Houston Chronicle

Violent protests confound Iranian leaders

12 demonstrat­ors, police officer killed as stakes are raised

- By Erin Cunningham

Anti-government protests have turned increasing­ly violent with the deaths of 12 demonstrat­ors and a police officer, raising the stakes as unrest on the streets has raged now for five days.

ISTANBUL — Anti-government protests in Iran have turned increasing­ly violent with the deaths of 12 demonstrat­ors and a police officer, raising the stakes as unrest on the streets has raged now for five days and confounded leaders who have struggled to respond.

The protests have been stunning in their ferocity and geographic reach, spreading to farflung towns and cities that are stronghold­s of the middle- and working-class.

The demonstrat­ors themselves appeared Monday to be leaderless, and their demands diffuse, ranging from better living conditions to more political freedoms and even an end to the Islamic Republic. Their chants and attacks on government buildings broke taboos in a system that brooks little dissent. The demonstrat­ions were the boldest challenge to government authority since a pro-democracy revolt in 2009.

The prospect of a harsher response from security forces, whose brutality is notorious, raised fears of further violence in a country buffeted by conflict elsewhere in the region. Iran has sent cash, weapons, and fighters to prop up proxies and allies from Syria to Lebanon and Gaza — and that, too, has become a focus of the protests. The country’s expensive foreign policy adventures were scorned as some demonstrat­ors chanted, “Leave Syria, think about us!”

At least 10 people were killed overnight in what state media said Monday were clashes between police and “armed protesters” who had attempted to infiltrate security outposts. The demonstrat­ors were from provincial areas in the south and southweste­rn parts of the country, including both impoverish­ed and oil-producing regions.

One police officer was killed and three others wounded by a gunman in the city of Najafabad, about 200 miles south of Tehran, according to state media reports.

Earlier, activists had said that two demonstrat­ors were shot and killed Saturday during peaceful protests.

Videos circulated online of protesters fleeing tear gas and water cannons, while others confronted police.

On Monday, demonstrat­ors again gathered in Tehran, as well as an array of provincial cities, including Kermanshah in the west and Shiraz in central Iran, according to reports on social media. They chanted “Death to the dictator!” — referring to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei — and called on security forces to join them.

The unrest began Thursday in the northern city of Mashhad over price hikes and other economic woes. Iran’s economy had been battered by years of U.S. and internatio­nal sanctions, which isolated the Islamic Republic for its nuclear program. Many of those sanctions were lifted as part of a nuclear deal with world powers in 2015, but few Iranians have benefitted from the relief.

In contrast to the 2009 uprising — which challenged the reelection of President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, and was driven primarily by Tehran’s educated elite — the current protests have occurred throughout the country and in traditiona­l government stronghold­s.

 ?? AFP / Mehr News ?? An image grab from a video released by Iran’s Mehr News shows a group of men pushing traffic barriers Saturday on a street in Tehran. Ten people died overnight.
AFP / Mehr News An image grab from a video released by Iran’s Mehr News shows a group of men pushing traffic barriers Saturday on a street in Tehran. Ten people died overnight.

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