This article by Daniel Brett was published on Huffing
Post last year on 9th anniversary of 15 April 2005 Ahwazi Intifada
(uprising):
Today, April 15, marks the ninth
anniversary of one of the most bloody yet poorly known uprisings in the Middle
East. The peaceful Ahwazi intifada against forced displacement, discrimination
and persecution against the indigenous Arabs of southwest Iran in 2005 was met
with extreme brutality. The Iranian regime gunned down at least 130 unarmed
Arab civilians in cold blood in the first few days of the civil unrest in order
to restore control to the oil-rich region. At least 2,000 were incarcerated and
more killings were carried out, judicial and extra-judicial, in the following
months and years.
These protests are continuing and are
often spontaneous. Even recent football matches have turned into mass protests,
with fans chanting: "The people will topple the regime...Leave, leave
Rouhani (the Iranian president)...This land has lions, no one can come near
it."
The persecution of Iran's highly
impoverished Ahwazi Arab minority has intensified under the administration of
President Hassan Rouhani, in spite of his rapprochement with the West over the
country's nuclear programme.
Rouhani claimed during his presidential
campaign that he would address
ethnic demands in order to win support from the non-Persian half of the Iranian
population. This attracted votes from the persecuted Ahwazi Arabs,
who are indigenous to southwest Iran. However, on the ninth anniversary of the
peaceful Ahwazi Arab intifada, an ever increasing number of Ahwazi activists
are being put to death. Indeed, te most peaceful cultural activists are often
the ones being targeted for the most violent reprisals by the Iranian state.
Last week, ahead of the anniversary of
the 2005 uprising, the Iranian security forces began a new wave of arrests in
Al-Ahwaz in what has become an annual ritual of violent repression. On 9 April,
intelligence services arrested 25 year old activist Aref Sorchi, who had been
arrested three times previously, most recently at a funeral of the poet Molah
Fazel.
Sorchi remains in the custody of the
intelligence services for his role in a "shouting silent march" in
which placards were raised saying "our heritage is our lives, its death
our death", stressing the importance of the historical monuments of Ahwaz
Arabs and need to preserve them. Ammar Abayat was also arrested during a
peaceful protest against the destruction of the Abdulhamid palace, which was
built by the last Arab ruler of Al-Ahwaz Sheikh Khazaal Kaabi.
Meanwhile, concern is growing over the
fate of two Ahwazi Arab men on death row, Ali Chebieshat and Sayed Khaled
Mousawi, who were recently transferred from Fajr Prison in Dezful in Al-Ahwaz
to an unknown location, sparking fears their execution may be imminent. They
were sentenced to death on 9 September 2013 by
Branch Two of the Revolutionary Court in Ahwaz City on the charge of
"enmity against God" (moharebeh) in relation to the explosion of a
natural gas pipeline, in spite of no casualties and no proof the men were near
the scene. The court sentenced a third man, Salman Chayani, to 25 years'
imprisonment to be served in internal exile in Yazd, central Iran.
According to Amnesty International, the
three men were denied access to lawyers and their families for the first
several months of their detention and are believed to have been tortured or
otherwise ill-treated. Far from being hardened terrorists, according to
accounts by those who know them the three Arab men have a humble background and
were only ever interested in giving young people in their community a good
education. All were members of the Al-Shabab (Youth) Cultural Institute of
Shush which educated young people in Arabic language and culture. Following
months of torture, they were forced to confess to bomb attacks on a pipeline
and a railway trackin interviews with Press TV ahead of their sentencing
by a revolutionary court last September. They have appealed against
their death sentences, which are still under consideration by the Supreme
Court.
Two other Ahwazi Arab men were secretly executed in January 2014 after
their transfer to an unknown location. Hadi Rashedi and Hashem Shabani were
executed and buried in secret, although both stated that they opposed the use
of violence to assert Arabs' political demands. Three other Ahwazi Arab men,
Mohammad Ali Amouri, Sayed Jaber Alboshokeh and Sayed Mokhtar Alboshokeh, who
had been sentenced to death along with them, remain at risk of execution. All
were founding members of Al-Hiwar, a cultural institute that promoted Arabic
education, literature and cultural activities among deprived Ahwazi Arab youth.
Hadi Rashedi was a highly qualified high
school teacher with a keen interest in cultural issues and advocacy for the
poor. Before his trial, Rashedi suffered considerable mental stress and
sustained broken bones as a result of beatings. Hashem Shaabani, who was
married with one child and educated to a post-graduate level in Arabic and
political studies, had written poetry in Arabic and Farsi and taught Arabic
language and literature in high schools. He was a cultural, civil and student
activist and also a blogger. Both men were forced to confess on Press TV to
being involved in separatist terrorism and supporting Ba'athism in Iraq. They
were also made to claim that they had assistance from Hosni Mubarak and Muammer
al-Qadafi, the former rulers of Egypt and Libya.
In a letter smuggled out of prison, Shabani
wrote that he had written blogs and essays critical of the treatment of
minorities in Iran, including "hideous crimes against Ahwazis perpetrated
by the Iranian authorities, particularly arbitrary and unjust executions.
Through this reporting, I was defending the legitimate right that every nation
in this world should have which is the right to live freely with full civil
rights. With all these miseries and tragedies, I have never used a weapon to
fight these atrocious crimes except the pen."
Insisting on his innocence and demanding
a retrial before an impartial court, Shabani concluded his letter stating
"I would like to confirm that I have never participated in any armed
activity whatever the motives. I disagree with armed activities if there are
other peaceful channels to make demands and express our wishes and
aspirations."
The Iranian regime's execution campaign
demonstrates that any form of Arab civic organisation in Iran is portrayed as
terrorism, enabling it to impose the death penalty. Ahwazi Arab activists
maintain this is part of the regime's campaign of ethnic cleansing against
indigenous ethnic Arabs. Unfortunately, endemic anti-Arab racism has meant that
the Ahwazi cause has been alienated by some so-called "opposition"
groups.
Arguably the most virulent and violent
racism can be found within monarchist circles where Ahwazi Arabs are referred
to as "immigrants" and "invaders", although they have been
present in Iran for at least 14 centuries. Upholding notions of Aryan racial
supremacy that are augmented by Persian national myths, many monarchists are
cheer-leaders for the regime's persecution of Ahwazi Arabs. International
solidarity for the Ahwazi intifada is crucial to overcome prejudice and
persecution of this ethnic group, perpetrated by both the regime and some of
its equally fascistic opponents.
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