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Chitchat Ayatollah Of Foreign Colonial Religion in Iran Orders Internet Cut! No WhatsApp and Sammyboy For Persians!! Lucky Boss Sam Renounced Persian Roots!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
2019-11-16t120803z_1772304208_rc2ccd9u9ain_rtrmadp_3_iran-fuel-protests.jpg


NEW YORK — Iran imposed an almost complete nationwide internet blackout on Sunday (Nov 17) one of its most draconian attempts to cut off Iranians from each other and the rest of the world as widespread anti-government unrest roiled the streets of Tehran and other cities for a third day.

The death toll for the three days of protests rose to at least 12; hundreds were injured; and more than 1,000 people have been arrested, according to semiofficial news agencies like Fars News.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last word on all state matters, called the demonstrators “thugs” and endorsed the government’s decision to raise prices it sets for rationed gasoline by 50 per cent as of Friday and by 300 per cent for gasoline that exceeds ration limits. Even after the price hike, gasoline in Iran is still cheaper than in most of the rest of the world — now the equivalent of about 50 cents a gallon.

In a speech on Sunday, Mr Khamenei said he would support rationing and increasing gas prices because heads of three branches of government — the presidency, judiciary and parliament — had made the decision.

He acknowledged that Iranians had taken to the streets to protest and that some had died. But he blamed the protests on monarchists and opposition groups trying to destabilise Iran.

The widespread discontent on display across the country marked yet another crisis for the Islamic Republic. Iran has been struggling with an economic crisis after the United States exited a nuclear deal and reimposed harsh sanctions that ban Iran’s oil sales.

In the past month, Iran has faced a fierce backlash in regional countries such as Lebanon and Iraq where protesters have called for an end to Iran’s outsized influence in their countries’ affairs. Now, the most powerful forces leading the country are being challenged on the home front.

In the past, Iran has met such widespread protest movements with forceful crackdowns that have crushed dissent.

Mr Khamenei’s support of the gas price hike effectively put an end to parliament’s attempt to challenge the decision, and lawmakers took back a bill they had introduced to reverse the new policy.

But protests raged and criticism continued. At least two lawmakers resigned in opposition to parliament’s not being consulted. In the cities from Tehran to Shiraz in the south, Iranian protesters chanted, “Death to Khamenei.”

Some analysts said Iran could not sustain the pressure from all directions and would have to make some concessions — either to its population or to the United States for new negotiations.

“The regime is facing a serious crisis and unless they concede someplace to relieve the pressures, the anger and the violence will continue,” said Mr Roozbeh Mirebrahimi, an independent analyst based in New York.

The Trump administration on Sunday condemned the lethal use of force and the cutting of communications in Iran.

“The US supports the Iranian people in their peaceful protests against the regime that is supposed to lead them,” a statement from the White House press secretary said.

Iranian activists on social media called for the United States to figure out a way to provide Iran with internet access. Human rights activists said they worried that without witness documentation of the violence, it would be difficult to hold Iran accountable for its crackdown.

The Associated Press reported that Iran also experienced wide disruptions and outages of internet service on Friday and Saturday, according to the group NetBlocks, which monitors worldwide internet access. By Saturday night, connectivity had fallen to just 7 per cent of ordinary levels, NetBlocks said.

“The ongoing disruption is the most severe recorded in Iran since President Rouhani came to power, and the most severe disconnection tracked by NetBlocks in any country in terms of its technical complexity and breadth,” the group said referring to President Hassan Rouhani. The internet firm Oracle called it “the largest internet shutdown ever observed in Iran.”

Mr Ahmad, a taxi driver in Tehran who did not want his last name used, said in telephone interview that when he tried to connect to the internet on his mobile phone, a recorded message said that because of a decision by the National Security Council, connectivity had been cut off.

WhatsApp and Instagram, both used widely by Iranians, were also blocked.

Ms Fahimeh, an accountant, said she and her friends relied on WhatsApp to find out the location and time of protests, and in the absence of the internet, it would be difficult for Iranians to plan and spread the word.

The Ministry of Information said Sunday that it had identified bad actors among protesters and warned that those responsible for unrest would be arrested.

Intelligence agents on Sunday arrested Mr Abdoleza Davari, a senior aide to Iran’s former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and a vocal critic of the gas price policy, according to his wife, Ms Elham Salmani. Mr Davari had posted a tweet a day earlier saying that the people have the right to demonstrate and that parliament must hear their concerns and stand up to the branches of the government imposing this policy.

“They have failed to successfully counter freethinking with ideology so the only tool at their disposal is violence,” said Ms Salmani, a journalist and political activist, in a telephone interview. She said the prosecutor’s office had threatened to arrest her as well and had accused her of hiding her husband’s mobile telephone and laptop computer.

