Students in Iran have ignored anĀ official warning toĀ stay off the streets despite authorities cracking down in an attempt toĀ quell widespread revolt.
On 29 October, the head of Iranās Revolutionary Guards told protesters that Saturday would be their ālast day ofĀ riotsā. According toĀ news , security forces may beĀ preparing toĀ rampĀ up their response toĀ demonstrators, having already used tear gas and live rounds toĀ disperse crowds.
But the protests ā now in their seventh week after the death of a young woman in custody ā appear to show no signs of letting up, with students raising their voices against the government both and .
āUniversities have been hotbeds of unrest for weeksā¦Iranian students feel they are taking part in a revolution, and this sentiment will not be easily thwarted by security forces,ā said Jason Brodsky, policy director of United against Nuclear Iran, a US-based non-profit organisation.
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In recent days, students at several universities ā including Tehranās prestigious Sharif University of Technology and the , located in a more socially conservative part of Iran ā as they tore down the barriers that segregate cafeterias, dividing men and women.
The studentsā actions show that they are āprepared to engage in civil disobedience because they completely reject the Islamic Republicās gender apartheid stricturesā, said Mr Brodsky.
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Researchers noted that gender segregationĀ was the norm in Iran, affecting everything from eating spaces to lecture halls, sports facilities and even parks.
Afshin Ellian, a Dutch-Iranian professor of law and head of the department of jurisprudence at Leiden University in the Netherlands, said that with universities the ādeĀ factoā site of protests, studentsā actions threaten the regimeās hold on power.
āGender barriers, such as gender segregation, or the mandatory hijab, resemble the Berlin Wall, according to Iranian womenās activist Masih Alinejad. If this wall falls, so does everything else. It is the core identity of the sharia-based Iranian regime,ā he said.
While students have been tearing down such barriers by force, he was sceptical that administrators, who tend to side with the regime, would cave in to demands to desegregate their institutions, even if they were unable to prevent students from eating together or removing headscarves.
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Professor Ellian said lasting reforms could take place only when Iranās conservative sharia-based laws formally change. Still, he continued, it seemed that studentsā actions were starting to wear down the government.
āThe battle is now about more than gender segregation. Students are now shouting: āwe do not want an Islamic republic, we want freedom of speechāā¦Nightly demonstrations deplete the energy of security forces. And we see that factions of the regime have become fearful of their future. It is beginning to look like a revolution,ā he said.
He urged institutions abroad to support those calling for change.
āDeclare solidarity, take symbolic actions and, more importantly, boycott university administrators in Iran,ā he said.
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