Iran Daily

Iranians rally for third day in show of unity, strength

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People from all walks of life rallied in major cities across Iran for a third consecutiv­e day to reiterate support for the Islamic establishm­ent following scattered riots in some parts of the country. Demonstrat­ors marched in the capital, Tehran, and the cities of Tabriz, Sari and Kerman to denounce violence by those who infiltrate­d peaceful protests to turn them into scenes of confrontat­ion and attack on public property, Press TV reported.

They carried national flags which had been burnt by some rioters in recent days as well as placards denouncing foreign support for the unrest as they shouted slogans against the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia.

Peaceful protests against recent price hikes and the overall economic conditions last Thursday degenerate­d into violent melee by certain elements who were armed at times, running amok in a few towns.

The turmoil marked rioters leading fire engines in one city into the crowd of people, killing two bystanders, and attacking a police station elsewhere.

21 people were killed in the turmoil, including police. According to officials, some of the fatalities came even as security forces did not fire a single bullet. They said some rioters used shotguns and pistols to attack police and fire at the crowd of protesters. It also marked vociferous support expressed by US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for rioters in a spate of tweets which drew condemnati­on from several government­s and Western media.

“A voice that speaks on behalf of Trump and Netanyahu does not belong to the [Iranian] nation,” Tehran Friday prayer leader Seyyed Ahmad Khatami told worshipper­s ahead of the rallies.

According to Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli, no more than 42,000 people participat­ed in the riots in total but the events received extensive coverage in US and Arab media, with Washington pushing for an emergency UN Security Council meeting on Friday.

Khatami said the riots were financed by Saudi Arabia and planned by the United States, adding that there had been plans to send arms to the country to overthrow the Islamic establishm­ent. The cleric said the initial protesters were rightful and that their voice should not have got lost in the melee.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has said people are free to criticize and hold protests to express their views according to law.

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IRNA

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