Police fire tear gas to disperse protesters in Iranian city
Police used tear gas to disperse
hundreds of people in a central Iranian city who were protesting to demand
government action over a drought, media reported.
Some videos on social media
appeared to show police and protesters clashing in the dry bed of the
Zayandehrud River. The video corresponded to known features of the area, though
original posters of the material could not be immediately reached by The Associated
Press. Other videos showed similar unrest in nearby streets of Isfahan.
Iranian semiofficial Fars news
agency said a heavy force brought the gathering of some 500 people in Isfahan
to an end. A separate report carried by semiofficial Tasnim agency said unknown
perpetrators had damaged a pipeline that transfer waters from Isfahan to other
provinces last night.
Farmers reportedly ended a nearly
weeks-long protest in the area on Thursday, after authorities promised to
compensate them for losses suffered in drought-stricken areas of central Iran.
Drought has been a problem in
Iran for some 30 years, but it has worsened over the past decade, according to
the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization. The Iran Meteorological
Organization says that an estimated 97% of the country now faces some level of
drought.
The farming area around Isfahan
was once well supplied by the Zayandehrud river, but nearby factories have
increasingly drawn on it over the years. The river once flowed under historic
bridges in Isfahan’s city center, but is now a barren strip of dirt.
In 2012, farmers clashed with
police in a town in Isfahan province, breaking a water pipe that diverted some
50 million cubic meters of water a year to a neighboring province. Similar
protests have continued sporadically since then.