Iranian state-organised marchers call for execution of 'rioters'

A police motorcycle burns during a protest over the death of Mahsa Amini, a woman who died after being arrested by the Islamic republic's "morality police", in Tehran, Iran September 19, 2022. WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
State-organised demonstrations took place in several
Iranian cities on Friday to counter anti-government protests triggered by the
death of a woman in police custody, with marchers calling for the execution of
protesters.
The demonstrations followed the strongest warning from
the authorities yet when the army told Iranians it would confront "the
enemies" behind the unrest - a move that could signal the kind of
crackdown that has crushed protests in the past.
Demonstrators condemned the anti-government protesters as
"Israel's soldiers", live state television coverage showed. They also
shouted "Death to America" and "Death to Israel", common
slogans the country's clerical rulers use to try and stir up support for authorities.
"Offenders of the Koran must be executed," the
crowds chanted.
Iranians have staged mass protests over the case of Mahsa
Amini, 22, who died last week after being arrested by the morality police for
wearing "unsuitable attire".
The morality police, attached to Iran's law enforcement,
is tasked with ensuring the respect of Islamic morals as described by the
country's clerical authorities.
Amini's death has reignited anger over issues including
restrictions on personal freedoms in Iran, strict dress codes for women and an
economy reeling from sanctions.
The Iranian army's message on Friday, seen as a warning
to protesters enraged by the death, read: "These desperate actions are
part of the evil strategy of the enemy to weaken the Islamic regime."
The military said it would "confront the enemies'
various plots in order to ensure security and peace for the people who are
being unjustly assaulted."
Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi also on Friday warned
"seditionists" that their "dream of defeating religious values
and the great achievements of the revolution will never be realized,"
according to the AsrIran website.
The anti-government protests were especially strong in
Amini's home province of Kurdistan and nearby areas. State television said two
caches of weapons, explosives and communications gear were seized and two
people were arrested in northwestern Iran which includes the border with Iraq
where armed Kurdish dissident groups are based.
Internet blockage watchdog NetBlocks said mobile internet
has been disrupted in Iran for the third time.
"Live metrics show a nation-scale loss of
connectivity on leading cellular operator MCI," it said on Twitter.
Twitter accounts linked to Anonymous
"hacktivists" voiced support for the protests and said they had
attacked 100 Iranian websites, including several belonging to the government.
Websites of the central bank, Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei and several state-affiliated news agencies have been disrupted in recent days.
Iran's clerical rulers fear a revival of the protests that
erupted in 2019 over gasoline price rises, the bloodiest in the Islamic
Republic's history. Reuters reported that 1,500 people were killed.
Rights groups such as Hehgaw and HRANA, lawyers and
social media users reported widespread arrests of students and activists at
their homes by security forces in an apparent effort to curb protests.
In the latest unrest, protesters in Tehran and other
cities torched police stations and vehicles as outrage over Amini's death
showed no signs of abating, with reports of security forces coming under
attack.
Iranian media reported the arrest of 288
"rioters" on Thursday.
In Madrid, four topless activists from the Femen women's
movement protested on Friday in front of the Iranian embassy over Amini's
death, carrying signs reading "Women, Life, Liberty" and "Mahsa
Amini was assassinated".
The protest took place peacefully and there were no
arrests.
In Athens, angry protesters demonstrating over Amini's
death tried to approach the Iranian embassy on Thursday before being forced back
by police wielding shields. Demonstrators chanted slogans and held placards
reading "Homophobia and sexism kill."
Protests over Amini's death were also held in Canada and
the Netherlands on Thursday.
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