16 June 2009 @ 12:45 pm
Iran: Why You Should Care (reposted from one_hoopy_frood)  
I have taken this from [info]one_hoopy_frood, with encouragement: the LJ equivalent of a Twitter repost.

I (me, June) have been following the Iran elections & subsequent protests for the last two days, over Twitter, [info]ontd_political, and the blogosphere. It has been a harrowing experience: the tension, the photos, the reports that have come trickling out from the tightening grip of the Iranian government has been both heartbreaking and terrifying. There's something about following the updates of a student getting shot at by armed militias that just tears at you.

Fixed where we are a world away, the best thing we can do is to stay informed and help get the word out. Let those who are fighting for their freedoms know that they are not alone, that others are hearing their cries.

REPOST!




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If you are reading this right now, you have more luxury than someone in Iran could ever hope for right now. If you are watching TV or a video on youtube, updating your status on Facebook, Tweeting, or even texting your friend, you are lucky. If you are safe in your home, and were able to sleep last night without the sounds of screaming from the rooftops, you need to know and understand what is happening to people just like you in Iran right now.

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They are not the enemy. They are a people whose election has been stolen. For the first time in a long time, a voice for change struck the youth of Iran, just as it did for many people in the United States only seven months ago. Hossein Mousavi gained the support of millions of people in Iran as a Presidential candidate. He stands for progressiveness. He supports good relations with the West, and the rest of the world. He is supported with ferver as he challenges the oppressive regime of Mahmoud Amedinejad.


On Friday, millions of people waited for hours in line to vote in Iran's Presidential election. Later that night, as votes came in, Mousavi was alerted that he was winning by a two-thirds margin. Then there was a change. Suddenly, it was Ahmedinejad who had 68% of the vote - in areas which have been firmly against his political party, he overwhelmingly won. Within three hours, millions of votes were supposedly counted - the victor was Ahmedinejad. Immediately fraud was suspected - there was no way he could have won by this great a margin with such oppposition. Since then, reports have been coming in of burned ballots, or in some cases numbers being given without any being counted at all. None of this is confirmed, but what happened next seems to do the trick.

The people of Iran took the streets and rooftops. They shout "Death to the dictator" and "Allah o akbar." They join together to protest. Peacefully. The police attack some, but they stay strong. Riots happen, and the shouting continues all night. Text messaging was disabled, as was satellite; websites which can spread information such as Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, and the BBC are blocked in the country. At five in the morning, Arabic speaking soldiers (the people of Iran speak Farsi) stormed a university in the capital city of Tehran. While sleeping in their dormitories, five students were killed. Others were wounded. These soldiers are thought to have been brought in by Ahmedinejad from Lebanon. Today, 192 of the university's faculty have resigned in protest.

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Mousavi requested that they government allow a peaceful rally to occur this morning - the request was denied. Many thought that it would not happen. Nevertheless, first a few thousand people showed up in the streets of Tehran. At this point, it is estimated that 1 to 2 million people were there. (Personal note: I've heard reports that it might have been 3 million-- but nothing is confirmed at this point). Mousavi spoke on the top of a car. The police stood by. For a few hours, everything was peaceful. Right now, the same cannot be said. Reports of injuries, shootings, and killings are flooding the internet. Twitter has been an invaluable source - those in Iran who still know how to access it are updating regularly with picture evidence. Women are being brutally beat.

Tonight will be another night without rest for so many in Iran, no older than I. Tonight there is a Green Revolution.

For more information:

PICTURES:
Here - from Boston.com
Here - on Flickr

NEW INFORMATION:
Andrew Sullivan's Daily Dish - near constant updates
ONTD_political live post - Collated information, pictures & etc in the comments

ON TWITTER:
@StopAhmadi
@ProtesterHelp
@IranElection09
@IranRiggedElect
@Change_For_Iran <-- no tweets for a while, which is worrying :(
@NextRevolution <-- absolutely heartbreaking

ETA: SIGN THE GLOBAL PETITION! 25,000 signatures and growing! http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/protest-against-the-june-2009-coup-detat-in-iran.html


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دنیارابگوییدچطورآنهاانتخاباتمان دزدیده اند
Tell the world how they have stolen our election





HTML Code for reposting:


Repost this in your own LJs or elsewhere if you must-- spread the word! CAN'T STOP THE SIGNAL!
 
