 
 
Though Tehran has largely shut down communication outlets, protesters are getting out snippets of text and stealthily uploaded photos in a guerrilla-style Internet revolt.
Reporting  from Cairo -- Footage of burning cars, masked  boys and bloodied protesters in Iran  is playing across the Middle East, captivating  Arab countries where repressive regimes have for years been arresting political  bloggers and cyberspace dissidents.
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and other Sunni nations have tense relations with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Shiite-led theocracy ruling Iran. But they don't want protests in Tehran to inspire similar democratic fervor in their countries -- especially the merging of Facebook and Twitter with a potent opposition leader like Iran's presidential challenger, Mir-Hossein Mousavi.
So far,  that has yet to happen. Egyptian activists, for example, have called for  rallies and strikes on Internet social networks over the last year, but they  have no galvanizing personality and are too disorganized to pose a threat to  the police state controlled by President Hosni Mubarak.
 
"I don't think similar events could even take place in Egypt or other Arab countries," said  Ibrahim Issa, editor of the Cairo  independent newspaper Al Dustour, who has been arrested a number of times for  criticizing the Mubarak government. "We hope and we always keep faith that  what's happening in Iran  could push Arabs to try and do the same against their oppressive regimes. But  reality tells us that this is not applicable. We are comparing 30 years of what  I can call Iranian democracy to 30 years of Egyptian tyranny."
 
The Middle East is witnessing Iran slip into a guerrilla-style Internet and Twitter game of strategies and slogans pecked out by protesters attempting to outflank a government that has largely shut down communication outlets, leaving the nation breathless on snippets of text and stealthily uploaded pictures.
It is a  battle on the streets and across the airways, a realm where technology is both  churning out and smothering polarizing messages and images. Iranian authorities  have blocked opposition websites, jammed satellite TV channels and cut off text  messaging. But still, word is trickling beyond the censors, linking, however  sparsely, protesters from Tehran  to those elsewhere in the country.
 
Tweets by StopAhmadi are both philosophical and terse: "In a time of  universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act. Over n'  out." "Girl shot in Tehran."  Persiankiwi's tweets list updates of police movements and arrests: "Our  street is quiet now -- we cannot move tonight but must move asap when dawn  starts."
 Iran is offering an intriguing glimpse into how years of disillusionment can  suddenly leap from cafes and university campuses to a national revolt, where  dueling political voices and agendas square off with banners, rhetoric and  allegations of election fraud.
 
The Iranian elections have "imposed themselves on everything. The masses  of young men, the noticeable presence of young women -- especially female  university students -- and the slogans of change, the intense competition that  raged," Mohammad Hussein al-Yusifi wrote in the Kuwait daily Awan. "All these  factors left us no possibility but to observe closely what is happening on the  Iranian scene."
 
The characters in that tumult, appearing amid videos of tear gas and  baton-swinging police, have provided alluring narratives: presidential  challenger Mousavi, whose Facebook fan group has about 50,000 members, standing  amid throngs of his supporters; Ahmadinejad proclaiming victory and calling for  calm; and the hovering visage of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Each is  mentioned on Twitter missives bristling with rumors about what might happen  next.
 
But sometimes things go blank. On Tuesday, Persiankiwi's Twitter feed, which  has nearly 19,000 followers, posted this: "I must log off now -- will log  on when I have more info -- need phone line -- no mobile cover, no sms, no  satellite, no radio." Similar difficulties are encountered by international media. Teymoor Nabili, a  reporter for Al Jazeera, wrote on the network's website: "Day-by-day our  ability to access any information has been slowly whittled away. . . . I am no  longer allowed to take a camera out into the streets. I'm not even sure I can  walk out into the streets with a mobile phone without getting into  trouble."
 Activists and bloggers watching developments in Iran  from afar say the protests show the promise and limits of technology in  orchestrating the kind of social unrest seen in Tehran. There is also the sentiment that  Iranian activists rising up against an anti-Western regime enjoy more  international support than their counterparts in Arab countries where  anti-democratic governments are close U.S. allies.
 
"A cyber war and its bloggers [can't] carry out a revolution or overthrow a  certain regime on its own," said Wael Abbas, a blogger and human rights  activist in Egypt.  "Full revolution has to come from the masses in the streets." The huge rallies and placards in Tehran make  Issa, the Cairo  editor, envious: "The current Egyptian system was built on fraud while the  Iranian revolution was built by the people, and that is why they are fighting  for such a system," he said. "The bottom line is that unlike Iran, we are  politically dead."
 Iran's  revolutionary spirit, evident 30 years ago in the Islamic Revolution, has been  unbottled again. And for the Arab world it is a lesson in resistance and a  maturing democracy that may be controlled by clerics but is expressing its will  in the streets and in blips of texts and tweets. 
Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/la-fg-iran-image17-2009jun17,0,5597.story?track=rss
Tags: Iran, Twitter, Iranian elections, Iranian protests, Cairo, Egypt, Facebook, Bloggers, activists, persiankiwi, Tehran, Global Development News, Al Dustour, Mubarak,
 
 

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