Repression in Iran: bullets to the head, heart, neck, and torso of the victims

At least 82 people have been killed since Friday in the crackdown on protests that erupted in Zahedan, southeastern Iran, the NGO Amnesty International said Thursday.

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“Iranian security forces unlawfully killed at least 66 people, including children, and injured hundreds more following opening fire with live ammunition and firing lead pellets and tear gas at protesters, bystanders and of the faithful” during the demonstrations of September 30 in this city of the province of Sistan-Baluchistan, according to the organization.




Since then, Amnesty said, “sixteen other people have been killed in separate incidents in Zahedan as part of the ongoing crackdown on these protests.”

In addition, “elements collected from activists, families of the victims, eyewitnesses and images and videos of the demonstrations suggest that the real number of deaths in Zahédan is likely to be higher”, continues the NGO, which adds that “at least three children” have died since September 30.

“The majority of the victims were shot in the head, heart, neck and torso, revealing a clear intention to kill or seriously injure”, insists Amnesty International on the basis of the elements it has collected.

According to the NGO Iran Human Rights, the protests were sparked by accusations that a police chief in the port city of Chabahar, also located in the province of Sistan-Balochistan, allegedly raped a 15-year-old minority girl. Baloch Sunni.

The accusation was made public in September by the Friday prayer leader in the town of Rask, south of Zahedan, sparking protests that later spread to the region’s main town.

Media close to the Iranian government, for their part, described the clashes in Zahedan as a “terrorist incident” directed once morest a police station and which led to the death of five members of the Revolutionary Guards, the ideological army of the Islamic Republic. .

These clashes erupted in an already tense context.

Iran has been rocked for more than two weeks by a wave of protests across the country following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurdish woman, who died three days following her arrest for violating the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code, which in particular obliges women to wear the veil in public places.

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