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Iran vows 'no leniency' against wave of women-led protests

At least 41 people have died so far in nationwide protests

By - Sep 26,2022 - Last updated at Sep 26,2022

People demonstrate against the Iranian government during a protest at Mel Lastman Square in Toronto, Ontario, Saturday (AFP photo)

PARIS — Iran's judiciary chief vowed no leniency on Sunday against the wave of unrest that has rocked the country since the death of young Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini in the custody of the morality police.

The warning by the head of the Judiciary, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, came after nine nights of protests and street clashes and echoed earlier comments by ultra-conservative President Ebrahim Raisi.

At least 41 people have died so far, mostly protesters but including members of the Islamic republic's security forces, according to an official toll, although human rights groups say the real figure is higher.

The judiciary chief "emphasised the need for decisive action without leniency" against the core instigators of the "riots", the judiciary's Mizan Online website said.

Hundreds of demonstrators, reformist activists and journalists have been arrested amid the mostly night-time demonstrations that have spread to scores of cities since unrest first broke out after Amini's death on September 16.

Security forces have fired live rounds and bird shot, rights groups charge, while protesters have hurled rocks, torched police cars, set ablaze state buildings, and shouted "death to the dictator".

Iran's largest protests in almost three years have been led by women and triggered not by classic political or economic grievances but by anger over the Islamic republic's strictly enforced gender-based dress code.

Amini, whose Kurdish first name was Jhina, was arrested on September 13 for allegedly breaching the rules that mandate tightly-fitted hijab head coverings and which ban, among other things, ripped jeans and brightly coloured clothes.

Some Iranian women protesters have since taken off and burnt their hijabs in the rallies and cut off their hair, some dancing near large bonfires to the applause of crowds that have chanted “zan, zendegi, azadi” or “woman, life, freedom”.

 

‘Outrage and hope’ 

 

Iranian Academy Award-winning filmmaker Asghar Farhadi was the latest to add his voice of support for Iran’s “progressive and courageous women leading protests for their human rights alongside men”.

“I saw outrage and hope in their faces and in the way they marched in the streets,” he said in a video message on Instagram. “I deeply respect their struggle for freedom and the right to choose their own destiny despite all the brutality they are subjected to.”

The world has learnt of much of the turmoil and violence through shaky mobile phone footage posted and spread on social media, even as authorities have throttled internet access.

WhatsApp, Instagram and Skype have been blocked and internet access restricted according to web monitor NetBlocks, following older bans on Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and Telegram.

London-based rights group Amnesty International has warned of “the risk of further bloodshed amid a deliberately imposed Internet blackout”.

Protests abroad have been held in solidarity with Iranian women in Athens, Berlin, Brussels, Istanbul, Madrid, New York, Paris, Santiago, Stockholm, The Hague, Toronto and Washington, among other cities.

 

‘Foreign plots’ 

 

Iran, which is ruled by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 83, and which has been hit with tough economic sanctions over its nuclear programme, has blamed “foreign plots” for the unrest.

The foreign ministry said onSunday it had summoned Britain’s ambassador over what it described as an “invitation to riots” by Farsi-speaking media based in London, and Norway’s envoy over “unconstructive comments” made by the parliament speaker.

Iran has also organised large rallies in defence of the hijab and conservative values, and another pro-government rally was set to be held Sunday in Enghelab (Revolution) Square in central Tehran.

The main reformist group inside Iran, the Union of Islamic Iran People’s Party, has called for the repeal of the mandatory dress code and the winding down of the morality police.

The party, led by former aides to ex-president Mohammad Khatami, who oversaw a 1997-2005 thaw with the West, also called on the government to “authorise peaceful demonstrations” and release those arrested.

Human rights groups based abroad have sought to shine light on the turmoil rocking Iran, citing their own sources in the country.

Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights has put the death toll at 54, excluding security personnel.

Iranian authorities have yet to state the cause of death of Amini, who activists say died as a result of a blow to the head.

Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi has said Amini was not beaten and that “we must wait for the final opinion of the medical examiner, which takes time”.

United Arab Emirates agrees to supply Germany with gas, diesel

By - Sep 26,2022 - Last updated at Sep 26,2022

This handout image provided by the UAE Ministry of Presidential Affairs shows UAE President Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz witnessing the signing of a New Energy Security and Industry Accelerator agreement at Al Shati Palace in Abu Dhabi on Sunday (AFP photo/UAE Ministry of Presidential Affairs)

ABU DHABI — The United Arab Emirates agreed Sunday an "energy security" deal with Germany to supply liquefied natural gas and diesel as Berlin searches for new power sources to replace Russian supplies.

Emirati industry minister Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber called it a "landmark new agreement" that "reinforces the rapidly growing energy partnership between the UAE and Germany", at a signing attended by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, the UAE's state news agency WAM reported.

Scholz was on a visit to the UAE as part of a Gulf tour that also includes stops in Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

He met with Emirati President Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, who said on Twitter afterwards they had discussed "further opportunities for cooperation in areas including energy security, emissions reduction and climate action".

The German leader said he "welcomed" the "energy security" agreement, WAM said.

As part of the deal, the UAE will provide "an LNG cargo for delivery in late 2022, to be used in the commissioning of Germany's floating LNG import terminal at Brunsbuettel", a North Sea port, the WAM report added.

UAE state oil company ADNOC completed its first ever direct diesel delivery to Germany earlier this month, and will "supply up to 250,000 tons of diesel per month in 2023", it said.

"ADNOC has reserved a number of further LNG cargos exclusively for German customers in 2023," it said.

Sunday was the second and final day of Scholz's Gulf tour, which he hoped would seal new energy deals to replace Russian supplies and mitigate the energy crisis resulting from Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.

On Saturday, he met in Jeddah with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and on Sunday afternoon he arrived in gas-rich Qatar to hold talks with Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

Scholz’s stop in the UAE included a tour of an environmental project at a mangrove park with Emirati climate change minister Mariam Almheiri.

Almheiri said discussions on Sunday would, in addition to energy security, cover “climate action and economic growth”.

“The UAE believes all three pillars must go hand and hand. We cannot look at one or two of these pillars separately,” she said.

She also reiterated Abu Dhabi’s insistence on “a just transition” away from fossil fuels.

Both the UAE and Saudi Arabia have been leading critics of what they describe as “unrealistic” transition models they say have contributed to the current energy crunch.

Scholz told reporters in Abu Dhabi that his country had “made progress on a whole series of projects here in terms of the production and purchase of diesel and gas”, while adding it was determined to avoid energy dependence on Russia in the future.

“The fact that we are dependent on one supplier and also dependent on its decisions will certainly not happen to us again,” he said.

“With the investments that we are now making in Germany, and that will become reality bit by bit next year, we will indeed have an infrastructure for gas imports for Germany, such that we are no longer directly dependent on the specific supplier at the other end of the pipeline, as we are with a pipeline connection.”

His visit to Qatar comes one day after France’s TotalEnergies signed a new $1.5 billion deal to help expand Doha’s natural gas production.

Scholz said such projects were “important”.

“We have to ensure that the production of liquefied gas in the world is advanced to such an extent that the high demand that exists can be met — without having to fall back on the production capacities in Russia that have been used so far,” he said.

 

Death toll of Lebanon migrant ship tragedy rises to 89

150 people were on board small boat that sank off Syrian port of Tartus

By - Sep 24,2022 - Last updated at Sep 24,2022

Mourners march with the body of one of the victims who drowned in the shipwreck of a migrant boat that sank off the Syrian coast, during his funeral after the return of his body in Lebanon's northern port city of Tripoli on Saturday (AFP photo)

DAMASCUS — Eighty-nine bodies have been recovered since a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon sunk off Syria's coast, Syrian state media said Saturday, as the Lebanese army said it arrested a suspected smuggler behind one of the deadliest recent shipwrecks in the eastern Mediterranean.

