Angry Iranian Students Rebel Against Ahmadinejad Appointee
Iran's recent student protests have become too large and too public for the regime to conceal. Ardeshir Arian reports, with videos.
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For nearly two weeks, Shiraz University in central Iran has been paralyzed by a student demonstration that refuses to die and appears to be encouraging an atmosphere of protest on campuses around the country.
The protests began on February 24, when more than 500 students in Shiraz University marched from their dormitories into the main campus and demonstrated against the school’s chancellor Mohammed Hadi Sedeghi, demanding that he resign. The angry protests have taken place daily ever since.
In another country, angry student protesters might be considered a campus matter and wouldn’t necessarily have national significance, but the Shiraz students rising up and rebelling against Sadeghi, a former Revolutionary Guard Corps commander who was personally appointed by Mahmoud Ahmedinejad in an effort to crack down on campuses and rid them of non-Islamic influences, has wider implications. Sadeghi is clearly a political figure and an Ahmedinejad ally — he was in charge of the upcoming parliamentary election committee in the province of Fars.
The angry students are chafing at the restrictive environment on campus in which campus guards are permitted to enter their dorm rooms without any prior warning. Students believe Sadeghi manipulated the internal election of the university council, rejecting 108 student candidates, which resulted in banning them from entering the race and imposing extreme limitations on student print media and activities. There is also general unhappiness with their food and housing, and underlying the action there is general discontent. Fliers distributed among the students are claiming that Sadeghi embezzled approximately $22 million following the sale of a university building.
It isn’t the first protest against the unpopular chancellor. Last April, students protested against a tightened dress code which included huge bulletin boards at the school’s male dormitories with a statement ordering male students not to wear “shorts and tank tops in the dormitory’s halls or where they sleep.”
From the moment the protests first broke out, government security agents were keeping tabs on the students as they marched towards the chancellor’s office chanting: “This is the final message, the student movement is ready for insurrection,” “The movement continues, even if bullets come,” “Resign, resign,” “Freedom of the print media,” “Long live freedom,” “Support the noble nation, support, support,” and “They close the nuclear file, but where are the students’ files?” — protesting jailed students that are missing since the time of their arrests, without any news or closure of their uncertain situation.
The campus was shut, but citizens gathered at the gates of the university to watch the students’ protest — among them, faculty members and other university employees.
On that first day of demonstrations, Sadeghi managed to quietly slip away from campus. Demonstrators rushed in his direction to capture him, but the campus police prevented them from reaching him. After his departure from campus, students occupied his office and vowed to sit in until he resigned.
After, agents of the IRI, employed by the university, blocked the main gates of the campus and parked buses at the entrance to prevent the outsiders from entering the campus and to contain the demonstrations within. Islamic security forces stood at the gates preventing any contact between the students and the people.
Naturally, little has been heard of the student uprising on official Iranian media. But Radio Farda, a Persian-language, 24/7 radio service financed by the U.S., interviewed some of the demonstrators inside the campus. Its reports have been translated by Radio Free Europe:
Student Mohammad Mehdi Ahmadi complained to Radio Farda on February 26 of “pressures” the university chief, whom he identified as Dr. Sadeqi, was imposing on the campus. He said these included the disqualification of 108 students who had sought to run for seats in a student council, the expulsion of various students from dormitories, the closure or evacuation of dormitories for married students, and pressures on student journals and activists. “These all became a trigger for the … protests,” he said.
As the protest has continued, the numbers of students has grown into the thousands, organizers say, despite attempts to break it up by the authorities, with actions such as shutting down the main water lines into the student dormitories.
Among the student chants: “Sadeghi, the Pinochet, Resign, Resign,” and “This is our last warning, the student movement is ready to rise up.”
Multiple YouTube videos have been posted, including those showing students marching and chanting “The noble people, we are ready, we are ready.” As they gathered on the steps of the administration building, they chanted “The noble people, support, support” and “Freedom and justice is the remedy for our people’s pain.” There was also repeated chanting of “Resign, resign, we don’t want a corrupt chancellor,” “This is our last warning, students’ movement is alive,” or “We don’t want a Pasdar [a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] as our chancellor.”
