Houston Chronicle Sunday

Iran’s leader hails paramilita­ry group

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BAGHDAD — Iran’s supreme leader on Saturday praised paramilita­ry volunteers tasked with quashing dissent, speaking in a televised address as dozens of eye doctors warned that a rising number of demonstrat­ors have been blinded by security forces during anti-government 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 United States and its “mercenarie­s.”

The Basij “should not forget that the main clash is with global hegemony,” Khamenei said, referring to the U.S. The address 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,” a reference to the recent unrest across the country. “They sacrificed themselves in order to confront oppression.”

The Basij has 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.

Her death sparked months of protests over the country’s mandatory headscarf but quickly morphed into one of the greatest challenges to Iran’s theocracy since the chaotic years after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

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

Iran’s crackdown has drawn criticism, with at least 448 people killed and more than 18,000 arrested in the protests and the violent security force response that followed, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group monitoring the demonstrat­ions. Iran has not offered a death toll or a number of those arrested.

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,” said the letter, addressed to the head of the country’s ophthalmol­ogists associatio­n.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Demonstrat­ors protest on a street in Iran’s capital, Tehran, in September.
Tribune News Service file photo Demonstrat­ors protest on a street in Iran’s capital, Tehran, in September.

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