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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran’s Guards threaten petrol protesters with ‘revolutionary’ response
2019-11-19
[Rudaw] Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) threatened the Iranian public on Monday with a "decisive and revolutionary" response if nationwide protests against the government’s tripling of petrol prices continue.

Security forces have failed to quell the unrest which has seen dozens of protesters killed and a total internet blackout imposed.

Despite the blackout, a small number of videos emerged on Monday showing extensive damage to cop shoppes and vehicles, banks, and other infrastructure, with security forces deploying live ammunition against unarmed protesters.

Kurdish human rights
One man's rights are another man's existential threat.
organizations reported around a dozen protesters were killed in the Kurdish areas of the country’s west, with the cities of Mariwan and Javanrud resembling a war zone.

"This for the world to hear our voice," a woman who had removed her mandatory headscarf screams from an overpass in one of the videos as hundreds of vehicles stop below. "We have lost everything... we gave deaders and this is how this regime repays us."

Another woman off camera says: "Hopefully this time it [the protests] will bear fruit."

In another video filmed on Sunday two members of the security forces can be seen running along a rooftop shooting down at the people below.

Another video from a hospital in the Kurdish city of Mariwan shows a number of maimed people lying on hospital beds.

There are no exact figures as to how many people have been killed in the four-day protests. Iranian authorities claim three protesters and two members of the security forces have been killed, while Iranian human rights groups based outside the country say more than 40 are dead.

The Kurdistan Human Rights Network said on Monday the authorities in the Kurdish regions of Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan, the abbreviation IRGC is a cognate form of Stürmabteilung (or SA), the term Supreme Guide is a cognate form of either Shah or Führer or maybe both, and they hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
are refusing to hand over the bodies of those killed to their families for burial.

Authorities launched a fresh crackdown following a call from Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
...the actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
to deal with the protesters, which he branded "thugs" on Sunday morning.

More than 1,000 people were arrested overnight with more arrests taking place on Monday. Members of the IRGC intelligence organization detained two protest leaders in the city of Shiraz, which has seen widespread violence in recent days, one pro-government website said on Monday.

While the crackdown has been vicious since protests gained momentum on Friday night, the IRGC’s official entrance onto the scene will likely have dire consequences for the protesters, with the number of dead expected to rise.

The IRGC said in a statement on Monday it has taken into account the instructions of the supreme leader and sees it as its responsibility "to protect the security and stability of the society by working with other security forces... and when necessary they would deal with any continuing acts that disturbs the peace of the people and causes insecurity in a decisive and revolutionary manner".

Sepideh Gholian, a well-known Iranian activist and journalist in the southern city of Ahwaz who was recently released from prison for her activism, was immediately arrested after joining the protest and raising a placard that read "You increase petrol to 3,000, have you increased the salaries too?".

Gholian was referring to the price of a liter of petrol which was increased from 1000 ($0.10) tomans to 3000 tomans ($0.30) on Friday morning bringing many people who are already under extreme economic pressure to the streets, igniting protests that soon engulfed the whole country.

The Iranian government is under increasing economic and budgetary pressure as the US withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal last year and the subsequent re-imposition of crippling sanctions have emptied its coffers, while inflation and unemployment have skyrocketed.

As of Monday lunchtime, the internet blackout was still in place across Iran.

"Forty hours after #Iran implemented a near-total internet shutdown, connectivity to the outside world remains at just 5 percent of ordinary levels," the non-partisan connectivity tracking group NetBlocks said in a tweet on Monday.

Government spokesperson Ali Rabie admitted an internet blackout is in place, but said it was implemented to prevent foreign hands from taking advantage of the protests. He said the service would be resumed once the unrest subsides in the coming days.
Posted by:trailing wife

#14  ^ nail on head
Posted by: chris   2019-11-19 19:15  

#13  and yet, while this important event, consequent to Trump's strategy of financial strangulation bears possible regime change fruit, we look at the bug-eyed Shiff-for-brains and the travesty that is our news media now!
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2019-11-19 16:25  

#12  recent estimates of fatalities in the recent civil unrest in Iran ranges from a few dozen to several hundred

past month and a half unrest in Iraq: estimates from several hundred to a thousand
Posted by: lord garth   2019-11-19 12:02  

#11  I imagine this it what the Democrats look forward too, if they ever regain control of the White House and repeal the 2nd amendment. No wonder they are so cozy with Iran.
Posted by: bbrewer126   2019-11-19 11:02  

#10  Not sure the Iranian people have the arms necessary to deal with the Basenji and IRGC plus any regular military that support the regime. Mullahs have been following the Democratic Party Plan for 40 years now.
Posted by: Mercutio   2019-11-19 09:43  

#9  Rather entertaining, Grom. Unlike the protestations and faux-probity of ...ahem.
Posted by: Dron66046   2019-11-19 04:53  

#8  
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2019-11-19 04:42  

#7  LOL talking about me when I'm not around again. You guys...aww.

Hey, I know! The US could meddle in Iran and overthrow the government (again). That could lead to total chaos and a complete disaster (again).
Posted by: Herb McCoy   2019-11-19 04:32  

#6   a post-modern liberal chaos existing alongside fundamentalist extremism focusing inward at their own increasingly kuffar populations. Atheist, LGBT, feminist, follywoods trying to thwart roving sasquatch squads of koran addicts.

Sounds like Malmo, or Bradford UK.
Posted by: Lex   2019-11-19 03:43  

#5  Yeah. Libya is good. The 'Stain too these days. Of course there's always a danger that democracy might prevail, but we must actively prevent that. For the greater good.

Oh dear ! I hope 'erb doesn't see this. He wouldn't understand.
Posted by: Dron66046   2019-11-19 03:34  

#4  I think, something like Libya is ideal.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2019-11-19 03:17  

#3  I believe the ideal government for muslim majority nations is a dictatorship. An autocratic police state which copies the worst elements of 'pre-modern' States blindly and squeezes the last drop of blood from its citizens. But that too would not be good for the rest of the world.

For the good of the rest of the world, an ideal government for these countries to have would be a post-modern liberal chaos existing alongside fundamentalist extremism focusing inward at their own increasingly kuffar populations. Atheist, LGBT, feminist, follywoods trying to thwart roving sasquatch squads of koran addicts.

It would keep them busy and unstable, and we could all get on with our lives.
Posted by: Dron66046   2019-11-19 03:15  

#2  Not "revolutionary justice"?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2019-11-19 02:35  

#1  Looks like the ayatollahs have worn out their welcome.
Posted by: chris   2019-11-19 00:18  

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