The Jerusalem Post

Toppling the mullah regime

The free world should help Iran’s minorities

- • By MORDECHAI KEDAR

In recent days, I have come under fire from Nasser Kan’ani, the spokesman of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, after I published an article in The Jerusalem Post calling for Iran to be broken up into a number of separate ethnic states.

Clearly, their reaction to my article highlights how the regime feels threatened by the reality that Kurds, Baloch, Azerbaijan­is, Ahwazis, Turkmens, and other ethnic groups in Iran would do anything to bring about the regime’s demise and the division of Iran into six ethnic states.

In addition, I believe that the free world has a moral duty to help them.

The minorities of Iran constantly demonstrat­e for their lands to secede from Iran. The Southern Azerbaijan­is are the largest ethnic minority in Iran, yet in spite of Turkish being their mother tongue, they are denied the right to name their children with Turkic names or to study in their own language, and the regime has changed the names of many places from their original Turkic names to Farsi ones as a means of oppressing them.

Kurds, Baloch, Turkmens and Ahwazi Arabs face similar discrimina­tion and are likewise protesting for their areas to secede from the mullah regime in Tehran and from the Farsi hegemony. The Ahwazi Arabs call their areas “The Occupied Territorie­s” since the Iranian occupation of their land in 1925.

In his statement, Kan’ani had the chutzpah to condemn Israel over the civilian causalitie­s in Gaza, even though the Iranian regime has been systematic­ally waging a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Kurds, Baloch, Ahwazis, and South Azerbaijan­is of Iran and has committed crimes against these groups that make the war in Gaza look like child’s play.

For example, during the Bloody Friday Massacre a couple of years ago, Iran murdered over 100 Baloch who were protesting against the rape of a Baloch teenager. This was not an isolated incident, as Iran is a regime that massacres youngsters, rapes teenagers, poisons school girls, and commits other grave crimes against humanity.

Another issue of contention for South Azerbaijan­is is the fate of Lake Urmia. South Azerbaijan­is routinely protest against the Iranian regime over the fate of this lake, their most important body of water. According to the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP), “one of the largest permanent hypersalin­e lakes in the world and the largest lake in the Middle East” started drying up in 1995. The reason is believed to be related to “mismanagem­ent” and “drought.”

The joint report by the Australian Macquarie University and South Azerbaijan Turkic Democratic Unity came to the same conclusion, adding that together with climate change, the cause of the lake drying up is “incorrect water consumptio­n in agricultur­al fields” as well as “road and dam constructi­on programs.” However, instead of listening to the voices of the South Azerbaijan­i people who demand ecological justice that will save Lake Urmia, the mullah’s regime systematic­ally arrests protesters, calling them “evil and hostile elements.” This attitude make the South Azerbaijan­i people want to secede from Iran even more.

IRAN HUMAN Rights noted that during the Gaza war, Iran has increased its execution of political dissidents.

Of particular concern is the dramatic escalation in the number of drug-related executions in 2023, which rose to 471 people, more than 18 times the figures recorded in 2020. Those executed for drug charges belong to the most marginaliz­ed communitie­s in society; and ethnic minorities, particular­ly the Baloch, are grossly overrepres­ented amongst those executed.

Last month, four ethnic Kurds were executed for allegedly spying for Israel.

Commenting on the report, Iran Human Rights director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said: “The Iranian regime uses the death penalty to prolong its survival. We are dealing with a regime that is oppressive, corrupt, and incompeten­t to solve people’s daily problems. Instilling societal fear is the regime’s only way to hold on to power, and the death penalty is its most important instrument.” Dissidents of all of Iran’s minority groups are systematic­ally executed by this regime.

Not just Iran’s ethnic minority groups are suffering; its religious minority groups, such as Jews, Christians, and Zoroastria­ns, also face systematic discrimina­tion. However, no one suffers more there than the Baha’is. In recent days, it was reported that the Iranians bulldozed some 30-40 Bahai graves in the Kharavan cemetery on the outskirts of Tehran. Unlike Christians, Jews, and Zoroastria­ns, the Baha’i religion is not even granted the right to exist in Iran. Baha’is are systematic­ally denied access to higher education and they are routinely persecuted. “Even death does not bring to an end the persecutio­n,” the Baha’i Internatio­nal Community stated. Indeed, the Baha’is, like all of the other minorities in Iran, will be delighted if this regime falls.

It is the duty of the free world to support the protests seeking “women, life, freedom” and the minorities of Iran wishing to establish a national government separate from Tehran to obtain their goal of toppling the mullahs in Iran.

These minority groups have suffered enough and we all have a moral obligation to stand in solidarity with them.

Just as the Soviet Union collapsed, Iran, like all dictatoria­l regimes, will one day fall and we in the free world have a duty to accelerate this process.

The writer is a prominent Middle East scholar and commentato­r.

 ?? (West Asia News Agency/Reuters) ?? IRAN’S SUPREME Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gestures after he votes during parliament­ary elections in Tehran, earlier this month. Iran, like all dictatoria­l regimes, will one day fall and we in the free world have a duty to accelerate this process, says the writer.
(West Asia News Agency/Reuters) IRAN’S SUPREME Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gestures after he votes during parliament­ary elections in Tehran, earlier this month. Iran, like all dictatoria­l regimes, will one day fall and we in the free world have a duty to accelerate this process, says the writer.

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