Filippo Grandi, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), called it a "heart-wrenching tragedy".

At least 14 people rescued were recovering in hospitals in Syria while six others were discharged, as search efforts continued, with several people still missing since the boat sank on Thursday.

"There are 89 victims, while 14 people are receiving treatment at Al Basel Hospital, two of whom are in intensive care," Syria's official news agency SANA reported, quoting Iskandar Ammar, a hospital official.

Lebanon's army said it arrested a Lebanese man who "admitted to organising the recent smuggling operation from Lebanon to Italy by sea".

Lebanon, a country which hosts more than a million refugees from Syria's civil war, has since 2019 been mired in a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.

It has become a launchpad for illegal migration, with its own citizens joining Syrian and Palestinian refugees clamouring to leave.

As many as 150 people were on board the small boat that sank off the Syrian port of Tartus, some 50 kilometres north of Tripoli in Lebanon, from where the migrants set sail.

Those on board were mostly Lebanese and Syrians and Palestinians, and included both children and the elderly, the UN said.

Families in Lebanon were to hold a second day of funerals Saturday after they were handed bodies of relatives on Friday night through the Arida border crossing with Syria.

 

‘Death boats’ 

 

Since 2020, Lebanon has seen a spike in the number of migrants using its shores to attempt the perilous crossing in jam-packed boats to reach Europe.

The UN children’s agency, UNICEF, said they had initial reports that 10 children were “among those who lost their lives” in the latest disaster.

“Years of political instability and economic crisis in Lebanon have pushed many children and families into poverty, affecting their health, welfare and education,” UNICEF added.

Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said: “No one gets on these death boats lightly.”

“People are taking this perilous decisions, risking their lives in search of dignity.”

Lazzarini said more must be done “to offer a better future and address a sense of hopelessness in Lebanon and across the region, including among Palestine refugees”.

Antonio Vitorino, head of the International Organisation for Migration, said: “People looking for safety should not be compelled to take such perilous and often deadly migration journeys.”

Most of the boats setting off from Lebanon head for European Union member Cyprus, an island about 175 kilometres to the west.

Israel no longer 'partner' for peace, Palestinian President Abbas tells UN

Abbas says Israel acts with 'total impunity'

By - Sep 24,2022 - Last updated at Sep 24,2022

President of the State of Palestine Mahmoud Abbas holds up a photo as he speaks at the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters on Friday in New York City (AFP photo)

UNITED NATIONS, United States — Israel is deliberately impeding progress towards a two-state solution and can no longer be considered a reliable partner in the peace process, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told the United Nations on Friday.

His remarks come a day after Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said he supported a two-state solution, but Abbas said the proof would be immediate negotiations.

Repeating grievances, Abbas said Israel has acted with "total impunity" against people in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank and that Palestinians' trust in the prospects for peace is "regressing".

Israel "is, through its premeditated and deliberate policies, destroying the two-state solution", the Palestinian Authority (PA) president said in a speech to the General Assembly.

"This proves unequivocally that Israel does not believe in peace," he added.

"Therefore, we no longer have an Israeli partner to whom we can talk."

Lapid, in his own address, reiterated his support for the creation of a "peaceful" Palestinian state.

Abbas called the remarks a "positive development," but said a true test of credibility "is for the Israeli government to go back to the negotiation table, immediately, tomorrow."

Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations have been stalled since 2014.

The Lapid government's current strategy is to try to support the Palestinian economy, but without embarking on a peace process with Abbas.

 

'Protecting Israel' 

 

Abbas told the General Assembly that Israel has been engaged in a campaign of land confiscation in the occupied territories and was giving the military "total freedom" to kill or otherwise use excessive force against Palestinians.

"This is the truth: they are an apartheid regime," he said, using a comparison that infuriated Israel.

 

“President Abbas uses the UN as a platform to incite hatred against Israel, while glorifying the terrorists that he himself funds,” Erdan said in a statement, after the Palestinian leader praised jailed militants.

