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Iran Forcefully Clamps Down on Protests Against Growing Water Shortages

Iranwaterwiki In: Iran Forcefully Clamps Down on Protests Against Growing Water Shortages | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

 

 

Iranwaterwiki In: Iran Forcefully Clamps Down on Protests Against Growing Water Shortages | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Bridge over now-dry Zayanderoud River.   Photo Diego Delso, delso.photo, License CC-BY-SA.

 

Diego Delso, delso.photo, License CC-BY-SA

 

Iran has been facing increasing water scarcity issues because of years of mismanagement.

Does this sound familiar?  Yes, Iran is a far step from Florida in distance, but perhaps not in circumstance.

Has Florida’s water been mismanaged?  There is absolutely no debate here–just compare our rivers, streams and aquifer today with their status fifty years ago.   North Florida’s rivers have declined in flow on average over 30 per cent since historic times and they continue to decline.

Politicians and water managers brag about spending money to fix them, but they don’t fix them.  The money they spend carefully omits the main polluters.

Our mismanagement has allowed practically anyone wanting a permit to  withdraw millions of gallons of fresh water from our groundwater.  This attitude is completely out of control as is the unlimited use of fertilizer.  Some counties and municipalities are now putting some regulations on urban fertilizer, but the main source, agriculture, is still basically unlimited.

Apparently so as to give themselves a reason for being, water management districts still go through the ritual of “examining and considering” each pumping application, but with the same result  every time.

Back to Iran, Nigeria. Syria. Somalia have also had serious water problems and they have not sprung up overnight.

Most of Florida’s leaders think only of themselves and the present, unable to look around and see what is happening and unable to plan for the future.

There are lessons to be learned but Florida is conveniently blind.

Read the original article here in the New York Times.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


The crackdown came after the protests spilled over to at least one other city and a major protest on Friday loomed. Weather experts say 97 percent of the country is dealing with water scarcity issues.

For two weeks the Iranian government tolerated growing protests over scarce water supplies in the central Iranian city of Isfahan, watching them grow as restaurants served demonstrators free soup and barbers offered free haircuts. State television even aired interviews with farmers discussing their grievances.

But after the protests spilled over to at least one other city, the predictable happened on Friday: The government violently cracked down.

Security forces wielding batons, shields and guns swarmed the city’s riverbed around 4 a.m. Thursday as a group of farmers were sipping tea and chatting about protest strategy around a campfire.

The security forces had used a megaphone to tell farmers they had 10 minutes to evacuate, Hassan Tavakoli, a 47-year-old farmer from Isfahan, said in a telephone interview. His account was backed up by several videos that were shared with The New York Times by Isfahan residents.

“Before we had a chance to move, suddenly our tents were set on fire and they started throwing tear gas at us and shooting in the air,” Mr. Tavakoli said. He said the crowd included several families with young children and two babies.

“I never expected them to do this to us, to beat us, fire at us and injure farmers,” he added.

For more than two weeks, Mr. Tavakoli and hundreds of other farmers had been protesting on the dry bed of the city’s storied Zayanderoud River. Tens of thousands of people had joined them in a show of solidarity.

Their demand: Restore water flows to the river to help irrigate farmlands laid to waste from years of mismanaging water resources.

“We have nothing left of our lands and livelihoods, we are just asking for our water rights,” said Mr. Tavakoli. He owns three hectares of farmland that was once lush with crops of wheat, barley, and vegetables. The land has been dry and barren for 15 months, forcing Mr. Tavakoli to sell his livestock to survive.

Iran has been facing increasing water scarcity issues because of years of mismanagement. In the case of Isfahan, water has been diverted through underground pipes away from farmlands and toward industrial complexes in the desert province of Yazd and for drinking water to the religious city of Qom….

In Thursday’s crackdown, security forces demanded the farmers issue a statement announcing their sit-in had ended even though no resolution had been reached and the government had not taken steps to address their concerns, Mr. Tavakoli said.

On Friday, as people gathered to protest, security forces lashed out with more violence. Clashes spread from the dry riverbed to streets in downtown Isfahan. Security guards fired bird shots and tear gas at the crowds of protesters and beat them with batons, according to two eyewitnesses in the area and videos shared widely on social media.

There were no official casualty numbers, but videos and eyewitnesses said scores of demonstrators were injured. Mr. Tavakoli said dozens of farmers were also badly injured in the clashes, but he had not heard of any reports of deaths. Rights activists said dozens of people were arrested.

Videos on social media showed a woman clad in a black chador bleeding from the nose; a middle-aged man with blood running down his face from a bruised swollen eye; and a man’s bare back riddled with red spots, apparently from bird shots.

Some videos showed protesters throwing stones at anti-riot police and chanting “shame on you” and “death to the Dictator” and “death to Khamenei,” targeting Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last word in all key state and security matters.

Mobile and internet service was disrupted in Isfahan and Khuzestan, residents reported, as they government sought to cut off communication and organizing.

Experts on Iran’s water scarcity issues say climate change and reduced rainfall have exacerbated the drought caused by mismanagement.

“This is water bankruptcy, there are lots of water right holders but not enough water in the accounts,” said Kaveh Madani, a world renown water expert and former deputy head of Iran’s environment agency. “People upstream and downstream of Zayanderoud are asking for water for all. But this is mission impossible.”

The Zayanderoud River snakes through the historic city of Isfahan. Its leafy riverbanks are the city’s main green space, and families gather on summer evenings for picnics. In the fall, the river serves as a stop for migratory birds flocking south.

Correction: 

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article said that security forces began their crackdown on the protests at 4 p.m. Thursday. They actually began the crackdown at 4 a.m.

Farnaz Fassihi is a reporter for The New York Times based in New York. Previously she was a senior writer and war correspondent for the Wall Street Journal for 17 years based in the Middle East. @farnazfassihi

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