Special Report: Iran's leader ordered crackdown on unrest - 'Do whatever
it takes to end it'
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[December 23, 2019]
By Reuters staff
(Reuters) - After days of protests across
Iran last month, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appeared
impatient. Gathering his top security and government officials together,
he issued an order: Do whatever it takes to stop them.
That order, confirmed by three sources close to the supreme leader’s
inner circle and a fourth official, set in motion the bloodiest
crackdown on protesters since the Islamic Revolution in 1979.
About 1,500 people were killed during less than two weeks of unrest that
started on Nov. 15. The toll, provided to Reuters by three Iranian
interior ministry officials, included at least 17 teenagers and about
400 women as well as some members of the security forces and police.
The toll of 1,500 is significantly higher than figures from
international human rights groups and the United States. A Dec. 16
report by Amnesty International said the death toll was at least 304.
The U.S. State Department, in a statement to Reuters, said it estimates
that many hundreds of Iranians were killed, and has seen reports that
number could be over 1,000.
The figures provided to Reuters, said two of the Iranian officials who
provided them, are based on information gathered from security forces,
morgues, hospitals and coroner’s offices.
The government spokesman’s office declined to comment on whether the
orders came from Khamenei and on the Nov. 17 meeting. Iran’s mission to
the United Nations did not respond to a request for comment for this
story.
What began as scattered protests over a surprise increase in gasoline
prices quickly spread into one of the biggest challenges to Iran’s
clerical rulers since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
By Nov. 17, the second day, the unrest had reached the capital Tehran,
with people calling for an end to the Islamic Republic and the downfall
of its leaders. Protesters burned pictures of Khamenei and called for
the return of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the toppled Shah of Iran,
according to videos posted on social media and eye witnesses.
That evening at his official residence in a fortified compound in
central Tehran, Khamenei met with senior officials, including security
aides, President Hassan Rouhani and members of his cabinet.
At the meeting, described to Reuters by the three sources close to his
inner circle, the 80-year-old leader, who has final say over all state
matters in the country, raised his voice and expressed criticism of the
handling of the unrest. He was also angered by the burning of his image
and the destruction of a statue of the republic’s late founder,
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
“The Islamic Republic is in danger. Do whatever it takes to end it. You
have my order,” the supreme leader told the group, one of the sources
said.
Khamenei said he would hold the assembled officials responsible for the
consequences of the protests if they didn’t immediately stop them. Those
who attended the meeting agreed the protesters aimed to bring down the
regime.
“The enemies wanted to topple the Islamic Republic and immediate
reaction was needed,” one of the sources said.
The fourth official, who was briefed on the Nov. 17 meeting, added that
Khamenei made clear the demonstrations required a forceful response.
“Our Imam,” said the official, referring to Khamenei, “only answers to
God. He cares about people and the Revolution. He was very firm and said
those rioters should be crushed.”
Tehran’s clerical rulers have blamed “thugs” linked to the regime’s
opponents in exile and the country’s main foreign foes, namely the
United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia, for stirring up unrest. Khamenei
has described the unrest as the work of a “very dangerous conspiracy.”
A Dec. 3 report on Iran’s state television confirmed that security
forces had fatally shot citizens, saying “some rioters were killed in
clashes.” Iran has given no official death toll and has rejected figures
as “speculative.”
“The aim of our enemies was to endanger the existence of the Islamic
Republic by igniting riots in Iran,” said the commander-in-chief of the
elite Revolutionary Guards Corps, Hossein Salami, last month, according
to Iranian media.
The Revolutionary Guards declined to comment for this report.
Iran’s interior minister said on Nov. 27 more than 140 government sites
had been set on fire along with hundreds of banks and dozens of petrol
stations, while 50 bases used by security forces were also attacked,
according to remarks reported by Iran’s state news agency IRNA. The
minister said up to 200,000 people took part in the unrest nationwide.
“SMELL OF GUNFIRE AND SMOKE”
For decades, Islamic Iran has tried to expand its influence across the
Middle East, from Syria to Iraq and Lebanon, by investing Tehran’s
political and economic capital and backing militias. But now it faces
pressure at home and abroad.
In recent months, from the streets of Baghdad to Beirut, protesters have
been voicing anger at Tehran, burning its flag and chanting anti-Iranian
regime slogans. At home, the daily struggle to make ends meet has
worsened since the United States reimposed sanctions after withdrawing
last year from the nuclear deal that Iran negotiated with world powers
in 2015.
The protests erupted after a Nov. 15 announcement on state media that
gas prices would rise by as much as 200% and the revenue would be used
to help needy families.
Within hours, hundreds of people poured into the streets in places
including the northeastern city of Mashhad, the southeastern province of
Kerman and the southwestern province of Khuzestan bordering Iraq,
according to state media. That night, a resident of the city Ahvaz in
Khuzestan described the scene by telephone to Reuters.
“Riot police are out in force and blocking main streets,” the source
said. “I heard shooting." Videos later emerged on social media and state
television showing footage of clashes in Ahvaz and elsewhere between
citizens and security forces.
The protests reached more than 100 cities and towns and turned
political. Young and working-class demonstrators demanded clerical
leaders step down. In many cities, a similar chant rang out: "They live
like kings, people get poorer," according to videos on social media and
witnesses.