In demanding the international community hold Israel accountable for “the massacres they have committed”, Abbas accused the United Nations and its more powerful members, notably the United States, of “protecting Israel”.

He reiterated the Palestinians’ position that Israel be brought before the International Criminal Court so that it is forced to “shoulder its legal, political, moral and financial responsibilities”.

The United States has been urging the PA not to pursue a case at the ICC, arguing it is not a sovereign state and that the court unfairly targets Israel.

A year ago, Abbas addressed the UN by videolink and said he was giving Israel one year to withdraw from occupied territory or he would no long recognise the Israel based on pre-1967 borders.

He did not mention the ultimatum Friday, but focused instead on the lack of international recognition of the Palestinian territories.

Death toll doubles in 'harrowing' Iran protest crackdown

By - Sep 24,2022 - Last updated at Sep 24,2022

Women and men chant slogans as they march in a pro-hijab rally in Iran's capital Tehran on Friday (AFP photo)

PARIS — The official death toll has nearly doubled to 35 in a crackdown by Iran's security forces on more than a week of protests that erupted after the death of a young woman in custody.

Angry demonstrators have taken to the streets of major cities across Iran, including the capital Tehran, for eight straight nights since the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.

The Kurdish woman was pronounced dead after spending three days in a coma following her arrest by Iran's feared morality police for wearing the hijab headscarf in an "improper" way.

"The number of people who died in recent riots in the country has risen to 35," state media said, raising the official toll from at least 17 dead, including five security personnel.

Protests were held around the Islamic republic on Friday, with online videos showing some turning violent in Tehran and other major cities including Tabriz.

In some of the footage, security forces could be seen firing what appeared to be live ammunition at unarmed demonstrators in the northwestern cities of Piranshahr, Mahabad and Urmia.

In one video shared by the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights non-governmental organisation, a uniformed member of the security forces is seen shooting an AK-47 assault rifle at protesters in Tehran's Ferdowsi Boulevard.

It said other footage showed a “stream of state security forces... on a Tehran highway” on Friday night.

Security forces have carried out a wave of arrests of activists and journalists, including Niloufar Hamedi of the reformist newspaper Shargh, who reported on Amini’s death.

 

Internet blackout 

 

Elsewhere, the Norway-based Kurdish rights group Hengaw said protesters “took control” of parts of the city of Oshnaviyeh, in West Azerbaijan province.

Images showed protesters walking freely with their hands aloft in triumph, but Hengaw acknowledged this could be “temporary” and expressed fears of a new crackdown there.

Amnesty International warned late Friday of “the risk of further bloodshed amid a deliberately imposed internet blackout”.

The London-based human rights group said evidence it gathered from 20 cities across Iran pointed to “a harrowing pattern of Iranian security forces deliberately and unlawfully firing live ammunition at protesters”.

In its statement, Amnesty said security forces had shot dead at least 19 people on Wednesday night alone, including at least three children.

Thousands of people marched through Tehran during a pro-hijab rally Friday, paying tribute to security forces who have moved to quell a week of protests by what media called “conspirators”.

Demonstrations in support of the security forces also took place in several cities across the country including Ahvaz, Isfahan, Qom and Tabriz.

Amini died following her arrest by Iran’s morality police, a unit responsible for enforcing the Islamic republic’s strict dress code for women.

Activists said she suffered a blow to the head in custody but this has not been confirmed by the Iranian authorities, who have opened an investigation.

Iranian women have burnt their headscarves and symbolically cut their hair in protest at the strict dress code, echoed in solidarity demonstrations from New York to Istanbul and Brussels to Santiago, Chile.

‘Toothless’ 

 

On Friday night, Iran’s Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi insisted Amini had not been beaten.

“Reports from oversight bodies were received, witnesses were interviewed, videos were reviewed, forensic opinions were obtained and it was found that there had been no beating,” Vahidi said.

