2325 GMT: That’s it for today. We’ll be back at 0600 GMT. Look forward to seeing you then.
2315 GMT: What’s Your Punchline? Looking for a joke to end the evening. Here’s the set-up line, courtesy of Press TV: “A senior Iranian commander has announced that the country has developed a new system to distract missiles.”
2310 GMT: On the Labour Front. Mansour Osanloo, the leader of the Tehran bus drivers union, has been transferred to Solitary Ward Number 1 in Gohardasht Prison, also known as the “doghouse”.
2225 GMT: Taking Away Karroubi’s Protection? In an interview with Radio Farda, Mohammad Taghi Karroubi, Mehdi Karroubi’s son, says that several former Revolutionary Guards, wartime commanders, and family members of martyrs who had volunteered for protect Mehdi Karroubi on 22 Bahman have been called in for questioning and have not yet gone home. He says that they have probably been arrested. Read the rest of this entry »
UPDATE 1600 GMT: EA’s Chris Emery has now posted a response, adding to Mr Smith’s points that 13 Aban has been “a major blow to the Supreme Leader’s authority”.
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Mr Smith, who was one of the EA correspondents following and updating on yesterday’s events, offers his analysis:
The Green Wave has bounced back. The strongly-worded threats by the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps did not deter the supporters of Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, who made it to the police-infested streets of Tehran in their tens of thousands for yet another day of demonstrations, countering the official ones organised by the Ahmadinejad-Khamenei regime.
Yesterday’s events are yet again proof of the fact that the opposition has not been defeated and is not going away. Nearly five months into the Iranian post-electoral crisis, the Ahmadinejad-Khamenei camp has not quite figured out a workable plan to fulfil its intent of silencing the critics. The litany of street violence unleashed by security forces, the background of the occasional killing and raping of reformist activists, and the current warnings by the IRGC and Ayatollah Khamenei that criticism of the “legitimate government” amounted to a crime did little to cow the Green Wave supporters. Instead, the Supreme Leader found himself at the receiving end of the street chants. Read the rest of this entry »
2055 GMT: Reports that writer and blogger Ali Pirhousienlou and hsi wife Fatemeh Sotoudeh have been arrested.
1930 GMT: In addition to the assassination of the Assembly of Experts member (1750 GMT), it is reported that the Chief Prosecutor in Kurdestan has been shot.
1750 GMT: In the latest of a series of assassinations in the province, the Kurdistan representative on the Assembly of Experts was killed today.
1705 GMT: An EA source sends us this from a Tehran resident: “People will come out but many are also leaving Tehran as it is a long weekend. Saturday is half closed and Sunday is a holiday. Many who participated in previous demonstrations are leaving Tehran or have left already and many are much scared of what happened to their colleagues, friends and other citizens.”
1640 GMT: The Marches. Iranian activist HomyLafayette has posted the routes for tomorrow’s marches in Tehran (7 routes ending at the University of Tehran; start at 10 a.m. local time; 0530 GMT), Isfahan, and Tabriz. Read the rest of this entry »
At the end of a dramatic and surprising day, perhaps one of the most important since 12 June, Muhammad Sahimi of Tehran Bureau offers a concise summary of the 4th Tehran trial. This picks up on a lot of the developments we’ve noted in our live blog, bringing them together in one place. Even more importantly, Sahimi notes the goals of the regime that we’ve identified: 1) to break the reformists through charges of treason; 2) to humiliate Saeed Hajjarian, one of the key figures in the movement; and 3) the objective missed by all others in the Western media, the curbing of Hashemi Rafsanjani:
Stalinist Show Trials, Part Four
The fourth installment of the Stalinesque show trials of the leaders of the reformist movement was held today in Tehran. In this part of the big show, some of the most important reformist leaders were featured, including Dr. Mohsen Mirdamadi, secretary-general of Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF), the most important reformist group in Iran; Mohsen Safaei Farahani, Saeed Shariati, Abdollah Ramazanzadeh, Shahabolddin Tabatabaei, and Dr. Saeed Hajjarian, all leading members of the IIPF; Mostafa Tajzadeh, a member of the IIPF and the Islamic Revolution Mojahedin Organization (IRMO), another leading reformist group; Behzad Nabavi, a leading member of the IRMO, and Hedayatollah Aghaei, a leading member of the Executives of Reconstruction Party (ERP), a reformist group close to former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.
