Iran uses intimidation to deter Arab protests
Martial law, arrests, imprisonment, torture
& killings
Tehran’s media promotes racist anti-Arab propaganda
The Iranian regime is using racist propaganda, intimidation and
violent repression to deter protests by its persecuted Arab citizens. It has
imposed martial law and resorted to arrests, imprisonment, torture and
extra-judicial killings to suppress mass demonstrations.
Ahwazi Arabs have staged anti-government protests every April
since 2005, the date of the Ahwazi intifada that saw scores killed and hundreds
arrested by the Iranian regime. The protests in April 2011 were the strongest
since 2005, encouraged by the April Spring revolutions that toppled governments
in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen and rocked the Iranian-allied Assad regime
in Syria.
This year, the Tehran government prepared well in advance to
preempt any uprising; rounding up prominent members of the Ahwazi community
killing some under torture, broadcasting forced confessions on its
international Press TV network and imposing martial law on Arab-majority
districts. Around 100 people were arrested in the run-up to the planned
protests last month, according to the Ahwaz Centre for Human Rights in a clear
attempt to intimidate the Arab population.
The Iranian
media distributed pro-regime propaganda to provide a justification for the
violent repression of Arabs in the weeks leading up to the April 2005 intifada
anniversary. In March 2012, the state-controlled Press TV broadcast a
documentary which used political prisoners, who had been detained for months in
secret prisons without charge or trial, to construct an outlandish conspiracy
theory. Ahwazi Arabs were portrayed as “simple people with simple minds” and
therefore vulnerable to mysterious “mind termination” brain washing techniques
that turned them into violent unthinking killers. The documentary narrator
talked of ideas instilled by the former Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein, being
“grounded firmly into the Arab psyche”; implying that Arabs are an enemy within
and inherently untrustworthy. Such racist assumptions have underpinned the
regime’s policy of discrimination against Arab citizens and are also used to
justify violent repression. The documentary infantilised Arabs, suggesting that
unrest in the region is due to Arab tribes fighting each other “to secure their
interests” rather being as a result of the regime’s harsh persecution of Arab
people. A previous documentary, broadcast by Press TV in December 2011, aired
forced confessions from three Ahwazi Arabs following months of incarceration in
a secret Ministry of Intelligence detention centre.
Some of those
shown in the TV reports are among those facing execution. In March, Amnesty
International sent out an appeal on behalf of five Ahwazi Arabs, including
three brothers, their cousin and another man, who were believed to be at
imminent risk of execution after their death sentences were upheld by the
Supreme Court. Amnesty warned that the death sentences were apparently intended
to deter 15 April mass demonstrations.
Meanwhile, at
least two young Ahwazis - Nasser Derafshan Alboshokeh and Mohammad al-Ka’bi -
arrested by the security forces in January were killed under torture following
a round-up of Arab youth, teachers and others. Nineteen year-old Alboshokeh had
been rushed to hospital with a broken neck and torture wounds but was confirmed
dead. Al-Ka’bi’s death sparked huge protests in his home town Shush, but the
authorities refused to return his body and instead buried it in order to prevent
further disclosure of the torture he’d suffered.
As security
operations began and martial law was enforced in March and April, targeting the
restive Hay al-Thawra district of Ahwaz City in particular, the regime imposed
a media blackout.
Deputy Middle East director at Human Rights
Watch, Joe Stork, said: “Security operations in Khuzestan province since
protests there last April have resulted in the largest number of deaths and
injuries since the crackdown that followed the disputed 2009 presidential election.
With the province under an information blackout and the history of secret
convictions and executions, we have reason to be very worried about the people
the authorities have been snatching up and carrying off there.”
Protests did
take place in some districts such as Hay al-Thawra, Hamidiya, Kut-Abdullah and
Zewiyah with protesters carrying banners and Ahwazi flags, but were quickly put
down by the regime. In one disturbing development, the Iranian Revolutionary
Guards besieged the Shohada High School in Amaniyah
district after some Arab children hoisted
the Ahwazi flag in the school. Children were detained and interrogated for days
while their parents were denied access to them.
The consequences of the repression of
protests will be felt for many months, with activists expecting more show
trials and executions. These deaths will be in vain if the international
community and the global media continue to ignore the plight of the long
suffering Ahwazi Arabs.
Source: petertatchellfoundation.org
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