The Columbus Dispatch

Iran warns neighbors against seeking unrest

- By Nasser Karimi

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s foreign minister on Monday warned neighborin­g countries against fomenting unrest after anti-government protests roiled the country over the past two weeks.

The remarks by Mohammad Javad Zarif at a security conference in Tehran echoed previous allegation­s by Iranian officials, who have blamed the violence that accompanie­d some of the protests on the United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia.

“Some countries tried to misuse the recent incidents,” Zarif said, without naming them. “No country can create a secure environmen­t for itself at the expense of creating insecurity among its neighbors.”

“Such efforts” will only backfire, the official IRNA news agency quoted Zarif as saying.

The anti-government demonstrat­ions first broke out in Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city, on Dec. 28 and later spread to several other cities and towns. The protests were the largest seen in Iran since the disputed 2009 presidenti­al election. They were sparked by a hike in food prices amid soaring unemployme­nt but some demonstrat­ors later called for the government’s overthrow and chanted against the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

At least 21 people were killed and hundreds arrested. Large pro-government rallies were held in response.

In the past few days, Iranian authoritie­s have said the protests are waning, and on Sunday, Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard claimed the nation and its security forces had ended the unrest.

The Guard blamed the unrest on the United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia, as well as an exiled opposition group known as the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, and supporters of the monarchy that was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Zarif also mentioned an emergency session of the U.N. Security Council on Friday. The United States had called the meeting, portraying Iranian protests as a human rights issue that could spill over into an internatio­nal problem.

Envoys from several other countries expressed reservatio­ns about whether the council was the right forum for the issue.

Zarif on Monday depicted the session as a fiasco, saying the Trump administra­tion is “isolated at the internatio­nal level.”

The world “witnessed that (all other) members of the U.N. Security Council spoke about preventing the meddling in Iran’s internal affairs,” he said.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, meanwhile, said that despite the exploitati­on of the protests by outsiders, authoritie­s should listen to the demonstrat­ors’ economic grievances.

Rouhani, a relative moderate, also argued against the permanent suspension of social media applicatio­ns that authoritie­s had taken offline at the height of the protests, including the popular messaging app Telegram, which is used by an estimated 40 million Iranians — half the population.

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