Iran computer game targets opposition

Iran computer game targets opposition
Updated 10 April 2014
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Iran computer game targets opposition

Iran computer game targets opposition

TEHRAN: A new computer game is available online in Iran that allows players to shoot opposition figures involved in the disputed 2009 presidential election, media reported Wednesday.
The free flash-based game resembles a shoddy knock-off of Doom, a popular horror-themed game in the 90s that pioneered first-person genre, and was produced by a local media company run by “youths faithful to the Islamic revolution,” according to its website.
The company says the game allows the player to “confront symbols of sedition” — a term coined in the aftermath of the 2009 presidential election to describe pro-reform supporters who disputed the poll’s result.
The player must shoot the targets — the heads of Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, two opposition leaders who have been kept incommunicado under house arrests since February 2011 — and reformist ex-president Mohammad Khatami.
The game has drawn fire Iranian reformists and according to the media, the organization tasked with issuing licenses for video games produced in Iran is reporting it to the authorities. The game is named “The Return of Mokhtar.”
The government has expressed criticism of ongoing house arrests of Mousavi and Karroubi.