Log In | Subscribe

Images from Iran

Elizabeth Kirkwood
demotix

Citizen photo-journalism in action. Photo: AMIRPIX, Demotix

4th November has been an important day in Iran for several decades, and today marks the the 30th anniversary of the storming of the US embassy in Tehran by “students following the imam’s line”—one of the most memorable moments during the Islamic revolution of 1979.

Opposition protesters have marked today’s historic significance by taking to the streets. While the scale of the anti-government protests—and the regime’s crackdown—remains unclear, wire services and state-controlled media have reported police using tear gas and clashing violently with protesters.

Though Iran has banned nearly all media coverage of non-sanctioned rallies and protests, the citizen photo-journalism website Demotix has published a fresh collection of images from today’s events, including a picture of what looks like a protester kicking away a smoking teargas shell. Keep up with the latest news from Demotix here; they will continue to upload photos, eyewitness accounts and comments as the situation develops.

Anniversary blues in Iran

Tom Chatfield

A rocky road ahead for the Islamic republic…

This year sees the 30th anniversary of the 1979 revolution in Iran. It was in January that year that demonstrations began and the Shah fled the country, while on 1st February the Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Tehran, finally proclaiming an Islamic republic on 1st April. The rest is both history and an increasingly troubled present: which is why, in his lead essay for our 30th anniversary special feature, Christopher de Bellaigue explores the increasingly brittle confidence of an Iranian regime that faces declining oil wealth and a shaken confidence in its national project. Whatever happens in Iran’s June elections, though, de Bellaigue argues that what the world most needs is a fresh approach to engaging with Iran from Obama’s America.

While de Bellaigue looks to the future, historian Dominic Sandbrook looks to the past, and explores the story of Iran’s revolution in the context of those other shaping revolutions of the last few centuries: 1789 and 1917. How does what actually happened in 1979 compare to these epochal moments? Meanwhile, Katharine Quarmby tells a story on the most intimate of scales: of how she was one of a unique generation, the love child of a Persian naval officer and an English mother; and how, almost 40 years after her birth and adoption, she found her father again.

Finally, academic and author Michael Axworthy takes an in-depth look at a new biography of Iran’s last Shah written by none other than the man who served as Iran’s deputy minister of the interior before the revolution, Gholam Reza Afkhami. Afkhami’s account, Axworthy argues, has all the vivid and sympathetic detail one might expect from a monarchist insider—yet it, like the Shah himself, is blind to the larger historical currents that swept away his regime 30 years ago.