UN Iran faces widespread protesting against Islamofascism

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http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...n-protests-says-us-watching-very-closely.html
President Trump seized upon the anti-government protests in Iran, tweeting Sunday that Iranians are tired of their money being “squandered on terrorism” and that the U.S. is “watching very closely” for human rights violations.

Trump’s tweet was the fourth this weekend on the protests that began midweek and have escalated with two reported deaths late Saturday evening.

“Big protests in Iran,” Trump tweeted Sunday. “The people are finally getting wise as to how their money and wealth is being stolen and squandered on terrorism. Looks like they will not take it any longer. The USA is watching very closely for human rights violations!”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...clash-police-tehran-protests-enter-third-day/
wo people are understood to have been killed after Iranian security forces reportedly opened fire on anti-government demonstrators on Saturday as the largest protests seen in the country since 2009 continued for a third day.

Reports of the two deaths were were posted on social media. There was no official confirmation of the fatalities but the posted images appeared to show several bodies being carried away after clashes with police in the western city in Dorud

Angry protests escalated in cities across Iran as demonstrators tore down posters of Ayatollah Khamenei, the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader, while police on motorbikes charged into crowds swinging batons.

Protesters reportedly stormed the governor’s compound in the western city of Arak and started fires at government offices in Ahvaz, a city in the country’s southwest.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-42529576
Iran has moved to restrict social media networks that have been used to organise three days of anti-establishment protests.

The restrictions on messaging app Telegram and photo sharing app Instagram are "temporary", state news agency Irib reported.

The decision was taken "to maintain tranquillity and security of society", a source was quoted as saying.

The protests have been the biggest show of dissent since huge rallies in 2009.

They began in the north-east as an outcry against economic hardship and rising prices, but turned political in many places, with slogans chanted against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Hassan Rouhani and Iran's interventionist foreign policy in the region.

After violence flared in many places on Saturday, there was little sign of further demonstrations on Sunday.
 
How many of those young protesters were even alive during the Pahlavi dynasty?

I'm going to guess around 10% at most. A lot of the protesters look like they were born between 1988-1997. The protests in 2009 had a lot of older people protesting and even some old communists that were around from 1979 who helped fuck up Iran to begin with. I'm pretty sure Iran took the opportunity to disappear those people during the 2009 protest and the aftermath during the internet and media blackout.

As far as democratic governments in the Muslim lands go, the best outcome with this is a secular military dictatorship IMO. That has usually resulted in the most stable regimes, usually.
 
I'm going to guess around 10% at most. A lot of the protesters look like they were born between 1988-1997. The protests in 2009 had a lot of older people protesting and even some old communists that were around from 1979 who helped fuck up Iran to begin with. I'm pretty sure Iran took the opportunity to disappear those people during the 2009 protest and the aftermath during the internet and media blackout.

As far as democratic governments in the Muslim lands go, the best outcome with this is a secular military dictatorship IMO. That has usually resulted in the most stable regimes, usually.

they sound like millienials
link
Iran protests go on as social media apps blocked, 2 killed
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — The largest protests to strike Iran in nearly a decade continued unabated Sunday, despite a government move to block access to Instagram and a popular messaging app used by activists to organize, with even President Hassan Rouhani acknowledging the public’s anger over the Islamic Republic’s flagging economy.



Rouhani and other leaders made a point to warn that the government wouldn’t hesitate to crack down on those it considers lawbreakers amid the demonstrations, which began Thursday over the economic woes plaguing Iran.


“Those who misused cyberspace and spread violence are absolutely known to us and we will definitely confront them,” Iranian Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said on state television.


The outpouring of public discontent — the most widespread since protests following Iran’s disputed 2009 presidential election —have been fanned by messages sent on the Telegram messaging app, which authorities blocked Sunday along with the photo-sharing app Instagram, which is owned by tech giant Facebook.


Many in Iran are learning about the protests and sharing images of them through Telegram, a mobile-phone messaging app popular among the country’s 80 million people. On Saturday, Telegram shut down one channel of the service over Iranian government allegations that it encouraged violence, something its moderator denied.