The minister said Iran was investigating the cause of Amini’s death, adding “we must wait for the final opinion of the medical examiner, which takes time”.

Amnesty International dismissed Iran’s investigation and called on the world to take “meaningful action” against the bloody crackdown.

“UN member states must go beyond toothless statements, hear the cries for justice from victims and human rights defenders in Iran and urgently set up an independent UN investigative mechanism,” said Heba Morayef, its director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Iran has imposed tough restrictions on the use of the internet in a bid to hamper protesters gathering and stop the flow of images of the backlash from reaching the outside world.

The United States announced Friday it was easing export restrictions on Iran to expand internet services.

The new measures would “help counter the Iranian government’s efforts to surveil and censor its citizens,” said Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Missiles, drones paraded in Yemen capital on rebel anniversary

Hostilities have sharply declined since a UN-brokered truce came into effect in April

By - Sep 22,2022 - Last updated at Sep 22,2022

Armed militants gather for a protest against Yemen's Houthi rebels in the Khokha region of the country's war-ravaged western province of Hodeida on Tuesday, demonstrating against the destruction of farms and civilian property in the Bait Al Faqih district south of Hodeida (AFP photo)

SANAA — Thousands of troops paraded in Sanaa as Yemen's Houthi rebels marked the eighth anniversary of their seizure of the capital with a show of strength, despite a truce in their war with Saudi-led forces.

Drones and missiles that have been hallmarks of the Iran-backed rebels' military campaign filed past a grandstand on flatbed trucks on Wednesday, three weeks after a similar display in rebel-held Hodeida.

The Houthis took Sanaa in September 2014, prompting the Saudi-led intervention and triggering what the United Nations has called the world's biggest humanitarian crisis, with millions on the brink of famine.

Hostilities have sharply declined since a UN-brokered truce came into effect in April. It is up for renewal on October 2.

In a keynote speech, Mahdi Al Mashat, head of the Houthis' Supreme Political Council, stressed "the great desire for peace and openness to all efforts and good endeavours".

Mashat urged "the war leadership on the other side to jointly move from strategies of war and hostile policies to strategies and policies of peace".

However, Brigadier General Aziz Rashid, the Houthis' deputy military spokesman, said the parade also contained clear "messages" for the coalition.

"The military parade indicates the development of military capabilities, from drones to warplanes, which are now participating in the parade," he said.

“If the coalition of aggression does not understand these messages, there will be other advanced capabilities that the coalition will not be able to bear.”

Houthi drone and missile attacks, some of them deadly, have repeatedly targeted airports and oil facilities in neighbouring Saudi Arabia. Three people died in a series of strikes on coalition partner the United Arab Emirates in January.

The rebels’ Al Masirah TV channel said the parade included “new strategic weapons that have not been revealled before”.

'Drink it anyway': Syria water woes peak in cholera outbreak

By - Sep 22,2022 - Last updated at Sep 22,2022

A woman suffering from cholera receives treatment at the Al Kasrah hospital in Syria's eastern province of Deir Ezzor, on \September 17, affected by the usage of contaminated water from the Euphrates River, a major source for both drinking and irrigation (AFP photo)

AL KASRAH, Syria — In a Syria hospital crowded with women and wailing children, Ahmad Al Mohammad writhed in pain beside his wife after they contracted cholera, which is resurging for the first time in years.

During his six days in treatment, Mohammad has watched patients stream into the Al-Kasrah hospital in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, where the highly-polluted Euphrates River is a major source of contaminated water used for both drinking and irrigation.

"We have suffered from diarrhoea, vomiting and pain... because we drink directly from the Euphrates River," the 45-year-old told AFP from the hospital, barely able to speak.

"The waters of the Euphrates are polluted but we have no other choice."

Cholera is generally contracted from contaminated food or water and spreads in residential areas that lack proper sewerage networks or mains drinking water.

The disease is making its first major comeback since 2009 in Syria, where nearly two-thirds of water treatment plants, half of pumping stations and one-third of water towers have been damaged by more than a decade of war, according to the United Nations.

