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New Government Bill To Ease Shooting At Protesters In Iran

Iran International Newsroom
Jun 12, 2022, 10:35 GMT+1Updated: 17:32 GMT+1
A man shot with shotgun 'bird shots' in Esfahan on November 26, 2021
A man shot with shotgun 'bird shots' in Esfahan on November 26, 2021

The Iranian government has handed a draft bill to parliament to ease the use of firearms by different security forces against civilians amid recurring protests.

Some media outlets say the Speaker of parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has welcomed the draft bill.

Iranian media say, "the bill aims to ease the use of firearms against illegal gatherings." This comes while Iranian security forces did not shy away to shoot unarmed protesters, killing as many as 1,500 people in 2019. They widely used shotguns in later protest gatherings in Isfahan and Khuzestan provinces often shooting protesters in the head or chest during the past year.

According to Rouydad24 news website, "The Iranian armed forces have always had the permission to shoot protesters in illegal gatherings, but the new bill changed the phrase 'the officers of the armed forces' to 'armed officers,' given permission to more individuals to carry and use firearms."

The draft legislation has been introduced on the same day when Iranian media revealed that a hijab enforcement officer shot a man in a Tehran park four times a few weeks ago after they harassed his wife for not covering her head properly. The coincidence alarmed Iran's civil society which is active mainly on social media.

Iranian journalist Hedie Kimiaee wrote in a post on June 11: "Based on the new [draft] bill those who are shot at by the security officers can no longer file complaints against the officers. On the other hand, anyone who is issued a gun by the government is now officially a security officer."

A security officer firing at protesters in Esfahan in Noveber 2021
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A security officer firing at protesters in Esfahan in Noveber 2021

The existing bill about using firearms allows officers to shoot when there is an armed struggle or a riot in which armed individuals take part, but the draft bill applies categorically to any gathering, since all it takes is for the government to claim that protesters were armed.

The report in Rouydad24 said that those who prepared the draft have deliberately ignored the fact that this bill can be taken advantage of, and that its implementation can have grave consequences.

Recently, lawmaker Ahmad Naderi warned that this year the government may have to face protest gatherings and riots more widespread than the 2019. He added that confronting such riots could lead to catastrophe.

Meanwhile, another lawmaker Ghasem Saedi warned that there is a limit to people's patience. Failing to manage the next protests might lead to events more serious than what happened between 2017 and 2019."

The report added that since 1995, the government has never assumed any responsibility for people being shot during protest gatherings. Plainclothes officers have been observed beating the people during previous protests, the concern now is that they can now use firearms.

On the other hand, both Rouydad24 and Didban Iran new websites expressed concern that the new bill applies to "illegal protests." Islamic Republic authorities have never accepted any gathering as lawful unless they are in support of the government.

The media also opined that the new bill could be one of the outcomes of appointing IRGC officers as local governors in some two dozen Iranian provinces. These commanders look at any gathering from a security perspective.

Didban Iran also opined that the new bill could be an initiative to stop legal complaints against law enforcement officers.

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Iranian Police Adds $10 Million Worth Of Equipment For Riot Control

Jun 10, 2022, 17:07 GMT+1

Amid a growing wave of protests across Iran, the country’s police have added about $10 million worth of anti-riot equipment to law enforcement forces, including special armored vehicles.

The deputy commander of the Iranian police, Brigadier-General Ghasem Rezaei, made the announcement during a ceremony where some of the equipment was handed over to special units, including 527 vehicles and motorcycles.

Rezaei said that the new equipment and vehicles will help the operational units better execute their missions and is aimed at "strengthening the security of the country." 

In addition to enhancing operational mobility, some of the new equipment provides police forces with “self-protection” during missions, he added. 

Iran has tens of thousands of special police and security units that are often deployed to break up antigovernmental protests that have become more frequent since 2017.

In November 2019, when a sudden government price increase for fuel was announced and nationwide demonstrations began, these security forces were ordered to shoot unarmed protesters, killing at least 1,500 people in a matter of a few days.

Last year, special forces were used in two provinces to quell protests during which more than ten people were killed and hundreds wounded.

Congress Launches Probe Over Meta Censoring Iranian Dissidents

Jun 8, 2022, 10:51 GMT+1

The US Congress is investigating the Meta social media network to find out why the platform is censoring content by Iranian dissidents and pro-democracy advocates. 

Following reports that the social media giant might be aiding the Iranian government amid a wave of protests, three Republican lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs and Armed Services Committees have launched a probe into the matter, a copy of which was published by the Washington Free Beacon on Tuesday.

Representatives Jim Banks (Ind.), Claudia Tenney (N.Y.), and Joe Wilson (S.C.) want information about what steps Meta has "taken to confront infiltration by proponents of the Islamic Republic of Iran" that resulted in deleting and censoring accounts tied to anti-regime activists.

They also urged Meta to investigate claims that Instagram, the video sharing app owned by the company, has "been infiltrated by those sympathetic to the Islamic Republic in Iran."

The probe comes following reports alleging that Instagram content moderators are deleting and censoring accounts that have documented the regime’s human rights abuses during the latest wave of protests, including content showing Iranian security forces beating protesters and firing tear gas into crowds.

The lawmakers say Meta helping the Iranian government censor such content represents "an unacceptable threat to their privacy, liberty, and our national security."

BBC’s sources alleged that pro-regime employees of the German branch of Telus International, a Canadian contractor which provides content moderation to Instagram with over 400 Iranian employees for reviewing Persian-language content, are responsible for restricting anti-government content of Iranian users.

Protests, Bazaar Strike Show Anger Over High Prices In Iran

Jun 7, 2022, 20:38 GMT+1
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Iran International Newsroom

Retirees in Iran have staged a second day of protests in many cities demanding an increase of pensions amid what they say is a 100 percent inflation rate.

