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Nationwide Coverage Of Protests In Iran On September 24

Iran International Newsroom
Sep 24, 2022, 22:21 GMT+1Updated: 17:32 GMT+1
A scene from protests in Tehran on September 23, 2022
A scene from protests in Tehran on September 23, 2022

As Saturday dawned in Iran two trends could be discerned. First, many began to say this is a revolution, not just protests, and second, it is led by women.

Another major development was that the people did not wait for the habitual afternoon hours to begin their protests. Demonstrations began early at least in Tehran and Shiraz, as the regime kept attempting to control the popular movement, which has spread too far and too wide geographically for the few hundreds of thousands of security forces.

Government disruption of access to the internet certainly prevented news and videos to reach us from all locations in Iran, but some reports indicated it was the most active day of protests so far.

There are unconfirmed reports on social media quoting anti-riot police forces and regime loyalists as saying that they are exhausted physically and emotionally after six days of relentless protests. This might be true, but they are still using force wherever they get a chance.

At other locations they retreat, such as in Oshnavieh in the Kurdish populated west, where protesters drove the Revolutionary Guard out of its barracks and from the town on Friday, practically becoming the first urban area to be in the hands of the people. A tweet by a resident said people are determined not to allow government forces to return but they cannot defend against attacks by heavy weapons.

Reports say government forces are trying to take the town back, with helicopters and drones flying over Oshnavieh all day on Saturday.

Our live coverage ended at 01:00 o'clock local time on Sunday.

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People are shouting from buildings in a district west of tehran, "Khamenei is a killer - His rule is null and void."

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A tweet says, "A picture of Tehran streets that in this moment are witness to a revolution that has amazed the world. Iranian youth have smelled victory and tasted liberty. This is a one-way path toward victory."

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Protesters in Karaj, a city 20 miles west of the capital Tehran shout "Death to Khamenei" during unrest Saturday night.

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News came in about fierce protests in the religious city of Mashhad, Iran's second largest urban center. A protester is heard shouting, "Alamolhoda, we will not let you live," in reference to the ultra-conservative ayatollah in control of the city. He is also father-in-law of President Ebrahim Raisi, another hardliner cleric.

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A tweet says "Tehransar seized by protesters" but Iran International cannot verify this information. Protesters are shouting "scoundrels" at the security forces. The video shows a large group of protesters in the streets. Tehransar is a working class district west of Tehran.

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Demonstrators cut their hair during a protest following the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran, in Athens, Greece, September 24, 2022. REUTERS/Louiza Vradi

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People protest during a demonstration in support of Mahsa Amini, a young Iranian woman who died following her arrest by the country's morality police, outside the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Stockholm, Sweden, September 24, 2022. Fredrik Persson/via REUTERS

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People in the pre-dominantly Kurdish city of Sanandaj, who have been protesting for eight days, came out into the streets Saturday evening once again.

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Protests Staurday evening in Sattar Khan district of Tehran, one of the hotbeds of the movement in the capital in the past three days.

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Protests also started in Esfahan in early evening and continued into the night.

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Families of protesters arrested in the past few days gathered outside Tehran's notorious Evin prison to demand their release or find out about the whereabouts of their loved ones.

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Protesters forced security forces to retreat in Kashmat, a town with 100,000 population in the east.

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Secretary-General of French President Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party has invited the party's members and supporters to attend a demonstration to be held in support of Iranian women on Sunday at 4 p.m., at Trocadéro, Paris.

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A large protest in Shiraz, capital of Fars province, the heart of the Persian regions of Iran. A young woman took off her veil and standing on top of a car led the protesters in chanting, "Death to the dictator," a reference to the country's clerical ruler Ali Khamenei.

Protesters in an unknown location on Saturday are chanting "Death to the dictator:, a clear reference to Iran's 83-year-old ruler Ali Khamenei.

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The government is closing schools and universities often citing public health excuses as the youth get a chance to congregate on campuses and start protests. Here is a video of students gahtered at the University of tehran and chanting "Death to the dictator."

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A large crowd of protesters marched in Amol, northern Iran during daytime on Saturday. Amol has been a hotbed of protests in the past six days.

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Pink Floyd Becomes Another Brick In The Wall Of Iranian Protests

Sep 24, 2022, 18:18 GMT+1

Legendary co-founder of Pink Floyd Roger Waters has expressed anger over the death of Mahsa Amini, the Iranian woman whose tragic fate has inspired an uprising in the country. 

The English musician released a video on Friday, saying “We are all brothers, sisters and cousins; we are all related Mr. Ayatollah! Mahsa is my sister... She should be alive today. She and all her sisters must be able to decide whether or not their heads are covered.” “It's none of your business!" He added.

