The Oklahoman

Cleric says social media fed the protests in Iran

- BY JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — A hard-line cleric leading Friday prayers in Iran’s capital called on the Islamic Republic to build its own social media, blaming popular internatio­nal messaging apps for the unrest that accompanie­d days of protests over the country’s flagging economy.

The demonstrat­ions began on Dec. 28 and quickly spread across the country, prompting the government to suspend access to the messaging app Telegram, which was being used to publicize the protests, and briefly block the Instagram photo-sharing site. Twitter and Facebook were already banned.

With travel restricted across Iran, a nation of 80 million people roughly two-and-a-half times the size of Texas, online videos and images posted by activists have provided some of the only glimpses into the demonstrat­ions, the largest in nearly a decade, which have mainly been held in the provinces.

Such images only provide a limited view of events on the ground, and can be easily manipulate­d. All of Iran’s radio and television stations are state-run.

“Cyberspace was kindling the fire of the battle,” Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami told thousands of worshipper­s gathered in Tehran. “When cyberspace was closed down, the sedition was stopped. The nation does not support a social network that has its key in the hands of the United States.”

Amid the unrest and anti-government rallies that began last week, Iran has also seen three days of pro-government demonstrat­ions, with crowds in the tens of thousands. A similar rally followed Friday prayers in Tehran.

On Thursday, Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said about 42,000 people at most took part in the week of anti-government protests, saying they went on as long as they did because of the “leniency, restrain, tolerance and interactio­n” of the government. He did not elaborate.

Fazli’s comments marked the first government estimate of participat­ion in the protests and appeared timed so authoritie­s could contrast it against the mass crowds brought together for the pro-government demonstrat­ions.

The government’s move to block Telegram may have seriously curtailed protesters’ ability to organize. The app boasts an estimated 48 million users in Iran, more than half the population.

“Communicat­ion blackouts constitute a serious violation of fundamenta­l rights,” a group of United Nations human rights experts warned in a statement Friday.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Iranian worshipper­s attend the Friday prayer ceremony in Tehran, Iran. A hard-line Iranian cleric has called on Iran to create its own indigenous social media apps, blaming them for the unrest that followed days of protest in the Islamic Republic over...
[AP PHOTO] Iranian worshipper­s attend the Friday prayer ceremony in Tehran, Iran. A hard-line Iranian cleric has called on Iran to create its own indigenous social media apps, blaming them for the unrest that followed days of protest in the Islamic Republic over...

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