TEHRAN, Iran — About 100 students staged a rare protest Monday against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, calling him a “dictator” as he gave a speech at Tehran University marking the beginning of the academic year.
While the demonstrators and hardline students loyal to Ahmadinejad scuffled in the auditorium, the president ignored chants of “Death to the dictator” and gave his speech on the merits of science and the pitfalls of Western-style democracy, witnesses said.
The hardline students chanted, “Thank you, president,” and police looked on from outside the university’s gates without intervening. The protesters dispersed after Ahmadinejad left the campus.
Students were once the main power base of Iran’s reform movement but have faced intense pressure in recent years from Ahmadinejad’s hardline government, making anti-government protests rare.
In recent months, dissenters have witnessed an increasing crackdown, with hundreds detained on accusations of threatening the Iranian system. Numerous pro-reform newspapers have been shut down and those that remain have muted their criticism.
At universities, pro-government student groups have gained strength and reformist students have been marginalized, left to hold only low-level meetings and occasional demonstrations, usually to demand better school facilities or the release of detained colleagues.
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