Ministry Of Intelligence Summons Students From Tehran Universities

Students across universities in Tehran have been called to the Ministry of Intelligence for questioning as crackdowns on dissidents continue.

Students across universities in Tehran have been called to the Ministry of Intelligence for questioning as crackdowns on dissidents continue.
On the one-year anniversary of the security forces' attack on Sharif University of Technology, students from the university, as well as those from Tehran University and AmirKabir University, were summonsed.
Also, in the wake of the widespread expulsion of university professors, two additional professors from AmirKabir University and Tehran University have faced suspension and expulsion.
Sharif Today, a Telegram channel that reports on university events, disclosed that during Sunday and Monday, alongside the anniversary of the security forces' assault on Sharif University, "some student activists" were called into the Ministry of Intelligence through anonymous phone calls.
Simultaneously, Amir Kabir University Newsletter reported that the roundup extended to several other universities, including AmirKabir University, and Tehran University.
The student newsletter confirmed that the summoning of students took place "less than a day after the Ministry of Intelligence had summoned certain professors."
"Although a week has passed since universities reopened, security pressures on the academic institutions to suppress and retaliate against the student movement have reached unprecedented levels over the past four decades," it added.
The latest crackdown is a continuation of the repression seen across universities which have been a hotbed of dissent since the unrest began last year.

Amid growing pressure from Iran’s regime to silence academia, all but one member of the council of the professors’ union in a top university have resigned in protest.
Resignations began when Vahid Karimipour, a professor of quantum physics at Sharif University of Technology (SUT), published an open letter to say he had been summoned by an “external body” to “discuss” matters related to the university.
“I’d welcome any such discussion in my office,” he wrote, “but I find the order to appear in an institution outside the university is disrespectful to all professors.”
Karimipour did not offer any more details. But to call in people for a ‘conversation’ is standard practice for various intelligence organs in Iran. It is intended and understood as a threat, which may be followed by detainment.
Shortly after Karimipour published his resignation letter, four other members of the elected council resigned. Another member had been sacked by the university a few weeks ago, leaving the seven-member council with only one member standing.

The mass resignation is remarkable since academics in Iran tend to not express political opinions. Higher education institutions in Iran are state owned and state controlled. Professors, even tenured and well established, are not safe in their jobs as is customary in most other countries.
“You should think of professors as government employees… many are on fixed-term contracts these days, which makes their position all the more precarious,” a faculty member at SUT told Iran International on condition of anonymity.
At least 110 academics have been sacked from universities across Iran in the last year.
“They call it khales-sazi,” the SUT professor said, “which could be translated as purification or refinement. But it should be translated as cleansing, as in ethnic cleansing, because that’s what it is: to force out the people you don’t like and replace them with your own people. That’s what they used to call it, in fact, right after the revolution.”
‘Cleansing’ universities began almost immediately after Islamists took power in 1979. It was part of a much larger project by the revolution's leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and his aides to stifle freedom of expression and establish a monopoly of the ‘narrative’, be it social, historical, artistic, or even economic.
They called it the Cultural Revolution.
In the four decades since then, hundreds of academics have been sacked in waves of purges that rose and subsided but never stopped.
The latest wave seems to be a direct result of the 2022 protests, which began in mid-September 2022, coinciding with the beginning of the academic year. Universities became a hotbed of protests with students refusing to attend classes and chanting against the regime.
Security and intelligence organs hit back with mass arrests and brutal force. SUT was particularly targeted and bruised badly.
On October 2, 2022, security forces and thugs layed siege to the campus. Earlier that day, a video had gone viral of a group of SUT students chanting a harsh, explicit slogan against the Supreme Leader. Having blocked all exits, the thugs attacked students, injuring and arresting dozens.
This year, to prevent student rallies on the anniversary of the protests, the authorities took a variety of measures, adding guards, installing cameras, summoning and suspending students, even changing the academic calendar to ensure campus was not busy in mid-September.
The ‘cleansing’ of professors is yet another attempt to 'tame’ the campuses. It has become so widespread and so crass that a cautious figure like the former president Hassa Rouhani has come out against it.
On the other hand, however, hardline lawmakers have demanded even harsher measures against academics who step “out of line.”
“A member of faculty is employed to advance the system’s objectives,” said Fereydoon Abbasi, a hardline MP who once headed Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, “a professor has to teach students according to the system’s objectives and conduct research on topics that the system wants.”
With such sentiments prevalent among the Islamic Republic’s officials, it is likely that many more members of faculty will be sacked in the next few weeks, often on false administrative pretenses.
“The bottom line is, they don’t like universities,” the SUT professor concluded, “they don’t like the spirit, the liveliness, the curiosity. University is where you learn, or you are supposed to learn, to think critically. And critical thinking is anathema to the Islamic Republic.”