The Syrian government has announced 23 deaths and more than 250 cholera cases across six of the country's 14 provinces since the start of the outbreak in September, with most cases concentrated in the northern province of Aleppo.

The semi-autonomous Kurdish administration that runs northeast Syria and parts of Deir Ezzor has recorded 16 deaths and 78 cases in areas under its control, including 43 cases in western Deir Ezzor, health official Juan Mustafa told reporters on Wednesday.

He said water testing of the Euphrates proved the presence of bacteria responsible for cholera, a spread he said was caused by reduced water flow.

 

River pollution 

 

Said to have once flowed through the biblical Garden of Eden, the Euphrates runs for almost 2,800 kilometres across Turkey, Syria and Iraq.

In times of rain, it has offered abundant supplies, gushing into northern Syria through the Turkish border and flowing diagonally across the war-torn country towards Iraq.

But drought and rising temperatures linked to climate change have severely diminished water levels, with the Euphrates experiencing historic lows.

Syria’s Kurds have also accused Turkey of holding back more water than necessary in its dams.

The reduced water flow has compounded the problem of river pollution, largely from sewage, but also from oil in hydrocarbon-rich regions, including Deir Ezzor.

Despite the contamination, over five million of Syria’s about 18 million people rely on the Euphrates for their drinking water, according to the UN.

The cost of this reliance was visible in Al-Kasrah hospital, where a man softly cradled his infant, an intravenous tube piercing the child’s tiny hand.

Hospital director Tarek Alaeddine said the facility admits dozens of suspected cholera cases every day and has tallied hundreds of cases over the past three weeks.

“The patients were all drinking water delivered by trucks that extract it directly from the Euphrates River, without filtering or sterilisation,” Alaeddine said.

“We appeal to all international organisations working on health and the environment to act quickly and urgently,” he said.

 

‘We must live’ 

 

The Britain-based war monitor Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said early this month that the disease had spread in western parts of Deir Ezzor after local authorities stopped distributing chlorine to water pumping stations.

The Kurdish administration, which controls parts of Deir Ezzor including Al Kasrah, said they have resumed distribution following the outbreak.

They also announced assistance to Al Kasrah and other medical facilities in the region to help contain the number of cases.

But the main source of the problem remains largely unresolved.

Farmer Ahmad Suleiman Al Rashid, 55, said he irrigated his fields of cotton, okra, spinach and sesame using water from the Euphrates, which caused contamination of crops.

“There are no water filtering stations... we drink unsterilised and unchlorinated water and rely on God for protection,” he said

“What else can we do? The authorities are to blame.”

As he spoke, a rusty truck pumped water from the murky, green Euphrates.

Meanwhile, irrigation pipelines sucked water out of the river, leaking what appeared to be oil onto the land.

“We know the water is polluted... but we drink it anyway,” Rashid said. “We have no other option.”

Nearby, a young boy splashed river water on his face to cool down in the summer heat while Sobha Hamid Ali, 60, sat in the shade cleaning spinach leaves.

She too is aware of the dangers but said there is little she can do.

“We are forced to eat contaminated vegetables,” Ali said in a soft voice. “We must live after all.”

Death toll from Iran unrest climbs to 17 as Internet restricted

By - Sep 22,2022 - Last updated at Sep 22,2022

PARIS — The official death toll from Iran's wave of popular unrest shot up on Thursday to at least 17 as popular anger has flared over the death in custody of the young Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini.

However, the Oslo-based non-government group Iran Human Rights said at least 31 civilians had been killed in a crackdown by the Iranian security forces in six nights of violence.

Iranians have taken to the streets "to achieve their fundamental rights and human dignity... and the government is responding to their peaceful protest with bullets", charged its director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam.

The Kurdish woman Amini, 22, died last week after she had been arrested by the Islamic republic's feared morality police for allegedly wearing a hijab headscarf in an "improper" way, sparking widespread outrage.

