Monday, June 15, 2009

Iran: Report Says Government Goons Using Machetes On Citizens

From Salon:

The street protests mount

A fresh report from the Iranian capital. The government uses machetes on the public, the public fights back.

Editor's note: For reasons of personal safety, the author chooses to remain anonymous.

By Anonymous

June 15, 2009 | Now, three days after the election, a pattern is emerging. There is unstructured protest on the streets beginning in the late afternoon. Then, at night, it escalates.

In my own apartment complex on Monday morning we were woken up to screams and shouts. Kids from the building and elsewhere had been engaging in political rock fights in the adjoining street and had run into the complex (a typical urban apartment "tower" found in almost all of the developing world). Families went out to the fire escape to look down to see what had happened. It turned out that special police had rushed into the complex, followed by "basijis" or paramilitary forces, basically thugs on motorbikes with helmets and batons. It also turned out that they had electric rods and, to the shock of many, machetes. Several people were wounded and taken away and much of the first floor and entrance of the complex was destroyed.

After two hours there was a dramatic standoff. The gate was locked, and the elders of the complex engaged held a heated discussion with representatives of the basiji forces. "If you're chasing after someone," asked the elders, "why have you come into our homes and beaten women and children? Why have you broken all of our glass and busted the windshields on the cars in the underground parking?" The basijis left. The elders had done their best to mediate, to speak rationally to resolve the problem. That is unlikely to last as the situation in Tehran becomes more and more about force.

Go read the whole thing at Salon.

4 comments:

Damien said...

Pastorius,

Speaking of the Iranian election, I found this article at Frontpagemag.

"Elections and Dashed Hopes" by Lisa Daftari. She makes some good points. Maybe you could contact Midnight Rider, I told him I'd look for something on the Iranian election.

Always On Watch said...

For some reason, I can't sign into the Blogger dashboard to post this.

At ABC News:

A spokesman for Iranian presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi says his camp will keep pushing to change the results of Friday's election that gave incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad a landslide win.

"We are going to stay in the streets and ask the mullahs to give fatwas that Ahmedinejad is not our president. We are going to ask the Leader, through the will of the people, to change his mind," said Mostafa Makhmalbaf, who is speaking to the foreign press on Mousavi's behalf from his home in Paris.

"I don't think we can do a total Revolution in Iran but we can make some change," he told ABC News, describing what would be an unprecedented reversal for the Islamic Republic.

Mousavi's campaign claims the announced outcome, which gave Ahmedinejad 63 percent of the vote, was fraudulent....

Damien said...

Always On Watch,

If the Iranians really want genuine freedom and democracy, they need to overthrow the Mullahs. Otherwise, there is no other way, it will happen. Its unlikely there will be any significant change at all with them still in power.

Pastorius said...

AOW,
I don't know why you would not be able to sign in, but I will post it for you.

Let me know if you continue to have trouble.