Iranians keep up the heat on leaders with protests, strikes
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[October 08, 2022]
DUBAI (Reuters) -Iranians
enraged over the death of a young woman in police custody braved bullets
and tear gas on Saturday, a human rights group said, pressing ahead with
protests against clerical rulers facing a relentless popular uprising.
An Iranian state coroner's report denied that Mahsa Amini had died due
to blows to the head and limbs while in police custody and linked her
death to pre-existing medical conditions, state media said on Friday.
The death of 22-year-old Amini, an Iranian Kurd, has ignited nationwide
demonstrations, marking the biggest challenge to Iran's clerical leaders
in years.
Women have removed their veils in defiance of the clerical establishment
while furious crowds called for the downfall of Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei.
After a call for mass demonstrations on Saturday, security forces shot
at protesters and used tear gas in the Kurdish cities of Sanandaj and
Saqez, according to the Iranian human rights group Hengaw.
In Sanandaj, capital of Kurdistan Province in northwest Iran, one man
lay dead in his car while a woman screamed "shameless", according to
Hengaw.
Speaking at Alzahra University in Tehran, Iranian President Ebrahim
Raisi recited a poem in which he equated the "rioters" with flies.
"They imagine they can achieve their evil goals in universities.
Unbeknownst to them that our students and professors are alert and will
not allow the enemy to realise their evil goals," said Raisi, trying to
shore up support for Iran's leaders.
Widespread strikes are taking place in the cities of Saqez, Diwandareh,
Mahabad and Sanandaj, said Hengaw.
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Iran's riot police forces stand in a
street in Tehran, Iran October 3, 2022. WANA (West Asia News Agency)
via REUTERS
One of the schools in Saqez city's square was filled with school
girls chanting "woman, life, freedom," it reported.
Amini was arrested in Tehran on Sept. 13 for "inappropriate attire",
and died three days later.
Rights groups say more than 150 people have been killed, hundreds
injured and thousands arrested by security forces confronting
protests.
Hengaw said on Saturday that Iranian security forces had launched
crackdowns in two Kurdish cities.
"Security forces are shooting at the protesters in Sanandaj and
Saqez," the group said. It said riot police were also using tear
gas.
The widely followed Tavsir1500 Twitter account also reported
shootings at protesters in the two northwestern Kurdish cities.
The government has described the protests as a plot by Iran's
enemies including the United States, accusing armed dissidents -
among others - of violence in which at least 20 members of the
security forces have been reported killed.
(Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Writing by Michael GeorgyEditing by
Ros Russell)
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