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	<title>khuzestan &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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	<title>khuzestan &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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		<title>IRAN: Khamenei fears the widespread ‎uprising of the people of Isfahan</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2021/11/iran-khamenei-fears-the-widespread-%e2%80%8euprising-of-the-people-of-isfahan.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Millichronicle]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Nov 2021 18:04:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[isfahan]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=23552</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[by Cyrus Yaqubi The reality is that the Iranian society is like a barrel of gunpowder ‎that can explode at]]></description>
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<p class="has-small-font-size"><strong>by Cyrus Yaqubi</strong></p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote"><p><meta charset="utf-8">The reality is that the Iranian society is like a barrel of gunpowder ‎that can explode at any moment with any rally</p></blockquote>



<p>The City of Isfahan, the capital of the Isfahan Province, is located in ‎the center of Iran. In addition to its historical aspect, it houses ‎several ancient monuments which are considered one of Iran&#8217;s most ‎important tourist attractions. The City of Isfahan is also one of the ‎most important industrial and agricultural centers of Iran.  ‎</p>



<p>Zayandehrood River, which passes through the center of this province, has been one of the manifestations of this city for centuries. ‎Two historical and ancient bridges, &#8220;Si O Se Pol Bridge&#8221; (meaning 33 ‎bridge) and &#8220;Khaju Bridge&#8221;, were built in the 16th century.  ‎</p>



<p>Before the start of the rule of the mullahs in Iran in 1979, the ‎Zayandehrood River was one of the most water-rich rivers in Iran ‎and water flowed in it in all seasons of the year, and at the end, water ‎poured into a wetland called Gavkhoni Wetland, which was the ‎habitat of migratory birds. Farmers in the province also used the ‎water from the river to irrigate their fields. Due to the fertile soil ‎around this river, excellent quality types of vegetables, grains, and ‎fruits were produced in this province.  ‎</p>



<p>However, the regime&#8217;s mismanaged policies and destructive projects, including the building of dams without regard to the province&#8217;s ecosystem, have resulted in severe ecological problems. This ‎essential river has faced water shortages and droughts for years ‎because of the regime&#8217;s lack of appropriate environmental policies ‎and colossal corruption.  ‎</p>



<p>The river&#8217;s dryness has directly affected the livelihoods of hundreds ‎of thousands of farmers in the province and adversely affected the ‎environment. Government affiliated plants such as Mobarakeh Steel ‎Company or several ceramics factories, etc., have been using the ‎Zayandehrood River water excessively and irrationally, causing the ‎gradual dryness of this important and vital water source for the ‎ordinary people and farmers.  ‎</p>



<p>Additionally, the government has installed several large pipelines to transfer a significant amount of the Zayandehrood River to Yazd ‎which is located in the neighborhood of Isfahan. As a result, the ‎Zayandehrood River and Gavkhoni Wetland dried up, and the farmers&#8217; livelihood depended on the water of this river were severely affected and destroyed.</p>



<p>Furthermore, the regime had dug a large number of deep wells, withdrawing water from underground reserves, affecting the ecology of the area, causing extensive land subsidence in this province, especially in the city of Isfahan. The situation is so fragile, critical, and unfortunate that even the ancient monuments of this city are ‎exposed to destruction. Large cracks and signs of deterioration have appeared in many of these historical monuments.  ‎</p>



<p>Farmers in Isfahan, who have worked hard their entire life and have ‎experienced a demise in their livelihood due to the lack of water, ‎skyrocketing prices of commodities, etc., rallied to demand the ‎opening of the Zayandehrood Dam and the flow of water in the ‎riverbed so that they can irrigate their fields again.  ‎</p>



<p>In the last days of his presidency, Hassan Rouhani&#8217;s government ‎tried to convince the farmers to end their protests and, as usual, ‎offered some hollow promises of compensation and on July 11, the ‎government opened the dam gates, let the water be released to the ‎riverbed for two weeks. However, after two weeks, the water was shut off and redirected to supply the government-affiliated factories&#8217; water needs. As usual, the demands and welfare of the farmers and ‎ordinary people were ignored by the government&#8217;s officials, and the ‎plight of the people of Isfahan met deaf ears of the government ‎officials.</p>



<p>On Friday, the 12th day of a sit-in by impoverished farmers in ‎Isfahan, tens of thousands of people demonstrated in support of the ‎farmers&#8217; protest against water shortages and the clerical regime&#8217;s ‎plundering policies that have led to the drying up of the ‎Zayandehrood River and the destruction of agriculture and livestock.</p>



<p>‎The massive protest spanned a large area of the Zayandehrood ‎Riverbed.   ‎</p>



