IRAN
AFTER THE REVOLUSION -
WHAT THEN?
Stes de Necker
Iran has
been ruled by an oppressive theocratic regime for almost four decades. Since
its inception in 1979, the dictatorial mullah regime has become known as a revolutionary
regime dedicated to the export of its fundamentalist Islamic ideology, which it
brutally and forcefully impose on its own citizens.
Since 1979,
millions of Iranians have fallen victim to the relentless prosecution,
incarceration, torture and execution of those who dared to criticise the state
or to speak out against the ungodly and brutal persecution of the citizens of
Iran.
Only by their
ruthless intimidation and brutality, and under the guise of their fundamentalist
theology, did the regime manage to maintain its political power and the
oppression of its political opponents.
Under a
delusional reliance on nationalist sentiment and Middle Eastern regional
support, the regime unrelentingly enforced its oppressive policies on the
people of Iran for almost forty years.
During this
period, not a single sector of civil society escaped their pursuit of nationalisation
and political domination.
Corruption
and mismanagement by the incompetent mullah government have inevitably led to
the economic, social, and infrastructural destruction of Iran.
Throughout
2018 numerous demonstrations and strikes by Iranian workers occurred in almost
every city and region in Iran.
The people
of Iran had enough and it was only a matter of reaching critical mass for the
resistance to spill over in a national revolt.
Iran had
a revolution before, and it is busy happening again.
Iranians
have changed their ruling regimes on their own terms over the last two
centuries and they will do it again in 2019.
The
sustained battle against oppression and persecution has enriched and empowered
the Iranian people to overcome their internal problems without foreign
interventions in Iran’s political affairs.
No longer
supported by national sentiment and regional approval, the clerical regime now
faces the dire consequences of its incompetent governance of Iran. In the face
of international isolation, economic collapse and financial bankruptcy, the
clerical regime has come to the end of their reign of terror.
Knowing
that their time is up mullahs are currently only trying to postpone the evil
day by doing the only thing they know how to do; intimidating, persecuting and
torturing their own people.
Many politicians and government officials are
frantically resigning their positions and bailing out of government. After almost
four decades of working under the protection of the mullah regime and realizing
that the regime can no longer offer them any future security and protection
against the anger of the rest of the population, are deserting the clerical
regime in a last ditch attempt to cover their own hides.
A few months ago, Javadi Amoli, an influential Shiite cleric
in Iran, said: “We should know that considering these difficulties, if the
people rise, they will throw us all into the sea. Therefore, you should be
vigilant. Many have already escaped the country or have prepared a place to
escape but we don’t have a place to escape.”
For the
people of Iran, who had to survive the brutal prosecution of its people and the socio-economic destruction of its country, the imminent regime collapse could however have far reaching
and catastrophic consequences.
Iran’s
economy is dominated by companies that are owned, openly or otherwise, by
the radical Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Iran government, government
officials and political leaders.
Most
banks are owned directly by the state.
The
judicial system is dominated by clerics.
And the
educational system has been twisted by decades of radical religious ideology.
The
largest steel mills are owned by the state-owned
National Iranian Steel Group.
The Haft Tapeh Sugar Cane Company is state owned.
Most municipal authorities are still under the control of the
clerical regime
While the
United States and many other Western governments are having lively debates
about the merits of sanctions, the isolation of Iran and the demise of the
clerical regime, nobody seems to do much thinking about the future
reconstruction and development of Iran and its people.
If the people
of Iran want a free and democratic Iran to succeed, an Iran with a different
vision of its role and place in the international community, they should start
thinking about it, planning for it, preparing for it.
Similarly,
if the West’s, and for that matter the rest of the free world's interest in a free and democratic Iran reaches only the promotion
of failure in a post-oppressed Iran, the whole of the West and the MIddle East will be held responsible for the suffering
and chaos that will ensue the failing the people of Iran.
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