Iran launches new webmail service

The Iranian authorities have launched a new webmail service intended to be a substitute for public employees currently using Gmail, Yahoo mail or Hotmail accounts. The new Iran.ir webmail service is easier to control than the foreign services currently used by 95% of Iranian public sector employees. Internet and text-messaging services in Iran has recently been the victim of the government’s crackdown on free speech in the country. Both services will experience disruptions this week as heavy protests are anticipated on the anniversary of the Islamic revolution on 11 February. The authorities claim the disruptions are due to damages to the fibre-optic cables and ‘changing software’.

Iran executes two opposition supporters

Two men accused of plotting to overthrow the regime were hanged in Tehran yesterday. Reza Ali Zamani and Arash Rahmanipour, 19, were convicted of being ‘enemies of God’.

The pair were the first to be put to death after more than 100 dissidents were put on trial following protests disputing President Ahmadinejad’s re-election. They were among 11 people sentenced to death for their alleged involvement in the post-election violence.

The executions have increased fears for bloggers Mehrdad Rahimi and  Kouhyar Goudarzi, convicted of wanting to wage ‘a war against God’. The men were contributors to an opposition website.

Iran threatens opposition on cell phone, e-mail use

Iran’s police chief today warned the opposition movement that their emails and text messages are being monitored and that those who use SMS, emails or other web tools to organise protests will be severely punished.

General Ismail Ahmadi-Moghaddam said the police would show no mercy. He was quoted by the state-run Iranian Students News Agency as saying “Attending illegal gatherings, rioting and insulting the sacred are reason for police reaction,” but “those who organize the gathering commit a bigger crime.”

Ahmadi-Moghaddam also warned the opposition supporters using proxy servers to disguise their location that it was mistake to believe proxies could prevent the government from identifying them.

Montazeri and the struggle for free expression in Iran

As an embattled government clashed with a revitalised opposition in the cities of Qom and Isfahan, the funeral celebrations for Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri were in many ways overshadowed by the much wider struggle between forces loyal to Supreme Leader Ali Khamanei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and those of the increasingly bold and vociferous “Green Movement”.

Montazeri, a leading light of the 1979 Islamic Revolution and one-time successor-designate to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was – largely due to his religious rank rather than political clout – one of the most prominent and consistent critics of Khamanei and Ahmadinejad. Living under house arrest since 1997, his parting shot at the current government was a fatwa issued against President Ahmadinejad following his return to power earlier this year.

An initial mass gathering in the holy city of Qom – where supporters of the late Ayatollah repeatedly inveighed against the government – was replicated in the cities of Isfahan and Najafabad. The website Rahesabz reported clashes between security forces and protesters, with police using tear gas and batons and making a number of arrests. “Security forces are beating people, including women and children, with chains and stones,” it added.

Press freedom in Iran had been under threat since the first demonstrations to mark National Student Day on 7 December, with prominent reformist (and even some conservative) websites and newspapers facing closure, censorship and intimidation. The death of Montazeri, however, has encouraged the latest government assault on the press. On the day of his death, the Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance issued a statement banning newspapers from running stories about Montazeri and on the next day, the Commission for Press Authorisation and Surveillance shut down the reformist newspaper Andisheh-ye-No or “New Thought”.

Montazeri’s own website remains blocked and one of its editors, Mojtaba Lotfi, is currently serving a four-year jail sentence for “disseminating anti-government propaganda and Montazeri’s views”. An exclusive interview the Ayatollah gave to the BBC shortly before his death was also prevented from going on air. Websites including Rahesabz have also carried reports of government-affiliated Basij militia targeting the offices of Ayatollahs Jalaluddin Taheri and Yusuf Sanei. The offices of Sanei were reportedly ransacked, their windows smashed and his staff beaten up. Against such increasingly desperate and vindictive measures the opposition has stood firm.

Montazeri’s religious standing gave a unique weight to his criticism of the government, evidenced by the vehemence with which he was pursued by them. Many have argued that his death leaves a void within the opposition and has removed one of the government’s most powerful enemies, further empowering Khamanei and Ahmadinejad. At the same time, the opposition has consistently shown its ability to mobilise en masse independent of their ostensible political leaders – and as illustrated by the mass gatherings at his funeral and elsewhere, Montazeri has left both a legacy and a message around which many of the opposition can rally. Recent images and reports from Qom, Isfahan and elsewhere certainly don’t suggest an opposition scattered and demoralised as the government might hope.