<p>On Friday, November 19, more than 150,000 people in Isfahan ‎joined the rally in support of farmers. They protested, chanting ‎slogans accusing incompetent officials of causing the Zayandehrood ‎River to dry up and demanding water flow into the Zayandehrood ‎River.  ‎</p>



<p>Khamenei and his appointed president, Ebrahim Raisi, who see any ‎kind of gathering or rally, a threat to their regime&#8217;s existence, tried to ‎convince the people to end their protests and repeatedly offered ‎hollow promises and prompt actions. &#8220;I have ordered the ministers of energy and agriculture to take immediate steps to deal with the ‎issue&#8221;, Iran&#8217;s First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber said on ‎television, hoping to bring the situation to a state of calm.  ‎</p>



<p>After experiencing such meaningless promises from all sorts of ‎government officials, the people were not going to be fooled again ‎this time and chanted: &#8220;We will not return home until water flows ‎back into the river,&#8221; &#8220;Where is my Zayandehroodud River,&#8221; ‎‎&#8221;Zayandehrood River is our inalienable right,&#8221; and &#8220;Isfahani shout, ‎demand your rights.&#8221; If they could find a solution, they would do so ‎much sooner.</p>



<p>The Iranian regime&#8217;s suppressive forces and secret services, who are ‎worried about the presence of supporters and members of the ‎resistance affiliated with the Mojahedin Khalq Organization, tried to ‎send a number of their agents into the crowd and chanted slogans in ‎support of Khamenei and against the Mojahedin. But they faced the ‎raging reaction of the people and continued their slogans pointed at ‎the regime, its officials, and destructive policies.<br>‎<br>The reality is that the Iranian society is like a barrel of gunpowder ‎that can explode at any moment with any rally, gathering, anti-‎government action, etc., due to the incompetence and widespread ‎corruption in the ruling system that has caused the majority of ‎people to fall below the poverty line and inflation to reach the ‎highest level in Iranian history. </p>



<p>A few months ago, the same situation ‎occurred in Khuzestan province when the water of Karoon River and ‎Hur-Al-Azim Wetland, which are the main source of work for the ‎cattle breeders and farmers of this province, dried up due to ‎irrational and illogical construction of facilities and manufacturing ‎plants belonging to the Revolutionary Guards that led to widespread ‎protests in the province. </p>



<p>The protests rapidly spread to other provinces, and even the people of Tabriz in the northern part of Iran ‎staged several demonstrations in support of the people of Khuzestan. Eventually, the regime was able to temporarily quell the protests by ‎sending its suppressive forces to the area, killing several innocent ‎protestors, arresting hundreds of people, and injuring many. Fearful ‎of the spread of social unrest. Eventually, the regime was forced to ‎listen to the demands of the protestors by partially opening the dam ‎and letting the water be released into the Karoon River. </p>



<p>Now, the same issue has arisen again in Isfahan province, which, if it continues, will definitely spread to other parts of Iran. Because all ‎the people of Iran are dissatisfied with the current situation and ‎want a fundamental change in government, this is an undeniable ‎reality that Khamenei is well aware of, and so far has only been able ‎to prevent the uprising of the people through crackdown, fake ‎promises, repression, and killing. </p>



<p>Employing such a tactic cannot last ‎for long, a mere fact that many experts in Iran and beyond agree on. ‎Ahmadinejad, the former president of the Iranian regime, had recently said ‎that a destructive storm is brewing that would take everyone in the ‎regime with it.  ‎  </p>



<p><em>Cyrus Yaqubi is a Research Analyst and Iranian Foreign Affairs Commentator investigating the social issues and economy of the Middle East countries in general and&nbsp;Iran in particular.</em></p>
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		<title>Gas explosion flattens building in Iran, at least five people killed: State media</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2020/10/gas-explosion-flattens-building-in-iran-at-least-five-people-killed-state-media.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Millichronicle]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Oct 2020 16:49:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Middle East and North Africa]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[ahvaz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ahwaz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[explosion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[khuzestan]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=14673</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Tehran (Reuters) &#8211; A suspected gas explosion flattened a building and shops in a marketplace in southwest Iran on Sunday,]]></description>
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<p><strong>Tehran (Reuters) &#8211; </strong>A suspected gas explosion flattened a building and shops in a marketplace in southwest Iran on Sunday, killing at least five people, a fire official said, in the latest in a series of fires and blasts, some of which have hit sensitive sites.</p>



