Posts tagged as:

Khamenei

Who Is Waging War Against God In Iran?

by Abbas Djavadi on March 11, 2010

How did Mohammad Amin Valian, a 20-year-old student from Damghan, land in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) infamous Special Detention Center No. 209 of Tehran’s Evin Prison?

Valian comes from a religious family and is a member of his university’s reformist Islamic Students’ Association. In late December, on the Ashura remembrance day, he heeded a call by the opposition to go into the streets and join the city’s Green Movement supporters chanting “Death to the dictator!”

Ashura evolved into a broad show of power by the opposition, which has been demonstrating sporadically since the disputed June 2009 presidential election. On that day, hundreds of thousands took to the streets in Tehran and other cities. The IRGC and the Basij militia attacked the crowds and beat and dispersed demonstrators. About 10 were killed and a few hundred were arrested.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reacted in panic and gave his final (although still implicit) approval for the authorities to suppress any individual or group opposition “to protect the Islamic system.” His executors in government and the security forces were more direct in restating the supreme leader’s message: Anybody opposing the leader or the government is a “mohareb, a person “waging war against God.”

And a mohareb, in their interpretation, deserves death.

Valian was not fighting against God. In fact, how could a person “wage war against God” anyway? But in a country dominated by the absolute authority of an unelected clerical supreme leader, God is the government, and protesting against the government is the same as waging a war against God. Those who chant “death to the dictator” — implying the supreme leader — must be stopped, even if it means handing down death sentences.

[click to continue…]

مطلب را به بالاترين بفرستيد: Balatarin

{ 1 comment }

After Elections, Iran Remains A Major Player In Iraq

by Abbas Djavadi08.03.2010

On March 7, millions of Iraqis “made their mark” and participated in the country’s second, generally fair and democratic post-Saddam Hussein parliamentary elections — an event that is exemplary for Iraq’s Arab and Iranian neighbors. Among the good news was that election coalitions this time around were far more ethnically and confessionally mixed than they [...]

Read the full article →

Iran’s Fears And Hopes As Iraqis Vote

by Abbas Djavadi05.03.2010

Imagine the following: The de facto independent Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq declares independence, secedes from Iraq, and inspires Kurds in Turkey and Iran to join a “Greater Kurdistan.” Shi’ite Arab parties in Iraq follow suit and found a small, Iran-friendly country mired in tensions with Iraq’s Sunnis and other Arab countries. Fighting erupts [...]

Read the full article →

Shi’a Islam Vs. The Islamic Republic

by Abbas Djavadi25.02.2010

Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani is a source of emulation across the Shi’ite world
Recently, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq’s highest Shi’ite authority, urged voters to turn out for that country’s March 7 parliamentary elections. He warned that that failure to do so would “allow some to achieve illegitimate goals.”
To be sure, Sistani is no politician, though [...]

Read the full article →

Tabriz ‘Celebrates’ Anniversary Of Islamic Revolution

by Abbas Djavadi11.02.2010

High-school students gather to attend pro-government demonstration in Tabriz on February 11.
On the morning of February 11, the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, some 200 students and their relatives from the Ferdowsi High School in Iran’s northwestern city of Tabriz, the capital of Eastern Azerbaijan Province, gathered in the schoolyard.
The same happened with other [...]

Read the full article →

Zahra And Millions Like Her

by Abbas Djavadi14.01.2010

Zahra is a nurse working at the Beheshti Hospital in the central Iranian city of Isfahan. Both Zahra and her husband, Arash, a physiotherapist, work hard, with a lot of overtime, to provide for their two children.
They complain about their relatively low income. Zahra, for example, earns 550,000 tumans a month, about $600, and says [...]

Read the full article →

The Ashura of My Younger Years

by Abbas Djavadi26.12.2009
Ashura

December 27 is Ashura, the 10th day of the month Muharram of the Islamic calendar. It is commemorated to mark the day of martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, in the year 61 of Hijra (680 AD).
I grew up in a very traditional, religious Shi’ite family in Tabriz in northwestern Iran, during [...]

