[Iran] - Death without mourning: How worldwide media trivialize Iranian suffering

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
MADRID The surge that claimed the lives of at least 70 individuals and left over a thousand injured at the Shahid Rajaei port in southern
Iran has actually been a national tragedy of monumental proportions
Taking place near the tactically crucial Strait of Hormuz, an essential passage for worldwide energy transportation, the occurrence has not
just shaken Iranian society in humanitarian terms but has once again revealed the mechanisms through which the legitimacy of suffering is
built within the international media space.Just hours after the surge, significant international media outlets and certain Western analysts
started to speculate about the reasons for the incident, sometimes with paradoxical or condescending insinuations
In the face of comparable disasters in other parts of the world, the method would have been really various: a sober protection, concentrated
on the human measurement, accompanied by diplomatic gestures and institutional uniformity
In the Iranian case, nevertheless, what prevails is what the theorist Jasbir Puar has referred to as a necropolitical desire, in which the
lives of particular bodies the non-Western, racialized, geopolitically adversarial are represented as less worthy of mourning, as a
tolerable, even foreseeable loss.This differential treatment is not unexpected
It is inscribed within a colonial framework of representation in which the Iranian body, like the Palestinian or Iraqi body, is conceived
not only as expendable however likewise as suspicious
The victims at Shahid Rajaei port were not discursively built as residents or employees, but as extensions of an enemy state entity, in
whose distress there seems to be a hint of poetic justice.The irony of particular analystssome connected to military think tanks or outlets
like Iran Internationalregarding the tragedy can be understood, following Puar, as part of a training in death logic: a form of violence
that does not exclusively manifest in the physical act of killing, but in the way some bodies are permitted to die without grieving, memory,
or recognition
In this sense, the Western institutional silence concerning the disaster contrasts with the swift reaction from Iranian society: artists,
academics, athletes, and normal residents expressed their solidarity with the victims, reconstructing a social bond in the face of global
discursive decomposition.In this context, it is likewise crucial to think about the geopolitical measurement of the disaster
Iran goes through an extended campaign of economic pressure, concealed industrial sabotage, and diplomatic isolation
The idea that this surge might be part of a technique of destabilization has actually not been dismissed by different voices inside and
outside the nation, though conclusive proof is still lacking
Even without direct evidence, what is essential is to observe how the very suspicion itself forms part of a discourse system where Iran
appears as completely guilty, even when it suffers.The Shahid Rajaei port is, moreover, a tactical enclave, not just for Iran however for
worldwide trade as a whole
Its distance to the Strait of Hormuz makes it a symbolic and logistical target of main importance
In this sense, the incident affects not only the local population but the local facilities as a whole
However, the dominant interpretive structures continue to reduce Iranian pain to an appendix of the dispute, to a peripheral information
point in a geopolitics that rarely grants centrality to the daily lives of individuals who withstand it.The omissionwhether conscious or
notof empathy likewise has an internal impact
The opposition voices who, from exile or foreign media, freely rejoiced at the catastrophe not just showed a worrying ethical indifference
but also assisted enhance a narrative in which the nations well-being is secondary to their own political job
In some cases, such as in monarchical tv channels or particular platforms funded by foreign powers, the surge was treated with sarcasm or
instrumentalized as proof of the expected structural instability of the Iranian state.One of those voices that ventured to make humor of the
catastrophe was the present Middle East editor for The Economist, Greg Carlstrom, who published the list below comment on X: Looks like
individuals accountable for the Beirut port have actually discovered a brand-new task
Carlstrom was describing the catastrophe that happened at the Beirut port on August 4, 2020, which damaged large areas of the Lebanese
capital, killing over 220 people and injuring at least 6,500 more
It was among the most destructive catastrophes in recent Lebanese history
Carlstroms use of this event as humor in relation to the explosion at Shahid Rajaei port in Iran shows not just an absence of level of
sensitivity but also the occurrence of a position that dehumanizes victims when they come from politically or geographically thought about
enemy contexts.Carlstroms comment, dismissive and dehumanizing, shows an attitude that, rather than recognizing human suffering, opts to
trivialize it, marking a clear difference between lives considered deserving of empathy and those seen as expendable or, even worse yet, as
part of the geopolitical video game
These types of comments not just perpetuate racial and political predisposition but likewise stabilize indifference to disasters happening
outside the Western framework
Instead of promoting a discourse of uniformity and mankind, dehumanization is preferred, where the suffering of some is presented as
inescapable, even simply, when it comes from those thought about enemies or actors not aligned with dominant global interests.Greg
Carlstroms comment is not satirical, nor is it even amusing
Or maybe it is what could be called hegemonic humor, a form of humor that does not seek to take apart power structures, however to
perpetuate them
This type of humor is worked out from above to below, making fun of adversarial bodies, which exist as objects of mockery rather than
compassion
What Carlstrom stops working to acknowledge, or deliberately neglects, is that in this kind of humor lies a deeply rooted colonial vision:
the idea that non-white bodies, the bodies of the Other, have no right to even death
This dehumanization is so insidious that they are not even given the dignity of grieving or acknowledgment, as they are politically built as
disposable bodies, bodies that do not be worthy of either pity or memory
Hence, Carlstroms comment not only trivializes the disaster however also reinforces a global class structure in which the suffering of
individuals from the Global South is dismissed, dealt with as incidental and even unavoidable, without any value whatsoever.What is at stake
in these kinds of comments is, ultimately, the capacity to acknowledge the humankind of individuals suffering under dominant geopolitical
structures
The silence of the worldwide neighborhood, the contempt for the tragedy in Iran, and the dehumanization fundamental in the remarks from
figures like Carlstrom are all linked in a wider pattern of indifference toward the lives of those outside the Western structure
In this sense, the catastrophe at Shahid Rajaei port must be seen not only as a regional catastrophe but as a symptom of the more
comprehensive international power dynamics that form the lives, sufferings, and deaths of countless people in the non-Western world.Iranian
suffering, like that of other peoples in the Global South, continues to be the things of a double moral requirement: one moral standard that
grants worth and dignity to the lives of Westerners and another that, when it comes to racialized individuals and those geopolitically
outside the dominant international interests, views death and suffering as foreseeable, even essential
The catastrophe at Shahid Rajaei port is not just an irreversible pain for the victims and their households however also a suggestion of the
deep structural oppressions that continue to define global relations, where the humankind of particular bodies stays a subordinated concern
to political and geostrategic interests.The silence of numerous worldwide media outlets, paired with the dismissive mindset of specific
commentators, highlights how global politics continues to be an area where the life and death of racialized bodies are treated with
indifference, if not contempt
In this sense, the disaster in Iran and the comments that have accompanied this event welcome us to question the reasonings of
representation and the power structures that continue to dehumanize peoples outside the worldwide center
This article first appeared/also appeared in Tehran Times