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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    details .. What is happening in Iran?

    Rocky
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     details .. What is happening in Iran? Empty details .. What is happening in Iran?

    Post by Rocky Mon 01 Jan 2018, 3:00 am

    [size=32]
    details .. What is happening in Iran?[/size]
     details .. What is happening in Iran? 1-1008869

     Twilight News    

     3 hours ago




    After a new night of anti-regime demonstrations in Iran, Interior Minister Abdul Ridha Rahmani Fadhli called on Sunday not to participate in illegal rallies, noting that protesters "create problems for themselves and for other citizens."

    The interior minister warned that the government would confront those he described as "violent and chaotic users," telling state television: "Those who destroy public property, create chaos and act unlawfully will be held accountable for their actions and paying the price." 
    Promised statements indicate the size of anger that engulfs the "Islamic Republic", and raises many questions about the reality of what is happening inside Iran, we review it as follows: 
    What are the reasons for the protests?
    Economic conditions, corruption and rising prices and unemployment rates, and it seems that the protests took a political orientation expressing anger at the policy of President Hassan Rowhani.
    The demonstrations have developed into widespread protests against the authorities, demanding the release of political prisoners and an end to police repression.
    Protesters also chanted slogans against Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and chanted slogans against President Hassan Rowhani and religious rule.
    Demonstrators chanted slogans such as "people begging, clerics acting like gods", "not to Gaza, not to Lebanon, my life to Iran," expressing anger at Iran's interference in the region's affairs.
    Where did the demonstrations begin?
    The northwest of the country began in the city of Mashhad, Iran's second-largest city, and protests soon spread to more than 40 cities, according to the National Council of Resistance of Iran.
    The protests also spread to Qom, the most important religious city of the Iranians. Demonstrations also took place in the capital Tehran, in the governorates of Isfahan, Kerman, Arak, Khuzestan, Ziljan, Samanan, Golestan, Kailan, Arbil and Bandar Abbas.
    Does the government respond to protesters' demands?
    To answer this question is enough to monitor the official statements that address the protests, and how the regime sees the demonstrators?
    Iran's state-run IRB television channel quoted Iranian First Vice President Yitzhak Jahangiri as saying that "government opponents" were behind the protests.
    "Some of the events in the country these days are taking economic problems as an excuse, but they seem to be happening on the back of other things, they think they are hurting the government, and others are going to build the wave."
    Officials in Mashhad also said that "anti-revolutionary elements" organized the demonstrations.
    Finally, Iranian television resorted to a classic justification when he spoke of "foreign agents" who shot at demonstrators.
    How does the regime deal with demonstrations?
    The government warned citizens of "illegal gatherings", while police arrested dozens of "loud slogans" while demonstrators were detained in the city of Qom, where a number of influential clerics reside.
    Video footage on social networking sites showed protesters in the town of Duroud, west of the country, with gunshot wounds.
    The governor-general of the capital, Tehran, said that any "similar meetings" would be dealt with by the police who went to the main roads.
    In a number of cities police, equipped with riot gear and motorcycles, clashed with demonstrators.
    He urged the Minister of Communications to apply text messaging on mobile phones "Telgram", which calls for more protests, stop "to encourage violence," as he put it.
    Thousands of supporters of the Iranian government marched in mass rallies, a reference to a show of force in the face of anti-demonstrations.
    What does America say about the protests?
    "The world is looking at its response," President Donald Trump said in a tweet on Twitter. "Repressive regimes can not last forever. The day will come when the Iranian people face their choices.
    US Secretary of State Rex Tilerson reiterated his support for what he called "elements within Iran seeking a peaceful transition of power."
    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs also condemned the arrest of a number of Iranian demonstrators, calling on the world countries to support the Iranian people to achieve their basic rights and eliminate what it called "corruption" in the country.
    US State Department spokesman Heather Neuert described Iran as a "rogue state economically depleted, whose main exports are violence, bloodshed and chaos."
    Why do demonstrations attract wide international attention?
    Photo and media reports show protests in some Iranian cities continue to widen after the third day of the protests. Despite warnings from the authorities, thousands of Iranians continue to participate in the protests.
    The spread of protests in more than 40 cities, including the capital Tehran, confirms the size and breadth of demonstrations.
    It was Iran's biggest protest since protests demanding reforms in 2009, when protesters rallied in support of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in response to a protest by reformists over disputed election results that brought him back to power.





    http://www.shafaaq.com/ar/Ar_NewsReader/35f96a24-0dd7-480d-9f90-4e5cd1c1a8c0

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