Iran

Iranians keep up protests over Mahsa Amini death despite growing death toll

Reuters

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Iranians keep up protests over Mahsa Amini death despite growing death toll

FILE PHOTO: Morality police take down the name of a detained woman during a crackdown on "social corruption" in north Tehran June 18, 2008.

REUTERS/Stringer (IRAN)/File Photo

Protests ignited by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in the custody of Iran's morality police on September 16 turn into one of the boldest challenges to the clerical leadership since the 1979 revolution

DUBAI, UAE – Iranians kept up anti-government protests on Wednesday, October 12, despite an increasingly deadly state crackdown, social media reports showed, as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed the demonstrations as “scattered riots” planned by Iran’s enemies.

Protests ignited by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in the custody of Iran’s morality police on September 16 have turned into one of the boldest challenges to the clerical leadership since the 1979 revolution.

A crowd of at least 100 people blocked a road in central Tehran, shouting “by cannon, tank or firecracker, mullahs must get lost”, one video showed. Another video showed dozens of riot police deployed in a Tehran street where a fire was burning.

Tear gas was fired during a protest outside the lawyers association in Tehran, where demonstrators who appeared to number in the dozens had chanted “women, life freedom”, videos posted on social media showed.

Reuters could not independently verify the videos.

In an apparently coordinated effort, activist groups called for protesters to gather from early afternoon, breaking the pattern of nighttime demonstrations that have prevailed since unrest began sweeping Iran nearly four weeks ago.

While observers do not believe the protests are close to toppling the government – the authorities withstood six months of protests in 2009 over a disputed election – the unrest has underlined pent-up frustrations over freedoms and rights.

Amini’s death has struck a nerve, bringing a broad sweep of Iranians onto the streets, with protesters expressing anger at the heavy handedness of morality police and saying the victim could have been anyone’s mother, sister or daughter.

The widely followed 1500tasvir Twitter account shared what it described as a video showing morality police in Tehran arresting a woman over her hijab. A woman could be heard shouting “leave her alone!”

The Norway-based Iran Human Rights organisation said th edeath toll had increased to at least 201 civilians during the unrest, including 23 minors. Its previous report, on October 8, put the death toll at 185 people.

The authorities have said around 20 members of the security forces have been killed. Iran has accused its enemies including the United States of fomenting the unrest.

‘Stand up to enemies’

The unrest comes at a time of hardship for ordinary people in Iran, where costly interventions in wars such as Syria have fueled criticism in recent years. The economy continues to suffer from bad management and from Western sanctions tightened over Iran’s nuclear program, nudging Tehran ever closer to Russia and China.

Khamenei, a focus of protesters’ anger, said the protests were designed by Iran’s enemies, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported. “These scattered riots are the passive and clumsy design of the enemy against the great and innovative developments and movements of the Iranian nation,” he said.

“The cure against enemies is to stand up to them,” he said.

The unrest has been especially intense in Amini’s native Kurdistan region, where Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have a track record of putting down unrest by the Kurdish minority numbering more than 10 million.

Human rights group Hengaw reported strikes in Kurdish regions including Amini’s hometown of Saqez and Bukan, sharing videos which appeared to show shops with their shutters down in both towns.

In Rasht, the capital of Gilan province in northern Iran, a dozen protesters were seen shouting in a video posted on social media “from Kurdistan to Gilan, I sacrifice my life for Iran,” echoing chants that have stressed national unity. Reuters could not verify the video. – Rappler.com

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