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  • China tightens food safety checks ahead of May Day, Dragon Boat Festival holidays

    China tightens food safety checks ahead of May Day, Dragon Boat Festival holidays

    As two major public holidays approach, Chinese food safety regulators have launched a nationwide campaign to tighten regulatory oversight and enforcement, moving proactively to mitigate potential food safety hazards and guarantee a secure dining experience for consumers across the country.

    In an official notice released recently, the Food Safety Office of the State Council called on local regulatory bodies at all levels to make advance arrangements and ramp up inspections across every link of the national food supply chain, spanning from primary production and wholesale distribution to retail and food service, ahead of the peak holiday consumption surge that typically accompanies the May Day and Dragon Boat Festival breaks.

    The notice directs regulators to prioritize high-priority categories of food products, including staple goods with mass consumption, seasonal specialty items tied to the holidays, viral food products trending on social media and e-commerce platforms, and commercial health foods. Alongside targeted product checks, supervisory efforts will also be intensified at key high-traffic locations, including agricultural product wholesale markets, national retail chain outlets, and the country’s largest online e-commerce platforms.

    Under the new regulatory requirements, food producers and distributors are mandated to strictly uphold their primary legal responsibility for the safety of their products. For their part, regulators will increase the frequency and depth of on-site inspections, and launch a targeted crackdown on common violations. These prohibited activities include manufacturing and selling counterfeit or substandard food products, running deceptive false advertising campaigns for food items, and the unauthorized use of unapproved or illegal food additives.

    Special supervisory focus will also be placed on the food service sector, particularly large chain restaurant brands, catering services provided to organized tourist groups, and high-traffic online restaurants that rely heavily on food delivery orders. One key area of scrutiny is the growing problem of unregulated “ghost kitchens” — delivery-only food operations that lack compliant physical dining facilities and proper operating permits, which have been linked to repeated food safety outbreaks in recent years.

    Institutions that provide group meal services to large numbers of people, including primary and secondary schools and other public organizations, are required to reinforce internal food safety management protocols and conduct comprehensive proactive risk assessments to address potential hazards before they cause harm. Local authorities have also been assigned the task of tightening oversight over large group banquets commonly held in rural areas during holiday seasons, a measure designed to prevent large-scale foodborne illness outbreaks that have occurred in past holiday periods.

    In addition to routine on-site supervision, the campaign will expand the scope and frequency of random food safety sampling inspections throughout the holiday period. Targeted laboratory testing will be carried out on high-risk food products and seasonal holiday staples, most notably zongzi — the traditional glutinous rice dumplings that are the centerpiece of Dragon Boat Festival celebrations across the country.

    To further strengthen public protection, the notice also calls for the optimization and expansion of accessible consumer complaint and incident reporting channels, ensuring that members of the public can quickly report suspected food safety issues and have their legitimate rights and interests effectively protected throughout the holiday season.

  • Huangshan’s fish lantern culture wins over intl influencers

    Huangshan’s fish lantern culture wins over intl influencers

    In a vivid display of cultural exchange that bridges traditional Chinese heritage and global digital influence, a group of international content creators got a hands-on immersion into one of Anhui’s lesser-known cultural treasures during a visit to Zhanqi Village in Shexian County, Huangshan on April 21. What started as a sightseeing tour quickly transformed into an interactive cultural experience, as the digital influencers stepped out of their observer roles and into the heart of the village’s centuries-old fish lantern dance tradition. Under the guidance of local inheritors of the folk art, the group learned the dance’s signature detailed footwork, precise posture requirements, and the intricate rhythmic coordination that turns a collection of glowing lanterns into a synchronized, captivating performance. The visit reached a joyful, unexpected climax when the group adapted one of the world’s most iconic rock anthems for the occasion. Using the traditional wooden drum that normally sets the rhythm for fish lantern dance performances, they put a folk cultural spin on Queen’s legendary classic *We Will Rock You*, blending Western popular music with thousands of years of Chinese folk performance tradition. This spontaneous fusion moment highlighted how traditional Chinese culture can resonate with global audiences, turning a casual cultural visit into a demonstration of cross-cultural connection that is already being shared across international social media platforms. The Zhanqi fish lantern dance is a centuries-old intangible cultural heritage practice in rural Anhui, held during traditional festivals to pray for good harvests, peace and prosperity. The visit of international influencers is part of broader efforts to showcase China’s regional folk culture to global audiences, creating new pathways for cultural exchange outside of major tourist hotspots.