The pro-government, pro-Sagedhi point of view has not gone unrepresented at the protests, but is not very popular.
At one point, a student took the microphone and said: “Since the western media is reporting about your demonstration, then you are being supported by the United States.” Other students booed him and took the mic back from him.
Another representative of the dean claimed that the embattled administrator was ready to answer students’ questions in the auditorium, but the students shot back that “the only thing that he can do is resign. There is nothing to be said between us.”
As the protests entered their second week on Monday, Iranian secret police reportedly began to take more aggressive action to end the embarrassing incident. Ten student leaders have been contacted and threatened. About 25 families of the striking students have been contacted by the campus agents, pressured, threatened, and forced to get in touch with their children and ask them to call off the protest. Eight students have been named and summoned to the revolutionary court to answer for their conduct.
The student protest movement appears to be widening. There is news that students of another higher educational institution in the city of Shahroud, in the province of Khorasan, more than a thousand kilometers away, have followed suit and some students have been arrested by the secret police.
According to Radio Free Europe: “Citing unnamed activists, Radio Farda reported other ongoing protests or sit-ins in Shahrud University in northeastern Iran and the Teacher Training University in Tehran. Ahmadi told Radio Farda that specific issues were merely triggers for protests in Iran’s increasingly restricted campuses. ‘The atmosphere the … government has created in universities is [one] of protest, and the slightest issue can trigger large protests,’ he said.”
On Wednesday, reports emerged that the student unrest had made it to Iran’s capital: between 100 and 200 students at Allameh Tabatabai Univeristy in Tehran protested against the banning of 40 student leaders who had organized a demonstration against the authorities.
An Iranian activist website also reported that:
Students of Bahonar College held an angry demonstration over a fellow student beaten up by the chief of the school’s security. They shouted: “University is not a military garrison.”
Ardeshir Arian is a special correspondent for Pajamas Media; he covers Iranian affairs.
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14 Comments
Kamangir:Good job, thanks.
Mar 5, 2008 - 10:21 am HellifIknow:Color me skeptical: the first video is far less impressive than the second, in that the camera only pans across about 20 degrees. In fact, it seems that the cameraman takes pains to avoid going beyond that range, which begs the question: what is the chronology here? If the top video is later than the bottom one, then this is nothing to get excited about. I do hope that I’m wrong, but that tends not to happen.
Also, there are a few split infinitives in the copy.
Mar 5, 2008 - 11:50 am PianoFam:The song that the students are chanting in the second video is a popular anti-regime, revolutionary song, hated and banned by the mullahs. It is good! — sign of the students’ empowerment and lack of fear.
And the reason the videos seem jittery and moving around is purposeful I think, so it is not focused on any one face which the mullahs’ thugs can use later to identify anyone.
Mar 5, 2008 - 1:33 pm John the Dennis Miller Libertarian:HellifIknow wrote:
“… in that the camera only pans across about 20 degrees.”
should be: in that the camera pans about 20 degrees only.
HellifIknow wrote:
“… then this is nothing to get excited about.”
should be: then this is nothing about which to get excited.
Perhaps before you criticize the writer regarding his grammar, you should focus on your own.
Mar 5, 2008 - 1:38 pm Harvey Levy:This is great news but I wouldn’t get to excited until I see bullets flying and dead bodies. Demonstrations in Iran have been fairly common (for a repressive regime)over the last 10 years or so. While the demonstrations show that there’s discontent Iran is still a repressive regime. Only real change can come about when blood spills.
Mar 5, 2008 - 2:51 pm Rubicon:Most unfortunately, Harvey Levy is correct. In a nation like Iran w/a repressive central government controlled by radical religious zealots & doomsday lovers, the only way change may happen is if those in charge are forcibly removed.
