We can assume that their decision
was part good information or good guesswork about the regime’s intentions
and part good strategizing. Right now, the two are incommunicado. But we’ll
find out soon what further action they might call for.

As for the regime, Monday’s events have complicated its position on both the
domestic front and the international scene. After a year of deafening
propaganda about the alleged demise of the democratic movement, the Green
Movement has shown that despite great adversity, it is alive and well. This
has huge implications for the country’s politics, the factional alignments
and calculations of the various players. It is particularly discouraging for
the country’s hardliners who would have stood to gain from the defeat of the
Green Movement.

In particular, the trio of Mousavi, Karroubi, and Mohammad Khatami can
breath a sigh of relief. In the last three weeks since Khatami spelled out
their conditions for participating in elections, there has been an alarming
crescendo of calls for their arrest and even execution. The events of Monday
have reduced that risk — unless they keep pushing the regime into a corner,
that is. Thanks to the developments in North Africa, the Green Movement
leaders now have a window of opportunity, which they are expected to use in
the next few days, building on Monday’s unexpected success. Clearly, the
Islamic regime is quite concerned that it may be seen as another despotic
Middle Eastern government if it persecutes and represses its domestic
opposition.

The parallel between Iran and the Northern African states, highlighted by
the Supreme Leader in his Friday Prayer sermon, has now come to haunt the
regime. Overall, this wasn’t a good day for those who rule the Islamic
Republic of Iran.

*Hamid Farokhnia is a staff writer at Iran Labor Report and covers the
capital for Tehran Bureau. He writes under a pen name.*



http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/02/saneh-jaleh-and-the-battle-for-a-slain-protesters-memory.html

Saneh Jaleh and the Battle for a Slain Protester's Memory by HOMYLAFAYETTE 16
Feb 2011 01:200
Comments<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/02/saneh-jaleh-and-the-battle-for-a-slain-protesters-memory.html#disqus_thread>[image:
SanehJalehWithCigarette.jpg]*Regime attempts to exploit legacy of theater
student killed in 25 Bahman demonstrations.*

*[ dispatch ]* A day after a university student was shot to death during
anti-regime protests in Tehran, a battle is being waged for his soul.

Saneh Jaleh, 26, was killed on Jamalzadeh Street, north of Azadi Street, the
main fulcrum of demonstrations on February 14.

News outlets close to the government now claim that he was a supporter of
the regime and that he was shot by *agents provocateurs* controlled by
various opposition groups. The regime announced it would organize a funeral
procession for Jaleh, from the Arts University of Tehran, where he studied
theater, to Tehran University at 9:30 a.m., Wednesday morning.

Opposition forces, with Jaleh's friends and classmates at the forefront, are
leading a counteroffensive to prevent what they see as the cynical
exploitation of the slain protester. They have called on all those who
oppose the appropriation of Jaleh by the government to convene at the Arts
University near Vali Asr crossroads half an hour earlier.

"He was definitely not a Basij member," said Hatef Soltani, one of Jaleh's
friends and former fellow students who agreed to speak on the record by
phone, referring to the pro-regime militia that has employed violence to
subdue previous rallies. "He participated in past demonstrations,
particularly on Ashura," added Soltani. "He managed to escape harm that day,
but this time..."

Before yesterday, the last major protest in Iran took place on the Day of
Ashura -- the commemoration of Imam Hossein's martyrdom -- December 27,
2009.

Asked why he was ready to divulge his own name and possibly endanger
himself, Soltani simply said, "Well he was also a human being who is no
longer with us, come what may."
[image: SanehJalehOfficialShot.jpg]The barrage of what appears to be a
well-orchestrated disinformation operation is reminiscent of the regime's
attempts to blame anyone but its security forces for the death of Neda Agha
Soltan during the unrest of 2009. In June of that year, state media and
semiofficial news outlets like Fars made unsubstantiated accusations against
a broad group of likely culprits that included the CIA, the Mojahedin Khalgh
Organization (MKO), the Greens themselves, and BBC correspondent Jon Leyne.
The regime also widely distributed an edited interview showing Agha Soltan's
father saying that his daughter was not a member of the Green Movement.

The photo of Saneh Jaleh used by official and semiofficial outlets close to
the government -- stern and glum with a short beard -- does not quite
correspond to the rakish young man with a mischievous glint in his eyes that
appears in numerous candid shots that his friends have distributed.

Similarly, Jaleh's background does not quite mesh with that of a Basij
member or government supporter. He was in his third year of studies in the
field of dramatic arts at the Department of Cinema and Theater at Tehran's
Arts University. He was also interested in writing fiction, according to
Soltani, and published at least one short story, "The
Bus<http://www.magiran.com/ppdf/1294/p0129400370361.pdf>,"
in *Azma* magazine, which has been accused in some quarters of being a part
of the "soft war" against the Islamic Republic. A native of Kurdistan
province, he was a Sunni. "I think he was from the town of Bijar or Paveh,"
said Soltani. "In any case, he spoke both Turkish and Kurdish."

