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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

'Axis of evil' hits Iran

Bush's State of the Union Address on Jan. 29, in which he called Iraq, Iran and North Korea members of an "axis of evil" has had important reverberations in Iran. On Feb. 11, a state-sponsored demonstration marking the anniversary of the 1979 Iranian Revolution was attended by huge crowds chanting "death to America" and was addressed by President Khatami.

While some analysts have argued that Bush's speech made a distinction between the repressive government and the Iranian people’s "hope for freedom," most analysts have attacked Bush for alienating Iran's reformists. Bush's "axis of evil" designation has been a gift to the hardliners and is helping them to cover over the internal battles.

Following the September 11 terrorist attacks, many Iranians did solidarize with the people of the U.S. Many also celebrated the defeat of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Recent signs of continuing protest in Iran include the following:

- A student protest during a speech by Khatami at Tehran University in December. Students shouted: "Either strength or resignation," "Political prisoners must be released," "Do not chant slogans, take action."

- Demonstrations and strikes for better working conditions and a living wage by school teachers in Tehran, Shiraz and Isfahan. Teachers' strikes in Iran have been historically important as bellwethers of larger upheavals.

- A January walk-out by 240 of the 290 members of the Iranian parliament to protest the imprisonment of a deputy from the western city of Hamadan. He was subsequently released but the anti-reformist Iranian courts have also sentenced a woman member of parliament, Fatemeh Haqiquatju, to 17 months in prison for criticizing the government.

- The abduction, disappearance, and later arrest of an important journalist, Siamak Purzand, by the government. Purzand is married to Mehrangiz Kar, an Iranian feminist legal scholar whose critical writings have challenged clerical orthodoxy.

- A summons from the government has been sent to a number of prominent journalists and intellectuals who are to be questioned for their writings and activities.

—Sheila Fuller

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