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KurdistanObserver.com
US Encouraged By Tehran's Enemy Within
Simon Tisdall
Friday March 31, 2006
The Guardian
Increased repression and unrest affecting Iran's numerous ethnic and religious
minorities are providing new opportunities for the US as it steps up efforts to
destabilise and if possible bring down the hardline Islamic government of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Kurdish sources say persecution of Iran's
estimated six million Kurds, who mostly live in western provinces bordering
Turkey and Iraq, has intensified since Mr Ahmadinejad came to power. Weeks of
turmoil followed his election last July - and is continuing. Ten Iranian
Revolutionary Guards were killed in the latest clashes this week in Salmas and
Kelares, according to Iranian and Kurdish reports.
Although groups such as the Kurdistan People's
Democratic party have renounced violence, the Kurdistan Free Life party,
affiliated to the Turkish separatist PKK, has carried on the fight. More than
120 members of the security forces are said to have died in the past year.
"The Kurdish population has long been viewed
with suspicion by the Iranian authorities and has experienced decades of
official neglect," Amnesty International reported in February.
"The months since Ahmadinejad came to power
have seen no improvement. On the contrary, there have been signs ... of a
further harshening of repression.
"Despite constitutional guarantees of equality,
individuals belonging to minorities, believed to number about half Iran's
population, are subject to an array of discriminatory laws and practices,
including restrictions on social, cultural, linguistic and religious freedoms
which often result in human rights violations."
Ibrahim Dogus of Halkevi, a Kurdish and Turkish
community organisation, said Kurdish leaders wanted international support to end
human rights abuses. But any regime change in Tehran should "come from the
bottom" rather than be imposed from outside, he said.
Ethnically Arab Khuzestan province, in
south-west Iran, has witnessed several recent bomb attacks, including a rumoured
attempt to assassinate Mr Ahmadinejad in Ahvaz in January. The attacks have been
attributed to separatists. But Iranian officials blame Britain, whose troops
occupy adjacent areas of south-east Iraq, and its US ally for instigating the
violence.
Coincidentally or not, "British intelligence"
was also officially accused of colluding with "bandits" in Sistan-Baluchestan
this month after 21 government officials were shot dead. Like separatists in
Khuzestan, the south-eastern province's large ethnic Baluchi Sunni population
has long protested about discrimination by the Persian Shia majority.
Iran's leaders also face stirrings of
discontent in the north-east, home to two to three million ethnic Turkmen.
According to Muhammad Tahir of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting,
Turkmen say the Persian language, dress codes and customs are being forced on
them. "Sunni Muslims in a theocratic Shia state, they feel disadvantaged for
both ethnic and religious reasons."
Government fears about the "enemy within" may
have been reflected in a recent move to further pressure Iran's Baha'i
community, which is not allowed to practice its faith and has often been subject
to persecution at times of national strain. The UN condemned the move as
"impermissible and unacceptable interference with the rights of religious
minorities". A renewed crackdown on student groups has also been launched.
External pressure from non-Persian and mostly
non-Shia minorities is being applied via the exiled Congress of Iranian
Nationalities, which issued a manifesto in London last year. The congress
demanded a federal Iran, separation of religion and state, and an end to all
forms of discrimination.
President George Bush's national security
strategy, published this month, again urged Iranians to rise up against their
"oppressors". But whether the US can or should try to exploit Iran's ethnic and
religious fault-lines is a matter of debate in Washington. Officialdom is split
between those who fear triggering an uncontrollable, Iraq-style disintegration;
and those, notably in the Pentagon, who think they see a way of dishing the
mullahs where snail-paced UN diplomacy and high-risk military threats have so
far failed.
Iranian officials say western attempts to
divide the Iranian nation, forged in revolution and a bloody war with Saddam
Hussein, are bound to fail. They are especially scornful of regional Arab and
Iranian diaspora hopes of encouraging change from without. But nerves are
jangling all the same.
Today will see the beginning of Noble Prophet,
a large-scale Iranian military exercise along the length of the Gulf, the area
where any future military attacks might be expected.
Rear-Admiral Morteza Saffari said the wargames
would start with the firing of a Shahab-2 medium-range missile. The launch of
this formidable weapon, he told an Iranian news agency, was intended as "a
message of peace and friendship" to all Iran's neighbours. The admiral's grimly
ambiguous greeting conveyed a blunter warning: Keep Out. |