[image: SanehJalehAyatollahMontazeri.jpg][image: KashnFallah.jpg]

*Jaleh with Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri; Arts University President Saeed
Kashn Fallah*

"He was not what you would call an active militant in politics [*mobarezeh
siassi*], but you have to be somehow political when you engage in protests,"
said former fellow theater student Soltani. Jaleh's opinions led him to
accompany his university's student association on a visit to the late
dissident Ayatollah Hossein Ali
Montazeri<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/12/grand-ayatollah-hossein-ali-montazeri-1922-2009.html>,
who spent a good portion of the past 20 years under house arrest in Qom.

[image: SanehJalehAtUniversity.jpg]The progression of the official
presentation of Jaleh from devout student to regime sympathizer to
full-fledged Basij militia member has left a trail on cyberspace,
implicating news agencies, the head of the Arts University of Tehran, and
the Basijeh Daneshjouyi -- the Student Basij organization.

The Arts University's public relations office released a cautious statement
on Jaleh's death early in the day, saying that it was with a "heart filled
with sorrow and pain" that it had to announce the "martyrdom of Saneh Jaleh,
one of the dear and devout children of this university." The statement
continued, "We will not rest until the agents and instigators of this savage
act are identified."

Toward noon, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) spoke of Jaleh as a
"martyr who was killed yesterday during the riots of the seditionists," a
catchphrase for those who oppose the regime. Although Hadi Ghassemi, in
charge of public relations for the Student Basij, was quoted in IRNA's
report, he never said that Jaleh was a Basij member. IRNA added, "Jaleh was
a guardian of the Qur'an and a religious person and was considered a
supporter of the regime." The article planted the first seeds of the
scenario that the regime would be promoting: "This young man was killed with
a bullet fired from a small arm." In the case of Neda, the regime's news
agencies insisted that the bullet that killed the young woman came from a
weapon which is not used by the Islamic Republic's security forces.

Fars News, close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, also quoted Hadi
Ghassemi around noon, but this time the Student Basij spokesperson had more
to say. Jaleh had been the "target of a direct shot from the Monafeghin
[hypocrites] terrorist cell," said Ghassemi, using the regime's term for the
MKO.
[image: SJAllegedBasijCard.jpg]By early afternoon, the president of the Arts
University, Saeed Kashn Fallah, was quoted by Tabnak news, close to former
Revolutionary Guard commander Mohsen Rezaei, and Fars News as saying that
"Jaleh was a third-year student of theater at the Arts University, who was
killed by terrorist agents of the Monafeghin during the illegal gatherings
in Tehran yesterday." He added, "Jaleh was a Basiji student and guardian of
the Qur'an at the Arts University." The Tabnak piece concluded thus: "The
Monafeghin terrorist cell also targeted four other fellow citizens with
direct gunshots. They are being treated in hospitals."

By this point in the day, contrary voices were being raised to denounce the
regime's campaign to exploit Jaleh and to invite the people to preempt the
official funeral service on Wednesday morning. "The height of
shamelessness," one Internet user wrote on the Balatarin news aggregator.
"Our next meeting...tomorrow to bury Green martyr Saneh Jaleh," wrote
blogger Arezooabedini. It was time for the official news outlets to go to
the next level.

Fars News, which has been known to make creative use of Photoshop, published
what it purported to be Saneh Jaleh's Basij membership card at 2 p.m. (see
image at left). But some inconsistencies in the document were quickly
pointed out by Internet users. Blogger Irandust2000 wrote that the stamp on
the photo bore the name of the town of Paveh, but that the back of the card
had a postal code for Tehran. Irandust2000 said that the postal codes on the
back of Basij cards correspond to the city where they are issued and that
this discrepancy indicated that the individuals who had prepared the
document had not waited for a proper Basij card from Paveh to be sent to
Tehran. Also, the alleged card, supposedly issued three years ago, had a
higher serial number than those issued two years ago. Bloggers posted
scanned images of genuine Basij cards from two years ago to prove their
point.
[image: SanehJalehCloseup.jpg]Soltani and other friends of Jaleh have set up
a Facebook group
<http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_102185423195600>called
"Green martyr Saneh Jaleh" to protect the memory of their slain
comrade and to provoke a popular backlash.

Though the most immediate task of the group is to invite people to convene
at the Arts University funeral service tomorrow to prevent the regime from
burying Jaleh as a Basiji, one member posted another request.

"I read the words of [Arts University President] Saeed Kashn Fallah," he
wrote. "Friends of the university community! Let us begin housecleaning from
the university and...demand the removal of this unchivalrous character [*
najavanmard*]. Let us take this step in our own home, until we take the next
ones."

*Homylafayette, a Tehran Bureau contributor, blogs
here<http://homylafayette.blogspot.com/>
.*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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