President Rowhani was in the province of Sistan and Baluchistan in
southeastern Iran on April 15. To the cheering crowds who met him, he
proclaimed: “We don’t have second-class citizens; all Iranians are
equal.”
Rowhani thanked local Sunni and Shi’ite leaders and the
people of Sistan and Baluchistan for helping secure the release of four
border guards kidnapped by the Jaish Al-Adl militant group in February.
But he forgot to thank someone: Of the soldiers kidnapped, four of them
were returned a week ago due to the intense efforts of Molavi
Abdul-Hamid, a local Sunni leader, as well as other local elders. The
fate of the fifth soldier is still unknown.
While the whole
nation took to cyberspace to thank Abdul-Hamid, the popular Sunni Friday
prayer imam of Zahedan province, many hardliners in the capital raised
their eyebrows in jealousy and disapproval. Overnight, when the news
broke of Abdul-Hamid’s mediation between the regime and the rebels, he
become the most popular and likable figure in whole Iran—except among
the country’s rulers.
The right person to talk about equality?
The
province Rowhani visited is one of the most dangerous areas of Iran,
due to its proximity to both Pakistan and Afghanistan. Maintaining
security there is hard, if not impossible, because the regime does not
trust the local people to be in charge of their own security. It has
been almost 35 years since the revolution, and this region is still
discriminated against. The poor security situation is used as an excuse
for the deployment of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards and domestic
intelligence agents to the area, which causes a great deal of friction
between the people of the province and the central government.
It is obvious that when a particular group or sect is
discriminated against and their natural rights to live like other
citizens are trampled, some of them will become violent. Yet still,
Rowhani stood before the people, thanking them for their assistance in
getting the border guards back and talking about equality. He doesn’t
have even a single Sunni in his Cabinet.
The polls show that
people of Sistan and Baluchistan voted for President Rowhani in large
numbers in the election last summer. During his campaign, Rowhani
promised to secure equality for all Iranians, regardless of their
religion or sect. Not only did the president fail to convince the
hardliners to agree to appoint a single Sunni to his Cabinet, he
couldn’t even appoint a Baluchi governor for Sistan and Baluchistan.
Rowhani
told the audience that meritocracy rules in Iran and that there are no
differences between Iranian citizens. Are we meant to believe that among
all of Iran’s Sunnis—who make up almost 10 percent of the
population—they couldn’t find a single person capable of serving as a
minister? What about for the governorship?
Sistan and Baluchistan
has been recognized as the most deprived area of Iran. Developing these
parts of the country is risky for the Shi’ite powers that be because
the majority of the province’s people are Sunnis, and they are
constantly accused of collaborating with radical armed groups. What most
Iranians forget is that if the people of this province could have
stable lives, jobs, and access to the nation’s wealth on the same basis
as other citizens, they wouldn’t get involved with terrorist activities
or separatist groups in the first place. Keeping them in poverty and
appointing trusted regime insiders instead of locals to govern them does
not make them feel like part of society.
Troubled enough by
instability coming over the borders from Pakistan and Afghanistan, their
troubles increase when their rights as Iranians are denied. Poverty,
drug trafficking and armed rebel groups like Jaish Al-Adl and Jondolah
are all born out of this mistrust and mistreatment. On other occasions,
abducted Iranian soldiers have been brutally killed by the armed rebel
groups. This time, when the border guards were kidnapped, the regime
approached local people and sought their help in solving the problem. It
worked because they refrained from using the harsh language of death
and punishment that has so often been used in the past.
We
Iranians were hoping to see Molavi Abdul-Hamid standing beside Rowhani,
welcoming the president to the region. We wanted to hear him and cheer
him for all he has done for the soldiers, but instead his welcoming
speech was canceled and his appearance on camera was deliberately cut.
But
he doesn’t need publicity: Iranians know what he done for the country
and all people, regardless of their religion and sect, appreciate his
service.
Hakuna maoni:
Chapisha Maoni