Iran attempts to appease protesters after regime’s popularity erodes
In conjunction with the reopening of Iran and the resumption
of economic activities that have been hampered by the corona virus pandemic,
Iranian cities have returned to witnessing protests. Although limited, they could
be exacerbated if life returns to normal and large numbers of citizens leave
their voluntary home quarantine, showing that the popular protests did not stop,
but had only calmed down due to the spread of virus in the country.
The authorities fear that angry protests will flare up again
as the regime’s scandals and mistakes have accumulated, most prominently
Tehran’s neglect of the health sector and its reluctance to fight the virus
until it became widespread and claimed the lives of tens of thousands of
citizens.
In an attempt to contain the anger, Iranian Interior
Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said in an interview with state television on
Saturday, May 30, that the real number of deaths in the protests that broke out
in November 2019 due to the sudden increase in gasoline prices would be
announced soon, hinting that the number does not exceed 250. He added that 40-45
people, representing 20% of the dead, were killed by unlicensed weapons. Strangely,
Fazli described the dead protesters who demanded the fall of the regime as
martyrs.
Over the past months, government agencies have blamed each
other over who bears responsibility for announcing the death toll. The
government had promised three times to announce the death toll, but only
recognized five deaths, contradicting what Reuters had reported in the month
following the protests quoting three Iranian interior officials that the dead
numbered around 1,500.
The US Treasury recently imposed sanctions on Fazli and Police
Chief Hussein Ashtari as human rights violators for their role in crushing the protests,
and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed that Fazli was "the one
who gave orders to the security forces to use excessive force."
Fazli responded, saying, "America is our enemy. It
started its interventions since the beginning of the revolution, the latest of
which was the withdrawal from the nuclear agreement. We should not expect
support from this enemy." He accused the United States of trying to drag Iran
into a situation like Syria, adding that Khamenei had ordered the secretariat
of the Supreme National Security Council to open an investigation into the
incident and that the armed forces and interior forces have also opened
investigations.
It is noteworthy that MP Ali Motahari accused Fazli of being
responsible for crushing the protests, revealing that Parliament Speaker Ali
Larijani had suspended his interrogation.
It is also worth mentioning that the protesters in the
November uprising had burned images of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his
predecessor, Ruhollah Khomeini, demanding the fall of the regime and accused it
of corruption. In return, the regime carried out massacres against the
protesters.
For its part, Amnesty International said that it documented
the deaths of more than 300 people, including 23 children. It announced that it
has pictures and videos of the mass killing of peaceful protesters.




