Jul 09

A Brave Student Speaks Up [Persian]

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A brave student speaks up at Elm Va Sanat University.

Jun 14

Students Protest to Commemorate the Attacks of their Dormitories

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Students at the University of Tehran protest in commemoration of the brutal attacks on their dormitories one year ago on June 14th, 2009.

May 15

Protest at Shahid Beheshti University

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A brave female protestor keeps videotaping from the very middle of the crowd during a protest on May 10, 2010, that started at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran.

Apr 14

Three More Faculty Members Dismissed For Their Political Orientation

ICHR IRAN (Posted by: Free Iran)
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One week after the dismissal of Dr. Morteza Mardiha from his faculty post at Allameh Tabatabee University, the dismissal of two Elm-o-San’at University professors adds a new dimension to the campaign to dismiss faculty members who have different viewpoints from the government, or who have supported students during student protests. Go to ICHR Iran.

Apr 13

Iranian professors fired from universities

| Zamaaneh.com (Posted by: Free Iran)
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Two Iranian university professors were fired from Iran University of Science & Technology, Kalameh Website reports. Go to original article.

Mar 30

University is Alive & Standing Firm

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Mar 21

High School Girls Singing Yareh Dabestani

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High school girls, in Mashhad, singing Yareh Dabestani and holding green balloons in the air.

Mar 15

Slogans on Walls of Sharif University

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Students cover the walls of their university with slogans in preparation for Chahar Shanbeh Souri.

Mar 09

Workers & Students 3/9

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GVF:  Workers’ wages not paid for six months

GVF — An MP from the city of Arak has spoken of job losses at a plant of a company called Abangan in the city of Arak.

Ahmad Lotfi Ashtiani who represents Arak in the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) told the Iranian Labour News Agency (ILNA), that ceding the company and the subsequent unemployment that it would lead to, meant that it would be better not to implement article 44 of the Iranian constitution which refers to the economy and financial affairs.

Ashtiani stated that on the basis of article 44, Abangan was ceded at a price of around fourteen million dollars and they have even received fifty million dollars of government loans, and yet workers are losing their jobs at the company.

“The workers at Abangan have not received their wages for six months and are uncertain,” he added.
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This morning, workers from the Iranian Telecommunication Indutustry (ITI) arrived in Tehran and took their complaints to the Ministry of Industry and Mines building.

According to the Iranian Labour News Agency (ILNA), today’s protest took place after the Ministry refused to meet the demands of the workers, which it had previously promised to do.

One of the workers told ILNA that “thirteen months of unpaid wages are problematic for us. Workers have come from Shiraz to Tehran on New Year’s Eve to materialise their demands which the government had promised to meet and they [the workers] will not go home empty-handed.”

Last week a group of 200 workers from the plant belonging to ITI arrived in Tehran to claim their rights from the illegitimate government which then promised them to pay the total of around two million dollars of their unpaid wages until Saturday.

However, as with other empty promises made by the Iranian government, it failed to comply with the workers’ basic demands. Four days after the due date set by the Ministry of Industry, the workers’ wages were still not paid.

The ITI plant which is located in the historic city of Shiraz has 700 workers and has not paid their wages for the past thirteen months due to a lack of funds.

ITI is only one among the many plants that has not been able to provide its workers with pay. Ahmadinejad’s disastrous economic policies have ensured a continuous worsening of the situation of workers since he took office in 2005, and once again through rigged elections in June 2009.

GVF:  600 at Babol university protest fellow students’ prison sentences

GVF — Yesterday, more than 600 students from Babol Noshirvani University of Technology protested against the prison sentences handed down to two students from the university.

During the protest, students Iman Sedighi and Mohsen Barzegar explained the procedures that led to the issuance of their prison sentences. The students present at the protest expressed their condemnation of the court’s verdict against the two students.

An Iranian human rights website, reported that students at the Babol Noshirvani University of Technology then saw off their two fellow students towards the gates of the university while chanting slogans and singing sons.

Barzegar and Sedighi have to introduce themselves to the prison in order to commence their prison terms.

A statement issued by students at the university was published among students in addition to a publication for women’s day. The statement condemned the harsh sentences handed down to Iman Sedighi, Mohsen Barzagar, Nima Nahvi, Ali Taghipour, Hamid Jahan Tigh, Hesam Bagheri as well as the charge of Moharebeh against Behzad Azar Houshang, a graduate of the university and a study ban for Siavash Saliminejad.

It should be noted that if the court does find Azar Houshang guilty of Moharebeh, he will be facing the death penalty.

Mar 04

Green Student Confronts Islamic Regime Agent at Columbia University

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Mar 04

Protest at Elm Va Sanat University

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On March 3rd students came out to protest at Elm Va Sanat University in Tehran.

