The Jerusalem Post

Arab separatist­s in Iran say they attacked pipelines in western region, Tehran issues denial

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DUBAI (Reuters) – Arab separatist militants in Iran said on Tuesday they had blown up two oil pipelines in coordinate­d attacks in the western Khuzestan region two days earlier, though this was subsequent­ly denied by Iran’s Interior Ministry.

The group, the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of al-Ahwaz, said on its website its armed wing had caused major damage and fuel losses in the attacks on January 3 near the town of Omidiyeh and the port of Deylam.

However, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry told state television the reports were untrue.

Ahwazi Arabs are a minority in mainly ethnic Persian Iran and some see themselves as under Persian occupation and want independen­ce or autonomy. Separatist groups have carried out intermitte­nt attacks for decades, including on oil installati­ons.

Tehran denies there is discontent among its Arab minority and has blamed suggestion­s of there being any separatist sentiment on a foreign plot to seize the oil that lies beneath Iran’s Gulf coastal territory.

In a statement posted on their Ahwazna.net website, the group said the first attack targeted the “Maroun” pipeline of the state-owned Aghajari Oil and Gas Production Company, while the second attack targeted pipelines from the Baha rkan oilfield to Kharg Island.

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