Iran: Former MP Accuses Senior Officials of Ignoring Pleas to Stop Crackdown on Protests

A video interview with former Iranian MP Mahmoud Sadeghi revived talks about the Iranian authorities’ crackdown on the popular protests that swept the county in 2019 over the hike of petrol prices.
The
interview revealed details of a closed-door meeting between deputies in the
former parliament and senior officials in the security services, including the
Secretary-General of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani.
Sadeghi said that the senior security officials have ignored calls to stop the
killing of protesters.
Iran
witnessed massive protests in mid-November 2019 in wake of the government’s
sudden decision to raise gasoline prices by 300 percent.
The
protests began in the outskirts of the oil city of Ahvaz, in the southwest of
Iran, before spreading across the country, prompting the authorities to cut off
internet service and use live ammunition to disperse the demonstrators.
Minister
of Interior Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said in an interview last summer that about
230 people died in the protests, adding that some were killed by unlicensed
weapons.
Sadeghi
said that the security officials responded by “no” when he asked them during
that meeting about whether the authorities found evidence on the role of
Iranian opposition groups and parties in the protests and strikes.
“They definitely didn’t find anything; all of the
protesters were civilians…,” the former MP told the interview, adding: “I told
Mr. Shamkhani at the time: What would you do if the people did not withdraw?
Would you kill them? Shamkhani replied: “We will strike.”
In
the first official response to Sadeghi’s statements, the General Secretariat of
the Supreme Council for National Security hinted at prosecuting the former
deputy, saying his account was “false” and “unrealistic.”
The
new information revealed by Sadeghi come a month after Shamkhani made
controversial remarks in an interview with the state ISNA news agency, blaming
the administration of President Hassan Rouhani for “mismanagement” and “lack of
coordination” in implementing the decision to raise the fuel prices.