Deccan Chronicle

Iran: Are cracks appearing?

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It is not wholly clear if the massive nationwide anti-regime protests, starting December 28 last year, which rocked Iran very hard indeed for under a week, officially taking a toll of 22 lives, have exhausted themselves. What we have is a Sunday statement from the country’s Revolution­ary Guards that “tens of thousands” of security personnel were deployed to end the protests. This gives us an idea of the scale of the disturbanc­es.

Unconfirme­d reports for the past two days have suggested that former hardline President Mahmoud Ahmedineja­d, who appears hostile to the present government headed by a moderate President Hassan Rouhani, has been taken into house arrest for “inciting violence”. This has lent to speculatio­n whether the ruling unelected priestly elite of the ayatollahs, led by the 77year-old Ali Khamenei, is now seeing cracks. It is also not clear whether Mr Ahmedineja­d, if really guilty of incitement, or others who may have helped provoke the protests, have foreign backing. Iran’s economy has done reasonably well since the sanctions were lifted in 2015 but unemployme­nt remains high. The protesters were by and large working class people. They questioned Iran’s regional military involvemen­t in Syria and Iraq — which has raised Tehran’s stock — and pointed fingers not just at President Rouhani but also Ayatollaah Khameini. Given India’s close involvemen­t with Iran economical­ly and politicall­y, New Delhi cannot afford to take sides between Tehran and its foreign opponents.

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