Posted on 12/08/2009 5:36:31 PM PST by nuconvert
Day 2: Clashes at Tehran universities
2 Tehran universities attacked
AUT News | Dec. 8, 2009
Revolutionary Guard and Basij militia forces attacked campuses at Tehran University and Shahid Beheshti University in the Iranian capital on Tuesday morning.
Amir Kabir University of Technology (AUT) news service reported that the gates of Tehran University were opened by campus guards to allow the militia forces to pour onto campus.
Today's events after pro-opposition students announced Monday that they would gather Tuesday morning to protest the violent treatment they had received at the hands of plainclothes forces during Student's Day protests at Tehran University on Monday.
The security forces attacked student protesters on campus today with batons and pepper spray. According to eyewitnesses at Tehran University, a number of students were arrested and taken away.
Also on Tuesday, Basij and plainclothes forces entered Shahid Beheshti University in northern Tehran, according to an AUT News report.
The forces entered the Faculty of Law building, disrupting classes and beating students. Eyewitnesses report that a group of about 200 Basij forces faced off with about 300 opposition students, with the two sides chanting slogans against each another.
Yesterday, Shahid Beheshti students chanted anti-government slogans during protests to mark Student's Day [16 Azar]. They had also chanted "Allaho Akbar" in the direction of Evin Prison located near their campus.
Pro-government forces from the Basij milita and Ansar Hezbollah vigilante group who had entered Shahid Beheshti campus today chanted, "Death to the anti-Velayat Faqih" [Death to those who are against the position of Iran's Supreme Leader].
Student protesters countered with chants of "Death to the Dictator" and "Guns, tanks, Basijis are no longer effectual," referring to the government's violent crackdown on the opposition to suppress and intimidate them.
(Excerpt) Read more at pbs.org ...
ping
These people are risking it all for this protest. I hope they prevail in the end.
I said it last June and I’ll stand by my assertion the current regime is toast before next summer rolls around. Then we will hear all of the reasons why the new secualr regime (what they were promised in 1978) will have nothing to do with Obama.
Prayers up for the protestors. I hope God has their back. We know our Emperor doesn’t.
Heres an account of what happened in Tehran and some information about other cities where protests could be fully confirmed:
Tehran
In preparation for the protests, the government had already restricted Internet access across the city. Cell phone connections were jammed in the central part of the city where most previous protests had taken place. Even though protests were to start at 1500 hours Iran time, all major universities were surrounded by security forces in the early hours of morning and only students with valid identity cards were being allowed to enter the premises. There was an army of security forces in Central Tehran today. In some parts of the city, there were more security forces than protesters.
Despite this, protests started around noon in the area around Tehran University when students started to chant anti-government slogans. Chants also started in Tehrans Sharif Industrial University, Elm o Sanat University and Amir Kabir University. They were soon joined by hundreds of other Tehranis who started gathering and chanting in Enghelab Square and Vali Asr Square.
Clashes broke out when other protesters started attempting to enter Tehran University. Demonstrators chanted Death to the Dictator, Death to Khamenei, and You traitor Mahmoud you destroyed our homeland. Despite the clashes in Vali Asr and Enghelab Squares, Tehran University was the major scene of confrontation.
Riot police beat people with batons and fired tear gas indiscriminately at Enghelab and in Tehran University. People were attacked in other parts of the city as well. Reports confirm dozens injured; however, no one was reported to have been killed. By the end of the day, reports emerged that at least three dozen people and possibly many more were arrested by the security forces. There were reports of guns being fired in some parts of the city, but all shots were confirmed to have been fired in the air to scare the protesters.
The only major opposition figure that took part in the protests was former president Hashemi Rafsanjanis daughter, Faezeh Hashemi. She joined protesters in Tehran and videos of her emerged being accompanied by other protesters. The video shows protesters accompanying Hashemi and chanting, Thank you, thank you. There were also rumors of Mousavis wife Zahra Rahnavard joining the protests, but this could not be confirmed by reliable sources. [Editor’s note: see our updates reporting that Rahnavard was at the Tehran University campus, where she was assauted by a group of women.]
It is fairly difficult to estimate how many people joined the protests. However, by looking at pictures and videos from different parts of the city and universities, it can be safely said that somewhere between five to ten thousand people took part in protests throughout the day. It is worth noting that there was a government-sanctioned protest in Tehran University as well and more than a thousand government supporters took part in that.
Mashhad
Several hundred students gathered in Mashhad University and chanted anti-government slogans and sang the patriotic song Yaare Dabestani. There were confirmed reports of clashes or protests outside the university.
Shiraz
Hundreds of students and ordinary Shirazis protested in Shirazs main university and the central part of the city as well. People were again stopped from entering the institutions main grounds if they werent students. Reports of clashes from the city have been confirmed. There were also reports of arrests, but none could be verified.
Kermanshah
More than a thousand students gathered in Razi University, which is the largest institution of higher education in the city. At least 200 security forces were present around the university and prevented people from entering the premises unless they had valid student ID cards.
Hamedan
Bu-Ali Sina University was the main site of protest. Clashes here were perhaps the most violent. Reports of bloodied students being carried away from the scene of clashes were reported by multiple sources. Numbers here were also in the hundreds.
Arak, Kerman, and Najafabad
Protesters chanted in the three cities main universities. The protests remained largely peaceful. Not much further could be confirmed. Numbers in these cities were also comparable to Shiraz and Mashhad.
This report was compiled using information from eye-witnesses, Iranian opposition websites and media contacts outside Iran. Government-run media in Iran reported almost nothing about the protests so their view of the events is anyones guess.
Source: Enduringamerica
Sorry about not giving a better sorce rteference than the site name at the end, but i’’m having a problem with my clip agent today.
It’s coming to America
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