Truthblast Posted October 8, 2022 Share Posted October 8, 2022 This looks more and more like a revolution. Al-Monitor: https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2022/10/irans-raisi-heckled-female-students-more-protesters-killed Bullets, teargas, scuffles and business strikes brought many Iranian cities to a standstill on Saturday, as the country was rocked with another round of protests that began after the death of Mahsa Amini in hijab police custody last month. In the capital Tehran, key locations including streets leading to the traditional Grand Bazaar witnessed running battles. Protesters chanted slogans against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, before being attacked by riot police. Videos from the same locations also showed demonstrators blocking roads, while a massive cloud of smoke was billowing from what was reported to be a police kiosk set ablaze. "This is no longer a protest, it is a genuine revolution," some shouted. Others were heard chanting against Khamenei's son Mojtaba, signaling to him that the Islamic Republic will be toppled before his purported expectation of becoming Iran's next supreme leader and succeeding his father comes true. The Kurdish city of Sanandaj, according to multiple anti-government sources and viral videos, saw the worst violence, as security forces used "live ammunition." In one rally, a driver identified as Dariush Alizadeh was fatally shot after honking in protest. A teenage boy was also reported dead, while some accounts put to five the death toll from today's unrest in the city. Other videos showed angry demonstrators severely beating and chasing away a "senior commander" of hardline Basij militia, who have been actively involved in the ongoing crackdown. The conservative city of Mashhad was also the venue of many moments of violent crackdown, from a pregnant woman being attacked and forcefully taken away, and another beaten up by batons, to security forces smashing a private vehicle in a residential neighborhood. Videos from the same city made rounds of a woman shot and lying on the street surrounded by screaming fellow citizens. It remained unclear whether she had lost her life, but to many Iranians the captured moment struck similarities with the tragic and iconic moment of the death of another protest figure, Neda Agha-Soltan during the 2009 post-election protests. The rallies were held after nationwide calls despite government-imposed internet blackouts that have tremendously impeded the flow of communication. The day was also characterized by strikes in Tehran's normally overcrowded carpet market as well as the Lalehzar business center. Shops in many other provincial capitals were also shut down as an act of civil disobedience. President heckled On the same day, President Ebrahim Raisi was delivering a fiery speech at the women-only Al-Zarha University in Tehran, where he once again linked the unrest to foreign enemies. Outside the conference hall, videos from the campus showed students removing headscarves and chanting "clerics must get lost," repeating a call for the overthrow of the theocratic establishment. Raisi praised Iranian students for their "vigilance" in defusing enemy plots. The recent protests have seen many university students and schoolgirls, from the so-called Generation Z, burning their headscarves at campuses, schoolyards and on the streets, jumping on portraits of Iran's supreme leader. Rising death toll At least 19 minors were among 185 people killed by security forces, according to the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights (IHR), which has been documenting the deaths during three weeks of unrest. Iranian authorities deny killing the protesters, arguing that police forces are carrying "non-lethal weapons." In the latest from state media programs meant to attribute those deaths to other causes, a woman was brought before cameras on Friday, announcing that her daughter, Sarina Esmailzadeh, died of suicide. Amnesty International has reported that she lost her life due to severe blows of batons to her head. Many Iranians on social media cast serious doubt on the narrative after digging in videos earlier posted by Sarina Esmailzadeh on her personal channels on YouTube and Telegram, where they found striking differences between the interviewee and another woman who they said was indeed her mother. In another development, Ali Sharifzadeh, the lawyer of the family of a 14-year-old boy, shared a copy of the boy's official death certificate online, which asserted that he had died of a bullet in his head. "Do not attribute the death to some 'suicide' or 'underlying health condition'," he warned Iranian authorities sarcastically and pre-emptively. Read more: https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2022/10/irans-raisi-heckled-female-students-more-protesters-killed#ixzz7hAM57BI3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nemuri Kyoshiro Posted October 8, 2022 Share Posted October 8, 2022 CIA at work again. They fomented the 1979 revolution and now they're back. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pi3141 Posted October 9, 2022 Share Posted October 9, 2022 Who knows, maybe years of religous oppression has finally taken its toll. I doubt the CIA orchestrated the death of the woman that started these demonstrations But no doubt they are there fanning the flames. