The Scotsman

Brave young Iranians are sending a wake-up call to the world

The widespread protests against the mullahs’ fascist regime are turning into full-scale revolution,

- writes Struan Stevenson

While millions around the world tune-in to watch football in the World Cup 2022 in Qatar, young men and women in Iran are sacrificin­g their lives to restore freedom and justice to their nation.

The situation in Iran must surely act as a wake-up call in the West. This pariah regime and its murderous trampling of human rights can no longer be tolerated. The civilised world must support the Iranian people’s right to overthrow the mullahs’ brutal, theocratic regime.

A recent report by MI5 directorge­neral Ken Mccallum, revealing how the Iranian regime has tried to assassinat­e or kidnap ten people in Britain since the beginning of 2022, is the clearest sign yet of how the mullahs’ tottering grip on power has turned them into a lethal, internatio­nal adversary. Mr Mccallum said: “At [Iran’s] sharpest, this includes ambitions to kidnap or even kill British or Uk-based individual­s perceived as enemies of the regime. We have seen at least ten such potential threats since January alone.”

With the nationwide uprising in Iran now entering its tenth week and increasing­ly developing into a fullscale revolution, the fascist regime has resorted to deadly tactics at home and abroad. Ongoing protests in Iran have expanded to at least 243 cities, with more than 625 people killed so far by the repressive security forces and over 30,000 arrested. The revolt, which began in September with the murder in custody of a young Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, for not wearing her veil properly, has now escalated into an outpouring of hatred towards its misogynist rulers. “Death to Khamenei” has become one of the keynote chants heard during the mass demonstrat­ions, as Iranians demand the downfall of the elderly supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali

Khamenei, and his tyrannical government.

Hundreds of Iranians attending the Qatar World Cup have joined the protests, chanting “Say her name, Mahsa Amini” and wearing T-shirts with slogans like “Zan, Zindagi, Azadi” (women, life, freedom), a central chant from the protests in Iran. The Iranian football team refused to sing their country’s national anthem before the start of their match with England in a silent show of support.

They will now face severe retributio­n at the hands of the regime on their return to Iran. Meanwhile in Iran, the insurrecti­on has reached a new phase, with the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps and their thuggish Basij militia colleagues, deploying heavy weapons in a brutal crackdown against the mostly young protesters. Helicopter gunships now swoop low over the surging demonstrat­ions, while armoured military vehicles open fire with high-calibre machine-guns, scything down women and men indiscrimi­nately.

Live ammunition and tear gas has been fired into people’s homes. Doctors and nurses are even attempting to treat injured protesters in private homes, as people wounded during the protests are routinely dragged from their hospital beds and hauled off to prison. Drones film those taking part in the demonstrat­ions and they are then arrested by the IRGC and face long terms of imprisonme­nt, or even execution.

Death sentences have been announced by the Revolution­ary Court of Tehran on four people arrested during the protests: Mohammad Ghobadlou, Mohammad Boroughani, Sahand Noor Mohammadza­deh, and Mahan Sedarat Madani.

In recent days, the most intense protests have been in the north-western Kurdish-majority provinces, with videos continuing to emerge from

several cities, including Mahabad, Bukan and Piranshahr in West Azerbaijan and Javanrud in Kermanshah. The regime has tried to prevent the spread of informatio­n by blocking the internet and banning internatio­nal journalist­s from entering Iran.

But evidence has continued to surface showing unarmed student protesters blockading streets and courageous­ly confrontin­g the full military might of the mullahs. Mass strikes and protests have continued in universiti­es throughout the country, including in the capital Tehran and in Kermanshah, Sanandaj, Marvdasht, Karaj, Tabriz, Sari, Najafabad and Yazd. The students have been joined by bazaar merchants who have gone on strike in dozens of cities, closing their shops and seriously underminin­g the already reeling economy.

The uprising has been carefully coordinate­d from day one by the main democratic opposition movement, the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK). Led by the charismati­c Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), from her exile in Albania, the MEK resistance units have expanded rapidly throughout the insurrecti­on.

Posters, graffiti, hand bills and banners have highlighte­d direct backing for the NCRI, MEK and Mrs Rajavi, provoking a furious response from the mullahs who have a deep fear of this key opposition movement. However, the MEK and NCRI have continued to hack into national government TV networks, interrupti­ng news and current affairs broadcasts at peak times, with pictures of Mrs Rajavi and calls for the overthrow of the regime. Resistance units have used social media to highlight the millions who struggle to survive on incomes under the poverty line, against a background of rises in inflation, water shortages and unemployme­nt.

Mrs Rajavi has urged the UN Security Council and the EU to take immediate action to stop the killing of defenceles­s protesters, including comprehens­ive political and economic sanctions against the mullahs, listing the IRGC and the regime’s Ministry of Intelligen­ce on EU terror blacklists, and the expulsion of their agents and mercenarie­s. As she rightly said, “inaction in the face of crimes against humanity and war crimes by the terrorist and warmongeri­ng regime of mullahs has not only trampled human rights values but has endangered peace and security in the region and the world”.

Struan Stevenson is coordinato­r of the Campaign for Iran Change and chair of the In Search of Justice committee on the protection of political freedoms in Iran

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 ?? ?? ← A protester holds up a placard during a rally in Paris last month in support of the antigovern­ment uprising in Iran
← A protester holds up a placard during a rally in Paris last month in support of the antigovern­ment uprising in Iran

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