The Prison’s Rusted Bars
Ali Afshari - 2007.12.03

With the arrest of Ali Azizi, a new round of student arrests has been completed. The recent student protests have led to more arrests within Iran’s student community and students rights activists that include Arman Sedaghati, Mazyar Samii, Pedram Rafati and Behnam Sepehrmand, and a few more from Ahvaz University in the oil-rich province of Khuzestan. Furthermore, the fate of student Massoumeh Mansuri too continues to be in doldrums.
It appears that the goal of the recent arrest of these students is to calm down the protesting students movement and prevent the demonstrations from spreading to the population at large. Ali Azizi’s arrest however does not fall into this category and he is paying for his protests that span at least to a year in the Amir Kabir University Islamic Association and the central council of Daftare Tahkim Vahdat student organization. Initially he was to be among the students arrested on July 9, 2007, but managed to stay out. Now with his intense activities in defending the three imprisoned students from Polytechnic University, the security apparatus found the best excuse to return him to the dungeons. This would remove him from the scene and also send a strong message to Polytechnic University students.
In view of recent events, it is possible that he will be accused of participating on unrest that originates from outside the country. The student movement and protests in Iran have remained the only active force openly confronting the security-military regime. Recent imprisonments, expulsions and other bans have not weakened the student movement opposing the government and calling for freedoms and the defense of their rights. In addition to that, the movement has also echoed the voices in the country that have called for the defense of human rights, and social and political freedoms.
The student movement continues to be at the forefront of the struggle against the hardline and suppressive regime, which exposes the futility of the “iron fist” policies of the administration. The state has tried different methods of confronting this movement, including pinning them against the sacred beliefs of the ordinary folk in the streets, but none has worked, and the students have remained popular and legitimate protestors in the eyes of the people.
The manner in which the students from Ahvaz University have been treated is a carbon copy of the treatment that students from Polytechnic University received. A group is arrested and then charged with fake accusations of being consciously or naively in the service of foreigners who wish to create unrest in the country’s universities with the aim of overthrowing the Iranian regime through a peaceful velvet revolution.
What is clear is that just as the goals of the strategists of the Polytechnic University arrests did not yield the desired results to the security officials, the same efforts targeted at the Ahvaz University students will not succeed either.
As the security apparatus portrays that these protesting students are challenging the sacred values and beliefs of the population, it is clear that what they are really concerned about are the principles and foundations of the ruling circles, which the students challenge. From a strictly religious view, any measures or calls by those in power to spread the truth and deny the forbidden must begin with an honest criticism of the rulers. And in view of the unpopular and unjust activities of the leadership of the regime, this task of critiquing the leadership becomes even more important.
A review of the policies of the state in confronting the students clearly demonstrates the failure of the anti-human rights policies of the regime. And while the state’s assault and crackdown on the student movement initially slows down the student pro-democracy movement and hurts it, but in the long term, it only adds to its experience and maturity, making its demands even more radical. This situation has led the security machinery to even follow the students and abandon many of the red lines that it had initially set for the students not to cross.
Detention and imprisonment are now obsolete tools in this battle. The final outcome of any imprisonment is release from the dungeon and the re-entrance of the former prisoner in the political battlefield. This time however, the activist is more mature and more sophisticated, and consequently more effective.
It appears that the decision-makers of these strategies and tools too have come to realize the bankruptcy of their methods. They are continuing the same old tricks however merely out of desperation. The specter of a velvet revolution and the mobilization of the disenchanted masses will continue to haunt the regime, even as it continues to suppress the movement.
As Iran’s crises with the international community intensifies, the state sees no alternative but to create a domestic crisis so that the pro-democracy and opposition movement does not acquire the opportunity to mobilize and organize itself even more. And should events in Iran take the direction that would necessitate its leaders to once again drink the jar of poison (as they did when they rescinded all claims to liberate Iraq and Palestine during the 8-year war with Iraq), suppressing the student movement today is aimed to scare off the opposition from exposing the claims of those inside the regime who are promoting the nuclear rhetoric and military bluffs, who may also call for the prosecution of those who will be responsible for withering the country’s national interests.
It is clear that those who have “removed the brakes from the moving train” (as president Ahmadinejad once boasted about Iran’s nuclear policies and activities) are so intoxicated with their own rhetoric and beliefs that they truly believe that they have a divine mission to fulfill and that divine aids will help them sail through all odds and take them to become the leading power in the world.
But what is also clear is that these pipe dreamers have no ears to tolerate any just complaints and criticism, such as those coming from the students. And therefore, it is natural that they exercise and practice prison-therapy against honest voices of the masses and the brave who have called the king’s bluff by saying he is fully naked.
What these strategists miss is that the student movement is not rooted in specific students. Behind every prominent student activist sit tens of other students who take up the banner of freedom even if their forerunners are struck down.
The recent arrests and detentions of students only add to the already-dark record of the state in its drives to suppress freedoms, within and without the academic institutions. And they will certainly not deter students from standing up to what is right and what is just, and end their calls for the respect of human rights and equality.