  • World’s tallest bridge draws thrill-seekers to Guizhou canyon

    World’s tallest bridge draws thrill-seekers to Guizhou canyon

    Tucked between the steep, forested slopes of Southwest China’s Guizhou Huajiang Grand Canyon, a record-breaking engineering marvel has redefined extreme leisure travel in the region: the 625-meter-high Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge, the tallest bridge on the planet. Since welcoming its first visitors last September, this innovative infrastructure project has rapidly evolved from a technical achievement to one of Guizhou’s most popular travel landmarks, drawing thousands of adventure enthusiasts and casual sightseers alike every month.

    What sets this bridge apart from other tourist-focused infrastructure is its range of experiences tailored to different comfort levels. For hardcore thrill-seekers, the bridge caters to adrenaline cravings with one-of-a-kind bungee jumping opportunities and a unique, rail-free edge walkway that lets visitors step right to the edge of the 625-meter drop for unobstructed, heart-pounding views of the roaring river and jagged canyon cliffs thousands of meters below. For casual travelers who prefer a more relaxed visit, the bridge offers gentle walking paths along its main steel frame, where visitors can feel the mountain breeze drift up from the canyon while enjoying a cup of coffee against the backdrop of sweeping panoramic views of Guizhou’s dramatic karst landscape.

    The bridge’s rapid rise to fame underscores Guizhou’s ongoing strategy to turn its unique mountainous geography into a competitive advantage for tourism development. What began as a groundbreaking infrastructure project has become a major economic driver for local communities, creating new jobs in hospitality, guiding, and tourism services while putting the remote Huajiang Grand Canyon on the global adventure tourism map.

  • China mass-produces chip-scale atomic clock with ultra-high precision

    China mass-produces chip-scale atomic clock with ultra-high precision

    China has marked a landmark breakthrough in quantum precision measurement and high-precision timekeeping technology, with the successful mass production of an ultra-compact, fingernail-sized chip-scale atomic clock boasting extraordinary accuracy: it deviates by just one second over 30,000 years of operation. This advancement delivers a robust, high-precision time foundation for critical national strategic sectors ranging from low-Earth-orbit satellites to underwater BeiDou navigation systems, cementing China’s position as a global leader in the field.

    Developed by the Satellite Navigation and Positioning Technology Research Center at Wuhan University in central China’s Hubei Province, and commercialized via spin-off enterprise Zhongke Taifeisi (Wuhan) Technology Co, the finished device measures a mere 2.3 cubic centimeters — approximately one-seventh the volume of comparable atomic clock products manufactured in the United States, while delivering matching performance levels.

    “Time is a fundamental strategic resource. Nations that master the highest precision in timekeeping gain a decisive competitive edge across technology, economics, and even national defense,” explained Chen Jiehua, a professor at the Wuhan University research center and legal representative of Zhongke Taifeisi, in an interview with Hubei’s local newspaper Changjiang Daily. Chen, whose team has spent decades advancing the technology, emphasized the critical link between timing accuracy and navigation performance: “In navigation and positioning, time equals distance. A timing error of just one nanosecond — one billionth of a second — translates to a positioning deviation of 0.3 meters. Even the most accurate consumer timepieces drift by more than 10 seconds annually, which is why holding the “power of time” in China’s own hands has been such a critical national priority.”

    Unlike traditional timing solutions that rely on satellite calibration, chip-scale atomic clocks provide an independent, stable time reference in environments where satellite signals cannot reach or become compromised. These use cases include underwater exploration, underground infrastructure, deep space missions, and battlefields where global positioning signals are intentionally jammed.

    Traditional large atomic clocks operate by counting stable frequency signals produced when microwave fields interact with atoms. However, the long wavelength of microwaves imposes hard limits on how small these devices can be made. Chip-scale atomic clocks take a different approach, using microwave-modulated lasers that can be guided through extremely compact spaces. This innovation allows the devices to deliver ultra-high precision while cutting both physical size and power consumption by dozens of times compared to legacy designs.

