NEW Iran’s Chess Match: Setting Up the Pieces for FridayIran: Montazeri Letter to Islamic Clerics (14 September)The Latest from Iran (15 September): Momentum BuildsReceive our latest updates by email or RSS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FEED Buy Us A Cup of Coffee? Help Enduring America Expand Its Coverage and Analysis2030 GMT: An Artistic Clash for the Supreme Leader? A colleague writes with an essential correction of our first item today (0710 GMT) on Ayatollah Khamenei's meeting yesterday with ""artists, directors, screenwriters, poets, and writers":
"The English version of Khamenei's speech to the artists actually doesn't reflect what the meeting was about. It wasn't for him to give them any guidance but rather, as Fars News fascinating account of it reveals, it was meant for the various artists to speak 'frankly' with Khamenei. While Fars New tries to whitewash some of the conversations that the artists had with Khamenei, it is clear even by their own censored account that it was a raucous meeting and that at least a couple of the artists, including Majid Majidi (who accoring to Fars News breaks down into tears) conveyed some kind of oppositional sentiment. One filmmaker when asked to speak says he doesn't feel well and sits down. Another when told there is no time for him to speak, after he had prepared a talk complains, 'You keep contacting me for a couple of days asking me to come and speak my mind and now you tell me there's no time?'"
1855 GMT: Really?
According to Peykeiran, the Supreme Leader's representative with the Revolutionary Guard has warned that the arrest of Mir Hossein Mousavi or Mehdi Karroubi would turn them into martyrs for the Green opposition.
Given that the Supreme Leader supposedly signed the order for Karroubi's arrest two weeks ago, this is a bit confusing. Then again, as our readers are debating in their comments, Ayatollah Khamenei's position may be far from secure.
1800 GMT: Easy Does It. In a measured, even careful, interview with
Tabnak, Hashemi Rafsanjani
has downplayed his absence from leading Friday Prayers on Qods Day for the first time in a quarter-century: "It is not necessary after 30 years that I should lead the prayers."
1555 GMT: Why are
tents being erected around the main campus of Tehran University, where this Friday's prayers will be held?
1545 GMT: Make of this what you will: the Iranian Government
has declared national holidays on Saturday and Monday, the day before and after the celebration of the end of Ramadan, Eid al-Fitr.
1310 GMT: Cyber-charge. Talk about a story turning in a few hours. The opposition's aggressive fightback on the Web continues:
Mowj-e-Sabz has launched
an English-language website.
1215 GMT: Cyber-bounce. Indeed, after our worry this morning (0950 GMT) about a drop in information via the Web, there is a bit of a resurgence. Mehdi Karroubi seems to have
a new website for his statements and news. Is this an alternative for the Etemade Melli site, which is still down?
News is also being posted on
tagheer.ir.
1200 GMT: If the Iranian regime is trying to block news in and out of Iran, the effort is incomplete.
Fereshteh Ghazi has interviewed Ayatollah Mousavi-Tabrizi, who highlights the clerical resistance: "The authorities know [their] pressures have no effect on my position and action or those of Qom scholars." He adds, in relation to the arrest of his children and the family members of other clerics on Monday, "My sons and the sons of Mr. Nazemzadeh and Mr. Ahmadi aren't clerics, so why are they tried in clerics' court?"(summary in English
via Ghazi's Twitter account)
Twitter traffic from inside Iran is also picking up.
1120 GMT: The US network NBC is
interviewing President Ahmadinejad today and broadcasting the discussion on tomorrow morning's
Today programme.
1110 GMT: The
Mousavi Facebook page is still active, just posting
the statement of Seyed Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of Ayatollah Khomenei, inviting all Iranians to participate in the rally on Qods Day "a day...for the oppressed to fight oppressors and tyranny".
1100 GMT: Morning MediaFail. CNN ($199/story) are not eligible, since they no longer have news from inside Iran. Instead, the award goes to Robert Tait and
The Guardian of London. Amidst all the tension in advance of Qods Day, the confusion over Friday Prayers, the raids, the arrests, the Karroubi letters, the protests by senior clerics,
their story today?
"Chinese jeans bearing name of God anger Iranians".
In their quasi-defence, the prominent notation "Read This in Chinese" is a clue that
The Guardian's market attention is far away from Tehran.
1050 GMT: Cyber-war. Internet traffic from Iranians inside Iran is almost at a standstill this morning. Nothing is coming through via Twitter and contacts also remove no interaction on Facebook.
Etemade Melli/Saham News and
Norooz are down.
Mowj-e-Sabz and
Kaleme are both up.
0950 GMT: Correcting an oversight. We have reported the arrest of the three grandchildren of Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri on Monday.
The children of Ayatollah Hossein Mousavi Tabrizi,were also arrested.
The catalyst for the arrests may have been an Iftar at the house of Ayatollah Yusuf Sane'i. EA has received information that this Iftar, where reformist clerics and their families gathered, angered the regime and also led to the filing of a court action by President Ahmadinejad's office against Sane'i.
0935 GMT: The Islamic Republic News Agency carries the short item that
President Ahmadinejad will introduce Ahmad Khatami, who will give the Friday Prayer address this week.
0925 GMT: Associated Press is claiming, from Iranian state radio, that the Government has confirmed
Ahmad Khatami will lead Qods Day prayers.
0710 GMT: Yesterday's confusion over Qods Day continues. While Tuesday was a pretty good one for the Green leadership, as Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mohammad Khatami signalled that they would join forces with Mehdi Karroubi, the Government's disarray over Friday prayers was never resolved. We've tried to see the events in wider perspective, leading up to Qods Day,
in a separate analysis, "Iran's Chess Match: Setting Up the Pieces".
Rather than offer any specific guidance,
the Supreme Leader spent Tuesday telling "artists, directors, screenwriters, poets, and writers" that they should be putting out proper art. His reference point was not the current internal conflict but the 1980-1988 war with Iraq: "The eight-year Sacred Defense was the embodiment of outstanding characteristics, prominent cultural values, and lofty beliefs, and those who recount it in an artistic manner are like a mirror reflecting the manifestation of splendor and glory."
If there was contemporary resonance in Ayatollah Khamenei's address, it may be in this cryptic injunction to artists that "their sensitive views should not create a spirit of despair in people".