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Iran’s Religious Minorities Hopeful that Protests May Bring Positive Change

January 3, 2018 | Iran
January 3, 2018
IranMiddle East

ICC Note:

Shortly after Christmas, Iranians gathered to the street to protest economic and social grievances. The harsh Islamic regime has made life hard for every Iranian, especially Christians. Indigenous Christians are recognized as second-class citizens, provided they stay within the strictly defined boundaries established by the regime. Converting to Christianity is considered apostasy, and converts are regularly harassed, detained, imprisoned, and tortured. Some are hopeful that the current protest movement, if it continues to gather momentum, may signal the start of a new day for religious minorities in Iran.  

 

01/03/2018 Iran (Catholic News Agency) –   Ongoing protests in Iran could be a sign of hope for repressed religious minorities, if protesters demand that conscience rights be respected, said an Iranian-born journalist who converted to Catholicism in 2016.

Although most of those protesting in the streets of Iran were born after the 1979 revolution that led to the current Islamist regime, “many of them are chanting nostalgic slogans about the pre-revolutionary era,” noted Sohrab Ahmari.

“At the time Iran was no democracy,” he said, but the pre-revolution regime “was far less repressive and people retained many personal and social liberties, if not political ones.”

Ahmari was born in Tehran. He has lived in the United States for two decades and worked for the Wall Street Journal for several years before becoming a senior writer for Commentary magazine.

Ahmari spoke to CNA on Jan. 2, as Iranians protesting economic and social grievances flooded the streets of the Middle Eastern country.

Since the current round of protests erupted on Dec. 28, at least 21 people have died and 450 been arrested, CNN reports.

The protests are the largest in the country since the 2009 Green Movement, when thousands rallied in opposition to a presidential election they claimed was fraudulent.

The Iranian government has responded to the current demonstrations by sending out riot police and restricting access to internet and social media.

The protests began over economic issues. A year after sanctions against Iran were lifted by the United States, United Nations, and European Union, citizens of the Middle Eastern nation have yet to see the economic recovery that many had expected. Unemployment among the youth is high, and food and gasoline prices have risen significantly.

However, as the protests have grown, so have the grievances, with signs and slogans opposing what many see as a corrupt regime that suppresses the civil rights of its people.

“I don’t think you can separate the economic from the political,” Reza Marashi, research director for the National Iranian American Council, told CNN.

Ahmari agreed that the nation’s unrest shows a deep-seated discontent.

“The Iranians who are pouring into the streets have had it with an ideological regime that represses them and can’t even delivery basic economic security,” he said.

And while life is difficult for every Iranian, the situation for Christians and other religious minorities is particularly perilous, Ahmari told CNA.

“They are systematically discriminated against, are barred from various public offices and military posts, are prohibited by law from proselytizing, and so on.”

[Full Story]

 

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