He said Mahsa was arrested by “some kind of weird moral police”, and “she was beaten to death,” adding that he was watching the footage of people protesting her death on the streets. 

He also quipped that the ayatollahs may say it is none of my business and it is their country, but they are wrong, “I am a human being and I believe in human rights, and Mahsa Amini has human rights.”

“I am very very angry and I can understand why people are angry... all over the world,” he said. 

He also mentioned Neda Agha-Soltan, who was shot dead by a militiaman belonging to Basij paramilitary forces in protests following the disputed Iranian election in 2009. 

Waters also dedicated a song in his latest concert to Mahsa as a tribute to the young woman.

As Saturday dawned in Iran protests continued and two trends could be discerned. First, many began to say that this is a revolution and not just protests, and second, it is led by women.

Iran Bans Actresses Who Unveiled In Support Of Protests

Sep 24, 2022, 14:53 GMT+1

Iran’s culture minister has said that Iranian actresses who have unveiled in public or social media in support of hijab victim Mahsa Amini can no longer continue their careers in acting. 

Mohammad Mehdi Esmaili said on Saturday that the female actresses who removed compulsory hijab made a decision not to follow the rules, therefore they cannot engage in artistic activities. 

"They can freely do other jobs," he added, noting that “if someone insists on not obeying the laws of the Islamic Republic, we do not insist on forcing them to do so.”

He made the remarks as over 100 Iranian actors and filmmakers issued a statement on Saturday, calling on military forces to take down their weapons and "return to the arms of the nation."

"Once again, we remind all the people who have become agents of repression and violence against the people in the military units that these rifles were provided to them with public funds to defend the people. Do not point guns at the people and youth of Iran," they wrote. 

Even before the start of unrest over the death of Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old girl who died in hands of hijab enforcement patrols, the Islamic Republic’s security apparatus has increased pressure on the signatories of a statement against Iran’s crackdown on popular protests to rescind their signatures from another similar statement. 

More than 100 film industry figures issued a statement in May titled “Lay down the gun,” calling on military and security forces who “have become tools for cracking down on the people,” not to suppress protesters during popular demonstrations. 

Police Arrests Over 700 People Just In One Iranian Province

Sep 24, 2022, 12:34 GMT+1

The police chief of the northern province of Gilan says security forces have arrested about 740 people in the ongoing unrest during the last week, suggesting that the number is much higher across Iran. 

Azizollah Maleki said in a press conference on Saturday that these people were detained because they disturbed the public order, adding that at least 60 of them are women who were arrested in the past three days. 

He added that “a group of saboteurs” was also identified and two of them have been arrested so far. 

He claimed that a large number of the arrested people are not locals and entered Gilan for rioting and vandalism, and many firearms and cold weapons were also seized from them. 

Most of the arrested people are young but many of their leaders have criminal records, he alleged, saying that some of them were arrested and some were identified and will be arrested in the coming days. 

The number of people who have been arrested during the past week’s protests is definitely higher, but authorities rarely announce large numbers of arrests. Almost all over the country, people are holding daily protest rallies following the death of Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old woman who died of a severe head trauma caused by several blows to her head by the hijab enforcement patrols. 

While the government in Iran seems incapable to stop fierce protests, hardliner religious leaders on Friday doubled down on enforcing hijab for women.

Amnesty Urges Global Action Over Iran Protests As Death Toll Risis

Sep 24, 2022, 11:45 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Amnesty International has reiterated its calls for urgent global action, warning of further bloodshed in Iran amid a deliberately imposed Internet blackout.

“UN member states must go beyond toothless statements, hear the cries for justice from victims and human rights defenders in Iran and urgently set up an independent UN investigative mechanism,” said Heba Morayef, Middle East and North Africa Director at Amnesty International.

Amnesty said evidence it had gathered this week of fresh violence in 20 cities and 10 provinces across Iran points to a “harrowing pattern of Iranian security forces deliberately and unlawfully firing live ammunition at protesters.”

According to the organization, on the night of 21 September alone, shootings by security forces, consisting of Revolutionary Guard agents, paramilitary Basij forces and plainclothes security officials, left at least 19 people dead, including at least three children.

“Amnesty International has reviewed photos and videos showing deceased victims with horrifying wounds in their heads, chests and stomachs,” the organization said adding that the rising death toll is an alarming indication of just “how ruthless the authorities’ assault on human life has been under the darkness of the internet shutdown.”

An Iranian security agent aims and fires his assault rifle at protesters

Iran's state-run television Friday evening reported a death toll of 35 protesters and security forces but according to Iran Human Rights (IHR), a rights group, at least 50 protesters were killed in various cities and towns across the country since protests started last week. Several videos published on social media show security forces directly aiming at protesters with shotguns or rifles.