"Death to the dictator" and "Woman, life, freedom", protesters could be heard shouting in video footage shared online, during the biggest wave of protests to rock the country in almost three years.

Among those killed in clashes have been police and militia officers, state TV reported, while overseas-based human rights groups reported many more deaths, which could not be independently verified.

Security forces have fired at crowds with birdshot and metal pellets, and also deployed tear gas and water cannon, according to Amnesty International and other human rights groups.

There were fears violence could escalate further after Iranian authorities restricted internet access and blocked messaging apps including WhatsApp and Instagram, as they have done before past crackdowns.

Some women have burnt their scarves and symbolically cut their hair in protest at the strict dress code, in defiant actions echoed in solidarity protests abroad from New York to Istanbul.

Activists have said that Amini, whose Kurdish first name is Jhina, after her detention in Tehran suffered a fatal blow to the head — a claim denied by officials, who have announced an investigation.

Iranian women on the streets of Tehran told AFP they were now more careful about their dress to avoid run-ins with the morality police.

“I’m frightened,” said Nazanin, a 23-year-old nurse who asked to be identified by her first name only for safety reasons, adding she believed the morality police “shouldn’t confront people at all”.

US President Joe Biden in an address to the UN General Assembly on Wednesday said that “we stand with the brave citizens and the brave women of Iran who right now are demonstrating to secure their basic rights”.

Iran’s ultra-conservative President Ebrahim Raisi, speaking later in the same forum, complained of a “double standard” and pointed to Israeli actions in the Palestinian territories and the deaths of indigenous women in Canada.

The protests come at a particularly sensitive time for the leadership, as the Iranian economy remains mired in a crisis largely caused by sanctions over its nuclear programme.

Unprecedented images have shown protesters defacing or burning images of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and late Revolutionary Guard commander Qassem Soleimani.

The wave of unrest “is a very significant shock, it is a societal crisis”, said Iran expert David Rigoulet-Roze of the French Institute for International and Strategic Affairs.

 

Internet curbed

 

The protests are among the most serious in Iran since November 2019 unrest sparked by a sharp rise in petrol prices. The crackdown then killed hundreds, according to Amnesty.

Demonstrators have hurled stones at security forces, set fire to police vehicles and garbage bins, and chanted anti-government slogans, the official IRNA news agency said.

On Thursday, Iranian media said three militiamen “mobilised to deal with rioters” were stabbed or shot dead in north-western Tabriz, central Qazvin and northeastern Mashhad.

UN human rights experts condemned the “use of physical violence against women” and the “state-mandated internet disruptions” which they said were usually part of larger efforts “to stifle... free expression... and to curtail ongoing protests”.

Iran’s Fars news agency reported that “in accordance with a decision by officials, it has no longer been possible to access Instagram in Iran since (Wednesday) evening and access to WhatsApp is also disrupted”.

The two apps were the most widely used in Iran after the blocking of other platforms in recent years, including Facebook, Twitter, Telegram, YouTube and TikTok.

 

Hamas warns over Jewish visits to flashpoint Jerusalem mosque

By - Sep 22,2022 - Last updated at Sep 22,2022

By longstanding convention, Jews are allowed to visit but not pray at occupied East Jerusalem’s flashpoint Al Aqsa Mosque compound but Palestinians complain the rules are being flouted by the growing numbers of pilgrims (AFP photo)

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories — Hamas threatened “repercussions” over Jewish visits to Jerusalem’s super-sensitive Al Aqsa Mosque compound, in a warning issued on Thursday, days before the start of the Jewish high holidays when visitor numbers increase.

The mosque compound in the Old City of Israel-occupied East Jerusalem has been the focus of tensions for years, but Palestinians have voiced increasing anger at the rising number of visits by Jews, who revere the compound as their holiest site, the Temple Mount.

Mahmud Zahar, a senior member of the Islamist group which rules Gaza, warned “the continuation of the Zionist aggression and their brutality against Jerusalem and the holy shrines will be the cause of a major battle”.

