Iran's clerical leaders to grapple with deepening dissent in 2023
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[December 22, 2022]
By Parisa Hafezi
DUBAI (Reuters) - Nationwide protests sparked by the death in custody of
Iranian Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini have ushered Iran into a new era of
deepening crisis between the clerical leadership and society at large.
Amini's family said she was beaten after being arrested by the morality
police on Sept. 13 for violating the Islamic Republic's imposed dress
code. Amini died three days later. Authorities have blamed the
22-year-old's death on preexisting medical problems.
Her death unleashed years of pent up grievances in Iranian society, over
issues ranging from tightening social and political controls to economic
misery and discrimination against ethnic minorities.
Facing their worst legitimacy crisis since the 1979 Islamic Revolution,
Iran's religious leaders have tried to portray the unrest as breakaway
uprisings by ethnic minorities threatening national unity rather than
its clerical rule.
Those efforts by authorities have been undermined by solidarity between
Iran's different ethnic groups during the protests, according to
activists and rights groups, with protesters chanting slogans in support
of minorities.
Protesters from all walks of life have taken to the streets, calling for
the downfall of the Islamic Republic. Women have torn off and burned the
compulsory headscarves in fury.
Iran's rulers have accused a coalition of “anarchists, terrorists and
foreign foes" of orchestrating the protests in which the activist HRANA
news agency said 506 protesters had been killed as of Dec. 21, including
69 minors.
HRANA said 66 members of the security forces had also been killed. Two
protesters have been executed, drawing strong Western condemnation, and
thousands have been arrested.
WHY IT MATTERS
The turmoil, with women and youth in the forefront, poses a grave threat
to the priority that has defined Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's
rule since 1989 - the survival of the Islamic Republic and its religious
establishment, at any cost.
However, the persistent unrest does not mean the four-decade-old Islamic
Republic will disappear any time soon given the power wielded by its
security apparatus. The protest movement is leaderless, a challenge to
forcing a new political order.
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People take part in a protest against
the Islamic regime of Iran following the death of Mahsa Amini, in
Istanbul, Turkey December 10, 2022. REUTERS/Dilara Senkaya/File
Photo
But the unrest has shown the establishment's vulnerability to
popular anger, raising concerns among top leaders that a misstep
could mean more trouble ahead, even if current protests subside.
There is no guarantee greater force will end the unrest, as so far
the violent crackdown has only stoked more protests.
The clampdown on the protests and Iran's suspected transfer of
drones and missiles to Russia to help Moscow in its war in Ukraine
have made Western leaders reluctant to push for the revival of a
2015 nuclear pact that would provide Tehran billions of dollars
worth of extra resources.
Alarmed by popular discontent, the clerical leaders fear economic
misery could alienate core supporters among middle and lower-income
Iranians should the nuclear deal remain on ice.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR 2023?
The Islamic Republic will be engulfed by what analysts call a
"revolutionary process" that will likely fuel more protests into
2023, with neither side backing down.
With Khamenei, 83, believing compromise on the republic's
ideological pillars such as hijab would bring its collapse, the
establishment will double down on repression, resulting in more
anger among the 85 million population, 70% of whom are under 30.
The question of who will eventually succeed him as supreme leader, a
role with vast power, may intensify jockeying among the elite,
potentially widening rifts in the establishment.
Four years of sanctions have not stopped Iran's expansion of its
nuclear programme or curtailed its support for proxies abroad. But
its domestic crisis will likely give Western powers more scope to
increase pressure on Tehran.
Explore the Reuters round-up of news stories that dominated the
year, and the outlook for 2023.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by Tom Perry, William Maclean,
Peter Graff)
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