Authorities have resorted to what global Internet watchdog NetBlocks has called “curfew-style cellular network disruptions” to interrupt contact among protesters and leaking of footage from the protests. they have also restricted Instagram, WhatsApp, and LinkedIn at the national level.

The General Staff of the Armed Forces in a statement Saturday praised security forces’ “patience” but warned that they will no longer tolerate “any violence or insecurity” and would “take decisive action against those who disrupt public order and security”.

Security forces have extensively arrested protesters as well as dozens of activists and journalists including photojournalist Yalda Moaieri, journalist Fatemeh Rajabi, and Niloofar Hamedi, a journalist with the Shargh daily who was first to report Mahsa Amini’s case from a hospital in Tehran where she was taken after collapsing at a detention facility.

Officials, including President Ebrahim Raisi, and state media insist there will be a probe into the young girl’s death and claim those on the streets are “thugs” and “rioters” who have “hijacked” protesrs over her death to push their own agenda. The Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) has warned protesters and attributed the protests to “enemy plots” carried out by “anti-revolutionaries”.

Authorities mobilized supporters to stage demonstrations after Friday prayers and claimed “millions of Iranians” took part, but eyewitnesses claim supporters’ numbers were so small that the state television had to resort to images from previous years in its broadcasts. At least in one image shown on television the date on a banner belonged to several years ago.

Imams Appointed By Khamenei Insist On Enforcing Hijab

Sep 24, 2022, 08:50 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

While the government in Iran seems incapable to stop fierce protests, hardliner religious leaders on Friday doubled down on enforcing hijab for women.

At the same time, a few members of the parliament and have admitted that dress code enforcement by Iran's hijab patrols (nicknamed by foreign media as morality police) has been problematic.

Karim Hosseini, a member of parliament (Majles) has said that the government should not ignore Mahsa Amini's death in custody that triggered the protests, with the pretext of defending the police force. Shahryar Heidari, a member of the Majles National Security Committee also said that the government should stop the hijab police's activities adding that the police force should not be used to clamp down on "bad hijab".

Meanwhie, Seminarian Ayatollah Ali Akbar Massoudi Khomeyni has told reporters that "the hijab police's treatment of Iranian woman is against the teachings of Islam," adding that "Only judges can rule about the hijab, but even they cannot tell a woman that your hijab is not consistent with the dress code and punish them." This comes while protesters’ demands have gone far beyond their grievances about hijab and apparently, they will not settle for anything less than a regime change.

However, hardliner Friday prayers Imams in various cities, who receive their marching orders from a central office controlled by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, insisted in their sermons that the hijab police should remain in place with permission to use force against women.

Ayatollah Alamolhoda (C) with President Raisi (L) and Ali Khamenei. Undated
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Ayatollah Alamolhoda (C) with President Raisi (L) and Ali Khamenei. Undated

The firebrand Friday Prayers imam of Mashad, Ahmad Alamolhoda said: "Hijab is the most important issue in Islam. The enemies of Islam wish to promote a lifestyle without hijab." He charged that previous governments have ignored the importance of hijab but added that "since 2006 some 20 organizations have been established in Iran to promote the idea of hijab." Meanwhile, he praised the police force as the pivot of the authority of the regime for upholding hijab," without mentioning the murder of Mahsa Amini.

Alamolhoda said in his sermon that "women's hair corrupts young men just as half-naked women can do."

In Tehran, Ahmad Khatami who led the prayers on Friday, criticized monarchists and the supporters of Mojadein-e Khalq organization for "supporting a woman," meaning hijab victim Mahsa Amini. Meanwhile, Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib attributed the protests against Amini’s killing to "the enemies" without making clear who the enemies were. However, his statement was vague and general, as he deliberately tried not to make any categoric assertions before Khamenei expresses his opinion about the nationwide protests.

Commenting on the situation, Tourism Minister Ezzatollah Zarghami reassured the government and supporters of the hijab police in a September 23 tweet that "revising some of the laws and inefficient approaches" that have annoyed the protesters "will not lead to a domino-like collapse of the regime."

Reformist analyst Mohammad Reza Tajik commented that the protests over police brutality have revealed the naked image of the regime. Tajik wrote that although the government will come up with some superficial solutions, trying to keep the foundations of the regime in place, wide gaps have emerged in Iranian society that make it difficult to conceal the crisis.

Tajik stressed that the current situation is dangerous as there is no serious sign to indicate that the regime has understood the situation, and there seems to be no determination to address the root causes of the crisis.