Sowetan

Iran rejects UN probe into anti-government protests

Demonstrat­ions show no signs of stopping

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Dubai – Iran will reject a newly appointed independen­t UN investigat­ion into the country’s repression of anti-government protests, the foreign ministry said yesterday, as demonstrat­ions showed no sign of abating.

“Iran will have no cooperatio­n with the political committee formed by the UN Rights Council,” ministry spokespers­on Nasser Kanaani said.

The UN Rights Council voted on Thursday to appoint a probe into Iran’s deadly crackdown on protests.

The UN rights commission­er, Volker Turk, had earlier demanded that Iran end its “disproport­ionate” use of force in quashing protests that erupted after the death in custody of 22-year old Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini on September 16.

Activist news agency HRANA said 450 protesters had been killed in more than two months of nationwide unrest as of November 26, including 63 minors.

It said 60 members of the security forces had been killed, and 18,173 protesters detained.

Challengin­g the Islamic Republic’s legitimacy, protesters from all walks of life have burnt pictures of Khamenei and called for the downfall of Iran’s Shi’ite Muslim theocracy.

The protests have particular­ly focused on women’s rights – Amini was detained by morality police for attire deemed inappropri­ate under Iran’s Islamic dress code – but have also called for the fall of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The unrest has posed one of the boldest challenges to Iran’s clerical ruling elite since it came to power in the 1979 Islamic revolution, though authoritie­s have crushed previous rounds of major protests.

Iran has blamed foreign foes and their agents for the unrest.

Iran has proof that Western nations were involved in protests that have swept the country, Kanaani said yesterday. “We have specific informatio­n proving that the US, Western countries and some of the American allies have had a role in the protests,” he said, without giving details.

Iran has given no death toll for protesters, but a deputy foreign minister, Ali Bagheri Kani, has said that about 50 police had died and hundreds been injured in the unrest – the first official figure for deaths among security forces.

He did not say whether that figure also included deaths among other security forces such as the Revolution­ary Guards.

 ?? ?? An Iranian holds an image of Mahsa Amini during a protest in Santiago, Chile. /REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado
An Iranian holds an image of Mahsa Amini during a protest in Santiago, Chile. /REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

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