PARIS — For 18 days, the world watched Egypt’s revolution live on television, following every surge of protest, every incremental escalation of people power.
And for one day this week, when the fervor inspired by Egypt’s example seized Tehran, the world did just the opposite. No satellite images like those of Tahrir Square showed Enghelab Square. No foreign reporters poured through Tehran’s airport. No networks vied for the most exhaustive coverage.
Instead, outsiders foraged through YouTube fragments and Facebook
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/19/world/europe/19iht-letter19.html?sq=alan%20cowell&st=cse&scp=6&pagewanted=print
And for one day this week, when the fervor inspired by Egypt’s example seized Tehran, the world did just the opposite. No satellite images like those of Tahrir Square showed Enghelab Square. No foreign reporters poured through Tehran’s airport. No networks vied for the most exhaustive coverage.
Instead, outsiders foraged through YouTube fragments and Facebook
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/19/world/europe/19iht-letter19.html?sq=alan%20cowell&st=cse&scp=6&pagewanted=print
English to Persian translation(Google)
http://translate.google.com/#
نگاهی از سرکوب های تهران
COWELL آلن
پاریس -- به مدت 18 روز ، جهان را تماشا
COWELL آلن
پاریس -- به مدت 18 روز ، جهان را تماشا
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