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WSWS : News
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East
Thousands protest against Iranian government
By Justus Leicht
20 June 2003
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For over a week, several hundred students have taken part in
daily demonstrations in Teheran against the Iranian Islamic government.
The students were joined by thousands of city residents, who became
embroiled in battles with the police and fanatical groups of thugs
loyal to the government.
The demonstrations were originally directed against the privatisation
of the universities and the introduction of fees for students,
but they were rapidly joined by broader sections of the population.
Inhabitants of the city who joined the protests deliberately blocked
traffic, while car drivers beeped their horns in a show of support
for the students. Residents allowed students caught up in the
fighting to take refuge in their homes. Later, several thousands
also demonstrated in other Iranian cities.
According to recent reports, 140 demonstrators have been arrested,
with many injured. The police used truncheons and tear gas, while
paramilitary groups of religious fanatics attacked the protesters,
including women, with metal chains. On Saturday, right-wing thugs,
supporters of the religious leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, overran
student dormitories and attacked students with chains, metal bars
and knives. Fifty students were wounded in the course of this
single assault, and a further two dozen disappeared soon after
the attack. Fearful that the extreme brutality of the militias
could provoke wider dissent and, under circumstance in which the
state forces were coming off the worst in some fighting, the police
arrested a handful of members of the religious militias.
The student protests express a widespread popular mood,
the German Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper commented.
The causes of dissatisfaction are immediately apparent: poverty
and unemployment, economic stagnation, permanent official bullying
and strict Islamic laws affecting every aspect of daily life.
But as the paper continued: There is no party or structure
which could serve to fuse the general discontent into coordinated
action.
The political slogans became visibly more radical. For the
first time, such chants as Death to Khamenei and Khatami,
resign could be heard on Teheran streets. Last Monday, 250
intellectuals published a letter in which they questioned the
basis of the theocratic system of the Rule of the religious
clerics. The people and their elected representatives
have the right to supervise, criticise and remove those from power
with whom they are dissatisfied, the letter read. The letter
also stated, To elevate an individual to a position of absolute
power is a clear heresy against God and a clear affront against
human dignity. Such comments are punishable in todays
Iran with nothing less than a prison sentence.
Discredited reformers
It is evident that the faction of liberal reformers
around state president Mohamed Khatami are completely discredited,
having failed to realise any of their promises of increased democracydespite
their holding overwhelming majorities in all elected institutions.
This process was already apparent in local elections in late
February. Voter participation slumped to just 25 percent (12 percent
in Teheran) compared with 64 percent in similar elections held
in 1999. In most city councils, the reformers lost
their posts to conservative opponents.
Following the US offensive in Iraq, 100 deputies from the Iranian
parliament, which is still dominated by the reform
faction, wrote an urgent letter to the religious leader
of the republic, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. They pleaded with him
to allow democratic reforms in order to rescue the existing system
and prevent Iran from suffering the same fate as the Taliban and
Saddam Hussein. State president Khatami himself responded by issuing
a general ban on publication of the letter.
Later, the end came for two draft laws passed by parliament
in March that were seen as Khatamis last card. One law aimed
to take away the conservative-dominated Council of Guardians
veto power to bar candidates it does not like from participating
in elections. This law was particularly significant given parliamentary
elections scheduled for the spring of 2004. The conservatives
have made no bones about their intention of using these elections
to mount a counter-offensive to regain the majority in parliament.
The second piece of legislation was aimed at expanding the
powers of the state president, allowing him to punish violations
of the constitution and revise decisions made by the conservative-dominated
courts, such as the banning of newspapers and the imprisonment
of intellectuals.
Khatami had tied his political fate to this legislative package
and, as he has frequently done before, threatened to resign should
the measures not be approved. Deputies had also threatened to
resign en masse should the draft laws be blocked. In fact, nothing
of the sort took place following the anticipated decision by the
Council of Guardians to veto the drafts. Instead, Khatami indicated
he was prepared to seek a compromise with the esteemed Council
of Guardians. In a letter to the speaker of the Iranian
parliament, he explained the aim of the two drafts: In this
sensitive situation where seditious hands are at work
consolidating the link between the nation, government and the
system has immense importance.
Khatamis response reveals the dilemma of the reformers.
The liberal reforms they are seeking in order to rein in the influence
of the mullahs can only be achieved through a mobilisation of
broad layers of the working masses. The reforms are to be directed
against the domination of privileged clerics supported by the
layer of so-called bazaar handlers, rich merchants and traders
who profit under the protection of the Islamic regime. These layers
fear any liberalisation and opening up of the country, which would
rapidly and radically challenge the basis of their privileged
position.
At the same time, the reformers fear any mobilisation
of the masses. Their own perspective envisages a programme of
extensive deregulation and privatisation of the economy, which
will only deepen the horrendous gulf between rich and poor in
Iran and prove deeply unpopular. It is no accident that the trigger
for the latest protests was moves towards the privatisation of
the universities and the introduction of student fees.
The aggressive activities of the US in the Middle East, which
are increasingly directed against Iran, have intensified the reform
wings dilemma. Now their right-wing opponents can brand
any form of criticism or opposition as an expression of American
subversion. Khamenei also denounced the demonstrators as adventurers
and American mercenaries for whom Iran would show
no mercy. At the same time, the second most prominent ranking
conservative after Khamenei, Hashemi Rafsanjani, called upon the
US to be logical and carry out discussions with Iran
instead of bullying the country. He indicated that
Iran could use its influence amongst Islamic groups in Palestine
and Iraq to bring the situation in those countries under control
and in line with the interests of the United States.
The Financial Times commented: Reformists close
to Mohammad Khatami, the elected president who holds limited powers,
suspect Mr. Rafsanjani and other conservatives want to suppress
the movement for change at home while trying to make a deal with
the US.
US and monarchists seek to exploit the bankruptcy
of the reformers
The Bush governments pressure on Iran has increased considerably
since the stationing of American troops in Afghanistan, Central
Asia and Iraq. President Bush welcomed the student protests and
enthusiastically described them as the beginning of new
free Iran. Secretary of State Colin Powell made similar
remarks.
For some time, private Persian-language TV stations, mainly
situated in the wealthier neighbourhoods of the capital, have
been played an important role. They broadcast programs produced
in Los Angeles and transmitted by satellite that call for participation
in anti-government demonstrations. Most of these channels are
controlled by right-wing monarchists whose aim is to put in power
Reza Pahlavi, the son of the shah of Iran, who was deposed in
1979. In common with the rest of the right-wing monarchist movement
in Iran, Pahlavi lacks any real popular support.
The backers of these private stations also include Douglas
Feith, the US under secretary of defence for policy, who is closely
linked to the influential pro-Bush American Enterprise Institute
as well as to the pro-Israeli lobbyists in Washington. A recent
bill introduced by Republican senator Sam Brownback calls for
the US government to provide official funding for the satellite
channels to the tune of US$50 million.
See Also:
Washington turns to regime
change in Iran
[29 May 2003]
Iran: death sentence
sparks protests and coup threats
[21 November 2002]
Social tensions escalate
conflicts within Iranian regime
[6 September 2002]
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