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Ahwazi youths defy Iran regime with Eid protests - British Ahwazi Friendship Society |
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Ahwazi
Arab youths defied the Iranian security forces and used Eid ul-Fitr - an
Islamic festival marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan - to call for
Arab minority rights in protests across Ahwaz.
Peaceful demonstrations were reportedly larger than last year's Eid
demonstrations, when two Ahwazi Arab youths died when 3,000 Arabs attempted to
march peacefully to the centre of Ahwaz City (click
here for further details). Youths gathered in the Hay Al-Thurah (Dairah)
district of Ahwaz City after Eid prayers, where the Ahwazi Intifada began in
April 2005. The demonstrators chanted anti-regime slogans and called for the
release of political prisoners and an end to state violence. Some carried
Ahwazi flags or painted their hands with the colours of the Ahwazi flag.
A
large police contingent was deployed to the district along with other members
of the security services in plain clothes. Camcorders, mobile phones and
cameras were confiscated and there were an unknown number of arrests. The
protestors were banned from demonstrating in a bazaar area allocated to Eid
celebrations as well as Farhani
Street, which was closed
off by a police cordon. Instead they gathered outside Sayed Hamdan Mosque where
they were confronted by the police and security forces, but staged a peaceful
demonstration.
The Ahwazi demonstrators had defied the regime's attempts to intimidate them.
In the month prior to Ramadan over 1,400 Ahwazi Arabs had been arrested in a
massive police crack-down on dissent (click
here for further information). The mass arrests were ostensibly carried out
to seize illegal satellite dishes and tackle organised crime, but their timing,
the extent of the arrests and the people arrested in the operations indicated
that the government intended to crush dissent and prevent broadcasts by exiled
Ahwazi parties to the region |