By Nov. 18 in Tehran, riot police appeared to be randomly shooting at
protesters in the street “with the smell of gunfire and smoke
everywhere,” said a female Tehran resident reached by telephone. People
were falling down and shouting, she added, while others sought refuge in
houses and shops.
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Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivers a speech
during a ceremony marking the death anniversary of the founder of
the Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in Tehran, Iran,
June 4, 2017. TIMA via REUTERS
The mother of a 16-year-old boy described holding his body, drenched
in blood, after he was shot during protests in a western Iranian
town on Nov. 19. Speaking on condition of anonymity, she described
the scene in a telephone interview.
“I heard people saying: ‘He is shot, he is shot,’” said the mother.
“I ran toward the crowd and saw my son, but half of his head was
shot off.” She said she urged her son, whose first name was
Amirhossein, not to join the protests, but he didn't listen.
Iranian authorities deployed lethal force at a far quicker pace from
the start than in other protests in recent years, according to
activists and details revealed by authorities. In 2009, when
millions protested against the disputed re-election of hardline
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, an estimated 72 people were killed.
And when Iran faced waves of protests over economic hardships in
2017 and 2018, the death toll was about 20 people, officials said.
Khamenei, who has ruled Iran for three decades, turned to his elite
forces to put down the recent unrest -- the Revolutionary Guards and
its affiliated Basij religious militia.
A senior member of the Revolutionary Guards in western Kermanshah
province said the provincial governor handed down instructions at a
late-night emergency meeting at his office on Nov. 18.
"We had orders from top officials in Tehran to end the protests, the
Guards member said, recounting the governor’s talk. “No more mercy.
They are aiming to topple the Islamic Republic. But we will
eradicate them." The governor’s office declined to comment.
As security forces fanned out across the country, security advisors
briefed Khamenei on the scale of the unrest, according to the three
sources familiar with the talks at his compound.
The interior minister presented the number of casualties and
arrests. The intelligence minister and head of the Revolutionary
Guards focused on the role of opposition groups. When asked about
the interior and intelligence minister’s role in the meeting, the
government spokesman’s office declined to comment.
Khamenei, the three sources said, was especially concerned with
anger in small working-class towns, whose lower-income voters have
been a pillar of support for the Islamic Republic. Their votes will
count in February parliamentary elections, a litmus test of the
clerical rulers' popularity since U.S. President Donald Trump exited
Iran's nuclear deal -- a step that has led to an 80% collapse in
Iran's oil exports since last year.
Squeezed by sanctions, Khamenei has few resources to tackle high
inflation and unemployment. According to official figures, the
unemployment rate is around 12.5% overall. But it is about double
that for Iran’s millions of young people, who accuse the
establishment of economic mismanagement and corruption. Khamenei and
other officials have called on the judiciary to step up its fight
against corruption.
“BLOOD ON THE STREETS”
Officials in four provinces said the message was clear -- failure to
stamp out the unrest would encourage people to protest in the
future.
A local official in Karaj, a working-class city near the capital,
said there were orders to use whatever force was necessary to end
the protests immediately. “Orders came from Tehran,” he said,
speaking on condition of anonymity. “Push them back to their homes,
even by shooting them.” Local government officials declined to
comment.
Residents of Karaj said they came under fire from rooftops as
Revolutionary Guards and police on motorcycles brandished machine
guns. “There was blood everywhere. Blood on the streets,” said one
resident by telephone. Reuters could not independently verify that
account.
In Mahshahr county, in the strategically important Khuzestan
province in southwest Iran, Revolutionary Guards in armored vehicles
and tanks sought to contain the demonstrations. State TV said
security forces opened fire on “rioters” hiding in the marshes.
Rights groups said they believe Mahshahr had one of the highest
protest death tolls in Iran, based on what they heard from locals.
"The next day when we went there, the area was full of bodies of
protesters, mainly young people. The Guards did not let us take the
bodies," the local official said, estimating that “dozens” were
killed.
The U.S. State Department has said it has received videos of the
Revolutionary Guards opening fire without warning on protesters in
Mahshahr. And that when protesters fled to nearby marshlands, the
Guards pursued them and surrounded them with machine guns mounted on
trucks, spraying the protesters with bullets and killing at least
100 Iranians.
Iran’s authorities dispute the U.S. account. Iranian officials have
said security forces in Mahshahr confronted “rioters” who they
described as a security threat to petrochemical complexes and to a
key energy route that, if blocked, would have created a crisis in
the country.
A security official told Reuters that the reports about Mahshahr are
“exaggerated and not true” and that security forces were defending
“people and the country’s energy facilities in the city from
sabotage by enemies and rioters.”
In Isfahan, an ancient city of two million people in central Iran,
the government’s vow to help low-income families with money raised
from higher gas prices failed to reassure people like Behzad
Ebrahimi. He said his 21-year-old nephew, Arshad Ebrahimi, was
fatally shot during the crackdown.
“Initially they refused to give us the body and wanted us to bury
him with others killed in the protests,” Ebrahimi said. “Eventually
we buried him ourselves, but under the heavy presence of security
forces." Rights activists confirmed the events. Reuters was unable
to get comment from the government or the local governor on the
specifics of the account.
(Editing by Michael Georgy, Cassell Bryan-Low and Jason Szep)
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