On Sunday, Telegram CEO Pavel Durov wrote on Twitter that authorities had blocked all access to the app.


“Iranian authorities are blocking access to Telegram for the majority of Iranians after our public refusal to shut down ... peacefully protesting channels,” he wrote.


Iran’s state TV news website, iribnews.ir, said that social media in Iran was being temporarily limited as a safety measure.


“With a decision by the Supreme National Security Council, activities of Telegram and Instagram are temporarily limited,” the report said, without elaborating.


Facebook, based in Menlo Park, California, declined to comment.


Facebook itself has been banned in Iran since the 2009 protests that followed the re-election of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. However, some in Iran access it and other banned websites using virtual private networks.


Meanwhile, authorities acknowledged the first fatalities in the protests, during clashes late Saturday in Doroud, some 325 kilometers (200 miles) southwest of Tehran in Lorestan province, where protesters had gathered for an unauthorized rally, said Habibollah Khojastepour, the security deputy of Lorestan’s governor.


“The gathering was to be ended peacefully, but due to the presence of the (agitators), unfortunately, this happened,” Khojastepour said.


He did not offer a cause of death for the two protesters, but said “no bullets were shot from police and security forces at the people.”


However, the reformist Etemad newspaper quoted Hamid Reza Kazemi, a Lorestan lawmaker, as saying police did open fire during the clashes.


“If someone comes to the street and acts like a norm breaker, what would you do?” the newspaper quoted Kazemi as saying.


Videos circulating on social media late Saturday also appeared to show fallen protesters in Doroud as gunshots sounded in the background. The Associated Press could not immediately verify the footage.


Thousands have taken to the streets of cities across Iran, beginning on Thursday in Mashhad, the country’s second-largest city and a holy site for Shiite pilgrims.


The protests in the Iranian capital, as well as President Donald Trump tweeting about them, raised the stakes. It also apparently forced state television to break its silence about the unrest, acknowledging Saturday that it hadn’t reported on the protests on orders from security officials.


Trump, whose travel bans have blocked Iranians from getting U.S. visas, again tweeted about the protests Sunday.


“The people are finally getting wise as to how their money and wealth is being stolen and squandered on terrorism. Looks like they will not take it any longer,” Trump wrote. “The USA is watching very closely for human rights violations!”


Rouhani criticized Trump in comments aired Sunday night.


“This guy in America who wants to sympathize with our people today has forgotten that he had called Iranian people ‘terrorists’ a few months ago,” Rouhani said. “This person who is against Iran from head to toe does not have the right to be sympathetic to Iranian people.”


Several hundred protesters have been arrested so far, beginning with over 50 in Mashhad on Thursday. The semi-official ILNA news agency reported Sunday that authorities had arrested some 80 protesters in the city of Arak, some 280 kilometers (175 miles) south of Tehran, as well as another 200 in Tehran on Saturday night.


State TV also has reported that some protesters invoked the name of the U.S.-backed shah, who fled into exile just before Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution and later died.


Iran’s economy has improved since its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, which saw Iran limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the end of some international sanctions. Tehran now sells its oil on the global market and has signed deals to purchase tens of billions of dollars’ worth of Western aircraft.


That improvement has not reached the average Iranian, however. Unemployment remains high, and official inflation has crept up to 10 percent again. A recent increase in egg and poultry prices by as much as 40 percent, which a government spokesman has blamed on a cull over avian flu fears, appears to have been the spark for the economic protests.


While the protests have sparked clashes, Iran’s hard-line paramilitary Revolutionary Guard and its affiliates have not intervened as they have in other unauthorized demonstrations since the 2009 election.


Some analysts outside of Iran have suggested that may be because the economic protests initially just put pressure on Rouhani, a relative moderate whose administration struck the nuclear deal.


While saying people should be allowed to protest, Rouhani also made a point Sunday of issuing a warning to demonstrators.


“The government will definitely not tolerate those groups who are after the destruction of public property or disrupting the public order or spark riots in the society,” he said.


___


Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

 
So do they have the Basij out busting heads yet? That's how this went down the last time. They let loose the goon squad and gave everyone involved a good thumping until things quieted down.
 
