Iranian insider analysis is tending toward the view that the protests have grown into a full-blown revolution.
“A wave of resignations has started among presenters and hosts at Iran’s state broadcaster in solidarity with the ongoing protests across the country.” State media is recognized as propagandist extensions of fascist regimes. This wave represents a critical turn. Other important updates: Protesters have set fire to the ancestral home (now a museum) of the Islamic Republic’s founder, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. And a senior intelligence officer in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps was stabbed to death by protesters. Now some Iranians have even stated that they’re unsure whether they can support their country at the World Cup.
Also, with Iran facing the shame of being unable to contain the protests, it is accusing “Israel and Western intelligence services of plotting to start a civil war in the Islamic Republic.”
Iran’s back is against the wall.
“TV Presenters Resigning In Support Of Iran Protests,” Iran International, November 20, 2022:
A wave of resignations has started among presenters and hosts at Iran’s state broadcaster in solidarity with the ongoing protests across the country.
At least three presenters have resigned in the past few days. Farhad Fakhrbakhsh, who hosted a show about programs of the Islamic Republic’s broadcaster for over four years, announced his resignation on Saturday.
In a video message published on Instagram, he said entertainment activities need peace of mind that no Iranian has at the moment, adding that “the people of Iran are not in a good mood these days.”
Kimia Gilani is another host that resigned after bursting into tears on live television when she was talking about Kian Pirfalak, the 10-year-old boy who was killed by security forces who fired at his family car in the city of Izeh in Khuzestan province this week.
Davoud Abedi, a sport reporter who resigned in recent days, is well-known for his energetic presentations. In a message, he said that these days that people are dying on streets and he cannot fake a happy or energetic tone.
Barbod Babai, Mojtaba Pourbakhsh, Peyman Sheikhi, Majid Ghazanfari are among other presenters that have left the state TV since mid-September in support of the protests.
TV football (soccer) commentator and producer Adel Ferdosipour — one of the most popular public figures in Iran — rejected the offer by the state broadcaster to do the commentaries on FIFA World Cup 2022, in support of “bereaved Iranians.” He was banned and dismissed by the IRIB in 2019 reportedly over pressure by the Revolutionary Guards, but was asked to come back for the World Cup.
Iran’s state broadcaster was not very popular even before the current wave of protests began, but its popularity has declined dramatically in the past two months because it serves as the main mouthpiece of government propaganda that dismisses the protesters as “rioters.”
In October, ‘reformist’ commentator Abbas Abdi said what the state-run television broadcasts is “sheer propaganda.” Ironically, when hackers interrupted the state TV news program October 8, playing a short clip, most Iranians found out about it through social media or on foreign-based satellite TV because few were watching the state TV….
Walter Sieruk says
Those protest engaged in by the people of Iran are right and righteous. For the tyrannical Islamic regime is cruelly oppressive in many very brutal hostile and murderous ways.
The Iranian people do have every right to rise up and overthrow that horrendous Islamic tyranny which terribly abuses them and denies then their basic human rights and reasonable personal freedoms and establish a real genuine government.
This is their nature right by, common sense and even explained that very intelligent men, who many Iranians in their quest for freedom might not even know about, as the British philosopher, John Locke.
PMK says
The people have every right to protest, but the regime has a few things on its side.
The regime is getting help from China, which has installed millions of cameras that employ facial recognition technology in 20 Iranian cities. Combined with the identity cards that Iranians must carry, the regime is better able to identify protest leaders and arrest them at home after the protesters have dispersed.
Then there’s the calendar. Winter is coming on. Will protests continue in snow and freezing temperatures? Maybe we’ll have to wait for a Tehran spring.
࿗Infidel࿘ says
About the Iranians who said that they were unsure about supporting their soccer team in Qatar, their team expressed solidarity w/ them and lost their first game to England 2:6. So looks like they can support their soccer team