Also present in court were Dr. Kian Tajbakhsh, who used to work for the George Soros Open Society, and three of the journalists arrested, Jalal Karami, Masoud Bastani, and Mohammad Quchani, a leading reformist journalist and editor of many reformist newspapers that have been closed by the hardliners. [Overall, 42 journalists were arrested, but some were later released]. Mohammad Reza Jalaeipour, who was a leader of the Mir Hossein Mousavi campaign, and a doctoral student at Oxford University in Britain, was also present in court. The court has apparently ordered the release of Quchani and Jalaeipour before the court session took place, but they were still brought to court for an appearance.
Once again, the prosecutor read a long “indictment” that had been prepared by Saeed Mortazavi, Tehran’s notorious Prosecutor General and the Prosecutor of the Revolutionary Court. Once again, the “indictment” was not a legal document, but a political manifesto of the hardliners, almost all of which had been published over the past few years by the daily newspaper Kayhan, the mouthpiece of the security-intelligence apparatus, and Fars News Agency, which operates more like a propaganda machine.
Once again, the reformist leaders were accused of having links with foreign powers, and in particular Britain and the United States, through a variety of channels, from the Open Society to people who are, or were at some point, supposedly members of western intelligence agencies.
2110 GMT: In addition to providing the first set of his evidence of detainee abuse to Parliament, Mehdi Karroubi has responded to criticism from a conservative MP, Ahmad Tavakoli, that the revelations were against Karroubi’s revolutionary background and would have bad consequences. Karroubi said that it was not right to sacrifice “our religion, dignity and bravery for the benefit of ourselves” and that the regime’s is to no one’s benefits.
2100 GMT: Returning to the comments of former 1st Vice President Esfandiar Rahim-Mashai (see 1315 GMT), more to raise a smile than to offer any analysis. Rahim-Mashai said that the election had demonstrated President Ahmadinejad’s historic and extraordinary popularity in the world, a popularity unique before and after the Islamic Revolution. He added that, had it not been for the “challenges” that the Ahmadinejad Administration created in the world, Iran would not be as successful as it is today. (Press TV has a summary in English.)
Iranian officials interviewed an alleged victim of jailhouse rape at the hands of security personnel. But instead of consoling him, they asked him embarrassing questions and blamed him for the violence.
They said it was the young man’s own fault for protesting the results of Iran’s June 12 presidential elections, according to a fresh account of the alleged rape published on the website of a prominent reformist politician.
“I asked them why I and others were raped in prison,” the young man says he asked two interrogators and a judge who had agreed to hear his story….
One of the three replied, “‘When the supreme leader confirmed the election result, everyone should have recognized it.”
1940 GMT: For What It’s Worth. Press TV, citing Ayandeh newspaper, reports that the managing director of the Behehst-e-Zahra cemetery has denied the secret burial of post-election casualties. Norooz claimed earlier this week, from information provided by a cemetery employee, that security forces had forced staff to inter 40 bodies.
1930 GMT: Tabnak reports that Kazam Jalali of the Parliament National Security Committee has met with Mehdi Karroubi to discuss Karroubi’s initial presentation of evidence on the sexual abuse of detainees (see 1535 GMT). The Los Angeles Times offers an English summary quoting Jalali, “Karoubi agreed to introduce four persons, who have met him personally and claimed that they were tortured and raped in prison, to Parliament. Karoubi told us these four persons are ready to provide their testimonies that they were sexually abused, but they do not feel secure.”
1600 GMT: Cyber-Wars. We will probably run a feature tomorrow, but it appears that the Iranian authorities are doing serious damage to the communications and presence of the Green opposition and reformists.
One key site of Mir Housein Mousavi’s campaign, Ghalam News, was hacked out of existence last month (“Service Unavailable”). It is reported that another, Kalameh Sabz, has been down for more than 10 days. The closure of Etemade Melli newspaper has been followed by the disappearance of its website (“Under Construction”); Seda-ye Edalat fell at the end of July. (The website of the Etemade Melli political party is still up and a key source for information.)
