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30 Iranian Mothers Arrested at Peaceful Gathering, Group Says
Thirty members of a women's group were arrested by Iranian security forces during a peaceful protest in a Tehran park on Saturday, a human rights organization reported.
Iranian opposition supporters, pictured at Tehran University's campus on December 13, 2009. The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, citing an eyewitness account, said more than 100 police and plainclothes officers broke up a gathering of the Mourning Mothers in Laleh Park Saturday afternoon. The group -- formed by women whose children have been killed in recent anti-government protests -- gathers every weekend at the park to call attention to the deaths.
"They would not allow anyone to even sit on the benches or congregate," the organization quoted the unidentified witness as saying. "After about 70 mothers entered the park, security forces engaged them and started chasing them, grabbing them, and forcing them into police vans. They used a lot of violence and insults in the process."
The witness said families and other members of the group later went to the Vozara Detention Center where officials provided the names of 30 members detained.
Hadi Ghaemi, a spokesman for the human rights campaign, told CNN that the members were being held overnight.
"Their families and colleagues are waiting for morning to arrive in Tehran to ask for their release," Ghaemi said.
With tight restrictions on international media, CNN could not independently verify the report. The group's Web site had no details about the reported arrests.
"No culture permits such violence to be unleashed against mothers," Ghaemi said in a news release posted on the campaign's Web site. "How can this government, which claims to have moral and religious authority, treat mothers who have lost their children in such a way? The Iranian officials should know that the activities of Mourning Mothers will not stop until their legitimate grievances are properly addressed."
Mourning Mothers was formed after the violent crackdown on anti-government demonstrators following the disputed June 12 presidential vote, which re-elected hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over main opposition candidate Mir Hossein Moussavi.
Since then, opposition activists and mothers whose children have disappeared or have been executed or detained, have also joined the group. Among its members is the mother of 26-year-old Neda Agha-Soltan, whose chilling death in post-election protests was caught on video and became a powerful symbol for the opposition.
The mothers are demanding government accountability for the deaths, disappearances and detentions of their children.



4 Comments so far
Show AllIran is a brutal, theocratic police state. The simple and unbiased question in my mind is, why are so many nations dominated by Islam also theocratic police states, theocratic even though some of their leaders rule in secular guises?
richsmith2-- They went 'theocratic' after all Non-Religious and Democratic reforms were crushed in their countries through the 'aid' of the US. That's not counting the Democratic governments we destroyed simply because they refused to kneel before our throne.
I agree with luckylefty.
We have systematically crushed modern secular democratically elected governments in Iran and elsewhere whenever they exhibited a desire to control their own national resources, namely oil in this case. (1953 - overthrow of Mossadegh, subsequent military support of the totally undemocratic Shah.) The Shah lived in luxury, was extremely brutal, and left much of the country in ignorance and poverty.
The only viable opposition to the hated regime of the Shah came from organized religion. The Islamic clergy had the grassroots support and respect of the majority of the population.
The US set this in motion and now we have lost the standing to criticize. If the Iranian people want to move away from a theocratic state, it is their struggle. I wish them great success, especially if their program includes the needs of the poor. However, the United States' participation would be like a rapist working at a rape crisis center.
I recommend Stephen Kinzer's book "All the Shah's Men" to understand the background.
Joe
And why is our government so
"... brutal, theocratic police state. The simple and unbiased question in my mind is, why are so many nations dominated by CHRISTIANITY also PLUTOcratic police states...
perhaps it is because we have gone lazy, as a society, playing with credit card toys, jamming up credit for fun, and have remained insensitive or looked the other way while US corporations commit crimes against humanity.
We forget that something just as bad is bound to bounce back as a boomerang because others are just human and do NOT deserve to live afraid of any more US invasions.
I invite you to watch Beyond Elections for a notion of participatory democracy pls watch:
http://www.beyondelections.com/