Thursday, December 08, 2005

Students arrested during protests in Iran capital: Update

Iran Focus: a pro-MEK website
Hundreds of students took part in a demonstration outside the main gates of the University of Tehran to mark Iran’s national Student’s Day amid tight police security and a ban on protests.

A student outside the campus told Iran Focus by telephone that State Security Forces, Iran’s para-military police, attempted to disperse the crowd who started to gather just after noon, chanting anti-government slogans and singing patriotic songs in commemoration of the student movement in the country.

According to the source, despite outnumbering the protestors, police were unable to disperse the crowd.

Police arrested half a dozen protestors including a young man who was then taken to ward 209 of Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison, according to one of his relatives who sent an email to Iran Focus.

Two female students were detained outside Tehran University’s Faculty of Law and Political Sciences as protests were gaining momentum and taken to an unknown location.

A couple were also arrested and taken to Police base 148, while a young man, who was nabbed while holding up a banner, was detained and taken to an unknown location.


Power lines were cut in local internet cafes in what appeared to be a government-orchestrated action to prevent news of the protests from spreading. Most payphones in the area were also out of action. There were a large number of plainclothes agents at the site of the university and in internet cafes.

Many other campuses across Iranian towns and cities were the scenes of similar protests despite a general ban on Students Day protests throughout the country. READ MORE

Late Tuesday, students from the University of Tehran’s Engineering, Literature and Human Studies, Medical, Dentistry, and Chemistry Faculties issued a joint statement accusing the authorities of deliberately shutting down schools and universities in Tehran to prevent large-scale student protests on Students Day under the pretext of poor air quality.

Iran’s Majlis (Parliament) Speaker Gholam-Hossein Haddad-Adel gave a stark warning to students not to rise against the state. Student action against the regime is a ploy by the enemy”, he said, adding, “Students must never loose sight of the reality that they are the target of our enemies who have thousands of plots and ploys to use universities against the Islamic Republic”.

Student protests have been on the rise in Iran in recent weeks in the run-up to the anniversary of the bloody suppression of a rally outside Tehran University in 1953.

On December 7, 1953, three students were shot dead by policemen during a rally against the Shah’s dictatorship. The day has been named Students Day and commemorated on campuses across Iran every year.