The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘Rioters’ shot and killed at protests, Iran admits for first time

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IRANIAN state television has acknowledg­ed security forces shot and killed what it described as “rioters” in multiple cities amid recent protests over the spike in government-set petrol prices.

It was the first time authoritie­s offered any sort of accounting for the violence used to put down the deadly demonstrat­ions.

The acknowledg­ement came in a television report yesterday that criticised internatio­nal Persian-language channels for their reporting on the crisis, which began on November 15.

The state TV report described the killings in four categories, alleging some of those killed were “rioters who have attacked sensitive or military centres with firearms or knives, or have taken hostages in some areas”.

The report described others killed as passers-by, security forces, and peaceful protesters without assigning blame for their deaths.

In one casae, the report said security forces confronted a separatist group in the city of Mahshahr armed with

“semi-heavy weapons”.

“For hours, armed rioters had waged an armed struggle,” the report said. “In such circumstan­ces, security forces took action to save the lives of Mahshahr’s people.”

Mahshahr in Iran’s southweste­rn Khuzestan province was believed to be hard-hit in the crackdown.

U.S. President Donald Trump said yesterday that Iran was

“killing thousands of people” for protesting.

“Iran is killing perhaps thousands and thousands of people right now as we speak, that is why they cut off the internet so people can’t see what is going on,” Trump said during a visit to London.

“Not just small numbers which are bad, big numbers which are really bad, and really big numbers ... It is a terrible thing and the world has to be watching.” Amnesty Internatio­nal said on Monday it believes at least 208 people were killed in the protests and the crackdown that followed.

Iranian officials disputed Amnesty’s findings yesterday, though no evidence was offered to support the denials.

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