Politics of Vengeance in Iranian Diaspora Communities

N. Rahimieh
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Abstract

The death of the young Kurdish Iranian woman, Mahsa Jina Amini, on September 16, 2022 following her arrest by Iran's now-suspended Gasht-i Irshad (guidance patrol or morality police) for apparent lax conformity to the Islamic dress code ignited protests across Iran. The protests, known as Women, Life, Freedom (Zan, Zendegī, Azadi) quickly spread to Iranian diaspora communities across North America, Europe, and Australia. Initially, diasporic Iranians organized their protests to support and amplify their compatriots’ calls for justice. As the protests continued in Iran and the demands for change grew louder, some members of the Iranian diaspora shifted their focus from the Islamic Republic to the public shaming of Iranians living outside Iran for their purported support of the Iranian regime. Some of the tactics employed by those engaged in public humiliations of suspected regime supporters recalled Gasht-i Irshad's methods of trapping and accosting individuals for perceived infractions. These public confrontations were aimed at isolating, shaming, and silencing perceived allies of the Islamic Republic and, by extension, denouncing the regime for its abrogation of women's and human rights. I refer to this phenomenon among diasporic Iranians as gasht-i intiqām, roving avengers, which reflects a frustration with the absence of justice in Iran and targets purported proxies for the regime. There have been many instances and types of denunciations aimed at silencing and ostracizing individuals, academics, and institutions. As Daniel Block points out in his analysis, “The attacks overwhelmingly target women, most notably in North America and Europe. The victims include gender equality activists, journalists, foreign policy analysts and a historian, each of whom has been accused of colluding with the authoritarian Islamist regime in Tehran.” Block further points out that many of the attacks are anonymous or originate from fake social media accounts. The common denominator he finds among those who target individuals is opposition to “Western-Iranian diplomacy or reporting information that adds subtlety to the debate over how the United States and its allies should handle the Islamic Republic.”1 Often those deemed regime collaborators are Iranian American individuals, journalists, or institutions that supported the 2015 the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, otherwise known as the nuclear deal.
伊朗侨民社区的复仇政治
2022 年 9 月 16 日,年轻的库尔德裔伊朗妇女马赫萨-吉娜-阿米尼(Mahsa Jina Amini)因明显不遵守伊斯兰着装规范而被伊朗现已停职的 Gasht-i Irshad(指导巡逻队或道德警察)逮捕,随后她的死亡引发了伊朗全国各地的抗议活动。这场名为 "妇女、生命、自由"(Zan, Zendegī, Azadi)的抗议活动迅速蔓延到北美、欧洲和澳大利亚的伊朗侨民社区。最初,散居国外的伊朗人组织抗议活动是为了支持和扩大其同胞要求正义的呼声。随着伊朗国内抗议活动的持续进行和要求变革的呼声日益高涨,一些散居国外的伊朗人将焦点从伊斯兰共和国转移到公开羞辱生活在伊朗境外的据称支持伊朗政权的伊朗人。那些参与公开羞辱疑似伊朗政权支持者的人所采用的一些策略让人想起加什特-伊-伊尔沙德(Gasht-i Irshad)的方法,即诱捕和搭讪被认为有违规行为的个人。这些公开对抗旨在孤立、羞辱和压制伊斯兰共和国的盟友,进而谴责该政权践踏妇女权利和人权。我将散居国外的伊朗人中的这种现象称为 gasht-i intiqām,即 "巡回复仇者",它反映了人们对伊朗缺乏正义的不满,并将矛头指向所谓的伊朗政权代理人。有许多旨在压制和排斥个人、学者和机构的谴责事件和类型。正如丹尼尔-布洛克(Daniel Block)在分析中指出的,"这些攻击绝大多数针对女性,尤其是在北美和欧洲。受害者包括性别平等活动家、记者、外交政策分析师和一名历史学家,他们每个人都被指控与德黑兰的伊斯兰专制政权勾结"。布洛克进一步指出,许多攻击都是匿名的,或者来自虚假的社交媒体账户。他发现,那些针对个人的攻击的共同点是反对 "西方-伊朗外交,或报道那些能为美国及其盟国应如何处理伊斯兰共和国的辩论增添微妙色彩的信息 "1 。被视为该政权合作者的通常是支持 2015 年《联合全面行动计划》(又称核协议)的美籍伊朗人、记者或机构。
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