Rene — Protests Straining Society, Relations With The U.S.
Topic(s): Iran | Comments Off on Rene — Protests Straining Society, Relations With The U.S.RFE/RL Iran: Protests Straining Society, Relations With The U.S.
By Mark Baker
A recent wave of anti-government protests in Iran is continuing, as
police and hard-line vigilante groups seek to suppress students and
their supporters. The demonstrations — now in their sixth day — are
putting pressure on both conservative elements and President Mohammad
Khatami’s reformist government. The protests are also straining ties
with the United States.
Prague, 16 June 2003 (RFE/RL) — Anti-regime protests are continuing
in Iran for a sixth day. Reports say the protests, mostly centered in
the capital Tehran, have now spread to other cities, including
Isfahan, Shiraz, Ahvaz, and Mashad.
Last night, cars and people clogged streets near the main campus of
Tehran University. Protesters called for the release of political
prisoners and the resignation of President Mohammad Khatami.
Police and hard-line vigilante groups later cracked down on the
protesters. Some 30 people were reportedly arrested on charges of
hooliganism, bringing the number of people who have been detained in
the past week to more than 140.
A correspondent from RFE/RL’s Radio Farda interviewed a young woman
who lives near where the protests took place.
“Last night the noise was extremely loud,” she said. “I think [the
demonstrations] continued until midnight or one o’clock in the
morning. The law enforcement forces were there. They were beating
people as if they wanted to beat them to death. I heard shooting. I
think the [vigilantes] were also there. We couldn’t sleep until one
o’clock because of the noise.”
The protests, at times involving thousands of people, are aimed at
both Iran’s hard-line Islamic regime and the reformist group centered
around Khatami. Many demonstrators say the reformers have not gone far
enough in promoting democratic change.
The demonstrations are considered the most serious challenge to the
leadership since a wave of university protests in the summer of
1999. They have exposed deep divisions within Iranian society.
A leading group of dissidents yesterday issued a strong reproach to
the hard-line leadership of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The
statement, signed by some 250 intellectuals, journalists, and clerics,
stressed the right of the people to fully supervise the actions of
their rulers.
The statement — referring to all-powerful religious leaders — said
that individuals who act as if they have “divine and absolute power”
commit a “clear heresy toward God” and a “clear affront to human
dignity.”
The protests are also straining the country’s already poor ties with
the United States.
The United States has voiced support for the
demonstrations. U.S. President George W. Bush said yesterday he sees
the protests as positive. “This is the beginnings of people expressing
themselves for a free Iran, which I think is positive,” Bush said. The
White House had earlier issued a statement expressing concern over the
use of violence by vigilantes against the students.
Iran, which suspects the United States of actively encouraging the
protests, has reacted strongly. The Foreign Ministry said today it was
“currently impossible” for the Islamic Republic to engage in any
dialogue with the United States. Iran has sent a protest note to
Washington.
Tehran and Washington cut diplomatic ties after the 1979 Islamic
Revolution, but the two countries had recently been engaged in
discreet talks through a forum initially set up to address the crisis
in Afghanistan.
Those contacts were halted after the suicide bombings in Riyadh in May
that killed 35 people. U.S. officials say they suspect Iran-based
operatives of the Al-Qaeda terrorist network of being involved in the
attack.
The protests are expected to last at least until 9 July, the
anniversary of the 1999 student demonstrations.
(Radio Farda and RFE/RL’s Farangis Najibullah contributed to this
feature.)