Iranian police fire shots, teargas to disperse protests over building
collapse
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[May 28, 2022] DUBAI
(Reuters) - Iranian police used tear gas and fired shots in the air to
disperse another night of protests over a deadly building collapse in
the southwestern city of Abadan that officials are blaming on corruption
and lax safety, Fars news agency and reports on social media said.
Officials in the oil producing region of Khuzestan, where Abadan is
located, said the death toll had risen to 28 people, and another 37 were
injured in Monday's collapse of the 10-storey residential and commercial
building. So far 13 people have been arrested for building violations,
they said.
Authorities investigating the disaster have detained Abadan's current
and past mayors and several other municipal employees, amid accusations
that safety warnings were ignored.
Fars agency said that a protest in Abadan on Friday night turned violent
when crowds forced their way into the ruins of the building, where
rescue operations were continuing. Police fired tear gas and warning
shots, it said.
Footage on social media showed people running for cover. Screams of
"Don't shoot, don't shoot" and the sound of gunfire could be heard.
Reuters could not independently authenticate the footage.
Unverified video from Khuzestan's port city of Mahshahr showed
protesters shouting: "They stole oil and gas, took our blood".
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General view at the site of a ten-storey building collapse in
Abadan, Iran May 23, 2022. WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
Marches in solidarity with the Abadan protests have
also been held in several nearby areas in Khuzestan as well as
Shahin Shahr in central Iran and the southern city of Shiraz,
according to other unverified postings on social media.
First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber told state television on
Friday he believed that "widespread corruption" between the builder,
contractor and supervising bodies was responsible for the disaster.
As during earlier protests over food price rises, residents have
reported disrupted internet services, an apparent attempt to stop
the use of social media to organise rallies and disseminate videos.
Officials deny blocking internet access.
(Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Dominic Evans and Frances
Kerry)
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