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#1 |
40th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: July 11, 2002
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 11,916
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4th Day of Protests in Tehran, and Demonstrations Spread
By NAZILA FATHI TEHRAN, Nov. 12 — Thousands of students ignored official warnings and demonstrated today for a fourth day over the death sentence for a reformist scholar charged with apostasy. Some 5,000 students gathered at Tehran University in support of the academic Hashem Aghajari, sentenced to hang for questioning clerical rule in the Islamic Republic. "The execution of Aghajari is the execution of the university!" demonstrators chanted. "Political prisoners should be freed!" The momentum of protests appeared to be growing, with more students gathering in Tehran each day and demonstrations spreading to the provincial cities of Tabriz, Isfahan, Urumiyeh and Hamedan. After their rally in Tehran, students marched through the vast university campus, holding hands and singing "Ey Iran," the national anthem before the 1979 Islamic revolution. The watching police did not intervene. Today's protests followed similar demonstrations on Monday at Modaress Training University in the central part of the city. More than a thousand students carried a portrait of Mr. Aghajari as they marched and chanted demands for the resignation of Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, the hard-liner chief of the Iranian judiciary. The students also called for the resignation of President Mohammad Khatami, the leader of Iran's reform movement, in a sign of frustration with the continuous setbacks for reform. Mr. Aghajari was sentenced to death last week in a closed-door trial in Hamedan on charges that he had insulted the Prophet Muhammad. The charges stemmed from a speech he made in August in which he called on people to not follow religious leaders blindly. The demonstrations have been the largest since 1999, when students staged a week of protest throughout the country after hard-line vigilantes attacked a student dormitory. A leading student activist, Saeed Razavi-Faqih, told the Iranian Student News Agency on Monday that students had decided to continue their protests in order to confront constitutional violations, not only in Mr. Aghajari's case but also in general. "We must reach a stage in our destiny that we have lawful rights and freedoms," Mr. Razavi-Faqih was quoted as saying. In a statement, protesters declared that the death sentence against Mr. Aghajari was an insult to university students and professors and demanded an apology from the judiciary. "The death sentence for Mr. Aghajari is punishing him for his opinion, which is against the Constitution and human rights," the statement said. The director of the humanities department at Modaress and several professors resigned in protest over the sentence. On Sunday, the speaker of the Parliament, Mehdi Karoubi, expressed "hatred and disgust over the verdict" on behalf of himself and a group of clerics. Two members of Parliament from Hamedan, where the sentence was issued, resigned in protest. However, Parliament continued with its reform agenda, passing a bill on Sunday that was aimed at limiting the judiciary's suppression of activists. It was the second such bill in two weeks; a measure passed last week was aimed at limiting the power of the Guardian Council, the hard-line body that regulates elections in Iran and has barred hundreds of liberal politicians from ballots. The two bills are considered to be the reason for recent crackdowns on reformist activists by hard-line opponents of President Khatami. The bill passed on Sunday would give the president more power to censure other branches of government over constitutional violations. |
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#2 |
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: January 10, 2002
Location: Upstate NY
Age: 57
Posts: 2,109
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I seem to recall it was the same group (university students) who drove the Revolution... seems like a bit of "the grass is always greener" syndrom. They got what they wanted (a fundamentalist state) and now they realize it's not all it's cracked up to be.
Blind faith is a core requirement of fundamentalism, without it the whole system comes crashing down... killing this guy is a totally understandable action given the system they're living under. |
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#3 |
40th Level Warrior
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And what a bright system it is.
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#4 |
Guest
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Yet another example of why the separation of church and state is necessary.
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#5 | |
Very Mad Bird
![]() Join Date: January 7, 2001
Location: Breukelen (over the river from New Amsterdam)
Age: 53
Posts: 9,246
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Quote:
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#6 |
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: May 9, 2001
Location: The backwoods in Georgia *sigh*
Age: 41
Posts: 2,151
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Pardon me, but isn't a constitution supposed to *prevent* this sort of thing.
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#7 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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RB they are going to put the guy to death....what do YOU think?
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#8 |
Symbol of Bane
![]() Join Date: November 26, 2001
Location: Texas
Age: 76
Posts: 8,167
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Red, do you really think that people in places like Iran have the same Constitutional protections that we enjoy in the USA (and elsewhere)? You need to do some reading.
BTW, here is Micael Ledeen's take on this. Very instructional.
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#9 |
40th Level Warrior
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I don't think Iran even has a constitution. They have the Koran, that's their law. And something called Sharia, which is responsible for the students execution if i'm not mistaken.
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#10 |
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: May 9, 2001
Location: The backwoods in Georgia *sigh*
Age: 41
Posts: 2,151
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Thank you for the explanation Johnny. What I meant was, if a constitution doesn't give you freedom of speech, is it really a constitution?
[ 11-12-2002, 03:07 PM: Message edited by: Redblueflare ]
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