<p>State television showed rescue teams looking for survivors in the rubble of the two-story residential building located near a historic marketplace in the old district of the city of Ahvaz, capital of oil-rich Khuzestan province.<br><br>“The gas explosion led to the complete destruction of a two-story residential building&#8230; and four nearby residential buildings and six shops,” Ebrahim Qanbari, head of the fire department in Ahvaz, was quoted as saying by the semi-official Mehr news agency.<br><br>Four men and one woman were killed, and nine people were injured, Qanbari said.<br><br>Some of the explosions in the past few months appeared to be linked to Iran&#8217;s deteriorating infrastructure, while others may have been security-related such as blasts at sensitive military and nuclear sites.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Iran&#8217;s occupation of &#8220;Arabistan&#8221;—an Oil-rich region and the Ethnic land of Arabs</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2019/08/irans-occupation-of-arabistan-an-oil-rich-region.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Millichronicle]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Aug 2019 20:21:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[arabistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[khazal bin jair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[khuzestan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=4219</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[by Abdullah al-Khazaal Persians used the term “Arabistan” to refer to what is now southwestern Iran simply because they recognized]]></description>
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<p class="has-small-font-size"><strong>by Abdullah al-Khazaal</strong></p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote"><p>Persians used the term “Arabistan” to refer to what is now southwestern Iran simply because they recognized that it was ethnically and linguistically distinct.</p></blockquote>



<p>Iran’s meddling across the Middle East is increasing. Iranian Revolutionary Guardsmen seize ships, Iranian proxies fire missiles into neighboring countries, and the Islamic Republic continues to seek a land bridge to the Mediterranean. Enabling Tehran’s malign outreach is its oil wealth. Iran possesses the fourth largest known oil reserves in the world. </p>



<p>Eighty percent of Iran’s oil is found in Khuzestan, the southwestern province at the head of the Gulf. A century ago, the region—once known as Arabistan, or “land of the Arabs”—was practically independent under Sheikh Khaz’al bin Jabir. In 1925, however, the same year the shah changed Persia’s name to Iran, the shah kidnapped him and held him under house arrest in Tehran while Iranian troops moved into Khorramshahr (then known as Mohammerah). Occupation followed. Khaz’al never returned. In 1936, assassins murdered him in his sleep.</p>



<p>Across administrations and both before and after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, successive U.S. administrations recognized Iranian unity and effectively blessed Iranian conquest of the Arab emirate. Had U.S. policy instead recognized that Arabistan has its own history and people distinct from Iran, then it is unlikely that the Islamic Republic of Iran could sponsor the terrorism in which it now engages.</p>



<p>For centuries, Persians used the term “Arabistan” to refer to what is now southwestern Iran simply because they recognized that it was ethnically and linguistically distinct. With many of Persia’s largest cities in the interior of the Persian plateau, Arabistan was also secluded, separated from the rest of Iran by the Zagros Mountains. Arabistan’s tribal governance was traditionally distinct from Iran’s monarchy and bureaucracy. The leaders of Arabistan were fine with their loose arrangement with Tehran, believing the protection of the Persian shahs to be preferable to subjugation, harassment and economic exploitation by Ottoman Turks. Indeed, Iranian shahs took little interest in Arabistan until the discovery of oil there in the first decade of the twentieth century.</p>



<p>Iranian leaders often claim to defend victims of oppression and discrimination across the region, whether they be Shia communities in other countries or the Palestinians in conflict with Israel. </p>



<p>Despite their lofty rhetoric, they have failed to address their own oppression and discrimination against the Arabs whose oil-rich land they have exploited for decades. </p>



<p>The discrimination is vast: Ethnic Arabs in Arabistan are not allowed to name their children Arabic names unless they were also the names of major Shia figures. Amnesty International has chronicled the disappearances and executions of ethnic Arabs across the province, as authorities in Tehran seek to complete their slow-motion ethnic cleansing.</p>



<p>Both the United States and its regional partners appear perplexed at how to respond to increasing Iranian aggression. They have tried all the usual diplomatic and economic mechanisms of statecraft, but most do not want war with Iran. Still, despite the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure campaign,” Iranian officials siphon off enough oil to fund and to continue their support for insurgencies and terrorism campaigns. Perhaps, then, the time is now to deny Iran the resources it wastes, restore regional stability, and right a historic wrong by setting Arabistan free.</p>



<p><em>Article first published on <a href="https://nationalinterest.org/blog/middle-east-watch/constraining-iran-requires-ending-its-colonization-arabistan-74151">National Interest</a>.</em></p>



<p><em>Sheikh Abdullah Al Khazaal is the grandson of Sheikh Khaz’al and a graduate of New York University Abu Dhabi.</em></p>
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