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As Anniversary of WomenтАЩs Uprising Nears, Iran Cracks Down

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The professor of artificial intelligence was a rising star at IranтАЩs elite Sharif University of Technology. He gained wider fame for his vocal support of the women-led uprising that rocked Iran last year. At one point, he refused to teach until Sharif students arrested in the governmentтАЩs crackdown against protesters were released.

But speaking up came with a cost тАФ last week, Ali Sharifi Zarchi lost his job, becoming one of at least 15 academics expelled from Iranian universities in the past few weeks because they supported the uprising.

The purging of academics like Mr. Sharifi Zarchi is part of a wide and intensifying crackdown by the government before the anniversary of the start of the uprising this month. In the past few weeks, Iran has arrested womenтАЩs rights activists, students, ethnic minorities, an outspoken cleric, journalists, singers and family members of protesters killed by security agents.

Security agents have been contacting relatives of the victims and demanding they remain silent, a group of the families said in a statement posted on Instagram, pledging, тАЬWe will resist until the end.тАЭ Amnesty International released a report last week documenting 22 cases of government harassment of families of killed protesters, including damaging the graves of their loved ones.

тАЬThe threshold of what constitutes an offense that gets one arrested has gone to an unexpected level,тАЭ said Tara Sepehri Far, an Iran researcher for Human Rights Watch. тАЬThey are trying to make sure at all costs that nothing happens around the anniversary. It shows how nervous they are about the growing frustration and discontent.тАЭ

The uprising erupted after a young woman, Mahsa Amini, was arrested by the countryтАЩs feared morality police and accused of failing to wear her hijab in accordance with the law. She died in police custody on Sept. 16. Her death set off nationwide protests for nearly six months and a movement, led by women and young girls, for wholesale democratic change in Iran.

IranтАЩs most prominent womenтАЩs rights activist, Narges Mohammadi, who is serving a 10-year sentence for тАЬspreading anti-state propaganda,тАЭ said physical violence was increasing against women in prison before the anniversary.

тАЬWe have seen women and girls entering prison with bruised and injured faces and bodies,тАЭ she wrote in a letter posted on Instagram on Aug. 17. The injuries included fractured cheekbones, rib pain, blows to the head and bruises, she said.

A senior judiciary official, cited by official news media, said IranтАЩs enemies were plotting unrest for the anniversary and that security and intelligence agents were monitoring any activity related to dissent. He vowed that protesters would be shown no mercy.

тАЬThe judicial system will deal with these people decisively,тАЭ said Sadegh Rahimi, the deputy head of the judiciary, according to the Iranian news media. He warned that the thousands of protesters arrested and released after the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued an amnesty in February would face severe punishment if they continued to protest. тАЬThis means that their punishment will be doubled, and no concessions will be applied to them,тАЭ he said.

Activists have called for protests to mark the anniversary of Ms. AminiтАЩs death, although itтАЩs still unclear how many people will turn out for rallies. The next few months will see a string of anniversaries marking that crackdown, in which at least 500 protesters, many of them teenagers and children, were killed, and seven were executed. Each date will renew the collective trauma and grief and carry the potential for unrest, the activists say.

Many Iranians mourned the sudden death of a 35-year-old protester, Javad Rouhi in prison on Thursday. Mr. Rouhi was sentenced to death on allegations of тАЬleading riotsтАЭ and inciting violence during the protests, but IranтАЩs Supreme Court overturned his sentence after an appeal. The local prosecutor said he had fallen ill and that the cause of his death was under investigation, according to local news media. Rights groups said he had been tortured in prison.

тАЬThe regime feels it has to assert itself or a new wave of protest will sweep across the country,тАЭ said Hadi Ghaemi, the executive director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran, a New York advocacy group. Mr. Ghaemi said many ordinary Iranians had shown an appetite for using any opportunity to air their grievances. In August, the Shiite religious ritual Ashura, attended by religious conservatives, became a new platform for anti-government protests across the country.

A popular pop singer, Mehdi Yarrahi, 42, was arrested on Monday at his home in Tehran. He recently released a song praising the growing number of women across Iran who have been rejecting the hijab and showing their hair in a collective act of civil disobedience.

The judiciary said Mr. Yarrahi had released an тАЬillegal songтАЭ that defied the тАЬmorals and norms of an Islamic society.тАЭ The rapper Dorcci, 32, was also arrested this week after his song тАЬDamn ThingsтАЭ тАФ in which he condemns power abuses, corruption and the struggles of everyday life тАФ went viral with over 20 million views.

Many young Iranians are posting videos of themselves dancing to the two songs and singing the lyrics to protest the artistsтАЩ arrests.

The targeting of professors in the universities has also ignited a wide backlash, even from former officials. In a meeting with former cabinet members, former President Hassan Rouhani called it тАЬan injustice to science and the countryтАЭ and said it was counterproductive. But the government defended the decision, with the ministry of the interior issuing a statement calling it тАЬa revolutionary duty worthy of praise.тАЭ

The newspaper Etemad reported on Thursday that at least 50 faculty members had been expelled, banned from teaching or forced into retirement in the past year. They had supported protests for democratic change and criticized the government repression targeting their students.

On Thursday, the computer engineering department at Sharif University of Technology issued a statement demanding that the decision to fire Mr. Sharifi Zarchi, the A.I. professor, be reversed. A student-led petition to reinstate him has received more than 6,000 signatures.

Mr. Sharifi Zarchi announced his dismissal in a social media post on Aug. 26 that included a verse from a Persian poem about showing defiance in the face of intimidation.

Sharif University of Technology, a magnet for IranтАЩs brightest minds and a recruiting ground for elite American universities such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was the target of a violent raid that shocked Iran last October.

Ghazal, a 22-year-old college student who attends an art school and asked that her last name not be used for fear of retribution, said four professors of design at her university had been fired and replaced with instructors who taught Islamic texts. She said the intimidation of students and firing of professors has contributed to an oppressive environment, just as the academic year is set to start at the end of September.

тАЬThese religious professors know nothing about specialized courses. Most of us are thinking about how to leave Iran and not study here. I donтАЩt even know if I want to finish my degree,тАЭ Ghazal said.

Many of the professors have reacted to the crackdown with defiance.

тАЬWe teachers cannot obey governments and be submissive,тАЭ Ameneh Aali, a professor of psychology at Allameh TabatabaтАЩi University who was among those dismissed, said in an open letter posted on social media. Dr. Aali said she had been interrogated by the ministry of intelligence multiple times over the past year. тАЬUs teachers are indebted to the people and must serve them.тАЭ

Leily Nikounazar contributed reporting.

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