NEW Iran After Qods Day: What Next for the Green Movement (The Sequel)?NEW Iran: Another Qods Day Participant WritesLatest Iran Video: More from Qods Day (18-19 September)NEW Iran: The Five Lessons of Qods DayQods Day Video Special: The Black-and-White Soccer GameIran’s Qods Day: The Participants SpeakQods Day: The Discussion ContinuesIran Qods Day: Snap Analysis and Summary Translation of Ahmadinejad SpeechThe Latest from Iran (18 September): Qods DayNEW Iran Video: Qods Day Protests (18 September)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 Analysis2200 GMT: We took a break tonight to recuperate from the drama of Friday. To be honest, almost all the chatter is a recycling of the events and images of Qods Day.
There are intriguing developments surrounding the clerical opposition to the Government.
Mowj-e-Sabz reports that Grand Ayatollah Montazeri was forced to
cancel an important annual prayer.
The Green Movement is highlighting the possibility that marjas, the highest-ranking senior clerics, will not declare that Ramadan has ended Sunday and can be celebrated with the feast of Eid al-Fitr. In particular, it is noted that the websites
of Ayatollah Montazeri and
of Ayatollah Sane'i have not yet declared that the Holy Month is over.
Ayatollahs
Mousavi-Ardebili,
Safi-Golpaygani, and
Bayat-Zanjani are also declaring that they have not seen the crescent of the moon. And now Hojatoleslam Taghdiri, the head of the crescent observation committee of Tehran Province,
has said that there is no way that the crescent can be observed tonight, permitting Eid al-Fitr to proceed tomorrow.
The statements are significant because they defy
the declaration of the Supreme Leader that Sunday is the end of Ramadan holiday.
1540 GMT: In his first statement after Qods Day,
Mehdi Karroubi has told medical faculty of the great opportunity "to expose in court atrocities which would have made the Shah look good".
1250 GMT: The Quds Day Football Mystery (continued). Two readers continue the tireless effort to sort out what happened with last night's Iranian state TV broadcast of the Esteghlal-Estell Azin match (
video in separate entry and see 0740 GMT). Both note that the game was re-broadcast, after the "problems" with live transmission. One notes, "It was in colour and not in black and white as reported. There were many Esteghlal fans in the stadium but almost all of them came in blue. You could see glimpses of green colour among them, but, as I said, about 95% of the came in blue. I also couldn't hear any opposition slogans during the game, to be honest."
The other reader has the possible answer: "They started over from the beginning of the match, in color, with the sound edited from another match (so Green chants could not be heard). Also they cut away several times to another camera on the sideline for showing reaction shots of the bench/coaches, even though they said there was only one camera in Azadi Stadium."
1240 GMT: Maryam at
Keeping the Change has taken on the task of sifting through the information to establish "whether Mir Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Karroubi, Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, and Mohammad Khatami...took part in the Qods Day demonstrations".
Her thoughtful but provocative assessment:
Mousavi and Rafsanjani could have been forced to appear in the protests against their wills or may have been given the choice to either stay away from the demonstrations or attend the government-sponsored rallies. The men may have calculated that failing to appear at the marches would be more damaging than participating in the pro-government demonstrations....The utilitarian calculations of the two men and the propaganda potential of these images aside, the presence of Mousavi, in particular, at the pro-government rally may prove to have undermined his "Opposition"-credentials, giving the impression (whether true or misleading) that he has become less assertive, more prone to succumb to government pressure, and/or is in a weakened position vis vis the government. As for Rafsanjani, a similar analysis may be appropriate, though his historical tendency to walk a fine line between competing interest groups militates against rushing to judgment on his motivations.
1130 GMT: Definitely a lull after the storm of events. We've now completed and posted the analyses of Mr Smith, "
What Next for the Green Movement (The Sequel)?", and of Scott Lucas, "
Iran: The Five Lessons of Qods Day". We've also got
a new account from a participant in the demonstration and
a new video thread as well as
yesterday's video collection.
0830 GMT: Contrary to our fears at the end of yesterday, it appears that the regime's restrictions on the Internet were more to stifle the Qods Day protests than as a forerunner of an even more intense crackdown of arrests.
Some Internet services have been restored in Iran.
0820 GMT: Three of the grandchildren of Ayatollah Montazeri, arrested yesterday,
have been released. Three of his grandchildren remain in detention.
0740 GMT: The Qods Day Football Match. Our quirkiest story of the day,
complete with video, gets even better. The latest account is that state television's coverage was delayed and limited to one black-and-white camera not because of the fears of Green symbols and chants but
because the regime's efforts to limit communications hindered IRIB's technical systems. (I think the Blue team won 2-0 but I can't tell which one was Blue.)
0600 GMT: To be honest, this is a holding entry. For the first time in 24 hours, it is possible to draw breath and take a reflective step back, as the news from Iran is slow this morning, in part because of the Government's attempts to close down information on the scale of its setback yesterday, more because everyone is trying to take in exactly what happened on Qods Day.
The regime will try to regain its balance today. Press TV has a lovely example. Its story just before I went to bed was "
Iran's Opposition Marches on Qods Day", a recognition that "supporters of Iran's opposition movement...joined the major annual commemorative rally showing their loyalty to their leaders". This morning the website is back on the proper line: "Iranians March in Solidary with Palestinians".
But, barring a swift crackdown by the Government, with a wave of high-profile arrests, the question of initiative will be with the opposition. What can the leaders and the Green Wave do with the opportunity offered by the tens of thousands who, after all that has been thrown at protest to make it go away, "won" with their defiance --- in anger, sadness, hope, and more than a bit of humour --- yesterday?
That's what EA staff will work on now. The
first part of our opening analysis is now posted.