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A female student holds a sign in Al-Zahra University, Tehran, during protest for Mahsa Amini. ABACA/PA Images
iran protests

Iran's supreme leader blames US and Israel for protests over Mahsa Amini death

Since the unrest started on 16 September, dozens of protesters have been killed and more than a thousand arrested.

LAST UPDATE | 3 Oct 2022

IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has accused the United States and Israel of stirring up the wave of nationwide unrest sparked by outrage over the death of Mahsa Amini.

“I say clearly that these riots and the insecurity were engineered by America and the occupying, false Zionist regime, as well as their paid agents, with the help of some traitorous Iranians abroad,” the Islamic republic’s leader said.

Amini, 22, was pronounced dead on 16 September, days after the notorious morality police detained the Kurdish Iranian woman for allegedly breaching rules forcing women to wear hijab headscarves and modest clothes.

Anger over Amini’s death has sparked the biggest wave of protests to rock the Islamic republic in almost three years, with security forces in Tehran cracking down on hundreds of university students last night.

The US has said it is “alarmed and appalled by reports of security authorities responding to university students’ peaceful protests with violence and mass arrests”, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.

In his first public comments since Amini’s death, 83-year-old Khamenei stressed that police must “stand up to criminals”.

“The death of the young woman broke our hearts,” said Khamenei. “But what is not normal is that some people, without proof or an investigation, have made the streets dangerous, burned the Koran, removed hijabs from veiled women and set fire to mosques and cars”.

Khamenei added that “this is not about hijab in Iran”, and that “many Iranian women who don’t observe the hijab perfectly are among the steadfast supporters of the Islamic republic.”

Student protests 

Concern grew over a night-time crackdown on students at Tehran’s prestigious Sharif University of Technology where, local media reported, riot police carrying steel pellet guns used tear gas and paintball guns against hundreds of students.

“Woman, life, liberty” the students shouted, as well as “students prefer death to humiliation”, Mehr news agency reported.

Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights posted videos apparently showing police on motorcycles chasing students running through an underground car park and taking away detainees, their heads covered in black cloth bags.

In one clip, which IHR said was taken at a Tehran metro station, a crowd can be heard chanting: “Don’t be afraid! Don’t be afraid! We are all together!”

In response to the university protests, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said that the courage of the Iranians was “incredible”, and that “the regime’s brute force is an expression of sheer fear of the power of education and freedom.”

Protests were also reported at other universities, including in the central city of Isfahan.

Iran has repeatedly accused outside forces of stoking the protests and last week said nine foreign nationals – including from France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Poland — had been arrested.

The parents of Italian woman Alessia Piperno, 30, from Rome, said they had lost contact with her after speaking to her on Wednesday – her birthday – but then received a phone call yesterday.

“I’m fine, but there are people here who say they have been inside for months and for no reason,” she told them, according to Il Messaggero, Rome’s daily newspaper. “I fear I won’t be let out again. Help me.”

Italy’s foreign ministry has so far made no comment on the identity of the Italian held.

Sanctions

Canada, meanwhile, said it had imposed new sanctions against Iran over its “gross human rights violations”, especially citing “the egregious actions committed by Iran’s so-called ‘Morality Police’”.

At least 92 protesters have been killed so far in the Mahsa Amini rallies, said IHR, which has been working to assess the death toll despite internet outages and blocks on WhatsApp, Instagram and other online services.

Amnesty International said earlier it had confirmed 53 deaths, after Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency said last week that “around 60″ people had died.

The chief of riot police in Marivan, Kurdistan province, died of his wounds yesterday after being shot during “riots”, state television said – the 12th death reported among the security forces since 16 September.

An additional 41 people died in clashes Friday in Iran’s southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province, bordering Afghanistan and Pakistan, IHR reported earlier, citing local sources.

Those protests were sparked by accusations a police chief in the region had raped a teenage girl of the Baluch Sunni minority, the rights group said.

© AFP 2022 

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