Speaking in a rare press conference in Gaza’s Omari mosque, Zahar alluded to Palestinian concerns that a longstanding convention by which Jews may visit but not pray in the compound was being covertly flouted.

He said Israel would be held “fully responsible for the repercussions of these violations”.

Beyadenu, a group that encourages Jews to visit the Al Aqsa compound, said it was committed to increasing such visits.

“We broke the 50,000 visitor barrier on the Temple Mount” this past year, Beyadenu said ahead of the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashana.

Tom Nissani, the group’s chief executive, said: “The goal is 100,000 visitors next [Jewish] year”, which begins on Sunday night.

Israeli far-right lawmaker Itamar Ben-Gvir, who has led multiple actions in Jerusalem in the past designed to provoke Palestinians, tweeted Thursday that he “went up to the Temple Mount this morning to pray and exercise sovereignty in the holiest place for the people of Israel”.

Thousands of Jews — Israelis and tourists — are expected to visit Jerusalem’s Old City during the high holidays, which run into mid-October.

Israel captured the Old City, along with the rest of East Jerusalem, in the June War of 1967.

The Al Aqsa compound is Islam’s third holiest site and is managed by Jordan, as part of a delicate arrangement with Israel.

Hamas, which has ruled over the Gaza Strip since 2007, regularly describes itself as the primary force defending Al Aqsa against Israel.

Israel and Hamas have fought four wars over the past 15 years.

Israel, which has imposed a blockade on Gaza since the Hamas takeover, has also in recent years sporadically increased the number of permits for Gazans to seek higher wage jobs in Israel.

The permits, highly sought after by many in Gaza, are also used by Israel as a means to apply pressure on Hamas, with Israel regularly suspending passage of workers through the Erez border crossing following Islamist rocket fire.

The Israeli defence ministry body responsible for civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, COGAT, on Thursday announced a 1,500 increase in the number of permits available, bringing the total to 17,000.

Tunisia opposition chief questioned all night by counterterrorism police

By - Sep 22,2022 - Last updated at Sep 22,2022

TUNIS — The leader of Tunisia's Islamist-inspired Ennahdha Party was questioned through the night by counterterrorism police over alleged complicity in the departure of extremist militants for Syria and Iraq, his lawyer said Wednesday.

Rached Ghannouchi, 81, finally left the police station in Tunis at 6:30 am (0530 GMT), an AFP correspondent reported.

The longtime exile had been a dominant figure in Tunisian politics after the Arab Spring uprising of 2011 but is a bete noire for President Kais Saied, who tightened his grip on the judiciary following the suspension of the Ennahdha-dominated parliament last year.

Ennahdha categorically denies the accusations levelled at Ghannouchi and Tunisia's former prime minister Ali Laarayedh, who was questioned for hours on Monday.

Ghannouchi has now been summoned to appear before the judiciary's counterterrorism branch later Wednesday, his lawyer Samir Dilou told AFP.

He had spent 12 hours waiting to be questioned at the police counter-terrorism unit on Monday before being told to come back the following day.

His party denounced the interrogation as “a flagrant violation of human rights”.

Critics of Ennahdha accuse it of having facilitated the departure of militants for war zones.

After the 2011 overthrow of dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, thousands of Tunisians joined the ranks of jihadist organisations, most notably the Daesh group in Syria and Iraq, but also in neighbouring Libya.

Ennahdha played a central role in Tunisia’s post-Ben Ali democratic politics until Saied began his power grab in July last year, followed by a controversial referendum which granted unchecked powers to his office.

The party has accused the president of seeking “to use the judiciary to tarnish the opposition’s image” and “distract the public” from the North African country’s pressing economic woes.

In July, the same counterterrorism unit questioned Ghannouchi in a probe into allegations of corruption and money laundering linked to transfers from abroad to the charity Namaa Tunisia, affiliated with Ennahdha.

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