The Jerusalem Post

Khamenei backs fuel price hike, blames ‘sabotage’ for Iran unrest

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DUBAI (Reuters) – Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backed the gasoline price rises that have caused nationwide protests, which he blamed on the Islamic Republic’s opponents and foreign foes.

“Some people are no doubt worried by this decision... but sabotage and arson are done by hooligans, not our people,” the Iranian Supreme Leader said on Sunday in a live speech on state TV.

Riot police and security forces clashed with demonstrat­ors in Tehran and dozens of other cities on Saturday, Iranian news agencies and social media said, a day after the government increased the price of gasoline.

“The counter-revolution and Iran’s enemies have always supported sabotage and breaches of security and continue to do so,” Khamenei said. “Unfortunat­ely, some problems were caused, a number of people lost their lives, and some centers were destroyed.”

Khamenei, who has the last say on all state matters, called on officials to prevent hikes in prices of other goods.

Although Tehran raised the price of regular gasoline to 15,000 rials ($0.13) a liter from 10,000 rials and also imposed rationing, with additional purchases costing 30,000 rials per liter, the gasoline is still among the cheapest in the world. Tehran says the price increase will raise around $2.55 billion a year for extra subsidies for 18 million families, or about 60 million Iranians, on lower incomes.

Some Iranian lawmakers, who planned to discuss ways to force the government to revise its decision, withdrew their motion after Khamenei’s Sunday speech, Iran’s state media reported.

Iran’s Intelligen­ce Ministry said in a statement reported by Tasnim news agency that the protest’s leaders had been identified and “appropriat­e action” was being taken.

“People have the right to protest,” Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said, TV reported. “But that is different from riots. We cannot let insecurity in the country through riots.”

One person died in the southeaste­rn city of Sirjan on Friday, officials said, while social media cited several others as fuel price protests turned political with slogans calling for top officials to step down.

State news agency IRNA said one policeman was killed on Saturday in the protests, which struck more than 100 Iranian cities and towns. Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency said 1,000 protesters had been arrested and 100 banks torched.

Iran’s clerical rulers want to prevent any repeat of unrest in late 2017, when 22 people were reported to have died

during protests in 80 cities and towns over poor living standards, some calling on Shi’ite clerical leaders to step down.

Iranian media said calm had been restored in the country. But videos on social media showed protests continued in Tehran and other cities. The footage could not be verified by Reuters, along with other images on social media.

A day after violent clashes between security forces and protesters, France called on its citizens in Iran on Sunday to avoid public places and refrain from taking pictures, the French Embassy in Iran said on Twitter.

Tehran often accuses exiled opponents as well as the United States, arch-enemy Israel and regional rival Saudi Arabia of trying to destabiliz­e Iran through online propaganda campaigns.

Iranian Internet access was curbed this week on the orders of a state security council, the semi-official news agency ISNA reported, a move apparently aimed at preventing protesters from communicat­ing with each other and sharing video on social media.

Internet observator­y NetBlocks said that by Saturday night, connectivi­ty had fallen to just 7% of ordinary levels.

“We condemn the attempted shutdown of the internet,” US State Department spokeswoma­n Morgan Ortagus said on Twitter on Sunday. “Let them speak!”

Many shops in Tehran’s bazaar closed on Sunday, after “disruption­s” by people from outside the trading center, ISNA reported, adding that businesses were expected to reopen after police reinforcem­ents arrived. •

 ?? (Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters) ?? IRANIAN EXILES IN BERLIN attend a protest yesterday organized by the National Council of Resistance of Iran to support nationwide demonstrat­ions against the rise in gasoline prices.
(Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters) IRANIAN EXILES IN BERLIN attend a protest yesterday organized by the National Council of Resistance of Iran to support nationwide demonstrat­ions against the rise in gasoline prices.

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