Iran unrest death toll rises as protests intensify
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[September 21, 2022]
DUBAI (Reuters) -Iranian
authorities said on Wednesday three people including a member of the
security forces had been killed during unrest sweeping the country, as
anger at the death of a woman in police custody fuelled protests for a
fifth day.
Rights groups reported at least one more person was killed on Tuesday,
which would take the death toll to least seven.
The death last week of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was arrested by
morality police in Tehran for "unsuitable attire", unleashed simmering
anger over issues including freedoms in the Islamic Republic and an
economy reeling from sanctions.
After beginning on Saturday at Amini's funeral in Iran's Kurdistan
province, protests have engulfed much of the country, prompting
confrontations as security forces have sought to suppress them.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei did not mention the protests -
some of Iran's worst unrest since street clashes last year over water
shortages - during a speech on Wednesday commemorating the 1980-88
Iran-Iraq war.
A top Khamenei aide paid condolences to Amini's family this week,
promising to follow up on the case and saying the Supreme Leader was
affected and pained by her death.
The official IRNA news agency said a "police assistant" died from
injuries on Tuesday in the southern city of Shiraz.
"Some people clashed with police officers and as a result one of the
police assistants was killed. In this incident, four other police
officers were injured," IRNA said. An official quoted by IRNA said 15
protesters were arrested in Shiraz.
In Kermanshah, the city prosecutor said two people had been killed on
Tuesday in riots. "We are certain this was done by anti-revolutionary
elements because the victims were killed by weapons not used by the
security apparatus," the semi-official Fars news agency cited prosecutor
Shahram Karami as saying.
Two Kurdish human rights groups - Hengaw and the Kurdistan Human Rights
Network - said a 43-year-old man was killed by security forces' gunfire
on Tuesday in Urmia, a city in the western Azerbaijan province.
There was no official confirmation of that death.
Amini fell into a coma and died while waiting with other women held by
the morality police, who enforce strict rules in the Islamic Republic
requiring women to cover their hair and wear loose-fitting clothes in
public.
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A police motorcycle burns during a
protest over the death of Mahsa Amini, a woman who died after being
arrested by the Islamic republic's "morality police", in Tehran,
Iran September 19, 2022. WANA (West Asia News Agency) via
REUTERS/File Photo
Her father said she had no health problems and that she suffered
bruises to her legs in custody and holds the police responsible for
her death. The police have denied harming her.
TEHRAN RALLY
Women have been heavily present in the protests, with many waving or
burning their veils, or cutting their hair in public.
Videos shared on social media have also shown demonstrators damaging
symbols of the Islamic Republic.
One showed a man scaling the facade of the townhall in the northern
city of Sari and tearing down an image of Ayatollah Khomeini, who
established Iran's Islamist government after the 1979 revolution.
People rallied again on Wednesday in Tehran, with hundreds shouting
"death to the dictator" at Tehran University, a video shared by
1500tasvir showed.
Reuters could not verify the authenticity of the videos.
Hengaw, the Kurdish rights group, said internet had been cut
completely in the Kurdistan province, where protests have been
particularly intense and Iran's Revolutionary Guards has a history
of suppressing unrest.
It also reported the death of another man killed on Tuesday in
Piranshahr, also in the western Azerbaijan province, while saying
that another died from wounds sustained on Monday in Saqez, Amini's
hometown.
There was no official confirmation of these fatalities.
Hengaw said all the civilians it reported killed were Kurds.
The governor of Kurdistan province has blamed the deaths of three
men in Kurdistan province on unspecified terrorist groups. Hengaw
has said they were killed when security forces opened fire.
The Tehran governor said authorities had identified 1,800 people
with a "history of taking part in previous riots, including 700 who
have significant records within various police, security and
judicial institutions".
(Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; Writing by Tom PerryEditing by Andrew
Cawthorne, William Maclean)
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