Iranian Opposition Reeling Under Pressure of Crackdown

Dissidents in hiding after flooding streets just one year ago.

ByABC News
June 18, 2010, 1:27 PM

June 21, 2010; -- One year ago Sunday, a single, violent death captivated the world. 27-year-old Neda Agha Soltan was shot during an anti-government protest in Tehran on June 20, 2009 – her death caught on camera and broadcast around the world on YouTube. Neda quickly become a symbol of the protest movement in Iran.

But one year later, the movement is suffering under the weight of a brutal crackdown.

We recently returned from a rare visit inside Iran -- the first by American television reporters since the protests. Though the government banned us from any contact with opposition leaders, we met them in secret and hid their identities for their safety.

What we found was a climate of deep fear among those who oppose the Iranian regime. People who once said they were on the verge of a revolution are now demoralized and on the run -- crushed by a brutal crackdown of show trials, torture and execution.

Everywhere we went, we were followed. But the risks are greatest for the opposition. In ten trips to Iran, this was the most nervous I've seen them.

A husband-and-wife pair of activists -- we'll call them Mehdi and Maryam -- arranged to be interviewed in a moving car.

"If they want they can come to our house and take us," Maryam said.

"They are coming for activists one by one... next I think it will be our turn," her husband Mehdi said.

Both had been beaten and injured by police loyal to the government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but they insisted they were not afraid to keep up their fight.

"We attended more than 20 or 30 protests during just one year. If you do that, you get used to it. You face the danger." Mehdi said.

We met another opposition figure, whom we'll call Ahmad, in a public park after midnight. Arrested twice and tortured, he's now hiding from the police.

"They don't know where I am right now," he said. "Each night I spend in a different place."

If the police were to find him, Ahmad says, he could spend ten to fifteen years in prison.