So do they have the Basij out busting heads yet? That's how this went down the last time. They let loose the goon squad and gave everyone involved a good thumping until things quieted down.

Basij has been out for a little while now, that's why the death toll is starting to rise. Last I looked I think it was up to 10-15 people dead so far. Also internet has supposedly been blocked and throttled in nearly all the major cities according to Persia-twitter. Supposedly it's taking over an hour just to upload 1 minute clips of the protest footage.
 
Basij has been out for a little while now, that's why the death toll is starting to rise. Last I looked I think it was up to 10-15 people dead so far. Also internet has supposedly been blocked and throttled in nearly all the major cities according to Persia-twitter. Supposedly it's taking over an hour just to upload 1 minute clips of the protest footage.
Be interesting to see how long they'll try to hold out for in this case.
 
It' gotten bad enough now that Iran has deployed the Revolutionary Guard on the protesters, so expect a bloodbath. :(

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/bff88f1c-efd1-11e7-a480-969f697997ea

The Revolutionary Guard has been deployed to the streets of Iran as protests enter their sixth day.

The elite troops, charged with protecting the Islamic revolution which brought the regime to power in 1979, announced today that it was taking control of security in Tehran, while mobile phone footage from other cities showed large groups of black-clad security forces on motorbikes or in armoured vehicles lining the streets.
 
From the standpoint of the US and Western Europe this is largely a no lose situation. The core of the issue is even with the Obama led reduction of sanctions and the vast increase in oil revenue, the Ayatollah’s spent the vast majority of the money funding foreign Arab groups. Iran poured billions into Bashir Asad’s Syrian Government (whatever is left of it.) Billions more into Hezbollah, and millions into Yemen. None of it into bolstering and rebuilding the Iranian economy or serving Persian interests. This is a bad moment for the Iranian Government. They back down and cut the foreign funding and a number of Middle Eastern hotspots suddenly quiet down as the Iranian interests collapse. They repress the uprising harshly and the West not only restores the sanctions but drops more punishing ones on them. And the people tear them apart for it. They have so alienated every other power in the region (save those they are propping up with billions of money they suddenly don’t have) that they have no outside direction to turn. The Mullah’s only viable ally is Putin, who not only doesn’t like them, but has a vested interest in shutting down or reducing their oil production.
 
From the standpoint of the US and Western Europe this is largely a no lose situation. The core of the issue is even with the Obama led reduction of sanctions and the vast increase in oil revenue, the Ayatollah’s spent the vast majority of the money funding foreign Arab groups. Iran poured billions into Bashir Asad’s Syrian Government (whatever is left of it.) Billions more into Hezbollah, and millions into Yemen. None of it into bolstering and rebuilding the Iranian economy or serving Persian interests. This is a bad moment for the Iranian Government. They back down and cut the foreign funding and a number of Middle Eastern hotspots suddenly quiet down as the Iranian interests collapse. They repress the uprising harshly and the West not only restores the sanctions but drops more punishing ones on them. And the people tear them apart for it. They have so alienated every other power in the region (save those they are propping up with billions of money they suddenly don’t have) that they have no outside direction to turn. The Mullah’s only viable ally is Putin, who not only doesn’t like them, but has a vested interest in shutting down or reducing their oil production.
Yet, apparently Donald "Take the Oil" Trump is in bed with Pootie-Poot.

Imagine if Hillary won and got us knee-deep in Syria's shit. Iran would be laughing all the way to the bank with four-dollar per gallon tanks of gas.
 
There's reports (nothing credible yet) that the former Iranian president and all around crazy Mahmoud Ahmadinejad got put under house arrest after setting up his own protest rally and criticizing the current president, government and Ayatollah at it.

The irony of it all is that Ahmadinejad's reelection is what caused the 2009 protests and he was not only funneling money away from the economy to fund terrorism, but he was also trying to build popularity with the Revolutionary Guard so he could essentially render the Ayatollah a puppet. There was some leaked CIA documents back in the late 2000's that refereed to him as the Persian Hitler.
 
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