 
( 30 allelujahs — Post a new comment )
catastrophe & the cure[info]swirling_chaos on June 16th, 2009 05:45 am (UTC)
I've been following things on Reddit, this truly is harrowing. Thank you for spreading the word, everyone needs to be made aware of this.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): OBAMA! Pageant Sash & Tina Fey Glass[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:32 am (UTC)
TBH I'm just glad that people on Twitter and ONTD_P seem to care. :)
Robert[info]zerorevenge on June 16th, 2009 06:04 am (UTC)
I much as it sucks what's happened to Iran; I can't help but find this as bitterly ironic.

25 years ago, the Iranian Students rebelled against the Shai because he was Pro-West, and now, their children, the new generation are in protest over someone who is Pro-West.

I wanted the Pro-West [i'm not about to butcher his name] to win, but is anyone honestly shocked that Ami-nut-job rigged the election? He isn't a reasonable man. I wouldn't say he's an abomination, because I'm sure that there's someone out there who thinks the same of me.

But, Jesus Christ, does this suck for Iran. Let's hope they have another revolution, and perhaps get rid of this strict "law", and become a reasonable member of the world society; for the sad situation the world is in right now, this is the shot in the arm we need.

TLDR; democracy yay, Corruption, boo. Viva la Revolution!
Robert[info]zerorevenge on June 16th, 2009 06:05 am (UTC)
To not be the stereotypical American asshole...

I hope that the Iranian government looks into this; not that I don't think the corruption stems all the wayt to the top. But Ahmedinejad needs to go. He is a cancer to that entire region.
Robert[info]zerorevenge on June 16th, 2009 06:07 am (UTC)
Oh and I hope that everything goes peacefully, etc, etc. I'm too scatterbrained right now.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): [AI] Adam HAI THAR[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:36 am (UTC)
I would say you aren't being the stereotypical American asshole, those are the ones who are going "Why the hell should I care?" or "Those brown people deserve it anyway!" (Some of the stories I've been hearing of people's encounters with such folks on ONTD_P... eeeegh.)

I do find it a little ironic as well w.r.t. to the 1979 revolution, but I guess that's what change is all about. Iran is a very young country, age-wise-- I think the median age is 26 years, something like that-- plus, the Ahmadinejad government is running the country into the ground. And so forth.

I'm actually SO glad Obama is in charge now, and not John "bomb bomb bomb Iran" McCain. Phew!
Robert: Gundam 00 - Union[info]zerorevenge on June 19th, 2009 05:59 pm (UTC)
Well, I felt it was now a stereotypical American phrase to say "Let's remove this Leader from this country!"

I don't think McCain would have done anything different from Obama is now though, we're taking the backseat, watching how it goes. And McCain would probably be pleased over the [hopefully upcoming] upheaval in Iranian politics.