Mar 03

The Student Movement’s Approach vis-à-vis the Green Movement

GOZAAR (Posted by: Free Iran)
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March 1st, 2010



What is known in Iran today as the ‘Green Movement’ may be viewed as the product of years of continuous activity by the women’s, student, and worker’s movements alongside the country’s Reform movement. By keeping respect for existing political leaders [such as the Reformist presidential candidates], the Green Movement showed from the beginning that because it stems from civil movements and not political parties, it will not accept exclusive leadership by anyone. Musavi and Karrubi understand this quality of the movement and have never tried to position themselves as domineering leaders or “deciders.” They have limited their role to issuing declarations that express the society’s “minimum demands,” leaving a door open for compromise with the country’s current rulers and past officials. The following article will focus on the role, status, and significance of the student movement in the current protests.

A brief overview of the student movement’s course of ups and downs over the recent decade will help contextualize the current movement and events of June 2009.

The student movement—and at its heart, Daftar Tahkim-e Vahdat (the Office for the Consolidation of Unity) as one of the few student forces that has a structured organization—played a lead role in helping Mohammad Khatami’s Reformist administration come to office in 1997’s landslide election. Khatami won on a platform of pledges for political and social freedoms—but he soon went up against various crises; the Tehran University student uprising in 1999 was among the first victims of the Reform era. The students paid a heavy toll in that event and had a tough time rallying support for a second Khatami term.

The glaringly weak performance of the second Reformist administration, the ending of the reformist-dominated 6th Majlis (2000-4), council elections, and other obstacles injected a climate of despair and defeat among the student movement. Even Tahkim, whose organizational power was remarkable in making demands and protests widespread and universal across Iranian universities in dozens of cities, was left with nothing but a handful of veteran—and weary—student activists in Tehran and in suspended student councils. Political student activists gradually lost their sway in the university scene. This political climate had several results: student movement leaders going into a defensive lock, a growing split in demands between students in Tehran and provincial cities, and the non-participation of students from Azad University, a private university which has branches in almost all Iranian cities and towns.

The Ahmadinejad administration’s sweeping crackdown on student activists of all persuasions, from liberal to leftist, in the major universities in the capital, fostered passivity among students in relation to political and social affairs. Although some campuses –such as Amir Kabir and Tehran University –periodically staged symbolic protests in reaction to various events, even these rare cases did not carry the student movement’s former strength and impact.

During Ahmadinejad’s first term, universities like other social institutions, had grown weary of the Reformists’ rhetoric and worried instead about the new hardline administration’s pressures for shutting down cultural, social, and economical arenas. Universities tried to stay as far away from public affairs and focus only on student issues.

The tenth presidential election on June 12, 2009, contrary to everyone’s expectations, completely transformed the public mood.

Despite Tahkim’s decline and resulting lack of a strong organizational base and cohesive body of student organizers, the universities reflexively became the center for the voice of the “youth.” What was different this time was that the struggle was not grounded in a small circle of political activists but that all ordinary students entered the fray to demand their legal and universal rights—a factor we can note as the secret of the Green Movement.

But how did this transpire? A glance back at the events of the past eight months will reveal two main differences between current and past student protests:

1) The breadth and scale of protests

News from the universities tells us that unlike previous bouts of student protests that were largely confined to Tehran University, Amir Kabir, and Elm o Sanat (Iran University of Science and Technology), this time the protests are widespread, spanning public as well as private campuses nationwide. In many cities, demonstrations are staged spontaneously and independently. Examples include:

Shiraz University, Tabriz University, and Esfahan University:

Over 20 protest sessions against the ‘coup’ government—attacks on dormitories of all three universities by Ansar-e Hezbollah, a pro-regime vigilante group, and campus security forces – arrests of dozens of student activists, unprecedentedly severe disciplinary sentences, and telephone warnings to the families of more than 50 students.

Razi University in Kermanshah:

In addition to the issuing of severe disciplinary sentences for more than 30 student protesters, one Razi student—Miss Tahmasebi—was killed in the course of campus demonstrations on June 18th, 2009.

Urmiyeh University:

Several campus demonstrations, the arrest of student activists and beating of student protesters, as well as attacks on the dormitories of female student protesters during the month of January 2010, put Urmiyeh in the news among provincial universities

Qazvin University:

Qazvin has shined in the past eight months, showing resilience in the face of arrests, as commendable footage of protests sent by this university attests.

Mashhad’s Ferdowsi University:

Ferdowsi has made headlines in student news by staging a massive demonstration simultaneously with Mashhad’s Azad University. The arrest of over 210 students in Mashhad on December 30, 2009 above all showed the regime’s desperation in dealing with student protests.

Babol University:

Following campus protests during June of 2009, 9 students received a 23-month jail sentences and 60-month suspended jail sentences, and 25 years of being barred from academic study. Additionally, 15 suspended sentences were handed out by the disciplinary committee.