Mr Mostafa Tajzadeh, a prominent reformist politician, said on Twitter that if elected officials could not listen to the demands of the people, “they should resign and leave the country to its real rulers.” THE NEW YORK TIMES

Read more at https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/17/world/middleeast/iran-protest-rouhani.html
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Iran, iraq, spain were centres of islamic golden age which ended with the mongol invasion and destruction of baghdad. Grand buildings. Libraries snd places where intellectuals can meet and discuss issues before religion took over and destroyed its true spirit.
Notice that the grand buildings were never in saudi. And not many mosques were built back then. Just one grand mosques per area. Unlike today where mosques and suraus are everywhere especially in malaysia.
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
Iran, iraq, spain were centres of islamic golden age which ended with the mongol invasion and destruction of baghdad. Grand buildings. Libraries snd places where intellectuals can meet and discuss issues before religion took over and destroyed its true spirit.
Notice that the grand buildings were never in saudi. And not many mosques were built back then. Just one grand mosques per area. Unlike today where mosques and suraus are everywhere especially in malaysia.
Are you a Sunni or Shiite?
 

ChristJohnny

Alfrescian
Loyal
Told you so ... low IQ country cannot make it.

There will be many excuses, blame America, blame this and that. It is too common to hear that. All low IQ countries standard operandi.

End of the day, results speak but it is absent in ALL low IQ countries.

IQ and Race
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Told you so ... low IQ country cannot make it.

There will be many excuses, blame America, blame this and that. It is too common to hear that. All low IQ countries standard operandi.

End of the day, results speak but it is absent in ALL low IQ countries.

IQ and Race
Just 40 years ago china was a bicycle pedalling country. Den xiao peng had to entice hongkies and later taiwanese, both successful due to their western influence, to help china modernise.
 

yinyang

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Iran Protests
DARA Jam
Since last Saturday, there are more than 100 cities in Iran protesting the increase in the price of gasoline.
The regime reacted strongly. There are currently 12 dead and networks, internet and sometimes even the phone are cut.
All the media are forbidden to speak about the demonstrations.

Iran Protests
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Iranians, Chileans, Catalans and Hongkies should have been well-behaved and docile like Sinkies, if there's a price increase or unfair law just smile, say 'yes sir, thank you sir' and carry on as normal. :wink:
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Iran, iraq, spain were centres of islamic golden age which ended with the mongol invasion and destruction of baghdad. Grand buildings. Libraries snd places where intellectuals can meet and discuss issues before religion took over and destroyed its true spirit.

There were many intellectual centers in places like Alexandria, Syria, Persia and India that moslems destroyed in the name of their religion. If moslems can destroy other people's universities and places of worship to create their own golden age, then it's fair that others do to islam what islam did to others.


Notice that the grand buildings were never in saudi. And not many mosques were built back then. Just one grand mosques per area. Unlike today where mosques and suraus are everywhere especially in malaysia.

The mosques and suraus are used for religious and political brainwashing. Which is why the moslems get alarmed when chinks control the mosques in xinjiang and whisk many moslems away to recreational camps for reducation.

The rise of the Sauds was due to american oil politics in the middle east. Military support to the sauds in return for cheap oil. The sauds used all that oil wealth to build mosques all over the world and stir shit. Today, sunni islam in most places is in essence wahabism and ISIS, depending on the severity of brainwashing. In places like Kelantan and Aceh, the islam they believe in is fast approaching the same religious intolerance of ISIS.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
Iran, iraq, spain were centres of islamic golden age which ended with the mongol invasion and destruction of baghdad. Grand buildings. Libraries snd places where intellectuals can meet and discuss issues before religion took over and destroyed its true spirit.
Notice that the grand buildings were never in saudi. And not many mosques were built back then. Just one grand mosques per area. Unlike today where mosques and suraus are everywhere especially in malaysia.

You and your indian fairytale stories.

This non-issue is a CIA effort to create unrest to topple the Mullahs.

Colour revolution.

Already done in Ukraine.

Done in Venezuela. Bolivia. And Hong Kong.

To varying degrees of success.

The 2009 colour revolution of Iran did not work.

Should not work this time either.

Iran should trace the source of training funds and equipment to the West/Zionists and take out the problem at its root.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
Told you so ... low IQ country cannot make it.

There will be many excuses, blame America, blame this and that. It is too common to hear that. All low IQ countries standard operandi.

End of the day, results speak but it is absent in ALL low IQ countries.

IQ and Race

True of your race.

Right? No?

AggressiveKindlyAustralianfreshwatercrocodile-max-1mb.gif
 
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