Iran unleashes violence on protesters again

CNN:

Security forces wielding clubs and firing weapons beat back demonstrators who flocked to a Tehran square Wednesday to continue protests, with one witness saying security forces beat people like "animals."

At least two sources described wild and violent conditions at a part of Tehran where protesters had planned to demonstrate.

"They were waiting for us," the source said. "They all have guns and riot uniforms. It was like a mouse trap."

"I see many people with broken arms, legs, heads -- blood everywhere -- pepper gas like war," the source said.

About "500 thugs" with clubs came out of a mosque and attacked people in the square, another source said.

The security forces were "beating women madly" and "killing people like hell," the source said.

"They beat up a woman so bad, she was all bloody," the source said in a description that underscores the growing and central role of women in the uprising.

"Women are playing an amazing role in the streets, both in terms of numbers and effectiveness," according to a member of Mir Hossein Moussavi's party.

The Iranian capital remained tense Wednesday. Some residents said they were too afraid to talk about the political crisis over the phone to anyone in the United States or Europe. Many protesters debated whether to show up on the streets.

"I am not going outside my house at all! The streets are too dangerous and just so very busy with police," a 21-year-old college student from Tehran said. "Ahhhh, when will our lives get back to normal?"

Worried the government was monitoring their phone conversations, some residents said the Internet was the best way to transmit information. However, the spotty connection made it difficult to rely on the Web.

"It's beyond fear," said a woman who arrived at a U.S. airport from Iran but still did not want her name used for fear for her safety. "The situation is more like terror." Video Watch a woman coming to the U.S. describe the crackdown »

...


Iran has retired soccer players who wore green wrist bans to show solidarity with demonstrators. CNN also reports that some clerics have joined in the protest.

The story of the protest indicates that the government is becoming more organized in its suppression of the demonstrations protesting the election. I think it will only become more brutal in the days ahead. There have been indications that those arrested will also face more severe punishment. One of the problems with radical Islam is the belief that corporal punishment is necessary to "persuade" others to their point of view. That is what we are starting to see in Iran.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

Is the F-35 obsolete?

Apple's huge investment in US including Texas facility