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Report from a communist student in Tehran
(translated for the Weekly Worker)
Tuesday December 4 saw
demonstrations to mark Student Day at the University of Tehran. During the
lead-up left activists were condemned by the government, and students were
warned not to attend.
Student Day has been commemorated
for 54 years in honour of three martyr comrades killed by the former shah
regime at the engineering faculty of the University of Tehran during protests
against the visit of Richard Nixon to Iran. In view of this, and most
importantly because over the past year every social movement - whether of
workers, women or students - has been suppressed, the students decided to defy
the government by staging our demonstration.
On Saturday December 2, while
student activists were preparing for Student Day, the government made its move.
The arrests started at 9am when Mehdi Gerailoo and Nader Ahsani were kidnapped
from their own homes by the security forces and taken to an unknown place. In
the afternoon two students of the sociology faculty at the University of Tehran
- Victoria Jamshidi and Anoosheh Azadbar - were arrested at their home without
any explanation. The arrests continued until Student Day itself, when to my
knowledge 26 students from various universities were rounded up, many of whom
are still being held.
But despite all this the
demonstration, organised by Radical Left students, went ahead exactly on time -
at 12 noon on Tuesday in front of Tehran University’s engineering faculty.
It
began with the singing of revolutionary songs by students holding up placards
with their demands and slogans: “No war”, “Hands Off the People of Iran”, “The
university is not an army garrison”, “The liberty of women is the liberty of
society”, “Free the political prisoners”, “There is an alternative”,
“Free our classmates”, “The students movement allied with the workers’ and
women’s movements”, “We want independent unions” and “Freedom and equality!”
There followed a number of
speeches. Behzad Bagheri (archaeology student) spoke about the pressures of the
past year and in defence of those arrested. Bita Samimizad (physics student)
spoke out against the threat of war on Iran and about the activities of the
women’s and workers’ movement of the past year. Bijan Sabbagh (a chemical
engineering student at the University of Mazandaran) talked about the arrested
students at the University of Mazandaran, Tehran and Ahvaz, whilst Kaveh
Abbasian, a student of cinema and representative of students who had been
prevented by the government from continuing their studies, spoke of the problems
they faced, and of how he narrowly escaped arrest on his way to Tehran for the
demonstration. He reminded the government that a movement that is supported by
the people cannot be defeated by those who run the system.
Then Roozbeh Safshekan read the
declaration of the Radical Left students (immediately after the demonstration
he was arrested at the university by security forces).
There were also speeches
from Peyman Piran (ex-political prisoner), Ali Ajami (student of law) and
Kamran Akhshi (political science).
The demonstration continued in
front of the university main gate, as the students resumed their singing and
yelled out their demands so everyone in the street could hear: “Free the
imprisoned students”, “I’ll kill whoever kills my brother”, “Taking part in
elections is betrayal”, “Down with the dictator”, “No to government and police
brutality”, “Ahmadinejad - Pinochet! Iran will not be another Chile!”
The demonstration ended outside
the faculty of law and political science and half an hour later the security
forces started to make their arrests - especially targeting those who had made
speeches. They first snatched Roozbeh Safshekan, who had read out the Radical
Left declaration, and his wife, Mina, who was released some hours later. The
security forces also tried to arrest Kaveh Abbasian and Bijan Sabbagh in front
of the engineering faculty, but they were unsuccessful because other students
surrounded them, allowing Kaveh and Bijan to run away.
By 7pm many activists
had changed their appearance and clothes and managed to leave the campus. As I
write, many are in hiding, but government forces are still trying to arrest
them.
However, no matter how many they
arrest or whatever they do to us, our movement will not be stopped. |
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