Panahi calls for international action

It Was Just An Accident filmmaker speaks out on Iran crackdown

by Amber Wilkinson

Jafar Panahi: 'This is no longer a metaphor. This is not a story. This is not a film. This is a reality ridden with bullets, day after day'
Jafar Panahi: 'This is no longer a metaphor. This is not a story. This is not a film. This is a reality ridden with bullets, day after day' Photo: Courtesy of Divergent PR
Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi has called on the international community to speak out about the ongoing brutal crackdown on demonstrators by the government in his homeland.

The writer/director, who was sentenced to a year in jail in absentia and a travel ban in Iran last month, urged action as he accepted the National Board of Review's award for Best International feature yesterda for It Was Just An Accident.

He said: "I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the [National Board of Review]. But I cannot speak easily, because as we stand here the state of Iran is gunning down protestors and a savage massacre continues blatantly on the streets of Iran.

"Perhaps cinema is supposed to make viewers laugh and cry. It is supposed to make us feel terrified and safe. Perhaps cinema must make us fall in love, then kill us with love, and teach us, and make us think. But today, the real scene is not on screens but on the streets of Iran.

"The Islamic Republic has caused a bloodbath to delay its collapse. Bodies are piling up on bodies and those who have survived are searching for signs of their loved ones through mountains of corpses.

"This is no longer a metaphor. This is not a story. This is not a film. This is a reality ridden with bullets, day after day.

"In accepting this award I consider it my duty to call on artists and members of the global film community to speak out and not remain silent. Use any voice and any platform you have. Call on your governments to confront this human catastrophe rather than turn a blind eye. Do not let blood dry in the darkness of amnesia.

"Today, cinema has the power to stand by defenseless people. Let us stand by them."

The call came just days after he and fellow exiled Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof (The Seed Of The Sacred Fig) wrote a joint letter of outcry amid the ongoing internet blackout in Iran.

They wrote: "In recent days, following the presence of millions of Iranians in the streets protesting against the Islamic Republic, the government has once again resorted to its most blatant tools of repression.

"On the one hand, the Iranian regime has cut off communication routes inside the country - the internet, mobile phones, and landlines - severing people’s ability to communicate with one another; and on the other hand, it has completely blocked all means of contact with the outside world.

"Experience has shown that resorting to such measures is intended to conceal the violence inflicted during the suppression of protests.

"We are deeply concerned for the lives of our fellow citizens, our families, and our colleagues and friends who, under these circumstances, have been left defenseless.

"We call on the international community, human rights organisations, and the independent media to immediately find ways to facilitate access to vital information in Iran by enabling communication platforms, and monitor what is happening in Iran. History bears witness that silence today will have regretful consequences in the future."

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