Muscat Daily

Iran vows to severely punish ‘mercenarie­s’ behind violence

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Tehran, Iran - Iran vowed on Sunday to severely punish ‘mercenarie­s’ arrested over a wave of street unrest sparked by a fuel price hike, as much of the country came back online after a week-long Internet blackout.

Authoritie­s say calm has been restored and have announced plans to hold a pro-government demonstrat­ion to condemn the ‘rioters’ at Tehran’s Enghelab Square on Monday afternoon.

The protests first flared on November 15, hours after a surprise announceme­nt that petrol prices were being raised by as much as 200 per cent with immediate effect.

Highways were blocked, banks and petrol stations set on fire and shops looted as the demonstrat­ions turned violent and spread to dozens of urban centres across the country.

Citing law enforcemen­t officials, Fars news agency said on Sunday that 180 ringleader­s had been arrested over the street violence, which it has blamed on enemies abroad.

“We have arrested all stooges and mercenarie­s who have explicitly made confession­s that they have been mercenarie­s of America, of Monafeghin and others,” said Rear-Admiral Ali Fadavi, deputy commander in chief of the Revolution­ary Guards.

Monafeghin is a term Iran

People walk past a charred office of a bank that was set ablaze by protesters during a demonstrat­ion against the rise in gasoline prices in the central city of Isfahan on November 17

uses to refer to the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran (MEK) opposition in exile group, which it considers a ‘terrorist’ cult.

The government said the fuel price hike would allow it to provide welfare payments to the needy in Iran, where many have struggled to make ends meet since the US reimposed sanctions after withdrawin­g from a landmark nuclear deal.

Officials have confirmed five deaths in the unrest, while Amnesty Internatio­nal said more than 100 demonstrat­ors were believed to have been killed and the real toll could be as high as 200.

Fadavi said about protest leaders that ‘we have arrested all of them and, God willing, the judiciary will give them maximum punishment­s’.

“We will certainly respond in accordance with the viciousnes­s carried out by them,” he told a news conference in Tehran.

The Revolution­ary Guards deputy commander was speaking at a gathering of female members of the Basij, a militia loyal to Iran’s establishm­ent.

On Friday, a Basij commander said the unrest sparked by the fuel price hike amounted to a ‘world war’ against Iran that had been thwarted.

Brigadier General Salar Abnoosh said interrogat­ions had revealed that a ‘coalition of evil’ of Israel, the United States and Saudi Arabia was behind the ‘sedition’, according to ISNA news agency.

The total number of people arrested over the unrest remained unclear, but the UN human rights office put it at more than 1,000 on Tuesday.

At the height of the unrest, a near-total Internet blackout was imposed in a step seen as aimed at curbing the spread of videos of the violence.

The outage had helped to ‘disrupt the complicate­d’ plans by Iran’s enemies, Abnoosh said on Friday. Connectivi­ty was back on Sunday for much of the country except for its mobile telephone networks, said NetBlocks, a website that monitors global Internet disruption­s.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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