For the last two years, Oscar nominated filmmaker James Longley (IRAQ IN FRAGMENTS) has been at work (and basically living) in Iran, as he worked on his new documentary film.
24 hours ago, we exchanged emails. He'd been posting to the D-Word online community about his experiences in Tehran in the aftermath of the recent contested elections and rare public protests. He gave me permission to reprint his comments here on the blog.
Sunday night, before I'd had an opportunity to post his observances, a mutual friend emailed me his most recent post, a first-person account of the detention and beating of Longley's translator.
Here, in order, are Longley's posts over the last 3 days. They show the situation in Iran escalating by the hour.:
Right now the incumbent camp
is declaring itself the big winner. In fact, they are declaring at
Ahmadinejad has won an unprecedented landslide.
From what I've seen, the opposite was more likely the case.
At the moment, off-hand, I would expect some rather upset people in Iran when they wake up on Saturday.
_______________________________
(Responding to a suggestion that revolution my be at hand and rumors that opposition candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi has been arrested.)
Well, revolution I don't know. It's kind of an unpopular idea here
still, after the last one. I do think there's bound to be some
significant social unrest, however.
Your rumor would jive with the fact that there has been no word from the Mousavi campaign all day.
All gatherings on the street have been banned and those violating the ban are arrested.
It is not possible to approach within several hundred meters the building where votes are being counted.
SMS is still not working – hasn't been working since yesterday
morning. Mousavi had complained specifically about this at his press
conference last night (around 10:45 pm local time) because his election
monitors were to have communicated any irregularities via SMS.
All the Farsi language independent news sources that my translator usually uses to read up on the elections are now blocked.
Tehran's chief of police has reportedly said he hasn't heard
anything about the incident yesterday evening at Mousavi's campaign
headquarters where armed men burst into the offices and threatened the
mostly youthful staff – which is odd since hundreds of riot police were
on hand in the scene that followed, as well as the deputy chief of
police.
_______________________________
12:12 pm
The rumor about Mousavi being arrested is only that – a rumor. Nothing of the kind happened.
Right now the official election results have still not been
announced, so it may be that the Mousavi campaign is wrangling in the
background and doesn't want to make any public statements yet.
At the moment, the city seems quiet but tense.
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