Cape Argus

Iranians strike in anniversar­y protests

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IRANIANS took to the streets yesterday after organisers of protests over Mahsa Amini’s death called for demonstrat­ions marking three years since a lethal crackdown on unrest sparked by a fuel price hike.

The call to commemorat­e those slain in the 2019 crackdown is expected to give new momentum to the protests that have roiled Iran for two months since Amini died on September 16, after her arrest for allegedly flouting the Islamic republic’s strict dress code for women.

Young activists have appealed for people to “conquer” the streets in Ahvaz, Isfahan, Mashhad and Tabriz, among other cities, including Tehran.

Shops were shuttered in Tehran’s famed Grand Bazaar and its neighbourh­ood of Tehranpars, and women were seen waving their headscarve­s above their heads on the street in the southern city of Shiraz, according to online videos verified by AFP.

“Death to the dictator,” commuters were heard chanting in a Tehran metro station, using a slogan directed at Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in other footage online.

Striking steel workers were seen gathering in a car park in the historic city of Isfahan, in videos posted on social media.

Workers downed tools and university students boycotted classes in Amini’s home province of Kurdistan, in western Iran, said the Oslo-based Hengaw human rights group.

In the province’s flashpoint city of Sanandaj, protesters were seen burning tyres in a street and chanting anti-government slogans, in other online footage.

“Woman, life, freedom” and “Man, homeland, prosperity”, chanted young male and females students at Islamic Azad University in the north-western city of Tabriz, in a video.

The call for protest actions yesterday was to mark the third anniversar­y of the start of “Bloody Aban” – or Bloody November – when a surprise fuel price hike sparked street violence.

The days of unrest in Iran from November 15 saw police stations attacked, shops looted, and banks and petrol stations torched as authoritie­s imposed a week-long internet blackout.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said at least 304 people were killed in the unrest that quickly spread to more than 100 urban centres across the Islamic republic. A tribunal convened in London this year by human rights groups said expert evidence suggested the actual number killed was likely far more, possibly even as high as 1 515. The anonymous youth groups behind the latest calls for protests have been mobilising since the death of Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman of Kurdish origin.

Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights said on Saturday that security forces had killed at least 326 people so far in the ongoing crackdown on the Amini protests.

The unrest was fanned by fury over the dress rules for women, but has grown into a broad movement against the theocracy that has ruled Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

It has shown no sign of abating despite the Iranian authoritie­s’ use of lethal force to confront what human rights groups say have been largely peaceful protests and a campaign of mass arrests that has snared activists, journalist­s and lawyers.

 ?? | AFP ?? A VIDEO grab shows Iranian students chanting slogans at the Kermanshah university in support of the protest movement in western Iran’s city of Kermanshah, yesterday.
| AFP A VIDEO grab shows Iranian students chanting slogans at the Kermanshah university in support of the protest movement in western Iran’s city of Kermanshah, yesterday.

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