2150 GMT: Before shutting down for the night, one more foreshadowing of our analysis tomorrow on “The Anti-Ahmadinejad Compromise”. An EA correspondent offers further evidence. Mir Hossein Mousavi, in a meeting at the house of Dr. Mohsen Mirdamadi (who has subsequently been arrested) with the families of some of the detainee, said, “Principalists that have a conscience are separating themselves from the power-hungry fraction.”
2130 GMT: Rafsanjani – We Told You So. A few hours after declaring that Rafsanjani was “closing ranks” with the Supreme Leader, the National Iranian American Council has discovered what we knew all along: Rafsanjani and his party are maintaining their flexibility, especially with their challenge to President Ahmadinejad. The NIAC reveals from the Iranian site Javan-e Farda that Rafsanjani’s party is backing Mehdi Karroubi’s position on detainees (which we picked up from Rafsanjani’s speech today — see 1715 GMT):
The Executives of Construction has released a statement announcing full support of Mehdi Karroubi’s position on the harassment issue. “Karroubi’s bravery, courage, and his compassionate approach in rooting out the current corruption in the country’s security and judicial apparatuses, is not only worthy of attention and congratulations, but has brought about an invasion of repeated attacks by various people and groups in the name of ‘defending the system.’ These behaviors serve as evidence of the ridiculousness of trying to combat reality.”
1715 GMT: The Anti-Ahmadinejad Compromise. After an unexpectedly lively Saturday afternoon, tomorrow’s analysis (which in fact is what we’ve been projecting for weeks) is shaping up: there is a convergence of disparate forces agreeing on the need to curb the President’s authority. In part, that comes from a closer consideration of Hashemi Rafsanjani’s statement (which, apart from its declaration of loyalty to the Supreme Leader, is actually pretty close to the recent statements of Mehdi Karroubi). In part, it comes from news such as this….
The “conservative” newspaper Jomhori Eslami has declared, “The abuse of prisoners is undeniable,” citing the Supreme Leader’s closure of Kahrizak detention center. Furthermore, “bringing up issues such as velvet revolution” are “fanciful fairy
tales” that must not be repeated, since “these claims have no effect other than providing a service to Iran’s enemies by implying that the USA is very strong and has a very strong influence upon Iranian internal affairs”.
The newspaper suggests that both “reformist” and “conservative” blocs “must accept mistakes they have made before and after the election, as accepting these realities is a step towards solving the existing problems”.
1645 GMT: And yet another reason. Parleman News has posted a summary of Rafsanjani’s statement: the support for the Supreme Leader is in conjunction with a call for all to uphold the Constitution and follow guidelines in areas such as detentions. Violators should be punished.
1630 GMT: Another reason why Hashemi Rafsanjani’s statement at the Expediency Council today should not be seen as a surrender (1530 and 1600 GMT): President Ahmadinejad was not at the meeting.
1620 GMT: The Regime Piles on Pressure? Our concern at a possible step-up in detentions of “reformists” (1245 and 1310 GMT) appears to be borne out. Mohammad Maleki, the 76-year-old former Dean of Tehran University, has been arrested.
1610 GMT: Oh, Please. Not even Press TV is buying this Government line, which comes out after reports noting that the nominee for Minister of Defense, Ahmad Vahidi, is wanted by Interpol for alleged involvement in a 1994 bombing of a Jewish centre in Buenos Aires (see separate story). Note the scare quotes in this opening paragraph:
Iran says the international reaction to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s nominee for defense minister is a “Zionist plot” to undermine the new Iranian administration.
“[Ahmad] Vahidi was a deputy defense minister and this is a very senior political position,” Ahmadinejad’s press adviser, Ali-Akbar Javanfekr, told AFP [Agence France Presse]. “Therefore it seems that this is a new trick being planned and is basically a Zionist plot.”
1600 GMT: In case you’re wondering after our previous entry, Rafsanjani’s website offers no mention, let alone commentary, on the former President’s statement at the Expediency Council.
