New Protests in Polytechnic
Two Weeks after Tehran University - 2007.10.27
Sorena Kyani
Exactly two weeks after university students protested Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to Tehran University, chants of “death to the dictator” were heard at another one of the country’s campuses: the Polytechnic University.
Hundreds of students gathered yesterday morning to call for the release of Ehsan Mansouri, Ahmad Ghassaban, and Majid Tavakoli, three Polytechnic University students that have been under arrest since spring. The students were sentenced to lengthy prison terms earlier this month.
Dozens of students from Tehran, Allameh Tabatabai, and Sharif Engineering universities, along with students from the Azad University climbed over barriers set up by anti-riot police and joined their Polytechnic University colleagues.
After several small skirmishes with security forces, students held an open microphone session.
Majid Sheikhpour, who was arrested along with Tavakoli, Mansouri and Ghasabban, delivered a speech describing the kinds of torture inflicted on Polytechnic University students while in custody. Sheikhpour identified nighttime interrogations, sleep deprivation, inflicting unbearable physical pain, group beatings, and having to stand up for hours as common instance of torture.
Alluding to a remark made by President Ahmadinejad, who said, "I give presents to my opponents," Sheikhpour said, “Your present to your opponents is prison and torture.”
During Sheikhpour’s speech, students sporadically chanted “imprisoned student – must be released,” and “death to the dictator.”
Ali Nikoonesbati, who serves on Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat’s [“Office for Fostering Unity”] central committee, was another speaker at the event. He argued that prison sentences are issued to students in an effort by the government to divert public’s attention from concessions given to Russia. Nikoonesbati also accused Ahmadinejad of exacting personal vengeance from Amir Kabir University students.
At the end of the gathering, student read a statement released from prison by Majid Tavakoli, Ahmad Ghassaban and Ehsan Mansouri. In their statement, the detained students insist on their innocence and claim that they were “tortured” during the entire time of their arrest.
Students then proceeded to march toward Vali Asr Square while holding placards bearing pictures of their three imprisoned colleagues. In unison, they were chanting, “death to the dictator,” “political students must be freed," and “Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, agent of corruption and discrimination.”
