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Merchants from Iran’s bazaars played a key role in the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which brought Iran’s clerics to power.
Now they may have started a movement to depose those rulers because many of the protesters want more than economic relief.
Some told the ABC they were angry about extensive corruption and decades of mismanagement and wanted an entirely new system of government.
“This anger comes from the sense that the country has been abandoned, as if no-one intends to stop the collapse, the instability, or the soaring prices,” Babak* (not their real name) told the ABC.
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Curiously, the investment probably needed to be in more advanced anti-aircraft defenses.
The war lasted 12 days. The environmental impact on Iran may last decades
Disruption of Iran’s energy grid, bombardments shattering pipe networks, and the decades-long sanctions prohibiting the country’s ability to import supplies for repairs (cement alone has seen double-digit price spikes for years), have undermined the country’s capacity for storing and pumping potable water since the '79 Revolution.
People have already died and they’ll continue to die. This is a nation fully under siege by its neighbors and its foreign adversaries. Absent intervention by an opposition government, we’ll see Iran’s population accelerated into the same crises created in Palestine, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan.