The Columbus Dispatch

Teachers protest over poisonings

Iran officials pressured as schoolgirl­s become ill

- Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Iranian teachers protested Tuesday over suspected poisonings targeting schoolgirl­s, as a prominent lawmaker and an activist group put the number of those reporting symptoms in the thousands across hundreds of schools.

The new figures dramatical­ly escalate the ongoing crisis now gripping the highest levels of Iran’s theocracy, already under pressure after months of demonstrat­ions following the death of Mahsa Amini in September.

Meanwhile, prosecutor­s started filing criminal charges against journalist­s, activists and others over their comments on the still-unsolved incidents that began in November. Officials also again announced arrests of unnamed suspects over the occurrence­s, with little detail, after withdrawin­g similar earlier claims.

These incidents at schools, with new ones reported Tuesday, threaten to again stoke public anger as parents fear for the safety of their children. It remains unclear who may be behind the suspected attacks and what chemicals – if any – have been used.

“The poisonings are further forcing a domestic conversati­on along Iran’s deep social divides between religious conservati­ve Iranians and more secular liberal Iranians,” risk-intelligen­ce firm the RANE Network said in an analysis. “If the poisonings continue, they will become another trigger of disruptive unrest against the government, regardless of whether the government is actually behind them or not.”

One new toll came from Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that also monitored the recent protests over Amini’s death. Relying on official reports and activists, the group said at least 290 suspected school poisonings have happened over recent months, with at least 7,060 students claiming to be affected.

At least 99 cities and 28 of Iran’s 31 provinces have been affected in the crisis, the group said. Tehran province has seen the most suspected incidents with 33 cases, followed by Qom province, where the crisis began in November.

Another toll came from Mohammed Hassan Asefari, a prominent Iranian lawmaker who is on a panel investigat­ing the incidents and has close ties to security forces. He told the semioffici­al ISNA news agency that as many as 5,000 students have complained of being sickened in 230 schools across 25 provinces.

Iranian authoritie­s to this point have yet to offer exact figures in the crisis. Activists and Iranian media reports previously have said that more than 1,000 students complained of falling ill, with at least 400 of them hospitaliz­ed.

Angry over what they described as the government’s slow response, teachers demonstrat­ed in a number of Iranian cities, including Ahvaz, Isfahan, Karaj, Mashhad, Rasht, Sanandaj, Saqqez and Shiraz, online videos purported to show.

Other videos showed riot police in the streets, with some police officers surroundin­g those demonstrat­ing in Isfahan. Activists identifyin­g themselves as belonging to Iran’s Coordinati­ng

Council of Teachers Syndicates said police used pepper spray, water cannons and force to disperse protesters in Mashhad, Rasht and Saqqez.

Iranian state media made no mention of Tuesday’s demonstrat­ions or of security forces dispersing demonstrat­ors. Teachers have been targeted by security forces and faced arrests for months over protesting in support of their long-standing demands for salary increases amid the collapse of Iran’s currency, the rial.

Protesters and others have raised the possibilit­y that religious extremists may be targeting schoolgirl­s to stop them from being educated. Attacks on women have happened in the past in Iran, most recently with a wave of acid attacks in 2014 around Isfahan, at the time believed to have been carried out by hard-liners targeting women for how they dressed. But even in the chaos surroundin­g the Islamic Revolution, no one targeted schoolgirl­s for attending class.

Iran itself also has been calling on the Taliban in neighborin­g Afghanista­n to have girls and women return to school.

Determinin­g what’s going on in Iran has been difficult. Authoritie­s have detained nearly 100 journalist­s since the start of the protests in September over the death of the 22-year-old Amini, detained allegedly because of how she was dressed. The targeting of journalist­s has escalated in recent days amid their reports on the suspected poisonings.

Tehran chief prosecutor Ali Salehi said authoritie­s began filing charges against journalist­s, including editors at the reformist newspapers Hammihan and Shargh, which have led reporting on the suspected poisonings. A news site, activists and others also face charges over allegedly spreading “unreal claims and totally false” statements about the attacks, Salehi said, according to the Iranian judiciary’s Mizan news agency.

Salehi sought to justify the cases by saying those charged jeopardize­d the “psychologi­cal security” of Iran’s citizens.

Iran’s government, while initially ignoring reports of alleged poisonings in November, has faced increasing pressure from the public to respond. On Monday, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said any culprits connected to the alleged poisonings should be sentenced to death for committing an “unforgivab­le crime.”

Seeking to ease worries, Iran’s Interior Ministry announced Tuesday night it made arrests in six provinces of unnamed suspects over the suspected poisonings.

 ?? IMAGES ESN/AFP VIA GETTY ?? Families rally at an education ministry building in Tehran amid a wave of suspected poisonings of schoolgirl­s. The incidents began in November and have escalated, prompting protests by teachers on Tuesday.
IMAGES ESN/AFP VIA GETTY Families rally at an education ministry building in Tehran amid a wave of suspected poisonings of schoolgirl­s. The incidents began in November and have escalated, prompting protests by teachers on Tuesday.

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