Iranian Elections

Video: Basij attack in Tehran

More video from yesterday's 18 Tir protests -- this one apparently of Basij militiamen attacking a cameraman (h/t Andrew Sullivan, who continues to post some good stuff about Iran in between his frequent [justified] rants about Sarah Palin):

No Comments

Post a Comment

The gritty blogosphere

Bloggers have spent long hours aggregating news from Iran, but their work has hardly displayed 'grit and daring.' The real grit is on the streets of Tehran.

Video: Protesters clash with Basij

This video is from yesterday afternoon in Tehran. The guys on motorcycles are apparently Basij paramilitaries (h/t Andrew Sullivan).

Drone barrage reportedly targets Hafiz Gul Bahadur

Downplaying human rights to buy "cooperation"

Miliband urges Karzai to accelerate reintegration

Al-Akhbar: Our weekly brief

Peace Processing

Biden arrives in Israel amid serious Palestinian doubts

Vice President Joe Biden and his wife arrived in Israel on Monday.
As Joe Biden lands in Israel, the Israeli government -- obviously keen to demonstrate that it's serious about restarting peace talks -- announced Monday that it will violate its West Bank settlement freeze and build 112 new homes in Beitar Illit, a settlement west of Bethlehem.

Iraqi Elections

Polls close in Iraq; media reports suggest strong turnout, relative calm

An Iraqi man on a bicycle displays his ink-stained finger after voting in Baghdad on March 7, 2010. (Photo: AP)
A handful of insurgent attacks around the country killed two dozen people, but Iraqi security forces seemed generally confident; the vehicle ban in Baghdad, scheduled to last all day, was lifted before noon. Anecdotal reports suggest a strong turnout across the country.

Iraqi Elections

Campaigning stops, voting starts; scattered violence in Baghdad, Mosul

Iraqi policemen show their ink-stained fingers after voting outside a polling station in Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad. (Photo: Reuters)
Iraq's campaign season wrapped up today, 48 hours ahead of the election, as soldiers and medical personnel voted early. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers and police will be on duty Sunday for the general election, when millions of Iraqis will vote at some 10,00 polling centers around the country (and abroad).