1530 GMT: Hashemi’s Surrender to Khamenei? Not quite.
The National Iranian American Council is making a big deal of Rafsanjani’s opening statement at the Expediency Council today, claiming, “it now appears that he is closing ranks with supreme leader Ali Khamenei”. It based the analysis on an Agence France Presse reports, quoting from Iranian news agencies, “Powerful cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani urged Iran’s warring political groups on Saturday to follow the orders of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for ending the present political turmoil.”
Hmm….The actual statement from Rafsanjani, according to the story, was “the current situation needs everyone to observe the leader’s decrees and advice”. That’s both very general and far from out-of-line with his stance since 12 June. The former Rafsanjani has never come out in direct opposition to Khamenei; any fight he has is with President Ahmadinejad.
Especially given the setting, a gathering of one of Iran’s most powerful bodies, Rafsanjani’s statement is simply that he is not taking apart the system of ultimate clerical authority. It remains to be seen where he takes his next step against the political leaders in that system. One could just as easily say, “Rafsanjani is hoping supreme leader Ali Khamenei closes ranks with him.”
1325 GMT: Another Symbol for the Movement? We are getting a lot of correspondence from readers today about the testimony of a 15-year-old boy, summarised in The Times of London today, who claims he was raped in detention “in a large provincial city”.
As journalism, there has to be some caution about the story as it is offered anonymously — The Times uses a pseudonym for the teenager — and cannot be verified. As politics (and, more importantly, as a story of humanity and inhumanity), it has to be recognised. In the words of The Times, “Reza is living proof of the charges levelled by Mehdi Karoubi.”
1310 GMT: Very Disturbing Signals. Reports are coming in via Twitter of political activists, including Mehdi Karroubi’s son, being arrested and summoned to the Government workers’ court. We are seeking confirmation. Read the rest of this entry »
2200 GMT: A third journalist working for the Etemade Melli newspaper has been arrested. Mehdi Yazdani Khorram, the editor of the literature and art section, was arrested by plainsclothes officers at 2030 GMT.
2130 GMT: An important clarrification. Although Rafsanjani is scheduled to deliver a sermon at next week’s Friday prayers, it is far from clear that he will take up this opportunity. It should be remembered that Rafsanjani turned down several opportunities to speak at Friday prayers before his last appearance on June 17.
1725 GMT: The resumption of the Tehran trials, scheduled for tomorrow, has been delayed until Saturday. The reason is unclear.
1715 GMT: Even the choice of Ayatollah Emami Kashani, a “conservative” cleric, to lead this Friday’s prayers is far from a firm guarantee of support for the President and the regime. In a sermon at Jamkaran Mosque, the ayatollah admitted, “The brightness of velayat-e-faqih (supreme leadership) has diminished….[Since the supreme leadership can not solve the problems of the country] may you [Mahdi, the 12'th Imam] reemerge and solve the country’s problems.”
1450 GMT: A summary of today before we return to our vacation. Riz Khan of Al Jazeera posted a question which, for Riz Khan, is remarkably ill-phrased: “As Mahmoud Ahmadinejad takes his oath, Will Iran again spiral into another cycle of violent demonstrations?”
The issue, as demonstrated again today, is not another ominous spiral into violence. Gatherings today, which persisted despite the state’s attempt to close down visible opposition to the inauguration, continue to express clear concerns and demands (and, notably, without violence). Ahmadinejad’s speech, which has already faded into a lack of significance, does nothing to check those concerns.
So the inauguration in fact becomes a sideshow, one boycotted by some politicians and attended by others with ill humour. With the Tehran trial resuming tomorrow, and more importantly with opposition politicians and clerics renewing their challenge, we’ll get back to serious business.
These hectic trials just reflect the deep problem which exists in our country. It is definitely not a source of pride to publicly expose such personalities in a mass trial. We made a [Islamic revolution in 1979] revolution so that trials were against criminals. We wanted trials with lawyers, trials with rights for the defendants, trials where the judge acts independently and trials which make the people feel justice prevailing.
Mousavi again denied any links between the opposition and foreign countries, asserting that the problem was an attempt to limit political views: “We have to learn to face other standpoints, listen to what they say, elaborate our own viewpoints and pay attention to their elaborations as well.”