    Chen highlighted the enormous untapped market potential for the technology, noting the device’s combination of tiny form factor (just a few cubic centimeters) and low power draw (less than 200 milliwatts). For example, on the seabed where satellite signals cannot penetrate and solar power is unavailable, autonomous synchronization systems require both ultra-precise time references and long-duration low-power operation — a combination that makes the new chip-scale atomic clock an ideal core frequency source component.

    To date, Zhongke Taifeisi is the first and only Chinese company to achieve large-scale commercial production of chip-scale atomic clocks. The devices have already been successfully deployed in real-world use cases, including time synchronization systems for underwater BeiDou navigation, low-Earth-orbit satellites, and drone swarms. As of 2024, the product had already sold several hundred units, with sales continuing a steady upward trajectory through 2025.

    Gou Fei, a representative of Yangtze River Industry Group — which holds a more than 20% stake in Zhongke Taifeisi — noted that quantum technology is designated as a top strategic priority for China’s future industrial development, with quantum precision measurement standing out as a key subfield where chip-scale atomic clocks act as a core enabling device.

    “Professor Chen Jiehua’s team has developed the world’s smallest chip-scale atomic clock, and in doing so has completely broken the long-standing foreign technology monopoly in the sector,” Gou said. “The product delivers a comprehensive leap forward: it is smaller than competing alternatives, matches or outperforms them in functionality, and supports scalable mass production. This achievement places China at the cutting edge of the global quantum industry.”

    Despite this milestone, mass market adoption still faces hurdles: currently, production is constrained by the performance limitations and high cost of imported laser components. To address this gap, Gou noted that Yangtze River Industry Group will deploy its capital and industrial resources to help Zhongke Taifeisi breakthrough key domestic component technologies, scale up automated production to bring down costs, and expand use cases across both military and civilian communications networks. The expansion will also strengthen Hubei’s already strong competitive position in the global quantum precision measurement sector.

    This breakthrough aligns directly with China’s 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) for national economic and social development, which prioritizes achieving key technology breakthroughs in quantum precision measurement and positioning quantum technology as a core new growth driver for the national economy.

    Globally, the sector is also growing rapidly. According to QYResearch, a global industrial market research firm with dual headquarters in Beijing and Los Angeles, the global market for chip-scale atomic clocks hit 405 million yuan ($60 million) in sales last year, and is projected to grow to 737 million yuan by 2032, reflecting rising demand across defense, navigation, telecommunications and scientific research sectors worldwide.

  • Expats try Anhui specialty vegetable at service station

    Expats try Anhui specialty vegetable at service station

    Along a busy Anhui expressway, a unique local agricultural delicacy has become an unexpected highlight for international visitors. At Fengle Service Station, a group of foreign content creators, led by UK national Joe Burns, got a first-hand taste of Jinsi Jiaogua, better known as Golden Silk Squash, the eye-catching Anhui specialty that has recently risen to national fame.

    Bred and cultivated locally in Sixian County, Anhui, Golden Silk Squash has a surprising trait that sets it apart from common produce: when cooked, its flesh naturally unravels into thin, noodle-like strands that look strikingly similar to spaghetti, despite being a variety of squash. This unusual characteristic, combined with its fresh, mild flavor, has made it a standout regional food product.

    The vegetable catapulted to broader national attention earlier this year, when it was featured as a highlighted local specialty during both the 2026 Spring Festival and Lantern Festival galas, two of China’s most-watched annual cultural events. The service station tasting, organized to showcase Anhui’s local agricultural and cultural treasures to international guests, gave the creators a chance to experience the viral specialty directly and share their impressions with global audiences.

    For visitors traveling through Anhui, stops at highway service stations have increasingly become opportunities to engage with local culture rather than just brief rest breaks. This event reflects a growing trend of integrating regional food promotion into roadside travel infrastructure, helping lesser-known local specialties gain exposure both domestically and internationally.

  • China renews blue alert for heavy rain as storms shift south

    China renews blue alert for heavy rain as storms shift south

    China’s top weather forecasting body has renewed a blue-level alert for heavy rainfall, as a major active rain band is projected to shift southward to southern Chinese regions between Thursday night and Friday. The blue alert marks the lowest severity warning in China’s four-tier national weather warning system, issued by the National Meteorological Center on Thursday.

