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24 Jun 2009 01:13 pm
Who The Police Are
Another great find by the Guardian - an interview with one of the riot police. Robert Tait's assessment:
The
man, who has come from a small town in the eastern province of Khorasan
and has never been in Tehran before, says he is being paid 2m rial
(£122) to assault protestors with a heavy wooden stave. He says the
money is the main incentive as it will enable him to get married and
may even enable him to afford more than one wife. Leadership of the
volunteers has been provided by a man known only as "Hajji", who has
instructed his men to "beat the counter-revolutionaries so hard that
they won't be able to stand up".
The volunteers, most of them from
far-flung provinces such as Khuzestan, Arak and Mazandaran, are being
kept in hostel accommodation, reportedly in east Tehran. Other
volunteers, he says, have been brought from Lebanon, where the Iranian
regime has strong allies in the Hezbollah movement. They are said to be
more highly-paid than their Iranian counterparts and are put up in
hotels. The last piece of information seems to confirm the suspicion of
many Iranians that foreign security personnel are being used to
suppress the demonstrators. For all his talk of the legal process, this
interview provides a key insight into where Iran's supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, believes the true source of his legitimacy
rests.
The regime is desperate and only further enraging the people it needs to persuade.
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