1445 GMT: The Islamic society of engineers, of which Ahmadinejad is a former member, has sent a letter to Ayatollah Rafsanjani. The head of the society, Seyyed Hasan Sobhani-nia, commented that “This letter asks about recent events and Ayatollah Rafsanjani’s position regarding them. This letter also states the concerns and worries that this society has regarding the future of individuals attached to the revolution who have played a crucial role in its formation. The society has requested Mr. Rafsanjani to clarify his position regarding these recent events.” The society had previously sent a letter to Ahmadinejad, which Enduring America also posted, asking for his own clarrification.
1440 GMT: A Twitter activist has created a Google map showing the locations of protests across the capital today.
1430 GMT: Gooya. com are reporting that “tens of thousands” of security forces were out on Tehran streets today, especially near Parliament building. Shops in the area were closed.
1415 GMT: The lawyer for detained politicians Behzad Nabavi, Mostafa Tajzadeh, and Mohsen Mirdamadi says he will not attend tomorrow’s trial because it is illegal.
1355 GMT: Another Arrested Journalist. In addition to last night’s seizure of Mir Hamid Hassanzadeh, the head of Ghalam News, Reza Nourbakhsh, the chief editor of the newspaper Farhikhtegan, was arrested. His office was searched, and some material was taken.
1340 GMT: The “reformist” Parliamentary group Imam Khomeini Line has denounced today’s events as a “so-called trial”.
1330 GMT: Fars News Agency has published the “confession” of former Vice President Abtahi; this differs somewhat from the version reported out of the trial (see 1210 GMT). This may be because Fars had an advance “script” of Abtahi’s testimony.
1210 GMT: Blaming Hashemi. And now to the political point of today’s proceedings. Take note of how the “confession” of former Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi, as described by Fars News, is set out to tie former President Rafsanjani into the “plot” of the opposition:
After the election [Mohammad] Khatami and Rafsanjani had sworn to have each other’s back, and I don’t understand the point of it, knowing the diference [in votes between Ahmadienjad and Mousavi] was 11 million….Hashemi wanted to take revange on Ahmadinejad and the Supreme Leader….
Mousavi probably did not know the country, but Khatami, with all due respect… knew all the issues. He was aware of the capability and power of the leader, but he joined Mousavi and this was a betrayal,…I see myself as a reformist but stated that Khatami did not have the right to force [this] on Mousavi. I did not agree with Ahmadinejad’s presidency but believe in people’s votes, and congratulated as people’s choice as the president.
It was wrong of me to take part in the rallies, but [Mehdi] Karroubi told me that we cannot call the people onto the streets with such a meagre number of votes, so we had better go to the streets ourselves to demonstrate our protest.
But, if Rafsanjani is the chief villain, Iran can thank its ultimate hero:
If the Supreme Leader would have backed up even a bit, today Iran’s distress would have gone as far as that in Afghanistan and Pakistan; therefore people should thank the supreme leader for his moves. I am telling all friends and all that hear our voices to know the election matter was a lie to make an excuse for riots so Iran would have changed to another Iraq and Afghanistan so [the opposition] could hurt the regime and take over.
1140 GMT: How Serious is that “Foreign Plot”? Well, Mark Palmer is far from a covert practitioner of regime change: he is the author of Breaking the Axis of Evil, which “has the gumption to argue what diplomats and political leaders dare not speak: that global peace with not be achieved until democracies replace the world’s remaining dictatorships”. A former State Department official, he advocated the invasion of Iraq well before March 2003, and he is now with the American Enterprise Institute.
Abbas Milani is also not very secretive: he is one of the most prominent US-based analysts of Iran. He is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, another “conservative” think tank (one of its most notable associates is former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice). While critical of the Iranian system, Milani has not advocated “regime change”.
And Gene Sharp, singled out in the prosecution’s indictment (see 0938 GMT), is an academic who has written for decades “on the strategic uses of nonviolent struggle in face of dictatorship, war, genocide, and oppression”. A long-time fellow at Harvard University, the “instructions” cited in the indictment are not direct orders to the defendants (unless the prosecution has some dramatic evidence that Sharp has ever met any of them) but a reference to the general theories and analysis in his books.
Put bluntly, if this is a “foreign plot”, as the Iranian prosecutors allege, it’s a very poorly-designed one indeed, given that it took me five minutes to assemble the above information. Read the rest of this entry »