Tag: Iran protests

  • UN urges restraint as Iran protests ease

    UN urges restraint as Iran protests ease

    UN Assistant Secretary-General Martha Pobee on Thursday urged action to prevent escalation as nationwide protests in Iran appeared to ease after nearly three weeks of unrest.

    Pobee spoke while briefing an emergency Security Council meeting in New York, convened by the United States to address the Iranian crisis.

    She described the situation as “fluid and deeply concerning”, noting that protests continued, “albeit reportedly at a smaller scale than last week”.

    Pobee warned against public statements suggesting possible military strikes on Iran, saying such rhetoric heightened risks.

    “This external dimension adds volatility to an already combustible situation. All efforts must be undertaken to prevent any further deterioration,” she said.

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres believes concerns over Iran, including nuclear issues and protests, are “best addressed through diplomacy and dialogue”.

    He urged “maximum restraint at this sensitive moment” and called on all actors to avoid actions that could cause further deaths or regional escalation.

    Protests erupted on Dec. 28 after Tehran shopkeepers demonstrated against currency collapse, soaring inflation and worsening living conditions.

    The unrest spread nationwide, becoming the largest anti-government protests since those sparked by Jina Amini’s death in custody in Sept. 2022.

    Authorities imposed a near-total communications blackout, while hundreds, possibly thousands, were reportedly killed and over 18,000 detained, figures unverified by the UN.

    Pobee said Iran’s government claimed it acted against “organised terrorists” and “rioters” accused of infiltrating protests and provoking foreign intervention.

    The UN chief expressed deep concern over reported excessive force and reaffirmed rights to free expression, association and peaceful assembly.

    Iranian journalist, Masih Alinejad, told the Council that “real and concrete action” was needed to bring justice for those ordering massacres.

    Human rights activist, Ahmad Batebi, recounted his arrest as a student protester, death sentence, torture and forced confession as a paid American spy.

    U.S. Ambassador, Mike Waltz, said Iran’s repression “has repercussions for international peace and security” and pledged U.S. support for Iranian protesters.

    He said the regime alone was responsible for economic misery and repression, adding it would be held accountable.

    Iran’s deputy envoy, Gholamhossein Darzi, denounced the civil society briefers, accusing them of serving U.S. and Israeli political agendas.

    He accused the United States of “lies, distortions of facts and deliberate disinformation” to conceal its alleged role in fuelling violence.

    (NAN) 

  • Iran protests: Rioters must be put in their place, Khamenei warns

    Iran protests: Rioters must be put in their place, Khamenei warns

    Iran’s supreme leader has asserted that “rioters must be put in their place”, following a week of protests that have rattled the Islamic Republic, a stance widely seen as signalling tougher action by security forces to quell the unrest.

    The remarks, the first by 86-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei since the demonstrations began, come amid escalating violence linked to protests driven by Iran’s struggling economy.

    Human rights activists say at least 15 people have been killed. The unrest shows no sign of abating and follows a warning from U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday that if Tehran “violently kills peaceful protesters,” the United States “will come to their rescue.”

    While it remains unclear whether or how Trump might intervene, his comments triggered an immediate and angry reaction from Iranian officials, with figures in the theocracy threatening to target American troops in the Middle East.

    The statements also gained added significance after Trump said on Saturday that the U.S. military had captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, a close ally of Tehran.

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    The current demonstrations are the largest Iran has seen since 2022, when the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody sparked nationwide protests. However, they have not yet matched the scale or intensity of the unrest that followed Amini’s death after she was detained for allegedly not wearing her hijab in line with official expectations.

    Shopkeepers close their businesses during a protest against rising prices and market instability driven by a rapid increase in foreign exchange rates.

    State television broadcast Khamenei’s address to an audience in Tehran, in which he sought to draw a distinction between Iranians protesting economic hardship, including the collapse of the rial, and what he described as “rioters”.

    “We talk to protesters, the officials must talk to them,” Khamenei said. “But there is no benefit to talking to rioters. Rioters must be put in their place.”

    He also repeated a long-standing claim by Iranian authorities that foreign powers such as Israel and the United States were fomenting the protests, offering no evidence to support the allegation. In addition, he blamed “the enemy” for the sharp fall in the value of Iran’s currency.