[b]Six months on from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed election victory, reports of gunfire and beatings are still coming out of Tehran almost weekly.[/b]
In the past 24 hours there have been reports shots have been fired in Tehran, as security forces have yet again clashed with student protesters.
In an attempt to prevent the protesters from getting organised, the government has been shutting down communication lines, but it seems to be making little difference.
Before Iran's disputed elections this year, publicly criticising the leaders of the country was almost impossible, but there was a chink in the Government's armour that's now being exploited.
Despite the deliberate daily intimidation, of police vans and armed guards constantly lurking the streets, the Iranians were already perfecting ways of getting their message out.
Now that protests, violent clashes and government crackdowns are regular events, those methods are helping the young Iranians organise protests and fight on the propaganda front.
[img]http://www.abc.net.au/reslib/200906/r388227_1813103.jpg[/img]
[b]Early hints of quiet opposition[/B]
"You can find me on Facebook," a man called Mehdi told me last year. I'd met him in the desert town of Yazd in central Iran and, in the typically hospitable nature of all Persians, he'd helped me translate the Farsi writing on my bus ticket.
"I thought those [social networking] sites were banned in Iran?" I said.
"Yes, but you can still view it through a proxy site. It means the government cannot see that you are looking at a banned site."
I asked him to show me what he meant, so we went to his work and he fired up a computer.
Mehdi showed me a number of different internet sites where you view a site within the site - hiding what you're really looking at.
He even confidently typed "Iran's nuclear installation sites" into a search engine within a fake websites and up popped a satellite map of reported nuclear sites. I found out that the young Persians also use these sites to download illegal Farsi rap which is critical of the President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
All over Iran, students are using these proxy websites and servers to send images of the protests to the outside world and keep in touch with one another.
Early this morning I spoke to a 21-year-old Tehran University student, Ashraf.
Ashraf confirmed the reports that the government has shut down the mobile phone network and blocked access to political sites and satellite television.
Satellite TV was already illegal in Iran, but in another daily act of defiance most rooftops have makeshift dishes propped up by bricks. Police occasionally raid homes and apartment blocks, confiscate the dishes and fine the owners, who then go out and put up a new one and keep watching.
Ashraf says the government has now found ways of blocking the satellite signals.
He says now all the channels, including BBC Persia, the US-sponsored Voice of America, and others including Arabic movie channels, just don't work any more. So the only option is to watch state-controlled media.
....
[url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/08/2765153.htm]Ahmadinejad's Facebook Fan Page[/url]
[IMG]http://i50.tinypic.com/259hd06.jpg[/IMG]
I guess things are still in an uproar.
What are you talking about silly wakka? Everyone knows this all stopped instantly when Michael Jackson died.
Is the student at the top wielding PVC pipes like swords?
[QUOTE=Wakka;18794575]
[IMG]http://i50.tinypic.com/259hd06.jpg[/IMG]
I guess things are still in an uproar.[/QUOTE]
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZQdaEFa_60[/media]
[QUOTE=40kplayer;18794607]Is the student at the top wielding PVC pipes like swords?[/QUOTE]
They aren't PVC pipes, they're wooden batons.
Also, [url=http://www.facebook.com/search/?ref=search&q=Ahmadinejad&init=quick#/pages/AHMADINEJAD/57371857069]Ahmadinejad's[/url] actual fan page if anyone's interested.
[QUOTE=Wakka;18794575]illegal Farsi rap which is critical of the President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.[/QUOTE]
oh my
Two revolutions in 30 years.
Make your mind. Jeez.
Where's your Sharia Law now?
haha nice
go iranians go
:3
Fuck yeah, Iran. FIGHT THE POWER.
[editline]12:26AM[/editline]
D'you folks really pronounce it like eye-ran? It's actually ee-rahn.
[QUOTE=archangel125;18794725]Fuck yeah, Iran. FIGHT THE POWER.
[editline]12:26AM[/editline]
D'you folks really pronounce it like eye-ran? It's actually ee-rahn.[/QUOTE]
terrorists
yeah you students show them whos boss fucking fap till your dicks fall off, topple the government!
!
all day everyday
[QUOTE=archangel125;18794725]Fuck yeah, Iran. FIGHT THE POWER.
[editline]12:26AM[/editline]
D'you folks really pronounce it like eye-ran? It's actually ee-rahn.[/QUOTE]
"Ii-rahn" would be better, in this poster's humble opinion.
[QUOTE=dryer-lint;18794920]"Ii-rahn" would be better, in this poster's humble opinion.[/QUOTE]
Wouldn't ii and ee make the same sound?
[QUOTE=archangel125;18794967]Wouldn't ii and ee make the same sound?[/QUOTE]
No "ee" is the sound that canadians make when there's not enough maple on their whatever they call pancakes.
Always good to see people who actually care about their government. Hopefully the US stays out of it.
However, I doubt Mousavi would have been any better than Ahmadinejad. From what I understand is that he didn't do very well with their economy; I don't believe he's some crazed psychopath like a lot of Americans believe though.
[QUOTE=archangel125;18794725]Fuck yeah, Iran. FIGHT THE POWER.
[editline]12:26AM[/editline]
D'you folks really pronounce it like eye-ran? It's actually ee-rahn.[/QUOTE]
Real Americans say ah-ran
Real Iranians say Bresident Push.
[QUOTE=dryer-lint;18794993]No "ee" is the sound that canadians make when there's not enough maple on their whatever they call pancakes.[/QUOTE]
Eeh?
No, no. ee like in "keep"
[QUOTE=Wakka;18794680]Where's your Sharia Law now?[/QUOTE]
Lol, you are naive to believe this will lead to the downfall of Sharia Law.
The protestors and youth of Iran are actually quite progressive.
Also, Iran/CnC Generals? Awesome!
I'm going to enjoy seeing where this goes. I want more riot footage.
:munch:
[QUOTE=Lithe;18795606]The protestors and youth of Iran are actually quite progressive.
Also, Iran/CnC Generals? Awesome![/QUOTE]
Burning buses is progressive?
[QUOTE=TH89;18795656]Burning buses is progressive?[/QUOTE]
they hav to make new bus, so it's progresive. :downs:
Tell me when the students use guns to get the government down, sticks won't do shit to an AK47
iran is actually one of the best possible situations right now for revolution, because the entire world is watching, so we're seeing what's going down in the country which leads to multi-faceted pressures on the iranian government
but if they ever want a good government they need to get rid of the guardian council and assembly of experts
In that pic it looks like he set the bus on fire by waving sticks at it.
Wizards.
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