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted October 9, 2022 Share Posted October 9, 2022 rent-a-mob colour revolution Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted October 22, 2022 Share Posted October 22, 2022 On 10/9/2022 at 3:02 PM, Macnamara said: rent-a-mob colour revolution October 15, 2022 Behind The Iranian Riots Over the last weeks there were some riots in Iran. At first there were protest about the falsely reported death of a young women, Mahsa Amini, who had suddenly collapsed (video) while waiting in a police station. She died a few days later. Mahsa Amini had previously had brain surgery and her collapse and death were related to that, not to police action. The protests by mostly women, and supported by a well known U.S. government employee, were soon taken over by separatist groups who turned them into riots. This especially in the northwestern Kurdish border region and the southeastern Baloch region. These groups are know to have foreign support. Police stations were attacked, cars were set on fire and night riots set off. In total some 24 policemen and some 100 protesters died. It is not the first time that such riots are happening in Iran. The 2007 riots were launched after peaceful protests against a petrol price increase and the 2017 riots after peaceful protests over general economic hardship. Each time the protests were taken over by foreign directed groups and ended in serious riots that caused some death. After a month or two the situations calmed down. Something similar is happening now. As usual the riots have 'western' media support, most notoriously from the New York Times. Here is a fine example: ‘It Was a Massacre’: How Security Forces Cracked Down in Southeastern Iran A New York Times analysis of witness testimony and videos reveals a bloody scene that unfolded last month in Zahedan during Friday Prayer, with mats as stretchers and bodies piled in cars. Some of the wounded tried to crawl away to escape the gunfire. Others bled to death on prayer mats as people tried to drag them to safety. But the snipers and officers kept pulling their triggers, firing bullet after bullet into men and young boys at a worship area where Friday Prayer had been underway. That sounds as if the police were shooting at will and unprovoked. But some details strewn deeper throughout the story paint a very different picture. If one cuts out the propaganda trash about some video scenes and anonymous Iranian voices making unverifiable claims one can take a less obstructed look at the real situation: The horrific scene unfolded on Sept. 30 in Zahedan, a city in southeastern Iran that is home to the ethnic Baluch minority, after a small group of worshipers emerged from the Great Mosalla prayer complex to confront security forces posted at a police station across the street. ... The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, an elite branch of the armed forces, has confirmed that its forces were present in Zahedan, and that six of its members were killed that day, including its regional intelligence chief, Col. Ali Mousavi, and officers from the feared Basij militia. They have denied firing on civilians. Witnesses said that a number of Iranian security officers were killed, but that they died later during street clashes. The protesters chanted antigovernment slogans and threw rocks at the officers, prompting the security forces to fire indiscriminately into the crowd, according to witnesses. As the demonstrators scattered, the gunshots stalked their retreat back toward the complex, where thousands were still praying ... But according to the cleric and two other witnesses, a group of 10 to 15 young worshipers left the complex before prayers had concluded to gather outside the police station. A video verified by The Times shows some of the protesters throwing rocks at the police station, where security forces stood on the roof, as gunshots are heard. Witnesses said that some protesters hurled Molotov cocktails. The forces responded with gunfire, witnesses said. One video verified by The Times shows two men who appear to be in uniform standing alongside another man on the roof of the police station firing what seems to be a pump-action shotgun in the direction of the mosque. ... As the day went on, more civilians swarmed into the streets as they became aware of the violence taking place in the city. They were met with Persian-speaking security forces, in traditional Baluch clothing, who emerged from cars before firing on the protesters, some of whom fought back with Molotov cocktails and bullets, according to witnesses. Most of the clashes took place on a street near the Makki mosque where hundreds had gathered. The riots in Zahedan were organized by some well resourced group, likely financed by this or that U.S. government program: The day before the shootings in Zahedan, protesters began calling for a “broad uprising” in “all of the towns of Baluchestan,” as an act of “solidarity with Kurdistan and in protest of the rape of the Baluch girl,” according to a poster advertising the demonstrations. The Kurdistan region of Iran has also seen major protests in recent weeks and has been subject to attacks by government forces. The alleged 'rape of the Baloch girl' is unconfirmed and likely just another false accusation. To sum it up: A group of well organized and armed provocateurs attacked policemen and tried to set a police station on fire. The police did not agree with that. It used pump-action shotguns with can be used with either birdshot or anti-riot ammunition. More people came. Some of them had guns. Who actually shot the people and the IRGC men who died is unexplained. Who the alleged 'snipers' were is also unexplained. The Times presumes that they were police but provides no evidence for that conclusion. Like during the 2014 Maidan riots the snipers might have been provocateurs hired to shot at both sides, protesters and policemen. Zahedan is near the at times unruly border with Pakistan. That is why IRGC and other security forces are stationed there. I find this sentence somewhat funny: They were met with Persian-speaking security forces, in traditional Baluch clothing, ... Is this supposed to be sinister? While Baloch people often speak Balochi, it is a local Iranian dialect. Persian (Farsi) is the official government language of Iran and taught in all schools. That some 'Persian-speaking' security forces were wearing the usual local civil clothing (loose long shirts without buttons) should not astonish anyone. Such undercover tactics are used all over the world. Iran's Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian is not amused about being lectured by 'western' officials about police behavior during armed riots: Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian