For the past weeks I have been passionately following Irans election thru any media I could get my hands on, including dragging dad in front of the screen to translate Persian words from youtube clips so that I could note down terms which I was not familiar with. Hoping to catch a glimpse and feeling for what is happening within the country.
Fortunately I have met numerous co-enthusiasts thru Twitter and Facebook who shared my thirst for information and passion to discuss and share insights about the current political landscape and election. If you care to come across some of these enthusiasts just follow #iranelection on Twitter.
One thing is clear; this election season has brought many firsts to Iran; that are there to stay. Surely these “firsts” also reflect the mood and feeling within the country; ELECTION FEVER.
The campaign trail is vibrant, full of passion and endless discussions; the web is overflowing with commentary, analysis and jokes; and the many that refrained from voting last time around have vowed to vote on June 12th and to drag everyone they know with them to the polls. In short, the country is alive and everyone has their own hopes set on the upcoming elections.
Tomorrow is the last day before the elections and apparently its law in Iran that all campaigning must be stopped 24 hours before the polls open.
For the coming weeks I will focus on Iran’s upcoming election. I plan to collect articles and editorial pieces that bring more light to this event while focusing on the various communication strategies used in the process.
To begin I suggest you read the fantastic 4 part article published by Tehran Bureau which covers the political landscape of Iran and the various candidates and political groups involved.
Here is a neat little clip that the guys from the Muslim Network of Bahai Rights made to communicate the current situation of the Bahai’s in Iran. Plus points to them in being so creative to communicate such a serious situation.
[simple]LEI8RxFL7Zs[/simple]
It’s interesting to see how more human rights and non-profit organizations are using viral and social media channels to bring attention to their topics.
Iran stoops to a new level of desperation in the case of the recently 7 detained Bahai’s. The government is trying their very best to keep the matter out of the press and pressure anyone that speaks up on their part.
Recently Shirin Ebadi and two of her colleagues have stepped up to defend these Baha’is in court. Shortly after this announcement Iran’s official IRNA news agency reported that Ebadi’s daughter had converted to the Bahai religion nearly a year ago, citing what it called “an informed source.”
This type of allegation is VERY serious in Iran as conversion away from Islam is considered apostasy and is punishable by death.
“Ebadi told the reformist Kargozaran newspaper that she believed the allegation against her daughter had to do with her decision to defend seven Bahais arrested on charges of having contact with Iran’s arch foe Israel.”
“I am proud to say that my family and I are Shiites,” she said in the comments published by the paper on Thursday. full article
I am sure will see more of this type of activity, let’s see what entertaining and absolutely groundless accusation is published next
I just came across this blog post stating that the seven Bahai’s who where arrested in May are being held in solitary confinement in Section 209 of the notorious Evin Prison in Iran.
Here is list of interesting and very shocking facts about SECTION 209:
Section 209 is known by most for its “political prisoners”. It is run by Iran’s various security services, and it houses prisoners who have somehow fallen afoul of some branch of Iran’s government or its religious authorities. To anyone but the Iranian government, they would be known as political prisoners.
The number have dramatically increased in the last year and a half, it seems to have reached its highest population level since the 1980’s
Inmates include students, journalists, bloggers, newspaper editors, human-rights activists and scholars and Bahai’s
Few are charged with any crime, but huge numbers are locked away and often tortured
Inmates face cruel conditions, including a form of solitary confinement known as the “white torture” (the lights of the windowless, empty cell are constantly left on, for months at a time). Beatings are not uncommon.
Section 209 is famous for Zahra Kazemi, the Montreal photographer who was arrested while taking pictures outside the prison in 2003. Inside, she was tortured, brutally abused and then beaten to death.
Since then attempts have been made to shut down the section due to its brutal and shadowy nature, however these attempts have failed and the section is still running in full swing
Organizations holding prisoners in Section 209 do not fall under the authority of the elected Iranian government; they answer to the clerics who stand above the government, or to rogue factions within the security services and the Revolutionary Guards. Some are loyal to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and not to parliament; some are loyal only to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Prison authorities do not have the power to control what is happening inside Iran’s prisons. Various cell blocks are controlled by various organizations with varying agendas. The use of solitary confinement and ‘white torture’ isn’t necessarily authorized by the government; the factions doing this are pretty much close to the hard-liners and the supreme leader. The Intelligence Ministry is very involved in threatening families.
To give you a more vivid picture of the harrassment that its inmate under go, here a excerpt from Ahmad Batebi about his experiences Evin:
“The captors blind folded him and thrashed him with metal cables until he passed out, then rubbed salt into the wounds to wake him up, so they could torture him more, beat his testicles and kicked his teeth out. They held his face down in a pool of excrement until he inhaled it. They tied his arms behind his back and hung him from the ceiling. At other times, strapping him to a chair, they kept him awake night after night. He was played recordings of what he was told was his mother being tortured.”
One can only imagine what is happening at this very moment to the Bahai’s who know have been accused of having confessed to setting up an illegal organization with connections to a number of countries including Israel and they have received orders from them to undertake measures against the Islamic system.