A journalist from Shargh Daily has been arrested for reporting the story of a teenager who was hospitalized after an altercation with hijab authorities in Tehran's metro.
Maryam Lotfi was apprehended while investigating the case of the young girl who was using the metro with her friends on Sunday without wearing their hijab, when an altercation with law enforcement authorities caused her to fall and hit her head on an iron bar, according to Farzad Saifi-Karan, a correspondent for the Radio Zamaneh website. On Monday night reports surfaced that Lotfi was released.
The young girl was transported to Fajr Air Force hospital and the CEO of Tehran Metro, Masoud Darabzadeh, confirmed she had been administered "life-saving" measures. The hospital has since been surrounded by heightened security as the case continues to draw concern, for both the victim and the imprisoned journalist, the latest in a list of scores of journalists imprisoned during the last year's uprising.
Footage released of the incident fails to give a clear picture, in spite of mass surveillance camera coverage across the metro and the city at large, showing only a cropped video from outside the train car depicting a group of unveiled teenage girls entering the car and later passengers assisting an unconscious girl. No footage from potential cameras inside the metro car has been made available thus far.
On Monday, Darabzadeh denied any wrongdoing and declared that the girl's loss of consciousness was caused by a "sudden drop in blood pressure." He rejected claims of any altercations between staff and the young girl.
It is unclear which authority exactly was involved in the altercation nor that responsible for the arrest of Maryam Lofti for her reporting on the incident which has chilling echoes of the case of young Mahsa Amini who died in the hands of morality police for the inappropriate wearing of her headscarf.

In spite of a mass rebellion against the mandatory hijab and oppressive policies against women, Iran's President has accused the West of manipulating the issue of women's rights.
In a typical regime slanted speech, Ebrahim Raisi claimed on Monday that Westerners “are not genuinely advocating for women's rights or human rights,” meanwhile the government's repressive measures continue to deepen, with punishments against hijab rebels including fines, imprisonment and bans from public spaces.
Speaking at a festival in Tehran, Raisi went as far as to claim that "Iran considers itself a champion of human rights", ignoring the Women, Life, Freedom movement which has grown in the wake of the death of Mahsa Amini who died in morality police custody for the inappropriate wearing of her hijab.
Since the inception of the movement, tens of thousands of girls and women have chosen to remove their compulsory hijabs. The Iranian government aims to criminalize hijab defiance, but no branch of the government wants to bear sole responsibility for the potential societal complications arising from such a provocative action.
Innumerable women have been imprisoned and sexually abused as a state-sanctioned punishment across Iran as state crackdowns have become harsher as the last year of uprising continued. New 'hijab and chastity' laws are set to come into force with ever more strict punishments for hijab rebels.
Human rights advocates have warned that the implementation of this law could result in increased violence, harassment, and arbitrary detentions of women and girls in Iran, and the United Nations has branded it gender apartheid.

A month after a major personal data hack impacting 27 million passengers and six million drivers of an Iranian taxi app, the company remains silent about the breach.
Tapsi's official communication channels, including their website, Instagram, Telegram, and blog, have seen updates since the incident, but they provide no information regarding the hack's specifics, how it occurred, or related details.
The news of the hack and data leak involving over 33 million Tapsi users first came to light on September 2, through a Telegram channel. Shortly afterward, Milad Monshipour, Tapsi's founder and CEO, confirmed the incident on his Twitter account, noting that the hackers had attempted extortion.
The hackers claimed to have engaged in a two-week negotiation with Tapsi's management before publicly disclosing the breach and demanding a $35,000 ransom payment, which the company refused.
Ultimately, the hackers publicly traded the stolen information, leaving the identity of those accessing the sensitive data unclear.
While large-scale privacy data breaches might not be uncommon in Iran, the magnitude and significance of the particular incident have elevated the Tapsi hack to one of the most prominent cases of a private company data breach in the country.
The situation underscores the absence of robust laws and substantial penalties for mishandling personal information, as well as the inability for users to request the removal of their data. It also highlights the recurring concern of data leaks impacting the financial and emotional lives of Iranian citizens.

The organizers of the Frankfurt International Book Fair have once more denied participation to the Islamic Republic in this notable international event for the second consecutive year.
Narges Eskandari-Grunberg, an Iranian-German city councilor in Frankfurt, conveyed to Iran International correspondent Ahmad Samadi in Berlin, according to the organizer’s decision, the Islamic Republic is not allowed to take part in this book fair.
The exclusion of the Islamic Republic from the fair is attributed to several factors, including the ongoing suppression of the Iranian population, especially women, the detention of journalists, writers, and artists, the forced closure of publishing houses and bookstores for admitting women without compulsory hijab, as well as continued denial of access to and censorship of the internet.
Eskandari-Grunberg emphasized that, due to the actions taken against the people of Iran, the Islamic Republic will not have a presence at this year's fair either. She added, "Last year, instead of the Islamic Republic setting up booths, several panels were organized to discuss women's rights and human rights in Iran, and this year, these panels will once again take place."
Last year, the Islamic Republic was barred from attending the fair due to its harsh response to nationwide protests in Iran, internet censorship, and the detention of journalists. More than 500 people were killed by the security forces in the five-month-long protests that started in September 2022, thousands injured and 22,000 arrested.
The seventy-fifth annual Frankfurt International Book Fair is scheduled to take place from October 18th to October 22nd, 2023.






