
A man with a cane gestures towards a woman on the ground during protests in central Tehran June 14, 2009. (Reuters)
Tehran's wild nights of protest
Iran's election aftermath: The view from the streets of Tehran
TEHRAN — Tehran is living strange days. After two nights of rioting, this city that manages to combine the frantic with the lackadaisical takes even longer than usual to get going in the morning.
Street-sweepers brush glass away from shattered bus-stops as slow traffic trundles past torched and blackened bank fronts. An overcast and cooler than usual summer with frequent rainstorms makes for a brooding atmospheric backdrop to the scenes of urban tension unfolding in the streets.
People go about their daily business against a backdrop of disrupted city life: scorched tarmac, overturned and torched trash bins, bus-stops bereft of glass sidings.
"I feel like that guy who was sitting in the Berlin cafe as Hitler came to power and, unlike those around him, knew that this was the end of democracy and freedom," said a 25-year-old journalist as he steered his car through the streets. "Not that we ever had freedoms and democracy here."
The now nightly shulugheha (troubles) that start as night falls and stretch until dawn are the talk of the town. But much debate revolves over whether the vote was rigged or not.
"The meta-narrative in the West now is beginning to emerge that these elections were not rigged but represent Ahmadinejad's popularity in the countryside," American journalist Robert Dreyfuss told a group of Iranian journalists as they sipped tea in his hotel lobby.
Some Iranians concur.
"Maybe there was some rigging, one or two million votes," a taxi driver told me as he steered his cab around the carbonized detritus of overnight rioting. "But Ahmadinejad still won by 24 million to Mousavi's 13 million. You can't falsify such a large number. The protesters were just looking for an excuse to cause a revolution."
That is the same accusation being made by Ahmadinejad's government. They believe that a Color Revolution is in the offing that is being promoted by invisible Western hands working through young, impressionable and highly excitable students.
"In our questioning we're after finding links between the plotters and the foreign media," said Ahmadreza Radan, the deputy police chief at a news conference today, according to the state-run Fars news agency.
"It's a psychological war," said Nader Ghassemi, a factory owner and Ahmadinejad supporter standing in the middle of a Tehran avenue with his wife and family at 4 a.m. waving posters of their leader. "They're trying to manipulate our people."
Meanwhile, the protests continue. The more people become angry at what they charge was blatant vote-rigging and the repression of their protests, the more they flock to street-corners to shout anti-Ahmadinejad slogans.
"They didn't even want to do a subtle vote-rigging," said a film director attending the protests. "They wanted to do it as blatantly as possible in order to let us know how unimportant we are in their schemes."
After the police violently demonstrated that it was ready to massively repress any reactions, a shocked populace largely refrained from challenging the status quo Sunday, switching to passive resistance techniques.
"These people thought that the nights after the election would be like the ones before," said a student activist manning a roadblock, referring to the extraordinary nightly scenes of the last week when thousands of Tehranis flooded Vali Asr Avenue, the longest boulevard in Tehran, and shouted anti-Ahmadinejad slogans without the police intervening. "They were beaten up and are now scared to come out," said the student.
Another frustrated student activist described how, on a night before the elections, he witnessed a lively debate in a central city park transformed into passivity as a Korean sitcom began broadcasting on the park's giant screen.
"People just cast around for a piece of newspaper, sat on it, watched the program and forgot about why they had come out," the student said.
This report by Iason Athanasiadis on the massive civilian protests in Tehran is cynical, tendentious and completely inconsistent with hundreds of other news reports and blog accounts pouring out of Iran in the past three days. He erroneously calls the protests "rioting," when in fact largely peaceful rallies were turned into street confrontations by police repression. He uncritically repeats the total fantasy that somehow Western interests are engineering a "color revolution" through these protests, when in fact the half-million Iranians in the streets on Monday could only be there because of genuine rage about both the election's irregular results and the instantaneous regime crackdown on peaceful protests. And he falsely calls the resistance "passive," as if the courage of tens of thousands and then hundreds of thousands of ordinary Iranians to brave severe beatings was some sort of passivity. This reporter sounds as if he were at an American rock concert gone out of control rather than a historic popular renunciation of an entire political order, which is what is in the air in Tehran. He should find something less disturbing to his ideological sensitivities to report.
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