Read the full article →

The Iranian Regime Would Do Anything to Survive

by Abbas Djavadi23.12.2009
hospodarske

(In Czech language)
Pro své přežití udělá íránský režim cokoli. Nedá se mu věřit
Pohřeb ajatolláha Alího Montazerího, na němž v pondělí protestovaly desetitisíce Íránců, byl poslední ukázkou, v jak vratké situaci se letos íránský režim ocitl. Sporné volby, radikalizace politiky, skrývání jaderného zařízení u Kómu, to vše letos vyneslo zemi znovu do role globálního hříšníka. [...]

Read the full article →

Iran Is Likely To See A Harsher Crackdown

by Abbas Djavadi15.12.2009
kha-a

There are fears that the Iranian regime may intensify the crackdown on the opposition in the next few weeks.
Six months after a rigged presidential election wherein Mahmud Ahmadinejad was hastily confirmed the winner, the resistance has not disappeared despite tear gas, beatings, and hundreds of detentions, torture, imprisonment, and even killings.
At every given opportunity, [...]

Read the full article →

Should Iranians Care About Jerusalem?

by Abbas Djavadi14.09.2009
Ghods

This coming Friday, September 18, is the “Day of Jerusalem” in Iran. Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, in chorus with some other Islamic countries and organizations, declared the last Friday of the month of Ramadan the “Day of Jerusalem” to demonstrate support for Palestinians and their drive to impose their [...]

Read the full article →

Why Should We Care About Jerusalem?

by Abbas Djavadi13.09.2009
Ghods

(In Persian)
قدس به ما چه مربوط؟
جمعه آینده در ایران “روز قدس”
است.  آیت الله روح الله خمینی بنیانگذار جمهوری اسلامی در همپائی با بعضی کشور ها و سازمانهای اسلامی آخرین روز ماه رمضان را به نشانه حمایت از فلسطینی ها و خواست آنها مبنی بر حاکمیت (حد اقل نسبی) بر این شهر قدیمی “روز قدس” اعلام کرده بود. نه اینکه شما تصور کنید [...]

Read the full article →

Iran: Evolutionary Change

by Abbas Djavadi22.06.2009

National Review Online, Sunday, June 21, 2009
The Iranian Revolt [Rich Lowry]
John O’Sullivan wrote me this note today.
Dear Rich,
Thanks for your note. I am happy to give you my judgment on the Iranian revolt. In brief, it’s one of the most important movements of our time. It radically undermines both the realist argument that Muslims are [...]

Read the full article →

Iran’s Khamenei On Crash Course

by Abbas Djavadi19.06.2009

For the past couple of months, we thought some kind of spring was coming to our beloved Iran. We deserved it, we thought, finally, after so many years of un-freedom, state-ideological one-way-turbo-course, and international isolation and humiliation. But after the much expected speech yesterday by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, it seems we are not in [...]

Read the full article →

Even Iran Can Change

by Abbas Djavadi10.06.2009
posters

Iran is always good for big surprises. Over the last four years, the international community has come to love to hate Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad (sort of like former U.S. President George W. Bush).
But now it seems there’s a real chance of Ahmadinejad becoming the first Iranian leader since the Islamic revolution 30 years ago [...]

Read the full article →

A Friend’s Note: Mesbah Yazdi’s Decree to Rig Votes

by Abbas Djavadi09.06.2009

Following the discovery of a “Fatwa” (“religious decree”) issued by ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi which sanctions cheating in Friday’s presidential election and was published in an open letter written by a group of Ministry of Interior employees, the heads of the Election Supervision Committees established by reformist candidates Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi sent a [...]

Read the full article →

Ahmadinejad For Four More Years?

by Abbas Djavadi27.04.2009
ahmadinejad

The uncertainty over whether or not conservative forces in Iran will throw their support behind incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s bid for a second presidential term is dissipating. On April 25, a coalition of 14 conservative and clerical parties and groups announced that they will indeed support Ahmadinejad’s candidacy in the June 12 presidential election.
Coalition secretary [...]

Read the full article →