Iran says protest death tolls reported by int’l organizations ‘exaggerated’

Iran on Saturday disputed death tolls issued by
international organizations during protests that erupted in the country over
fuel prices, after a rights group put the number at over 160, and opposition
groups reported hundreds killed.
“The statistics released by international
organizations on the number of victims from the recent unrest in Iran are not
credible,” Iran’s deputy interior minister Jamal Orf said, claiming that the
organizations that reported these numbers are “exaggerating.”
The prosecution body will release an official death
toll based on reports from the coroners office, he said.
Iran is yet to release an official death toll, but
opposition groups have put it in the hundreds, as Iranian security forces
cracked down on demonstrators in cities across the country.
UK-based human rights organization Amnesty
International said on Friday that the number of protesters confirmed killed has
risen to 161, adding that “the real death toll is likely to be significantly
higher.”
The protests were initially sparked by a rise in
fuel prices, prompting the government to shutdown the internet across vast
swaths of the country.
Prior to its latest tweet, Amnesty International
said on Monday that 143 demonstrators had been killed in the crackdown, citing
what it called “credible reports.”
The governments of the US, France and Germany have
condemned Iran over the bloodshed.