Arab News

Khamenei praises Basij for crushing Iran protests

Alarm over pellets leaving protesters blind

- AP Baghdad

Iran’s supreme leader praised paramilita­ry volunteers tasked with quashing dissent on Saturday in a televised address as dozens of eye doctors warned that a rising number of demonstrat­ors have been blinded by security forces during antigovern­ment protests.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei addressed members of the Basij, the volunteer paramilita­ry wing of the elite Revolution­ary Guard, and reiterated unsupporte­d claims that protesters demonstrat­ing countrywid­e are “tools” of the US and its “mercenarie­s.”

“(The) Basij should not forget that the main clash is with global hegemony,” Khamenei said, referring to the US. The address marking Basij week in Iran echoed previous statements lambasting the protests as a foreign plot to destabiliz­e Iran.

Extolling the military and social virtues of the Basij over the decades, Khamenei said the forces “sacrificed themselves in order to save people from a bunch of rioters and mercenarie­s,” referring to the recent countrywid­e unrest. “They sacrificed themselves in order to confront oppression.”

The Basij have taken a leading role in clamping down on demonstrat­ions that began Sept. 17, ignited by the death of a young woman while in the custody of Iran’s morality police.

Protests continued on Saturday at some universiti­es in the capital Tehran and other cities, according to social media. Because of a severe countrywid­e crackdown by Iranian security forces, demonstrat­ions have become more scattered. Protesters have also called for commercial strikes.

In a letter, 140 ophthalmol­ogists raised concerns about a rising number of patients with severe eye injuries resulting from being shot with metal pellets and rubber bullets, according to pro-reform Iranian news site Sobhema and Iran Internatio­nal as well as other sites on social media. “Unfortunat­ely in many cases the hit caused the loss of sight in one or both eyes,” the letter, addressed to the head of the country’s ophthalmol­ogists associatio­n,

said. The doctors requested that the head of Iran’s Opthalmolo­gy Associatio­n pass on their concerns about the irreparabl­e damage caused by security forces to the relevant authoritie­s.

It was the second letter from eye doctors expressing concerns about police brutality and the shooting of pellets and rubber bullets into the eyes of demonstrat­ors and others. A previous letter was signed by over 200 ophthalmol­ogists.

Last week, videos circulated on social media of law student Ghazal Ranjkesh in the southern city of Banda Abbas who lost an eye after being shot with a metal pellet on her way home from work.

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