Mar 6, 2008 - 7:50 am Mr. Zug:But then, will Iran & the world get anything better than what we currently have?
So long as individual freedoms, private property rights, human rights, intellectual freedom, & press freedom, remain suppressed & unfortunately misunderstood by many in nations guided by radical religious zealots, its probable the replacement will be just as repressive or more so, plus a lot more coy about it!
To top this off, even in America socialists are gaining traction as they push for more & more government regulation, legal control, information control, imposition of draconian rules & taxation, & “guidance:” for all, on almost any & every subject! With such as examples, how can the west expect these folks to really understand what freedom is & what to do with it?!
Personally, I think Iran is a significantly more progressive society than many in the west believe or understand.
Yet just as Americans keep electing panderers as their national leaders, folks in oppressed nations like Iran keep buying into the incessant religious control of every life aspect rhetoric drummed into them at every turn by “those who know what is best for all others”!
Looks like we ordinary folk may have to do some educating of the elite in order to obtain and maintain our own personal freedoms!
I wish the students well. All they want is more freedom than their gov’t will allow. The students have moral authority but no guns.
Mar 6, 2008 - 8:44 am Paymon Behmand:I hope this student uprising will affect the whole country and make all IRANIANS stand up for their rights. Meanwhile we, IRANIANS who live out side of IRAN, must be able to support those students who need us.
Mar 6, 2008 - 8:45 am Josh SN:I’m repeatedly amazed how certain people want governments to pay attention to smallish protests at the (relatively) UC Berkeley of Iran, but wrote off the largest protests in the history of the world.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_15,_2003_anti-war_protest
By the way, the government of Iran is heavily influenced by the Guardian Council, but their choice for President, Larijani, didn’t even get to the second round in their elections. Ahmadenijad got elected because a) the GC is kinda lazy/greedy, and b) they elected the relatively pro-Western Khatami twice and it got them nothing.
Mar 6, 2008 - 8:46 am Hotpatch 6:If these “students” are the same kind of “students” who took over our embassy in 1979 and held our diplomats hostage for over a year, I would not be sad if they meet an unhappy end. But that’s just me.
Mar 6, 2008 - 2:14 pm John D:Hotpatch,
It seems different to me than 1979 because these students are pro-western. The 1979 bunch was fanatical and was (and is) committed to terrorism and power. These students want freedom, the natural yearning inside all of us. I cannot imagine them taking an embassy and holding hostages.
Mar 6, 2008 - 4:56 pm Morton Doodslag:Yawn.
Let us know when you’re serious about destroying the Islamic fascists ruling your country. Let us know when you’re serious about confronting the Islamic underpinnings of the Nazi death spiral your society has fallen into. Let us know when you’re ready to repudiate the hideous “religion” of Islam which has destroyed your culture, and enslaved over a billion human beings.
We’ve seen a thousand breathless accounts of similar “the students are protesting — the Mullahs are about to fall!!!”
Don’t you think it gets tiresome for us after a while?
Mar 7, 2008 - 9:12 am Brian H:The chancellor is a symptom; the regime is the cause.
John: your grammar suggestions are uninformed and clumsy. Sounds like you were taught by an ESL speaker who was reading from a badly outdated book.
Mar 7, 2008 - 12:58 pm Ahmedinejadinurbooty:I hope the Iranian students are crushed under the great power of Allah…..The Iranian “Secret Police” need to be better informed rather than allow for such uprising to occur. Ahmedinejad should be a better dictator…I thought he was doing a great job oppressing those persian (iranian) sdratsab..I guess not if ten guys decided to bring down the greatness of king Xerex aka Ahmedinejad…Anyways I hope that country is always enslaved in a perpetual cloak of darkness under an oppressive regime…all the great people already left the god forsaken country anyway…they reside in the hills of beverly!!!! Ahmedinejad keep it real baby…as Randy from american idol would say….If the oppression stops we are gonna have another Iraq to deal with…
Mar 10, 2008 - 10:03 am