has underscored that Iran is the anchor of stability and security in the region and not the land of velvet or colorful coup, slamming foreign intervention by some Western countries in Iran. In a phone call with High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell, the Iranian foreign minister said that, “the death of the late Mahsa Amini is a painful for all of us,” however, he pointed out that this issue is just regarded as a pretext for (intervention of) some western authorities. ... “Peaceful demands are different from riots, murders, arson, and terrorist operations,” he pointed out. On the same topic, the Iranian FM also questioned “Who would believe that the death of a girl is so important to Westerners? If so, what did they do to the hundreds of thousands of martyrs and dead in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Lebanon? They wanted to start a sectarian war in Iran.” ... The Iranian FM said that for instance, in Zahedan, “there was no slogan or photo of Mahsa, and a known terrorist group tried to start a conflict between Shias and Sunnis, and they claimed responsibility for it. (The terrorist groups) did the same in part of Kurdistan, but the insight of Sunni scholars and people foiled their attempts.” The riots have died down. The CIA will prepare the separatist groups it finances for another round to be launched when the next random reason for some peaceful protest can be found to hide in. Iran is by now well aware of this tactic and its security forces are trained to defend against such nonsense. The Biden administration will use the Iranian police action against rioters to justify that it is breaking its election promise to reenter the nuclear deal with Iran. The U.S. will not be happy about the long term consequences of that failure. https://www.moonofalabama.org/2022/10/behind-the-iranian-riots.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mikhail Liebestein Posted October 22, 2022 Share Posted October 22, 2022 We need to send in some Spartans to sort things out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sanita Posted October 27, 2022 Share Posted October 27, 2022 That is so long post, wish i could have nerves right now to read it. But i can say that i personally, all by myself, went for a trip to Iran, kept clean myself from other`s opinions. Found out how beautiful people are. Victims of their system, i could relate to their pain. Iranians are judged by their rulers but the same way west can be judged. Love for Iranians. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Truthblast Posted October 27, 2022 Author Share Posted October 27, 2022 6 hours ago, sanita said: That is so long post, wish i could have nerves right now to read it. But i can say that i personally, all by myself, went for a trip to Iran, kept clean myself from other`s opinions. Found out how beautiful people are. Victims of their system, i could relate to their pain. Iranians are judged by their rulers but the same way west can be judged. Love for Iranians. Persian culture was very refined before the country went bellyup. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted October 29, 2022 Share Posted October 29, 2022 On 10/9/2022 at 3:02 PM, Macnamara said: rent-a-mob colour revolution Foreign spy agencies, led by CIA, behind Iran riots: Top intelligence bodies by tts-admin | Oct 29, 2022 Iran’s top intelligence bodies have issued a joint statement, pointing to the major role of foreign intelligence agencies, especially the CIA, in orchestrating the violent riots in Iran in the past weeks. The American regime launched a “pre-planned” project by exploiting the tragic death of Mahsa Amini before the announcement of official investigations, reads the statement. It censured Washington’s exploitation of the tragedy for its political interests despite having a history of ignoring the heinous Saudi crime of killing journalist Jamal Khashoggi or the intentional killing of journalist Shireen Abu Akeleh by the Israeli regime. “Intelligence evidence shows that the CIA had devised an extensive plan with the cooperation of allied spy services and reactionary proxies before the start of the unrest to initiate a nationwide chaos with the aim of committing crimes against the great Iranian nation and the country’s territorial integrity as well as paving the ground for increasing foreign pressures,” it added. According to available information, the statement maintained, “the CIA played the main role” while closely cooperating with the spy services of the UK, the Israeli regime, and Saudi Arabia. The statement went on to refer to some of the measures of the aforementioned agencies in preparing for the unrest such as holding so-called human rights conferences and implying the inefficiency of the Iranian government by exploiting every incident as an opportunity. The aforesaid spy agencies organized camps in a number of countries to train individuals on hybrid and soft war, said the statement, noting that the individuals who took and published the first picture of Mahsa Amini at the hospital, as well as the one who incited Amini’s family by posting specific photos, had received special training in those courses. Global media war on Iran The intelligence bodies also said that enemies planned and implemented a “global media war” against Iran, using TV channels and social media. It noted that Twitter and Instagram ignored their own regulations to pave the way for ramping up the dissemination of “fake news.” Providing more examples, the statement said that Twitter allowed 50,000 new fake accounts for Persian language users between September 11 to October 12 while also abolishing its own restrictions such as the time limits between posts. The statement concluded that despite all these efforts, the enemies “failed to attain none of their pre-planned goals,” as the “project of destroying Iran has faced a humiliating defeat.” https://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/?p=260514 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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