Iran’s Silencing of Citizens Abroad

Morgan Lorraine Roach /

Supporters of the Iranian opposition demonstrate in Paris.

Considering the atrocious abuses of human rights committed by the Iranian government against those who speak out against its tyranny, it comes as no surprise that Iran, according to a Wall Street Journal investigative report, “has been conducting a campaign of harassing and intimidating members of its diaspora world-wide.” Farnaz Fassihi reports that Iranians living abroad, have received ominous emails from Iranian security forces, warning that their families will be in danger, if their actions against the regime persist. Many Iranian citizens have been detained at airports and interrogated as to their online social networking activity.

As the protests against the Islamic Republic have grown fiercer, sustaining more injuries and fatalities that those during the election, the government issued a crackdown on all its citizens, at home and abroad who seek to resist the regime’s authority. Tehran has caught on to the dangers that new media poses towards its power and seeks to keep its citizens passive. As a result, Iran instituted a number of “senior Internet lieutenants” trained to quiet the regime’s “virtual enemies online.” Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps and intelligence ministry even have a monitoring units used for tracking prominent political figures and activists. Automated voice recording, warning people making international phone calls, not to disseminate information were also used. Despite sloth-like internet speeds and frequently blocked access to Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, Iranians persist. Those in-country turn to other means, such as cell phones to organize. Outside the country, threatened activists turn to other pacific means of resistance such as fundraising as was done under the 1979 Islamic Revolution. However, despite the threats, arrests, beatings, and countless other abuses, Iran’s revolutionaries refuse to stand down. (more…)