Mazandaran University:

Three female student activists were expelled from their dormitories, 50 student protesters were sentenced by the disciplinary committee, and 28 students were given failing grades during the months of June and July of 2009. The student council center was shut down and five student activists were imprisoned.

Gilan University:

Protests were so numerous at this university that the disciplinary committee expelled 68 students and barred them from future academic study.

Shahroud University:

Previously, Shahroud University had no significant record of political activism. In the immediate post-election aftermath, Shahroud saw mass protests by students during the month of June.

Ilam University:

Several students were arrested

Ahvaz’s Chamran University:

Over a series of protests, Ahvaz students denounced the government as illegitimate and gave a boisterous reception to a visiting governmental representative on October 29, 2009—an act that earned 100 students disciplinary sentences.

If we add to these examples from provincial cities,Tehran campus protests at Sharif, Khajeh Nasir, Shahid Beheshti, Elm o Sanat, Amir Kabir, Al Zahra, Azad, and Tehran University, we will get a sense of the breadth and scale of the post-election student demonstrations.

2) The structure of student protester groups

The scale of protests in the face of the aforementioned decline of political organizations and student organizers on campuses and the spate of arrests and disciplinary committee sentences shows the extent to which the student movement operates autonomously and spontaneously.

This time students did not stage protests under the banner of Takhim or their university’s Islamic student council, but protested according to their individual demands. Although it seems that the “right” political actions will bear results only when backed by a robust organized structure, Musavi and Karrubi’s approaches and stances—summarized in their motto “every Iranian is a media outlet”—suggests that the Green Movement does not have a representative leader and that all Iranians function as leaders and representatives of and within the movement.

The movement has thus demonstrated novel and extraordinary dynamics: the more the regime security apparatus arrests political leaders and thinkers, the more protesters are drawn to the cause and continue undiminished.

It can be said that the student movement, over the past eight months, has played its role and function admirably and will surely continue to do so. The question is: are Iran’s other civil society movements present and active at their fullest capacity in the Green Movement?

Go to Gozaar.

Mar 01

More forced academic retirements

| Irangreenvoice (Posted by: Lilli Parvin)
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More forced academic retirements: this time Tabriz University

Following the forced retirement of experienced academics, three university professors from Tabriz University have been faced with forced retirements.

According to an opposition website, Dr Karim Hossein Zadeh Dalir, Dr Firouz Jamali and Mohammad Reza Pourmohammadi have all been forced into retirement.

It is worth noting that these Tabriz University professors had signed a statement in June 2009 endorsing Mir-Hossein Mousavi in his bid to become president.

Students have threatened to go on strike in protest to these politically motivated retirements. See More.

Feb 25

CNN: Video exposes Iran crackdown

CNN (Posted by: Free Iran)
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New video purportedly shows violence, previously denied by Iran, at Tehran University after 2009’s disputed election.

Feb 23

Yousef Rashidi

IRAN NEWS DIGEST | Free Iran (Posted by: Free Iran)
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This is what bravery looks like…

image001

Dear readers,

I received this via an emial and can’t verify its accuracy. Yousef Rashidi, a brave political freedom fighter, is on a hunger strike in a jail in Iran.  In the picture above, he is holding a sign protesting Ahmadinejad’s visit to his university in 2006.  It says “Fascist President, You don’t belong in Polytechnic [University].”  Hopefully, the mainstream media will pick up his story…

The more media coverage he receives, the more likely that he will be freed.

P2E: JARAS: Mohammad Yousef Rashidi who was arrested by the Ministry of Intelligence at his home in Nowshahr, has gone on a hunger strike in the jail house of the Ministry of Intelligence in the province of Mazandaran. According to a JARAS reporter he was one of the left wing activists of the University of Amir Kabir in Tehran. He has played an important role in the student protest Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s presence at the university. He has been suspended from school ever since.  At the time of Ahmadinejad’s speech he held up a banner that read: “Fascist president, this is not a place for you!”  The student was arrested on November 27th, and except his hunger strike, no information on his condition has been given.
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Street Journalist: HRA-The Prisoners’ Rights Unit of HRA reports that Mohammad Yousef Rashidi who was arrested initially in the northern City of Noshahr has been transferred in recent weeks to the ward 209 of Evin Prison in Tehran. Rashidi, who is an expelled Amir Kabir University student, has gone on dry hunger strike for the second time, in protest to his arbitrary detention in solitary confinement.

Rashidi has been taken to Evin’s clinic three times as a result of his 2 hunger strikes. Agents from the Intelligence Ministry have accused him of taking part in illegal demonstrations.

Rashidi played a significant role in the student protests during Ahmadinejad’s speech at Amir Kabir University. He held a big sign during the speech on which was written “Fascist president, Polytechnic is not a place for you”. Rashidi was expelled from the university after the Ahmadinejad’s speech.

Coverage of same also by IHRV.org, RAHANA.

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