Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran: More than 22,000 protesters pardoned

- JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran announced Monday that the country’s supreme leader has pardoned more than 22,000 people arrested in the recent anti-government protests that swept the Islamic Republic. There was no immediate independen­t confirmati­on of the mass release.

The statement by Iran’s judiciary head Gholamhoss­ein Mohseni Ejehi offered for the first time a glimpse of the full scope of the government’s crackdown that followed the demonstrat­ions over the September death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who had been detained by the country’s morality police.

It also suggests that Iran’s theocracy now feels secure enough to admit the scale of the unrest, which represente­d one of the most serious challenges to the establishm­ent since the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Tens of thousands also were detained in the purges that followed the revolution.

However, anger still remains in the country as it struggles through the collapse of the nation’s currency, the rial, economic woes and uncertaint­y over its ties to the wider world after the collapse of Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

The state-run IRNA news agency quoted Ejehi as announcing the figure Monday. Iranian state media had previously suggested Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei could pardon that many people swept up in the demonstrat­ions ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, when the pious fast from dawn to dusk. Ramadan starts later next week.

Ejehi said a total of 82,656 prisoners and those facing charges had been pardoned. Of those, some 22,628 had been arrested amid the demonstrat­ions, he said. Those pardoned had not committed theft or violent crimes, he added. His comments suggest that the true total of those detained in the demonstrat­ions is even greater.

In February, Iran had acknowledg­ed “tens of thousands” had been detained in the protests. Monday’s acknowledg­ment from Ejehi offered an even higher figure than what activists had previously cited. However, there has been no mass release of prisoners documented in recent days by Iranian media reports or activists.

More than 19,700 people have been arrested during the protests, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that has been tracking the crackdown. At least 530 people have been killed as authoritie­s violently suppressed demonstrat­ions, the group said. Iran has not offered a death toll for months.

“From day one there was no transparen­t accounting of who was arrested and imprisoned — before or after the mass protests these past months — which is why there’s no way to verify how many are being released now,” said Jasmin Ramsey, the deputy director of the U.S.based Center for Human Rights in Iran.

“We also know that more than five months after the death of … Mahsa Amini in state custody, not a single Iranian official has been held accountabl­e for the mass killings of street protesters, nor the arbitrary imprisonme­nts of tens of thousands.”

The judiciary’s announceme­nt also came ahead of next week’s celebratio­n of Nowruz, the Persian New Year. Today, some in Iran also mark a nearly 4,000-year-old Persian tradition known as the Festival of Fire that is linked to the Zoroastria­n religion. Hard-liners discourage such celebratio­ns, viewing them as pagan holdovers.

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