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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran to split its biggest region
2004-04-18
The Iranian parliament has approved a plan to divide the north-eastern province of Khorasan into three. The government says the changes will make the area easier to administer, but many people fear their cities could lose influence as a result. Earlier efforts to divide Khorasan have led to riots in which dozens were hurt. The Khorasan region has played an important part in Iran’s history and critics of the division plan fear its cultural identity will be undermined. Members of parliament have been touring Khorasan to explain the changes. They have tried to reassure locals the new provincial boundaries could be redrawn if there are good reasons for it. The plan now has to be approved by the conservative Council of Guardians - but a BBC analyst says it is likely to rubber-stamp the plan, unless tension in Khorasan rises.
Information concerning this region is limited. There are only about five million people living in the area. The capitol, Mashhad, where the tomb of their eighth Imam, Reza, is located remains a very holy Shi’ia shrine. Below is one of the only leads that might explain why this is being done. It appears there may be a connection to Kurdish elements.
Khorason, especially in the north, is characterized by a large ethnic diversity. Over a surface of 15,444 square miles, all the ethnic groups that compose the population of contemporary Iran can be found: Kurds, Balouchis, Lors, Turks, Turkmens, Sistanis, Afghanis, Arabs, etc...

The existence of this mosaic of people is due to historical reasons. The presence of several of these ethnic groups such as the Turks goes far back in time. On the other hand, others, like the Kurds, have been forcefully settled. The Kurds were deported from their homeland during the reign of the Safavids in order to reinforce the defense line of the north eastern border.
Does anybody else have some insights on this situation? Below is a somewhat cryptic mention of riots that took place in Sabzevar during late 2001.
Security forces arrested 154 people for the riots that broke out on 29-30 August in Sabzevar after locals objected to their town not being selected as the capital of a newly-created province, according to official reports. During those riots, at least one person was killed and 37 others were wounded when the security forces opened fire. By 31 August, according to IRNA, "absolute calm" had returned to the city as Law Enforcement Forces and the Basij Resistance Forces patrolled the city. Yet at least 90 shops stayed closed on 2 September to protest the government’s actions. The unrest had spread, furthermore, and about 300 people held a demonstration in Qaem. They objected to the inclusion of their city in the southern one-third of what was formerly Khorasan Province. Local merchants promised to go on a sympathy strike. In Nishabur, locals protested against giving any privileges to Sabzevar, "Tehran Times" reported on 3 September. (Bill Samii)
Posted by:Zenster

#10  Jen, you display all the sophistication of a kindergartener. Feel free to go lay down by your dish.
Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-18 11:34:16 PM  

#9  PB, doesn't have to prove you're a troll; you do a pretty good job all on your lonesome.
And you would know a lot about "infantile."
Don't know how old you are in human years, but you clearly lack the emotional maturity needed to comment anywhere but DUH.com (Dimocrat Underwear) where knee-jerk emotionalism is taken for "researched opinion"....or perhaps "American Idol" has a fan forum.
Posted by: Jen   2004-04-18 10:32:38 PM  

#8  Thank you for asking, Phil B. From Jen's infantile glee, it's rather obvious that Parabellum's link was an unflattering one.

After nearly, 10,000 posts, some of which may have helped to save a life here and there, I was accused of physically threatening a troll who openly bragged about intentionally obstructing emergency vehicle access lanes.

Numerous people made it very clear to the SDMB Moderators how extremely dubious it was to construe me as attempting such a thing. Their decision was even criticized by another message board's Administrator. One of the SDMB moderators even saw fit to try and insult me while plagiarizing over 1,000 words of my submitted text without any attribution or even bothering to change 0.01% of the wording.

Parabellum, in the interests of fairness (if that's what you're even interested in) are you going to bother linking to any of the various SDMB threads that praised my contributions there, or is this just a smear tactic on your part?
Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-18 9:49:44 PM  

#7  Here is the post refer to in the link. You have to scroll down to find it.

So why did they ban you Zenster? Inquiring minds want to know.
Posted by: Phil B   2004-04-18 9:20:18 PM  

#6  Jen, go in for a rabies shot. You're foaming again. Getting the train to somehow derail in Neishabour was a little too fortuitous.

Parabellum, yes. Why do you ask?
Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-18 9:04:49 PM  

#5  Hilarious, PB!
Looks like they "love" him as much as we do--maybe more!
Posted by: Jen   2004-04-18 9:04:06 PM  

#4  Zenster, are you the same "Zenster" that used to post on the Straight Dope message board?

Link
Posted by: Parabellum   2004-04-18 8:46:39 PM  

#3  It wasn't "slipshod Iranian bureaucracy," Zipster, you knee jerk moron!
It was probably our Special Forces along with sympathetic Iranian recruits who took out a load of explosives headed to Taliban forces in Afghanistan, per Debka.
KEEP UP.
Posted by: Jen   2004-04-18 8:19:51 PM  

#2  Is it just me or does anyone else find it intensely ironic that, after years of facilitating terrorist car and truck bombings, slipshod Iranian bureaucracy obliterated Omar Khyam's revered birthplace with what amounted to an Iranian train bomb of their own making?
Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-18 8:14:35 PM  

#1  A quick Rantburg search:

Iran detains 80 after protest turns to riot

Workers arrested for gang raping 12-year-old boy

70 whorehouses closed in holy city

Baluchis on trial in Iran for white slavery

Iran boundary riot ’kills eight’

More than 200 killed, 350 injured in Iran train explosion.
This last seems to have been a load of explosives on its way to Afghanistan... or someplace.
Posted by: Fred   2004-04-18 7:39:32 PM  

00:01