Middle East & Africa | A brittle victory

A year after Iran was shaken by protests, zealots have tightened their grip

But dissidents await their next opportunity, unbowed

A woman, without head covering, at the Tajrish Bazaar in Tehran, Iran.
Image: Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times/Redux/Eyevine

Iran’s ayatollahs should, by rights, be triumphant. Their bully-boys have muzzled the cries of “woman, life, freedom” that reverberated around the country a year ago after a young Kurdish-Iranian woman, Mahsa Amini, died in custody for showing her hair. They have purged universities of critics, silenced disapproving media outlets and rounded up activists along with their family and friends. A new bill going through parliament will revive the morality police (who were disbanded in the wake of the protests) and introduce new punishments for those who violate their dress codes. The regime is cutting deals with friends and foes alike to help it tighten its political and financial grip. Oil exports are back to levels not seen since the Trump administration reimposed sanctions in 2018. And yet, unlike during previous crackdowns, the mullahs still sound nervous. “They know the genie is out of the bottle,” says a teacher in Tehran.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “A brittle victory”

From the September 9th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Middle East & Africa

Members of the new Syrian security forces stand outside a security building, in Nawa, near Daraa, Syria, Jan. 4, 2025. (

Syria’s new rulers say they are keen to integrate foreign fighters

Outsiders continue to see them as a threat

Internally displaced civilians from the camps in Munigi and Kibati, carry their belongings as they flee to Goma

Rwanda’s reckless plan to redraw the map of Africa

The fall of Goma could trigger another Congo conflict


illustration featuring three overlapping social media-style photo frames, each depicting different parts of a classic weighing scale

Three big lawsuits against Meta in Kenya may have global implications

One was prompted by the murder of an Ethiopian professor


Trump should try to end, not manage, the Middle East’s oldest conflicts

And he should see the region as more than a source of instability and arms deals

Government by social media in Somalia

Cheap data, social media and creativity are filling in for an absent state

The Gaza ceasefire is stoking violence in the West Bank

Hamas and the Israeli far right both want to destabilise the West Bank