BBC: Tehrangeles: How Iranians made part of LA their own – Google maps recently recognised "Tehrangeles" as a neighbourhood of central Los Angeles. How did this upmarket part of LA become home to the largest community of Iranians outside Iran? » | Shoku Amirani | Saturday, September 29, 2012
Showing posts with label expatriate Iranians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expatriate Iranians. Show all posts
Saturday, September 29, 2012
BBC: Tehrangeles: How Iranians made part of LA their own – Google maps recently recognised "Tehrangeles" as a neighbourhood of central Los Angeles. How did this upmarket part of LA become home to the largest community of Iranians outside Iran? » | Shoku Amirani | Saturday, September 29, 2012
Labels:
California,
expatriate Iranians,
Iran,
Los Angeles,
Tehrangeles,
USA
Sunday, June 28, 2009
THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: The brutal security crackdown on the streets of Tehran inflamed feelings on the streets of London last week. Hundreds of demonstrators from the UK's Iranian community besieged Iran's embassy in west London in protest at the repression imposed on their compatriots at home.
Overseas Iranians have rallied in response to the violence in their home country, but the embassy has been the focus of protesters' frustration. Each night, hundreds gathered to denounce Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei. Their message was clear. "Down with Khamenei, death to Khamenei," they chanted loudly.
Their numbers have swelled since the turmoil that has enveloped Iran after the 12 June election. The crowds that congregated last week included a mixture of youths, refugees and professional people.
Even as Ayatollah Khamenei blamed everyone from the British Government to the BBC for the bloodshed, several hundred students rallied in Piccadilly Circus in London in a show of solidarity with their Iranian counterparts. Many held candles for the "the martyrs of the election" – those who have died in the recent violence.
If the embassy witnessed the most fervent protests, elsewhere reaction to events did not lack vehemence. Iranian-owned businesses strung green lights and hung posters declaring support for the democracy movement. >>> By Tim Persinko | Sunday, June 28, 2009
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