The Mercury News

Iran reportedly reimposes mobile internet blackout in various provinces

- By Arsalan Shahla

Iranian authoritie­s have shut down mobile internet access across several provinces and security has been heightened in Tehran, the Iranian Labour News Agency reported, as mourning ceremonies approach for protesters killed last month in a government crackdown.

The mourning services are scheduled to begin on Thursday. The independen­t Shargh newspaper said five unidentifi­ed provinces will be subject to the blackout, while ILNA said internet users in those areas will have access to a limited number of state-approved Iran websites and applicatio­ns.

Social media footage whose authentici­ty cannot be verified appeared to show an increased presence of security forces and riot police in the capital.

Iran was rocked by protests in November after the government increased gasoline prices by as much as 200% and introduced rationing as the economy struggles under crippling U.S. sanctions. The unrest soon took a broader anti-establishm­ent turn, sparking a violent government crackdown and similar restrictio­ns on internet access. Amnesty Internatio­nal, the London-based human rights group, has said at least 304 protesters were killed, while Reuters, citing unidentifi­ed Iranian government officials, has put the figure around 1,500.

Iran has acknowledg­ed its security forces shot and killed protesters, but hasn’t given a toll. It’s called the Reuters number a lie and an exaggerati­on.

As the mourning ceremonies approach, authoritie­s arrested the family of a 27-year-old man who was killed by security forces in the city of Karaj during last month’s protests.

The mother, father, siblings and cousin of 27-year-old Pouya Bakhtiari were arrested for “instigatin­g counter-revolution­ary projects,” according to the semi-official Mehr news agency. They had recently appeared on social media appealing to citizens to join them in a mourning ceremony for their son on Thursday.

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