The Day

After week of unrest, pro-government rallies in Iran

- By NASSER KARIMI and JON GAMBRELL

Tehran, Iran — Tens of thousands of government supporters took to the streets across Iran on Wednesday as authoritie­s tried to project a sense of stability after a week of nationwide protests sparked deadly clashes and calls for the downfall of the Islamic Republic.

But even as state television broadcast swooping helicopter shots showing support among Iran’s 80 million people for its clerically overseen government, videos emerged showing the anti-government unrest that has swept major cities has also spread to the countrysid­e.

The violence has killed at least 21 people and seen hundreds more arrested by authoritie­s. Demonstrat­ors’ videos correspond­ed with Associated Press reporting from outside of Iran, though individual activists remain unreachabl­e and the protests for now appear leaderless. It was not clear if new protests were held Wednesday or if the videos showed earlier incidents.

The past week’s protests have been the largest since the disputed 2009 presidenti­al election, which ended in bloodshed. While many Iranians denounce the violence that has accompanie­d some demonstrat­ions, they echo the protesters’ frustratio­n over the weak economy and official corruption.

The government “should not punish the guilty and the innocent alike,” said Mohammad Hossein Vakili, a 20-yearold computer science student in Tehran who has struggled to find meaningful work and who joined in peaceful protests.

“Why should they arrest someone like me when I protest the rise of the price of eggs?” he said.

The protests began Dec. 28 in Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city and a bastion for hard-liners, initially focusing on Iran’s flagging economy and rising food prices. Now, they’ve morphed into demands for wholesale change in Iran’s theocratic government.

On Wednesday, state TV reported pro-government demonstrat­ions in dozens of cities and towns, including Ahvaz, the capital of the oil-rich province of Khuzestan, the Kurdish town of Kermanshah in the country’s west and Qom, the religious capital of Shiite Islam in Iran.

All those cities have seen protests in recent days.

The pro-government crowds included women wearing the all-encompassi­ng black chador, the occasional man in military fatigues and Shiite clerics wearing black turbans identifyin­g them as descendant­s of the Prophet Muhammad. Some claimed online that government employees had been instructed to take part, something Iranian media did not discuss.

 ?? MOHAMMAD AHANGARI/ISNA VIA AP ?? In this photo provided by the Iranian Students’ News Agency, a clergyman takes a picture of a pro-government demonstrat­ion Wednesday in Ahvaz, Iran. Tens of thousands of Iranians took part in pro-government demonstrat­ions in several cities across the...
MOHAMMAD AHANGARI/ISNA VIA AP In this photo provided by the Iranian Students’ News Agency, a clergyman takes a picture of a pro-government demonstrat­ion Wednesday in Ahvaz, Iran. Tens of thousands of Iranians took part in pro-government demonstrat­ions in several cities across the...

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