Iran's Guards warn cleric over 'agitating' in restive southeast
Send a link to a friend
[October 22, 2022]
DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran's
Revolutionary Guards accused a Sunni cleric of agitating against the
Islamic Republic and warned it may cost him dearly after he said
officials including the supreme leader were responsible for dozens
killed in the city of Zahedan last month.
Amnesty International has said security forces killed at least 66 people
in a crackdown after Friday prayers in Zahedan, in the southeast, on
Sept. 30, some of the deadliest unrest during five weeks of protests
ignited by Mahsa Amini's death.
Molavi Abdolhamid, Zahedan's leading Sunni cleric, said during his
Friday sermon that officials including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, head of the Shi'ite-dominated state, were "responsible before
God" for the Sept. 30 killings.
A short statement on Sepah News, the Revolutionary Guards official news
site, said: "Mr. Abdolhamid, encouraging and agitating youths against
the sacred Islamic Republic of Iran may cost you dearly! This is the
last warning!"
The protests ignited by the death of Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd
who died after being detained by morality police for "inappropriate
attire", have posed one of the boldest challenges to the Islamic
Republic since the 1979 revolution.
Though the protests do not appear close to toppling the government,
unrest has swept the whole country including areas home to ethnic
minorities with long-standing grievances against the state.
Zahedan is the provincial capital of the Sistan-Baluchistan province of
southeastern Iran at the border with Pakistan and Afghanistan, home to
the Baluch ethnic minority.
State media said at the time of the Sept. 30 violence that "unidentified
armed individuals" opened fire on a police station, prompting security
forces to return fire.
The Revolutionary Guards said five members of its forces and the
volunteer Basij militia were killed during the Sept. 30 violence.
Authorities blamed a Baluchi militant group. Neither that group nor any
other faction claimed a role.
MORE PROTESTS
After protests erupted in Zahedan again on Friday, deputy interior
minister for security, Majid Mir Ahmadi, said calm had returned,
official news agency IRNA reported on Saturday.
He said 150 "thugs attacked public property and even those shops
belonging to Sunnis".
[to top of second column]
|
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei speaks during a meeting with the members of the Expediency
Discernment Council in Tehran, Iran October 12, 2022. Office of the
Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via
On Friday, police arrested at least 57 people, described as
"rioters", after protesters threw rocks and attacked banks in the
city, provincial police chief Ahmad Taheri was quoted as saying by
the official news agency IRNA on Friday.
State television said up to 300 protesters marched in the city after
Friday prayers. It showed banks and shops with smashed windows.
Abdolhamid, the Sunni cleric, described the Sept. 30 killing as a
massacre, saying bullets had been fired at heads and chests. "Scores
were killed here. I don't have the exact number. Some have reported
90, some say less, some say more," he said in the sermon posted on
his website.
Rights groups say the government has long discriminated against
ethnic minorities including the Kurds, in whose region unrest has
also been particularly intense since Amini's death.
The state denies accusations of discrimination.
Iran has blamed unrest on an array enemies including armed
dissidents. The Revolutionary Guards have attacked bases of armed
Iranian Kurdish groups in neighbouring Iraq.
Protesters have sought stress national unity with chants expressing
solidarity between various ethnic groups.
Rights groups Hengaw reported that shopkeepers had gone on strike on
Saturday in the provincial capital of Iran's Kurdistan province,
Sanandaj, and Saqez - Amini's hometown, in addition to Bukan,
another northwestern city.
The activist news agency HRANA reported on Friday that 244
protesters had been killed in the countrywide unrest, including 32
minors. State TV has reported the deaths of at least 26 members of
the security forces during the unrest.
(Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Alex
Richardson)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|