<3
蘭[info]little_ribbon on June 16th, 2009 08:24 am (UTC)
=/ This makes me feel so sad... I hope it will all be resolved quickly and with the least amount of injuries and death possible. *shiver!*
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): b00bies: Halle chops off T-chan's head![info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:38 am (UTC)
I hope so too! I hope the votes of the Iranian people don't go to waste...
Obluda kierá nemá své jméno: i feeeel it. i feel the cosmos.[info]volley on June 16th, 2009 09:27 am (UTC)
Thanks for this post. My heart just sank while reading this. I... No words. I'll be following information on this now. I really hope everything turns out alright, somehow.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): b00bies: OSHI REVIVE[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:38 am (UTC)
:) It seems to be getting a bit better, signs of hope here and there-- but I don't know how far it will carry through.
trinfortune: Travel - Spirited Away[info]trinfortune on June 16th, 2009 12:16 pm (UTC)
I was keeping tabs on this, it is really awful what's happening, but great that the people are taking a stand against it. Hopefully justice will be done.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): SPN -- Dean Broken[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:39 am (UTC)
I hope so too! I am so emotionally invested in this, it's unreal. But following the people who are actually there, on the ground; reading their words and sharing their pain and hope and anguish-- it does things to your heartstrings, you know?
yukisama69: you suck special a[info]yukisama69 on June 16th, 2009 01:32 pm (UTC)
I'm following this VERY closely. My sister-in-law's dad is Iranian so I'm really concerned about what's going on there. Icon specially dedicated to Amadickwad.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang)[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:40 am (UTC)
Ooh I hope that if he has family in Iran, they are all safe. And yeah, #ahmadinejadisadouche!!!
yukisama69[info]yukisama69 on June 19th, 2009 01:21 pm (UTC)
he does have family in Iran. I forget where, I do know they're not in Tehran. My sis-in-law says they're ok though.
반혜연 hyeyeon[info]thechosenone47 on June 16th, 2009 02:07 pm (UTC)
:/ it's terrible how the soldiers stormed the university just like that. i hope it'll be resolved quickly!
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): Desu noto: L Smile Like You Mean It[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:41 am (UTC)
Yes, there's been a lot of outrage over the attacks on the universities. Profs are resigning in protest. Totally uncalled for-- killing & hurting & arresting students :/
HEFFALUMPS[info]forochel on June 16th, 2009 02:09 pm (UTC)
I remember doing the Iranian Revolution in Sec 4 history...and now I feel so DEPRESSED because these things seem so CYCLICAL in Iran. One generation they swing towards freedom and the next back towards theocracy. T___T signed it anyway, and hope things change and the change lasts.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): [KawaiiNot] Bit Stabbity[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:43 am (UTC)
Well I guess there are a slew of reasons for it going one way or the other, I guess, but I think Iran is liberalizing in the face of globalization and all. Plus the median age in Iran is something like 26 or 27, I heard; a lot of these students protesting were not yet born in 1979, or too young to remember it (I'm guessing).

But you know, change is mostly generational anyway. (Which gives me hope for Singapore!)
HEFFALUMPS[info]forochel on June 22nd, 2009 10:31 am (UTC)
the news in lianhezaobao today made me D:.
cindy: wolf chorus (by bunnymcfoo)[info]tsuki_no_bara on June 16th, 2009 03:16 pm (UTC)
i was trying to follow this yesterday on fark, of all places. (there were a couple threads with people reposting iranians' tweets and occasionally offering context to folks wandering in looking for news. the revolution will be tweeted.) i guess the fact that the ayatollah called for a recount is encouraging - could mean he's actually vaguely afraid of all the protesting - but i can't imagine it's going to have any other result than ahmediwhatshisface being declared leader oh look we had an official recount so you have to accept it.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): Desu noto: Madonna/Mello Badass[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:46 am (UTC)
I've been pretty much following it exclusively on ONTD and Twitter. (Actually Twitter mostly, ONTD I use to squee or gasp or cry with other invested folks)

Yeah, I don't trust a recount will be accurate either, since it's being done by the same folks who did the count in the first place! I'm glad that some of the clerics have come out in support of Mousavi, though. There may yet be hope.
Cedara: *zen*[info]cedara on June 16th, 2009 03:34 pm (UTC)
Reposting! Nuff said.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): Me: My Name Is June[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:46 am (UTC)
\o/!!! Can't stop the signal! :D
Jedi Protein of Milk Digestion[info]htenywg on June 16th, 2009 04:19 pm (UTC)
Reposted.

Also, I think that globally there must be something in the air. Or water. Either way, change beckons.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): b00bies: I like watching you die[info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:46 am (UTC)
And I hope it does come :)
ceru~[info]cerulean88 on June 17th, 2009 03:11 am (UTC)
ugh. Been following UN reports about it. I'm so sick of it.
ミス☆ハレルヤ (JY Yang): The Balkans: The Trains of DOOOOM![info]misshallelujah on June 19th, 2009 08:47 am (UTC)
I really hope it resolves peacefully ;_;
ceru~[info]cerulean88 on June 20th, 2009 09:34 pm (UTC)
the chances of it right now is actually non-existent in my pov. Their supreme leader approved of the results and as much as i know that we along with other countries thinks that there's definitely some foul play going on, it's pretty much impossible to reverse this ruling now. And i personally think that Obama should not listen to those Republicans to intervene, he is right to not wanting to do so (at least not too much) because Iran would seriously bristle if they get more of his and other leaders' concerns.