Dr Jana Bou Reslan creates content that combats stigma and stereotypes on topics relating to high-functioning anxiety, parenting, trauma, and setting healthy boundaries
mental health48 minutes ago
The 20,000 chanting fans might have come to support Iran's President Hasan Rohani on Saturday but it was clear their real heroes were the ones still locked away by the regime. "Mousavi! Karroubi! Khatami!" they chanted at deafening volume, over and over, at the election rally in a stadium in western Tehran.
Those first two names, drawing such passion from the crowd, belong to reformist leaders who have not been seen in public for six years now.
Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi - both candidates in the controversial election of 2009 that triggered months of protests after allegations of rigging - were placed under house arrest in 2011, allowed out only for medical treatment.
The third is Mohammed Khatami - president from 1997 to 2005 and spiritual head of the reformist movement - who is banned from travelling abroad or appearing in any form in the media.
An immense roar came from the crowd when their images appeared on the screen. The Green Movement, as the protests came to be called, were the biggest Iran had seen in three decades of Islamic revolution, driven by anger over the shock re-election of hardline Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Brutally put down, the regime prefers to call it "the sedition" .
Rohani, a 68-year-old moderate cleric, came from nowhere in 2013 to win a sizeable victory after the tattered remnants of the reformist movement told their supporters he was their best hope for change.
He still has the support of liberals for his efforts to rebuild ties with the West and slowly improve civil liberties, even if he has markedly failed to gain the release of Mousavi and Karroubi as he vowed four years ago.
"It was beyond his powers," said Javad, a 30-year-old graduate in the crowd. "He did everything he could."
The president has considerable powers, particularly over the economy, but no control over the conservative-dominated judiciary or security forces, and serves at the pleasure of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Rohani dared not speak the name of the jailed dissidents directly in his speech, but received huge cheers when he told the crowd he had not "forgotten his promises".
"Either they have been achieved, or I have been prevented from keeping them," he said
Dr Jana Bou Reslan creates content that combats stigma and stereotypes on topics relating to high-functioning anxiety, parenting, trauma, and setting healthy boundaries
mental health48 minutes ago
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