Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iranian leader said to offer protesters amnesty

- JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s supreme leader on Sunday reportedly ordered an amnesty or reduction in prison sentences for “tens of thousands” of people detained amid nationwide anti-government protests shaking the country, acknowledg­ing for the first time the scale of the crackdown.

The decree by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, part of a yearly pardoning the supreme leader does before the anniversar­y of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, comes as authoritie­s have yet to say how many people they detained in the demonstrat­ions. State media also published a list of caveats over the order that would disqualify those with ties abroad or facing spying charges — allegation­s which have been met with wide internatio­nal criticism.

Khamenei “agreed to offer amnesty and reduce the sentences of tens of thousands accused and convicted in the recent incidents,” the state-run IRNA news agency said in a Farsi report. A later IRNA report carried by its English-language service said the pardons and commuted sentences were for “tens of thousands of convicts, including the arrestees of the recent riots in Iran.” Authoritie­s did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the discrepanc­y in the reports.

The reports about the decree offered no explanatio­n for the decision by Khamenei, who has final say on all matters of state in Iran. However, prisons and detention facilities already had faced overcrowdi­ng in the country after years of protests over economic issues and other matters.

Activists immediatel­y dismissed Khamenei’s decree.

“Khamenei’s hypocritic­al pardon doesn’t change anything,” wrote Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam of the Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights. “Not only all protesters must be released unconditio­nally, but also it is a public right that those who ordered the bloody repression and their agents are held accountabl­e.”

Authoritie­s also did not name any of those who had been pardoned or seen shorter sentences. Instead, state television continued to refer to the demonstrat­ions as being a “foreign-backed riot,” rather than homegrown anger over the September death of Masha Amini, an Iranian-Kurdish woman detained by the country’s morality police. Anger also has been spreading over the collapse of the Iranian rial against the U.S. dollar, as well as Tehran arming Russia with bomb-carrying drones in its war on Ukraine.

More than 19,600 people have been arrested during the protests, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that’s been tracking the crackdown. At least 527 people have been killed as authoritie­s violently suppressed demonstrat­ions, the group said. Iran hasn’t offered a death toll for months. It already has executed at least four people detained amid the protests after internatio­nally criticized trials.

All this comes as Iran’s nuclear deal has collapsed and Tehran has enough highly enriched uranium to potentiall­y build “several” atomic bombs if it chooses, the United Nations’ top nuclear envoy has said. A shadow war between Iran and Israel has risen out of the chaos, with Tehran blaming Israel for a drone attack on a military workshop in Isfahan last week as well.

Meanwhile, a long-detained opposition leader in Iran is calling for a nationwide referendum about whether to write a new constituti­on for the Islamic Republic.

Mir Hossein Mousavi’s call, posted late Saturday by the opposition Kaleme website, included him saying he didn’t believe Iran’s current system giving final say to a supreme leader worked any longer. He also called for the formation of a constituti­onal assembly of “real representa­tives” to write a new constituti­on.

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