Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Anti-government protests rock Iran for second day

Anger still deep over plane downed by the military

- By Nabih Bulos and Sarah Parvini

BAGHDAD — Anti-government protests continued for a second day across Iran amid fury over the military’s admission it had downed a Ukrainian Internatio­nal Airlines jetliner near Tehran last week, killing all 176 of its passengers.

The demonstrat­ions mark yet another crisis for Iran’s leaders, who have been blamed for a weakening economy even as they cope with the Trump administra­tion’s targeted killing of a top general, Qassem Soleimani, in Iraq. The downing of the commercial aircraft, which military leaders acknowledg­ed Saturday they had done by mistake, came after their firing missiles at military bases in Iraq as a response to the White House.

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Azadi Square in downtown Tehran on Sunday, blocking roads around the square even as authoritie­s dispatched riot police to force them open.

There were also reports of demonstrat­ions spreading to other cities, including Shiraz, Ahwaz and Babol. The protesters excoriated the country’s top officials, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for what many saw as incompeten­ce of the military establishm­ent as well as the delayed acknowledg­ment of error after three days of denials.

“Our shame, our same, our stupid supreme leader,” shouted a group of demonstrat­ors in Azadi Square in a video posted to social media on Sunday. “Death to the dictator!” and “We don’t want an Islamic Republic!” other videos showed.

Anger has continued — and even grown — despite expression­s of contrition from Iranian officials, including Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the elite Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps’ airspace unit that was responsibl­e for downing the plane.

“I wish I were dead and such an accident hadn’t happened,” said Hajizadeh at a news conference Saturday.

He did not offer his resignatio­n.

The protests come after a moment of unity in Iran over the U.S.’s slaying of Soleimani, head of the Revolution­ary Guard Corps’ Quds Force and an important leader seen as a bulwark against Islamic State.

His killing brought tensions to a fever pitch between Washington and Tehran, leading to jittery Iranian military personnel firing surface-to-air missiles at what they thought, officials said, was a U.S. cruise missile attack but which actually was Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752.

Among the victims were dozens of Iranians, many of them students. Their alma maters were the site of protests Saturday evening.

Video posted Sunday showed students at Tehran’s Shahid Behesthti University walking around an American and an Israeli flag that had been painted on the floor suggesting that their beef was not with those nations but with Iranian leadership. As a Basij officer walked over the painted area, the crowd began to shout and called him “dishonorab­le” — an affront in Iranian culture.

The protests have garnered internatio­nal scrutiny amid fears of a crackdown by security forces. “To the leaders of Iran — DO NOT KILL YOUR PROTESTERS. Thousands have already been killed or imprisoned by you, and the World is watching,” tweeted Trump. “More importantl­y, the USA is watching.”

Britain too issued a complaint over the detention of its ambassador to Iran, Rob Macaire, which it said was “a flagrant violation of internatio­nal law.”

Macaire, later released, said he had come to pay respects at what was said to be a vigil for the victims of the doomed Ukrainian flight. He added in a tweet that he had left after five minutes when chanting broke out.

Iran summoned Macaire for his attending “an illegal rally,” according to a statement from Iran’s foreign ministry. Later that day, pro-government demonstrat­ors burned U.K. and U.S. flags.

Despite the discontent, it remains unclear whether the protests represent a strong threat to the country’s rulers.

“We are seeing Iran’s population of over 80 million growing increasing­ly polarized and frustrated based on various issues. Some over the economy, others over corruption, lack of political freedoms, Soleimani’s assassinat­ion, and mismanagem­ent across most branches of government and military,” said Ellie Geranmayeh, an Iran expert at the European Council on Foreign Relations. “The support base for the Islamic Republic is getting smaller and more segments of Iran’s population are questionin­g the legitimacy of its leaders — but neverthele­ss the support for the ruling elite remains powerful enough (no matter its shrinking size) to maintain its survival.”

 ?? MONA HOOBEHFEKR/ISNA VIA GETTY-AFP ?? A woman attending a candleligh­t vigil in memory of the victims of a downed Ukrainian jetliner gestures at a policeman on Saturday night in Tehran, Iran.
MONA HOOBEHFEKR/ISNA VIA GETTY-AFP A woman attending a candleligh­t vigil in memory of the victims of a downed Ukrainian jetliner gestures at a policeman on Saturday night in Tehran, Iran.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States