    According to the center’s forecast, portions of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Guangdong Province and Fujian Province will see heavy downpours, and some local areas may even experience extreme torrential rain between Thursday and Friday morning. Throughout this forecasting window, the core rain and convective weather system will track east and south, positioning South China as the central zone for precipitation accumulation. Specifically, parts of eastern and southern Guangxi, along with central and northern Guangdong, are projected to see heavy to torrential rainfall through the period.

    Long before this incoming weather event, many regions located south of the Yangtze River have already faced weeks of persistent, above-average rainfall over the past 30 days. Data from Weather China, an official public weather website operated under the China Meteorological Administration, shows that multiple areas in Jiangxi Province and Hunan Province have recorded total precipitation exceeding 400 millimeters over the past month — twice the long-term average precipitation for the same calendar period in typical years.

    For residents and local authorities navigating the prolonged wet weather, a brief reprieve is on the horizon. Starting Friday and extending through midday Sunday, the affected southern and Yangtze River basin regions are expected to see a temporary dry spell that will provide a window to carry out flood prevention inspections and post-rain damage assessments.

    However, the dry conditions will not last long. Starting Sunday afternoon or evening, an entirely new round of rainfall is set to develop, bringing new wet weather to Chongqing Municipality, Guizhou Province, Hunan Province and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. By Monday and Tuesday of the following week, widespread rainfall will return to most areas south of the Yangtze River and across South China, the official weather website confirmed.

  • Zhangjiakou launches its first freight train service to Central Asia

    Zhangjiakou launches its first freight train service to Central Asia

    In a landmark step for regional trade and China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the northern Chinese city of Zhangjiakou, located in Hebei Province, launched its first regularly scheduled freight train service bound for Central Asia on April 22, 2026.

    The inaugural service departed from the Xiahuayuan District rail transportation hub carrying 49 forty-foot containers filled with a mixed cargo of auto components, industrial materials, and finished consumer goods. Per details shared by Wang Dong, marketing manager of the Beijing Railway Logistics Center, the train will travel through the Alataw Pass border crossing in Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, with an estimated transit time of 13 days to reach its final destination: Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest commercial hub.

    This new route marks a major expansion of China’s cross-border freight network connecting northern Chinese industrial regions to Central Asian markets. For Zhangjiakou, a city previously best known for co-hosting the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, the new freight service opens a direct, efficient trade corridor that integrates the city’s local manufacturing and logistics sectors into the expanding BRI economic cooperation framework. It is expected to cut trade costs for local enterprises looking to access Central Asian markets while strengthening two-way trade and economic ties between northern China and Central Asian economies.

  • Hebei pupils embrace reading corners for World Book Day

    Hebei pupils embrace reading corners for World Book Day

    As the world prepares to mark World Book Day on Thursday, young pupils at No 1 Experimental Primary School in Guangping county, Handan City, Hebei Province have already turned specially designed campus reading corners into their favorite gathering spots during break periods.

    This grassroots reading initiative is not a one-off event for the annual celebration, but the newest addition to the region’s long-running “Bookish Campus” campaign, a multi-year effort that aims to embed a love of reading into daily school life across Guangping county.

    Local education authorities have noted that the steady push to upgrade campus reading spaces, paired with consistent, engaging literacy-focused activities over the years, has delivered tangible positive outcomes for students. Beyond just sparking greater curiosity and enthusiasm for reading among young learners, the campaign has also lifted overall academic performance across participating schools. More importantly, educators and officials emphasize that fostering a consistent reading habit from an early age builds a strong foundational cultural awareness that supports the holistic growth of students, preparing them for long-term learning and personal development.

  • Remains of 12 Chinese martyrs from Korean War buried in homeland

    Remains of 12 Chinese martyrs from Korean War buried in homeland

    This page outlines key administrative and legal information for the digital content platform operated by China Daily Information Co (CDIC). First established with copyrighted protections in 1994, CDIC holds full intellectual property rights over all material published across its website, covering everything from written text and photographic assets to multimedia content. No part of this published content may be reproduced, redistributed or repurposed in any format without explicit written permission granted directly by CDIC.

    Beyond copyright regulations, the platform includes technical guidance for visitors, recommending that users access the site through a browser that supports a minimum screen resolution of 1024*768 or higher to ensure optimal display and functionality. Additional administrative details are also listed on the page: the platform holds an online multimedia publishing license numbered 0108263 and carries an official registration number of 130349.

