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Lanka
Sri Lanka: ISSE demonstration demands the release of jailed
Iranian students
By our reporters
14 March 2008
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The Sri Lankan chapter of the International Students for Social
Equality (ISSE) held a demonstration in Colombo on Monday demanding
the immediate release of left-wing students jailed by the Iranian
government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The demonstration
was part of the ISSEs international campaign to defend these
students.
On December 4, Iranian police arrested 33 students who demonstrated
in commemoration of Students Day, which marks
the killing of three students by police in 1953 during protests
against visiting US Vice President Richard Nixon. In January this
year, more students were arrested while demonstrating against
the arrest of their colleagues.
The ISSE and Socialist Equality Party (SEP) demand the release
of these students and the withdrawal of all charges against them.
As part of the campaign, ISSE and SEP supporters distributed thousands
of copies of the WSWS article, Iranian government intensifies
crackdown on left-wing opposition, at Colombo University
and workplaces in the capital.

From 2 p.m., a demonstration was held in front of the Iranian
embassy. Participants raised slogans demanding the release of
the members of Students for Freedom and Equality, also known as
the Radical Left, and opposing US militarism. Some of the placards
read: Release jailed Iranian students immediately,
Stop persecution of left-wing students, Stop
US threats of war against Iran, Withdraw imperialist
troops from the Middle East and Fight for international
socialism against war and repression.
Alongside the placards, written in Sinhala, Tamil, English
and Farsi, photographs of some of the jailed students were displayed.
Leaflets were distributed to passers-by and the event attracted
the attention of students returning home after school.
SEP general secretary Wije Dias had informed Iranian embassy
officials a week earlier that the ISSE would deliver a letter
demanding the students release. Officials, however, refused
to appear to accept the letter, despite several attempts to contact
them.
The Iranian ambassador arrived in a car during the demonstration.
Aware of the protest, he left after about 15 minutes via the back
door. When the ISSEs Sri Lanka convener, Kapila Fernando,
tried to hand the letter to the security officer in charge of
the gate, he refused to accept it.
After demonstrating for an hour at the embassy, which is located
in a wealthy and secluded area, the ISSE changed the venue to
the busy Fort Railway Station, located in central Colombo, where
thousands of workers were returning home. More than a thousand
leaflets were distributed in less than an hour.
WSWS reporters spoke to some of those who stopped to discuss
the issues.
T, a Postal Department mail sorter, said: This is the
first time I have seen this kind of event. The Janatha Vimukthi
Peramuna (JVP) often holds demonstrations here and there but I
havent seen them pay any attention to international incidents.
I was watching the agitation curiously. There was a small number
of participants, but I understand its message is powerful and
it will get the attention of workers internationally. Only after
you explained, I realise that Sri Lanka had a tradition of this
kind of agitation when the Lanka Sama Samaja Party was fighting
for socialism.
As we are opposed to the Middle Eastern wars, I firmly
believe that the war in Sri Lanka should be stopped as well. However,
it cannot be stopped in the present set up, and even if it were,
repressive policies would continue. There is no difference between
the Iranian and Sri Lankan governments in their attacks on democratic
rights.

I have many more things to say, but the present security
situation in the country prevents me. Not only ordinary people
but members of parliament are abducted or murdered for their opposition
to the policies of the government. However, I must add that this
is an entirely new experience for me.
One young person among a group of youth who were going home
said: We first thought there was no use holding a demonstration
here in Sri Lanka demanding the release of Iranian students. Now,
after your explanation, we think it is meaningful as it aims at
the revival of an international tradition.
A middle-age railway worker commented: It is very important
to raise your voice on behalf of students. They are our future
generation. This is the first time I have seen a campaign in Sri
Lanka over an Iranian issue.
A Sri Lanka Telecom worker said: The Iranian government
put these students in jail when they were protesting US war threats.
I realised that you are opposing the US threats against Iran and
demanding the release of arrested Iranian students. Here you are
demonstrating to defend them even though they are not a part of
the Fourth International. As far as the democratic rights of all
are concerned, that is a great tradition.
After concluding the demonstration at Fort station, the ISSE
and SEP held a meeting, which will be reported on the WSWS at
a later date.
* * *
Below is the letter delivered to the Iranian embassy:
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei
President Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei,
We are writing to demand the immediate and unconditional release
of all members of the group Azady Barabary (Students for Freedom
and Equality) currently arrested and detained by your government.
We have included below a list of their names. We also demand that
you drop all charges against them. These students are not guilty
of any crime. They have engaged in a legitimate protest against
the war plans of the United States and the policies of the Iranian
political establishment.
They are not affiliated to our organisation. But, we, along
with students and workers all over the world, will keep following
their treatment carefully and publicising their cases until they
are freed and their unjust persecution ends. Following their unconditional
release, they should not be subjected to any further witch-hunt
for their political actions and must be free to express their
ideas openly.
What has outraged us further are reports that Iranian authorities
have subjected the arrested students to torture and various forms
of physical and psychological abuse. We also learnt that they
may be under pressure to make false confessions before television
cameras. Here in Sri Lanka, we are particularly familiar with
the dire consequences of such notorious methods. Successive governments
have used similar anti-democratic and repressive methods to silence
any political opposition while prosecuting a civil war for twenty-five
years.
It is important to note that the US puppet, Shah Reza Pahlavi,
used the same methods to suppress legitimate political expression
and actions of the working people and the youth. We would like
to state that the initial wave of student arrests, in December
last year, occurred after they organised a demonstration to mark
Students Day, which commemorates the murder of four students
by the Shah during the visit of US Vice President Richard Nixon
in 1953.
The ISSE speaks on behalf of students and workers in Sri Lanka
and around the world who are deeply opposed to the past and present
war-mongering policies of the US government against Iran. The
students that you have placed behind bars were engaged in protests
against US imperialism. Their arrest will only hinder any genuine
struggle against imperialist aggression, which endangers the population
of the entire region and beyond.
The imprisonment and mistreatment of the courageous students
by your government is a grievous assault on democratic and human
rights. It strengthens the hands of the imperialist militarists
themselves, who exploit the injustices committed by your government
to justify their war plans against Iran.
See Also:
ISSE demonstration to free
Iranian students calls for international unity of workers
[19 February 2008]
An interview with an Iranian
activist on arrests of left-wing students
[28 January 2008]
Iranian government intensifies
crackdown on left-wing opposition
[28 January 2008]
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