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Iran supreme leader claims protests a US-backed conspiracy
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei made the comment while
addressing members of the Revolutionary Guard’s all-volunteer Basij force,
which help put down the demonstrations.
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Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.(Photo: Reuters)
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Iran’s supreme leader on Wednesday
claimed without evidence that recent protests across the Islamic Republic over
government-set gasoline prices rising were part of a conspiracy involving the
U.S., as authorities began to acknowledge the scale of the demonstrations.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
made the comment while addressing members of the Revolutionary Guard’s
all-volunteer Basij force, which help put down the demonstrations.
Meanwhile, one lawmaker was quoted as
saying authorities arrested more than 7,000 people over the protests while a
security official claimed demonstrators attempted to take over Iranian state
television.
Iran’s government still hasn’t offered
any statistics on injuries, arrests or deaths in the protests and security
crackdown that followed government-set gasoline prices rising Nov. 15. Amnesty
International says it believes the violence killed at least 143 people,
something Iran disputes without offering any evidence to support its claims.
In his comments reported by state
media, Khamenei said the Iranian people extinguished a very dangerous deep
conspiracy that cost so much money and effort. He praised the police, the Guard
and the Basij for entering the field and carrying out their task in a very
difficult confrontation.
Khamenei, who has final say on all
matters of state, described the protests as being orchestrated by global
arrogance, which he uses to refer to the U.S. He described America as seeing
the price hikes as an "opportunity" to bring their "troops"
to the field but the "move was destroyed by people."
Wednesday marks the 40th anniversary of
the creation of the Basij. Videos from the protest purport to show plainclothes
Basij officials and others on motorcycles beating and detaining protesters.
Meanwhile, the moderate news website
Entekhab quoted Hossein Naghavi Hosseini, a member of parliament’s national
security and foreign policy committee, as saying more than 7,000 people had
been arrested in the demonstrations. He did not elaborate.
Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani
Fazli also claimed in an interview late Tuesday on state television that some
500 people tried to storm Iran’s state television offices. He did not elaborate
and no protests had been previously reported in the northern Tehran neighborhood
home to the state broadcaster.
Fazli also estimated as many as 200,000
people took part the demonstrations, higher than previous claims. He said
demonstrators damaged over 50 police stations, as well as 34 ambulances, 731
banks and 70 gas stations in the country.
"We have individuals who were
killed by knives, shotguns and fires, he said, without offering a casualty
figure.
Starting Nov. 16, Iran shut down the
internet across the country, limiting communications with the outside world.
That made determining the scale and longevity of the protests incredibly
difficult. While home and office internet has been restored, access on mobile
phones remains rare.
The gasoline price hike came as Iran’s
80 million people have already seen their savings dwindle and jobs scarce under
crushing U.S. sanctions. President Donald Trump imposed them in the aftermath
of unilaterally withdrawing America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world
powers.


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