    The page also provides navigation links for visitors seeking more information about the organization or engagement opportunities. These resources include an introductory page about China Daily, information on placing advertising campaigns on the site, official contact details for inquiries, open listings for available positions, and dedicated resources for expatriate job seekers. Finally, the page prompts visitors to connect with China Daily’s content across its social media channels to follow updated coverage.

  • What the Iran-Iraq war taught today’s Iranian leaders – and why that matters

    What the Iran-Iraq war taught today’s Iranian leaders – and why that matters

    Forty-four years ago, in September 1980, Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein launched a coordinated full-scale ground and air invasion of neighboring Iran, confident his forces would capture the Iranian capital Tehran in a matter of weeks and secure a swift, decisive victory. What followed upended both leaders’ calculations: the conflict dragged on for nearly eight brutal years, claimed the lives of more than one million combatants and civilians, and left vast swathes of infrastructure and territory in ruin. Yet far from being a catastrophic footnote in Middle Eastern history, this devastating war fundamentally reshaped and solidified the Islamic Republic of Iran into the political and military entity it is today, casting a long shadow that continues to define Iran’s actions amid the 2025 US-Israeli military campaign against the country.

    The invasion came at a moment of unprecedented chaos for Iran. Just one year prior, the 1979 Islamic Revolution had ousted the Western-backed Shah, a key US and Israeli ally in the region, leaving the country’s new leadership scrambling to consolidate control. The pre-revolutionary Iranian military had fractured in the wake of the uprising, and a fragmented landscape of competing factions – nationalist groups, leftist movements, and moderate religious factions – vied for power against the ultraconservative clerical bloc led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran’s first supreme leader.

    Saddam’s gambit to topple Khomeini’s fragile new regime backfired spectacularly. Rather than weakening clerical rule, the invasion provided a catalyst for Khomeini’s faction to tighten its grip on power, eliminate political rivals, and entrench the core institutions of the Islamic Republic. For opposition figures, the conflict proved a perfect tool for authoritarian consolidation. “For a dictatorial regime, war is the best blessing because any dissenting voice can be silenced under its pretext and the foundations of totalitarianism can be strengthened,” explained Behrouz Farahani, a Paris-based Iranian opposition critic. This framing was explicitly embraced by Khomeini himself: the phrase “War is a blessing,” attributed to the supreme leader, was painted as graffiti on walls across Iranian cities throughout the conflict.

    When the war finally ended in 1988, Khomeini died just 12 months later, opening the door for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – Iran’s current supreme leader – to consolidate power and launch full-scale national reconstruction. While the original “War is a blessing” graffiti faded from city walls, replaced by slogans from Khamenei, the core lessons the ruling clerical establishment drew from the 1980-1988 war have guided every major political and military decision Iran has made in the decades since.

    Most notably, the vast majority of Iran’s most powerful contemporary political and military leaders cut their teeth in the Iran-Iraq War. The slain Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, his successor Esmail Qaani, former senior security official Ali Larijani (assassinated by Israel in March 2025), current foreign minister Abbas Araghchi – who led Iran’s negotiations with the US – and influential parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf all served in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) during the conflict, many remaining in military service for years after the ceasefire before transitioning to civilian politics.

    Against the backdrop of the February 2025 US-Israeli invasion of Iran, analysts argue the country’s current strategy is directly shaped by hard-won lessons from the 1980s conflict. The most foundational lesson was the imperative of self-reliance. When Saddam launched his invasion, Iran found itself almost entirely isolated on the international stage: Western powers backed Saddam, and nearly all regional Arab states (with the exceptions of Syria and occasional support from Libya) aligned against Iran. Its post-revolutionary military was in disarray, and it quickly lost control of parts of the oil-rich Khuzestan province. Yet despite the isolation, shortage of weapons, and internal chaos, Iranian forces managed to push Iraqi troops back within roughly a year.

    “While Iran was under attack by Iraq, they [the Iranian establishment] realised they were not going to receive any help from the outside, so they had to rely on themselves,” explained Maziar Behrooz, a leading scholar of contemporary Iranian history and author of *Iran at War: Interactions with the Modern World and the Struggle with Imperial Russia*. “The lesson from that war was missile technology, which they reverse-engineered and then improved. Today we see its result, both in Iran’s drone and missile technologies, which have inflicted substantial damage to those who have now attacked Iran.”

