Iran’s house of cards teeters on the brink

Iran’s clerics are facing a crisis of legitimacy that could see the end of the Islamic Republic in its current form, says Trends magazine.
March 8, 2010 5:18 by Iason Athanasiadis
Hamid Ramenzadeh was in the process of applying to study at a British university and join the 150,000 Iranians annually leaving their country when the greatest crisis in the history of the Islamic Republic erupted this past summer. After participating in the extraordinary scenes of social defiance unfolding on Tehran’s streets, Ramenzadeh decided to postpone his departure and join the push for reform.
“I felt I had no right to flee the country [and go] abroad when my generation’s defining challenge came,” he said during a brief visit to Istanbul. “How could I face my colleagues or later my children if I hadn’t been on the streets during the crisis of 2009?”
Seven months spent on the streets and university campuses that form the seething backdrop to this movement culminated in December’s ‘Bloody Sunday’. Government forces killed at least eight and as many as 37 demonstrators in countrywide violence commemorating the Shiite festival of Ashura. Ramenzadeh has been out on the streets all along, watching the pace of change in demonstrators’ attitudes evolve with frightening speed.
“We started with peaceful silent protests but then [the] slogans got more radical,” he said. “At first, all we wanted was ‘our vote back,’ then ‘our presidency,’ and when there was still no answer we demanded ‘Death to the Dictator.’ If this continues, I wouldn’t be surprised if we start hearing the cry ‘Death to Islam’.”
Ramenzadeh’s fears that the regime’s behavior is jeopardizing ordinary Iranians’ faith in Islam have been echoed by the dissident Ayatollah Mohsen Kadivar.
“The Shiite theocracy in its present form has failed,” he said in a December interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel. “I do not know when exactly but I am convinced that the regime will collapse.”
This is not to say that Iranians are any less religious today than they were in 1979, when they overthrew the pro-Western Shah and welcomed back Ayatollah Khomeini who ushered in three decades of Islamic rule.
Ramenzadeh was born after the Revolution, one of the 40 million Iranians under the age of 30.
The experience of growing up in an Islamic republic has turned him in a firmly secular direction. But he still represents only a sizeable – though vocal – minority of middle class urbanites mostly clustered in Tehran. By far the largest demonstrations to break out in support of the Green Movement – as it has come to be known – outside Tehran were in Qom on the funeral of dissident ayatollah Ali Montazeri. And January has been marred by claim and counter-claim over who behaved more sacrilegiously on Ashura: the demonstrators for taking advantage of the holy day to protest and then skirmish with pro-regime vigilantes, or the police for assaulting them in the first place.
More on Middle East
-
Pullman to have 150 hotels by 2020
-
Yemen to receive loan from Arab Monetary Fund in 2013
-
EgyptAir plane diverted after “fire” threat
-
Global damage of corruption
-
MENA residents think freelancing is practical
-
Iranian President Unhurt After Helicopter Makes Emergency Landing
-
Italy reveals first case of SARS-like coronavirus
-
Kurds should separate from Iraq, says deputy prime minister
-
Majid Al Futtaim eyes major investments
-
Iranians face new Internet curbs
-
Morocco To Launch 4G Mobile License Tenders
-
Tesco Clothing Brand Plans International Expansion
-
NCoV – First report of patient-to-nurse spread
-
Turkish Airlines faces strike
-
GMR reveals top 50 Mena Corporate Brands
-
Citi betting on wealthy Middle Eastern family firms
-
Currency shortages hit Vodafone’s Egyptian business
-
IMF and Egypt working to reach loan deal in ‘coming weeks’
-
Hundreds Of Dead Expected After Iran Quake – Official
-
Arab youth choose UAE as model of development and preferred country of residence
Lately on Kipp
-
Mile-high tower fit for a prince
-
CompTIA Middle East Research Reveals Focus on IT Recruitment to Boost Business Competitiveness and Security
-
Shift in strategy since acquisition – Paul Kenny
-
Online Learning On The Rise
-
Saudi’s Sipchem picks HSBC as adviser for Sahara merger
-
Alcatel-Lucent Enterprises announces Data Centre & LAN Infrastructure Agreement with Jumbo Electronics
2 Comments
Sharjah Police: ‘Don’t give money to beggars’
Fighting the world’s biggest killer
Twist and shout
Smoking with child in car banned
“Your customers aren’t fools”
Behind the curtain of Simone Heng
Chatting with the man behind Dubai City Pass
A business discussion with the author of ‘Connect The Dots’

































Persia… Iran…. History in the making…But well, peace to all !!!
It’s time to admit the truth: the war in Iraq is due to oil and government contracts to private companies, not knocking down the Towers and killing so many Americans. The White House knew these terrorists were in the country and did NOTHING! They waste time and money chasing after Mexican illigals who do us no phyiscal harm, and are doing jobs most American lazy pelple will not lower themselves to do! QUIT LYING TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ABOUT why we are in Iraq! We have oil resources here in American we could appropriate but for the goody two shoes who are on the side of minows, the gnats, the rats and the worms on the earth and care nothing about the people. Save the Whales, sacrifice the people! This country is being led by IDIOTS who are only interested in lining their pockets. WANT TO BE RICH? BECOME A CONGRESSMAN!