Saturday
Oct242009
Iran: The Karroubi Effect
Saturday, October 24, 2009 at 8:24
The Latest from Iran (24 October): Resurgence
Video: Karroubi & Crowd at Iran Media Fair (23 October)
The Latest from Iran (23 October): Karroubi Appears
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On 17 July Mehdi Karroubi, a cleric who had finished a distant fourth in the Presidential vote, allocated a measly percentage point of the toll, joined the crowds marching to the Friday Prayer ceremony being led by Hashemi Rafsanjani. He was jostled by security forces, with his clerical turban knocked from his head.
Far from removing Karroubi from the political scene, however, the incident symbolically propelled him to the centre of it. The former Speaker of Parliament, was well-known inside Iran, of course, but Mir Hossein Mousavi, who had finished a disputed second to President Ahmadinejad in the vote was the most prominent leader of the Green Wave. By late July, that was no longer the case. After Karroubi published a letter he had sent to Rafsanjani, asking for full investigation of the regime's abuses of detainees, he too became a representative of the demands for reforms that millions of people had sought from the first marches after the election.
Yesterday the turban was knocked from Karroubi's head again. He arrived at the Iran Media Fair, which has been running all week. One look at the videos, however, will show the impact of the appearance. The electric effect on the crowd, as they were spurred into both positive chants for Karroubi and, allegedly, anti-regime outbursts ("Death to the Dictator"), overturns weeks of speculation that the Green movement is spent.
The jostling of Karroubi, forcing his withdrawal from the Fair, may have been the result of a surge in the crowd. It may have been a clash between pro-Ahmadinejad supporters and their opponents. Security forces may have been trying to protect Karroubi, rather than joining in an attack upon him.
None of that matters. Once someone swiped an arm at Karroubi's head, they donated an injection of spirit to the Green wave. Details of plans to change the system are difficult to develop, let alone implement. So movements can drag, drift, wander as the messiness of politics overtakes the initial rush of protest. But when the turban again came off Karroubi yesterday, it overtook all those details --- indeed it overcame the Government surveillances, detentions, and "information" which have tried to sap the strength from opposition. Karroubi had made it, he had defied the authorities, and so could "we".
As we count the days to the 13 Aban (4 November) demonstrations, we have wondered if the Green Wave could maintain its strength, rather than ebbing out into a half-mobilised, less than half-hearted demonstration. I think we just got our answer.
Video: Karroubi & Crowd at Iran Media Fair (23 October)
The Latest from Iran (23 October): Karroubi Appears
Receive our latest updates by email or RSS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FEED
Buy Us A Cup of Coffee? Help Enduring America Expand Its Coverage and Analysis
On 17 July Mehdi Karroubi, a cleric who had finished a distant fourth in the Presidential vote, allocated a measly percentage point of the toll, joined the crowds marching to the Friday Prayer ceremony being led by Hashemi Rafsanjani. He was jostled by security forces, with his clerical turban knocked from his head.
Far from removing Karroubi from the political scene, however, the incident symbolically propelled him to the centre of it. The former Speaker of Parliament, was well-known inside Iran, of course, but Mir Hossein Mousavi, who had finished a disputed second to President Ahmadinejad in the vote was the most prominent leader of the Green Wave. By late July, that was no longer the case. After Karroubi published a letter he had sent to Rafsanjani, asking for full investigation of the regime's abuses of detainees, he too became a representative of the demands for reforms that millions of people had sought from the first marches after the election.
Yesterday the turban was knocked from Karroubi's head again. He arrived at the Iran Media Fair, which has been running all week. One look at the videos, however, will show the impact of the appearance. The electric effect on the crowd, as they were spurred into both positive chants for Karroubi and, allegedly, anti-regime outbursts ("Death to the Dictator"), overturns weeks of speculation that the Green movement is spent.
The jostling of Karroubi, forcing his withdrawal from the Fair, may have been the result of a surge in the crowd. It may have been a clash between pro-Ahmadinejad supporters and their opponents. Security forces may have been trying to protect Karroubi, rather than joining in an attack upon him.
None of that matters. Once someone swiped an arm at Karroubi's head, they donated an injection of spirit to the Green wave. Details of plans to change the system are difficult to develop, let alone implement. So movements can drag, drift, wander as the messiness of politics overtakes the initial rush of protest. But when the turban again came off Karroubi yesterday, it overtook all those details --- indeed it overcame the Government surveillances, detentions, and "information" which have tried to sap the strength from opposition. Karroubi had made it, he had defied the authorities, and so could "we".
As we count the days to the 13 Aban (4 November) demonstrations, we have wondered if the Green Wave could maintain its strength, rather than ebbing out into a half-mobilised, less than half-hearted demonstration. I think we just got our answer.