    A second critical lesson was the value of moving critical military infrastructure underground. In the years after the 1988 ceasefire, Iran built missile and drone production facilities deep inside mountain networks and relocated portions of its nuclear program underground to avoid targeted strikes. Analysts credit this shift, born of the Iran-Iraq war experience, for the failure of US and Israeli efforts to disable Iran’s strike capacity in the current conflict.

    This commitment to self-reliance extended far beyond the military, reshaping Iran’s entire political and economic approach. Before the 1979 revolution, Iran was heavily dependent on Western powers, particularly the US, for both military equipment and civilian infrastructure. That dynamic shifted permanently during and after the war. “The establishment realised it had to be independent and rely as much as possible on its own resources,” said Peyman Jafari, an Iranian historian and professor at the College of William & Mary in Virginia. “Reliance on their own initiatives and strategising their policies within this framework became of high importance for them in the military, industry, intelligence, and all other fields.”

    The war also reshaped how the clerical establishment consolidated domestic power. Just months before the invasion, the 1979 US embassy hostage crisis had already stoked widespread anti-American sentiment among the Iranian public, fueled by decades of resentment over the 1953 CIA-backed coup that restored the Shah to power after he ousted Iran’s democratically elected prime minister. The invasion allowed the new regime to tie together anti-Western sentiment and nationalist mobilization to crush internal opposition. Beginning in 1981, the Khomeini-led government moved rapidly to eliminate rival factions: it cracked down on the main opposition group the People’s Mojahedin Organisation, forced out the country’s first post-revolution president Abolhassan Banisadr, launched military campaigns against Kurdish separatist groups, and dismantled remaining leftist and nationalist factions. This process created a new post-revolutionary social order: while many Iranians supported the new regime, a large share of the population stepped back as bystanders, waiting out the conflict to see which faction would emerge victorious.

    This same dynamic is playing out in the 2025 conflict. After the Iranian government violently suppressed nationwide anti-establishment protests in January 2025, the incoming US-Israeli invasion allowed the regime to stoke nationalist sentiment to repair its standing with the public, while also cracking down further on dissent. Executions of imprisoned dissidents have risen, new stricter laws criminalizing “espionage” and “contact with foreign media” have been enacted, and arrests on these charges have become far more widespread.

    Beyond domestic consolidation, the Iran-Iraq War created a permanent shift in Iran’s governance structure: after the ceasefire, hundreds of senior and mid-level IRGC commanders transitioned into roles across politics, the economy, cultural institutions, and even sports administration. This process began during the war, but accelerated rapidly after 1988, as battlefield veterans were redirected into building new state institutions. Jafari argues this process was bonded by a shared experience of “army brotherhood” forged during eight years of brutal conflict. “Because that war lasted very long, that brotherhood was really forged in steel,” he noted. These deep, battle-tied bonds have created a highly organized, layered state system that has surprised Western and Israeli observers by its resilience in the current conflict. Many analysts had predicted that targeted assassinations of senior Iranian leadership would collapse the system, but the opposite has occurred, a failure Jafari attributes to outdated orientalist assumptions about Iran’s governance. “This is rooted in this slivery orientalist idea that these Iranians are kind of savages who cannot organise any modern state. This system is very organised, with layers of offices, a finance system, and planning for its own survival,” he explained.

    While the war taught the Islamic Republic how to survive external threats, it did not resolve deep-seated internal tensions – and analysts note the regime failed to learn one critical lesson from the conflict: repression alone cannot resolve public dissatisfaction, and over time it only deepens public discontent. Even during the war, there was underlying public discontent with Khomeini’s rule, but the regime enjoyed broader popular support and faced far fewer constraints on cracking down on dissent. Today, that balance has shifted, with a shrinking circle of power and growing distance between the state and Iranian society. “In undemocratic countries, the ability to listen to the base diminishes over time, and as repression intensifies, understanding what the base demands becomes increasingly impossible,” Behrooz noted. Jafari added that long-standing structural issues have left most Iranians disillusioned with the current system: “Because of the ideological, political and cultural restrictions, many citizens do not feel that they can be integrated in this system. Moreover, we have economic problems, poverty, mismanagement, and corruption, and that’s why the majority are fed up with the system.”

    This analysis was originally produced by Middle East Eye, an independent outlet specializing in coverage of the Middle East and North Africa.