The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Amnesty says at least 106 killed in Iran protests

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Days of protests in Iran over rising fuel prices and a subsequent government crackdown have killed at least 106 people across the Islamic Republic, Amnesty Internatio­nal said Tuesday, citing “credible reports.”

Iran’s government, which has not made nationwide numbers available for the toll of the unrest that began Friday, did not immediatel­y respond to the report. A request for comment to its mission at the United Nations was not immediatel­y acknowledg­ed.

The Amnesty report comes after a U.N. agency earlier said it feared the unrest may have killed “a significan­t number of people.” Amnesty added that it “believes that the real death toll may be much higher, with some reports suggesting as many as 200 have been killed.”

Iranian authoritie­s have not offered a definitive account of how many people have been arrested, injured or killed in the protests that spread quickly across at least 100 cities and towns. Authoritie­s shut down internet access to the outside world Saturday, an outage that persisted Monday in the nation of 80 million.

That has left only state media and government officials to tell their story.

State television showed video Tuesday of burned Qurans at a mosque in the suburbs of the capital, Tehran, as well as progovernm­ent rallies, part of its efforts to both demonize and minimize the protests.

Absent in the coverage, though, was an acknowledg­ment of what sparked the demonstrat­ions in the first place. The jump in gasoline prices represents yet another burden on Iranians who have suffered through a painful currency collapse, following President Donald Trump’s unilateral withdrawal of the United States from Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers and the reimpositi­on of crippling U.S. economic sanctions.

Relatively moderate President Hassan Rouhani has promised that the fuel price increase will be used to fund new subsidies for poor families. But the decision has unleashed widespread anger among Iranians, like Maryam Kazemi, a 29yearold accountant in the southern Tehran suburb of Khaniabad, who said the new cost of fuel was “putting pressure on ordinary people.”

“It was a bad decision at a bad time. The economic situation has long been difficult for people, and Rouhani unexpected­ly implemente­d the decision on fuel,” she said.

Amnesty said it gathered its figures from interviewi­ng journalist­s and human rights activists, then crosscheck­ed the informatio­n. In its breakdown, it showed the hardesthit areas as the western Kermanshah province and its oilrich southweste­rn province of Khuzestan. Many online videos released before the internet outage showed unrest there.

Amnesty, citing eyewitness­es corroborat­ed by video footage, said snipers also shot into crowds of people from rooftops and, in one case, a helicopter.

So far, scattered reports in staterun and semioffici­al media have reported only six deaths.

 ?? Masoume Aliakbar / Associated Press ?? In this photo taken Monday and released by Iranian Students’ News Agency, ISNA, people walk past buildings which burned during protests that followed the authoritie­s’ decision to raise gasoline prices, in the city of Karaj, west of the capital Tehran, Iran. An article published Tuesday in the Keyhan hardline newspaper in Iran is suggesting that those who led violent protests will be executed by hanging as the unrest continues.
Masoume Aliakbar / Associated Press In this photo taken Monday and released by Iranian Students’ News Agency, ISNA, people walk past buildings which burned during protests that followed the authoritie­s’ decision to raise gasoline prices, in the city of Karaj, west of the capital Tehran, Iran. An article published Tuesday in the Keyhan hardline newspaper in Iran is suggesting that those who led violent protests will be executed by hanging as the unrest continues.

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