Iranians boiling in anger after singer's death
Despite repression by the authorities, Iranians continue to protest on the streets of Iran.
The
death of legendary Iranian singer Mohammad Reza
Shajarian has fueled a new wave of protests in Iran.
Iranian
citizens participating in the protests sang slogans critical of the Iranian
television and radio which banned the works of the deceased singer for a decade
against the background of his support for the protests that erupted in Iran in
2009 against the re-election of former Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
Iranian
authorities prevented ordinary Iranians from participating in the funeral and
the burial of Shajarian for fear of the re-eruption of protests.
Shajarian
died at a hospital in Iranian capital Tehran on October 8.
Thousands
of the late singer's fans assembled outside the hospital and chanted slogans
against Iranian security.
"Death
to the dictator," some of the demonstrators chanted, apparently in
reference to the Iranian supreme guide Ali Khamenei.
Iranian
police used force to disperse the demonstrators under the pretext of applying
the law which bans assemblies because of the coronavirus.
Social
media users, meanwhile, shared videos that show large numbers of anti-riot
police on the streets in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad. Policemen
were also deployed in the vicinity of Shajarian's
tomb.
Shajarian
is an icon in Iran, even as he is not heavily involved in politics. Nonetheless,
he backed the 2009 protests which followed the presidential elections.
He
asked Iranian media to stop broadcasting his works after police brutally
dispersed the demonstrators.
Iranian
authorities then prevented him from producing music albums or holding concerts.



