South China Morning Post

Thousand of Iranians take to streets in show of support

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Thousands of Iranians took to the streets of Iran early yesterday in a show of support for the unpreceden­ted drone and missile attack against arch foe Israel.

“Death to Israel!” and “Death to America!” chanted demonstrat­ors in Tehran’s Palestine Square shortly after the Revolution­ary Guards announced the launch of Operation Honest Promise.

A mural saying “the next slap is fiercer” was unveiled in the square where a huge banner has hung for days calling, in Hebrew, for Israelis to “take shelter”.

Demonstrat­ors also waved Iranian and Palestinia­n national flags alongside banners reading “God’s victory is near”.

Iran’s attack came in retaliatio­n for an April 1 strike that levelled the five-storey consular annexe of the Iranian embassy in Damascus and killed seven Revolution­ary Guards, two of them generals.

Tehran has since vowed to avenge the strike, which was widely blamed on Israel.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pledged that the “evil [Israeli] regime will be punished”.

Iranian media described the attack on Israel as “complex” as it also involved Iranian allies in Yemen, Lebanon and Iraq.

“This attack did not come from Iran only, and this regime [Israel] is being punished from four directions,” the Tasnim news agency said.

A large crowd of demonstrat­ors gathered outside the British embassy in Tehran.

Supporters of the retaliator­y attack also demonstrat­ed in Iran’s third-largest city Isfahan where Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Zahedi, one of the generals killed in the Damascus strike, is buried.

Demonstrat­ors also gathered near the grave in the southern city of Kerman of prominent Guards commander Qassem Soleimani, who was killed in a 2020 US drone strike in Baghdad.

Tehran had earlier appealed to Washington to keep out of its conflict with Israel, but Iranian hopes were dashed after a Pentagon official confirmed that US forces were shooting down Israel-bound drones.

Iran insists that has it acted in “self-defence” after the targeting of its diplomatic mission in Damascus. It said it hoped its action would prompt no further escalation and “the matter can be deemed concluded”.

The latest developmen­ts took place against the backdrop of the Gaza war which began with the October 7 attack on Israel in Hamas and which was followed by a retaliator­y offensive againsty Gaza by the Israeli miliatry.

Tehran backs Hamas but has denied any direct involvemen­t in its attack on Israel.

Iran does not recognise Israel, and the two countries have fought a shadow war for years.

Anticipati­on of conflict with Israel had gripped Iran ever since the April 1 strike on its consulate.

“It is better to reach a compromise so that the war does not begin, and innocent people don’t die,” said Maryam, a 43-year-old private sector worker.

“God willing, our government will favour reason over emotion,” said Salehi, a 75-year-old retired government employee in central Tehran.

Ehsan, a 43-year-old university professor, said it was “logical” to retaliate.

“War is always bad and worrying – a person who has experience­d war would never support it, but sometimes to achieve peace, a war is necessary,” he added.

God willing, our government will favour reason over emotion

SALEHI, RETIRED GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEE

 ?? ?? An Israeli Air Force F-15 Eagle after an intercepti­on mission.
An Israeli Air Force F-15 Eagle after an intercepti­on mission.

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