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Security Measures Tightened in Iran’s Ahwaz as Protests Continue

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You're the type that would support ISIS rats invading them and beheading them only to stroke your hatred. Your interest lies not in their progression but their destruction. Fall of the regime should be for their progression, I know that is too much asking from the people living in the middle east. The mosques should be closed to start with.
 
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Torture, repression mount as Ahwazi protests get tougher

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Arab people across Ahwaz region are continuing their mass protests against the policies of the Iranian regime.

The protesters in al-Zawia district raised placards demanding the release of political prisoners and stopping the schemes aimed to change the demographic makeup in the Arab region.

Social media users posted videos showing protesters chanting slogans denouncing the practices of the regime and its incessant attempts to annihilate the identity of the Arab people of Ahwaz.

According to the Ahwazi activist Karim Dahimi, the Iranian intelligence forces arrested about 400 Ahwazi protesters, including 15 children. Other activists put the number of detainees at around 500.

Official tallies suggest over 15 people have been killed since the outbreak of demonstrations

He added the protests are still ongoing in most of the Ahwazi cities and districts, warning against assassinations that could be carried out by the regime to quash the uprising of the Ahwazis.

http://ahwazna.org/en-579_Torture_repression_mount_as_Ahwazi_protests_get_tougher_.html
 
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Iran has far more cohesion than Saudi. Ahvaz are Arab Shia.

Meanwhile Saudi is merely a Nadj bully holding onto Hejaz and Eastern province with the help of USA (Roosevelt promise to cover Saudi).
 
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Security Forces Kill Three Protesters in Southern Iran as Demonstrations Continue

22nd May 2018 - FDD Policy Brief

Protests in Iran have largely faded from Western news reporting, but not from the country’s streets, with more than 400 in April alone. Last week in the southern city of Kazeroon, police opened fire on demonstrators, reportedly leaving at least three people dead and dozens injured. Authorities arrested more than 100 others.

Rallies have occurred sporadically in Kazeroon since the summer of 2017 in response to a government plan to divide the city by merging parts of it into a new town. Residents fear the separation will unfairly apportion key water resources and leave Kazeroon’s historic sites in the control of the newly formed municipality.

However, like the other demonstrations that began to consume Iran in December 2017, the Kazeroon turmoil also reflects longstanding discontent with Tehran’s repression, foreign adventurism, and economic and environmental mismanagement.

In fact, slogans chanted during the rallies featured familiar refrains from the nationwide protests of the previous months, including “State radio and television and should be ashamed,” “The government supports Gazans but betrays Kazeroon,” and “Our enemy is here, not in the U.S.”

These developments suggest that Iran’s uprising constitutes not a temporary phenomenon, but a sustained mass movement that poses a potential threat to the regime’s survival. To date, hundreds of demonstrations have unfolded in each month of 2018.

In the first three weeks of May, scores of protests over Iran’s poor economy have occurred in more than two dozen cities. On May 10, teachers and academics in at least 30 cities waged coordinated protestshighlighting their poor wages as well as ethnic, religious, and gender discrimination in the nation’s schools.

On May 6, protestors disrupted a speech by President Hassan Rouhani in the city of Sabzevar by reciting slogans accentuating his broken campaign pledges and the nationwide dearth of jobs. Even minor transportation inconveniences have prompted protests: On May 16, the malfunction of a Tehran subway car spurred passengers to chant, “death to the dictator.”

Meanwhile, Iran has doubled down on the systemic repression that fuels the crisis. In late April, the regime directed internet providers to block access to Telegram, a messaging app used by some 40 million Iranians, in an effort to prevent them from spreading word about the escalating protests.

But the move does not seem to have dampened Iranians’ willingness to demonstrate. “The social gap is about to explode,” said Alireza Saghafi-Khorasani, the secretary of a labor rights group in Iran. “There is no economic plan.”

Both the White House and Congress should draw attention to the waves of protests shaking Iran, and encourage U.S. allies to follow suit. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo led the way on Monday in an addressarticulating the Trump administration’s new Iran strategy, reminding his audience that Iran’s people “cry out for a simple life with jobs and opportunity and with liberty,” only to face violent repression.

Tzvi Kahn is a senior Iran analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Follow him on Twitter @TzviKahn.

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irane-ma.com
Students of Tehran's Azad University protest educational, recreational and research facility difficulties - Our Iran
 
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maybe iranina can help me out
IRan is not Arab Country
THis guys who burn the Iran flag what country do they consider themselves
 
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Iran has far more cohesion than Saudi. Ahvaz are Arab Shia.

Meanwhile Saudi is merely a Nadj bully holding onto Hejaz and Eastern province with the help of USA (Roosevelt promise to cover Saudi).
Original Ahvaz People are Persian Lors , After war with Iraq lots of Arabs from Around the city migrated to Ahvaz but still around 55% are Persian

Maybe this one?

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no they usually fly this flag
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or more precisely this one
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Iran is not an Arab country. Want to speak Arabic, Iraq is that way.
Ahwaz is Arabic speaking area.

Saudis, Israelis and Americans were barking "regime change" at that time too...
No international press ever dared to report what goes inside Iran.
Not even Iranian poster on defence.pk report any protests /crime /missing person.
 
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Ahwaz is Arabic speaking area.


No international press ever dared to report what goes inside Iran.
Not even Iranian poster on defence.pk report any protests /crime /missing person.
Did anyone report on Al-Awamiyah?
 
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