Khaleej Times

For decades — Iranians have risen up, only to be put down

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Here is a look at past protests in Iran, and how its theocracy prevailed.

The Islamic Revolution

The 1979 Islamic Revolution began with broadbased mass protests that eventually forced the Western-backed monarchy from power. But in the resulting chaos, hard-line followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini quickly moved to sideline left-wing and moderate opposition groups, forcing many Iranians into prison or exile and establishi­ng a firm foundation for clerical rule. Iran also suppressed a rebellion from among its Kurdish minority in a yearslong military campaign. In 1988, at the close of the disastrous Iran-Iraq war, Iran is believed to have executed thousands of political prisoners, something authoritie­s have yet to publicly acknowledg­e.

A student uprising

The closure of a reformist newspaper in 1999 ignited a week of student protests. On July 9, security forces and hard-line vigilantes stormed a student dormitory at Tehran University. At least three people were killed and 1,200 were arrested in the unrest, which spread to other cities. The protests unfolded amid a power struggle between President Mohammad Khatami and hard-liners who dominate the Revolution­ary Guard and the security apparatus. The hard-liners eventually prevailed, and the resulting crackdown set back reform efforts for a decade.

The Green Movement

The largest and most sustained protests since the Islamic Revolution erupted in the summer of 2009, after the reformist opposition disputed the re-election of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d. Millions of Iranians took part in months of protests in several major cities. Green Movement leaders did not call for the overthrow of the system, but for the reversal of the allegedly rigged election, greater social freedoms and the reining in of the security forces. Authoritie­s neverthele­ss responded with a massive crackdown. The Revolution­ary Guard and its volunteer force, the Basij militia, opened fire on protesters and launched a wave of arrests. Opposition leaders were placed under house arrest and silenced in the largely state-run media.

President Barack Obama came under criticism for not offering a full-throated endorsemen­t of the protests. But it’s unclear if that would have made a difference, and it might have fed into hard-liners’ allegation­s that the protests were part of a Western plot.

Economic protests

Since withdrawin­g from the 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and world powers, Trump has imposed “maximum” sanctions on Iran that he says are aimed at countering its nuclear program and its support for armed groups across the region. The sanctions, including those targeting the vital oil industry, have eviscerate­d Iran’s economy, wiping away many people’s life savings and fueling high unemployme­nt.

In the 18 months since the US began restoring sanctions, Iran has seen waves of sporadic, leaderless protests initially focused on economic grievances and perceived corruption among the clerical elite and the Revolution­ary

Guard. Each time, the protests rapidly escalated into chants against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and calls for the end of clerical rule.

The protests have often turned violent and security forces have responded with deadly force. In the most recent and deadly wave of protests, in November, authoritie­s shut down the internet for several days, making it difficult to discern the scale of the protests and the resulting crackdown. Amnesty Internatio­nal estimates that over 300 people were killed. —

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