Videos and reports published on social media show hundreds of retired protesters marching in Ahvaz, capital of the oil-rich Khuzestan province, in Ilam, Qazvin, the port of Bandar Abbas, Esfahan in central Iran, Mashhad in the northeast and other towns and cities.

Retirees who depend on monthly payments from the Social Security Organization say their pensions have increased at a much slower rate than current inflation and they simply cannot make ends meet.

In most cities protesters were chanting slogans against the government calling it a cheat and a liar. They also repeated the chant, “Death to Raisi” that has been ringing out in other protests since early May.

Just a few days ago the government announced that pensions for most retirees will increase by just 10 percent, while the official inflation rate is at least 40 percent.

At the same time videos show the bazaar in the northwestern city of Tabriz was on strike on Tuesday with merchants shutting down their stores and businesses in protest to a sudden increase in sales tax.

Bazaar or traditional retail market strikes have a deep historical root in Iran and signal a serios political and economic crisis. The bazaar strikes played a major role both in the Constitutional Revolution of the early 20th century and the 1979 revolution against the monarchy.

Tabriz was the scene of another remarkable event on Monday when a few hundred marching retirees reached a police cordon in a street, hesitated for a moment, and then kept on marching, breaking through the police lines. Security forces did not react as they were overwhelmed.

Since early May when the government of President Ebrahim Raisi stopped a food import subsidy and prices soared, Iran has witnessed protests and instability.

The subsidy started in 2018 when former President Donald Trump pulled out of the 2015 nuclear agreement and began imposing tough sanctions on Iran. Two months before his decision, the Iranian currency had already begun to fall against the US dollar making imported food and other necessities more expensive for consumers. The government decided to provide import subsidies to prevent political discontent, but it eventually decided that the scheme was too expensive and scrapped it.

According to widely varying figures, the subsidy annually cost the state anywhere between $9 to $15 billion, while US sanctions have reduced its main source of income, oil exports.

The Iranian currency reached as low as 320,000 rials for one US dollar on Tuesday, falling by more than 25 percent in two months and almost tenfold in four years.

This immediately translates into higher prices for food, as more than half of Iran’s wheat and most of its animal feed are imported from other countries, amid high global inflation.

Iranian Retirees Hold Protests Across Country As Inflation Reduces Incomes

Jun 6, 2022, 15:31 GMT+1

Iranian retirees held demonstrations Monday in several cities across the country to protest the meager rise in their pensions while the inflation rate is hovering over at over 40 percent. 

The pensioners took to streets in the capitals of many provinces such as Tabriz, Gilan, and Kermanshah, while several cities across the southwestern oil-rich Khuzestan province, including Ahvaz, Dezful, Abadan, and Shushtar, were also scenes of similar protests. 

The enraged protesters chanted slogans such as “Death to Raisi” and "Shame on you incompetent minister”, against the government and “empty promises” by authorities.

Retirees are demanding pension increases in par with rising prices of essential foods, saying that the current payments are not in line with decrees by the Supreme Labor Council, which had stipulated a 38-percent increase in the minimum wage.

The protests occurred as the government spokesman Ali Bahadori Jahromi said in a tweet on Sunday that the minimum wage for retirees covered by the Social Security Organization has risen by 57 percent, calling it “one of the largest increases in 20 years and nearly 20 percent above the official inflation rate.”

With food prices rising faster after four years of United States’ ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions, Iranian workers and retirees and workers have been holding regular protests or strikes to demand higher salaries. 

Moreover, the collapse of a ten-story Metropol building in Abadan in May has sparked anti-government rallies that have spread to other cities in the southwestern Khuzestan province and elsewhere.

Iranian Expats In US, Canada Hold Rallies In Solidarity With Iran Protests

Jun 6, 2022, 13:52 GMT+1

Iranian expatriates in the United States and Canada held gatherings in Washington DC and Toronto on Sunday to express support for popular anti-regime protests in Iran.

The Washington protest was held at the former building of the Iranian embassy and called by dissident singer-songwriter Arash Sobhani, a blues musician who has been an active advocate of human rights and democracy in Iran and has delivered speeches about Iranian social issues in various universities, including Harvard, Stanford, and University of California Irvine. 

During the event, Sobhani performed some of his original works, which are usually themed around the cultural and political issues in the Islamic Republic, as well as some cover songs about Iran, which were accompanied by the participating crowd. 

The gathering in Toronto was organized by Hamed Esmailioun, who is the flagbearer for the victims of the downing of Ukrainian Airlines Flight PS752 in January 2020 by the Revolutionary Guard, where he himself lost his wife and daughter. 

"Iran is ruled by the turban-wearing criminals and bloodthirsty revolutionary guards," Esmailioun said during his speech at the demonstration.

Hamed Esmailioun, who is the spokesman for the victims of IRGC’s downing of Ukrainian Airlines Flight PS752, delivers a speech during a gathering of Iranian expatriates in Toronto on June 5, 2022, in solidarity with the popular protests in the southwestern Iranian city of Abadan.
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Hamed Esmailioun, who is the spokesman for the victims of IRGC’s downing of Ukrainian Airlines Flight PS752, delivers a speech during a gathering of Iranian expatriates in Toronto on June 5, 2022, in solidarity with the popular protests in the southwestern Iranian city of Abadan.

In both gatherings, people expressed solidarity with the people of Abadan, whose mourning ceremonies for the victims of the collapsed ten-story Metropol twin towers in May have turned into anti-government protests and spread to other cities of the southwestern Khuzestan province as well as other cities across the country.

“Although we tremble from sorrow but abound with anger; our heart is with you Abadan and we will not let them trample on the truth,” Esmailioun added.