Shopkeepers and factory workers went on strike in Iran on Saturday as women-led nationwide protests sparked by Mahsa Amini’s death in custody entered a sixth week, activists said.
The death of 22-year-old Amini, after her arrest for allegedly breaching Iran’s strict dress code for women, has fueled the largest protests the Islamic republic has experienced for decades.
Young women have led the charge, removing their headscarves, chanting anti-government slogans and confronting security forces, despite a crackdown that human rights groups said has killed at least 122 people.
Photo: AP
Activists issued a call for fresh demonstrations as Iran’s working week began on Saturday, but it was difficult to gauge the turnout because of curbs on Internet access.
“On Saturday... We will be together for freedom,” activist Atena Daemi said in a Twitter post that bore an image of a bare-headed woman raising her fist.
However, the government downplayed the protests.
“There are various gatherings in some universities, which are decreasing every day, and the riots are going through their final days,” Iranian Deputy Minister of the Interior Majid Mirahmadi told state media.
The 1500tasvir social media channel told AFP that there were “strikes in a couple of cities including Sanandaj, Bukan and Saqez,” adding that it was difficult to see evidence of them online as “the Internet connection is too slow.”
Saqez, in the western province of Kurdistan, is Amini’s home town, where anger flared at her burial last month, helping trigger the protest movement.
Verified footage that circulated on social media showed dozens of students holding Iranian flags and chanting outside one of Iran’s largest campuses, Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran.
Some female students among them did not wear the mandatory headscarf.
In northwestern Iran, dozens of students clapped and chanted slogans during a protest at the Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, verified footage showed.
Iran accused the US of seeking to use the protests to gain concessions in talks aimed at restoring the 2015 nuclear agreement.
“The Americans continue to exchange messages with us, but they are trying to fan the flames of what has been going on inside Iran in recent days,” Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said.
The organizers of a mass rally in Berlin in solidarity with the Iranian protesters called on “democratic governments... to stop negotiating with the criminal state called the Islamic republic.”
Iranians for Justice and Human Rights in a statement also called for the expulsion of Iran’s ambassadors.
“We are not asking you to interfere in Iran, wage war or sanction Iran’s people,” it said. “We want you to impose targeted sanctions on the leaders, operatives, oligarchs and lobbyists of the Islamic republic.”
The Berlin rally, which police said drew more than 80,000 people, was one of a number of demonstrations around the world, including in Australia and Japan.
A teachers’ union in Iran called for a nationwide strike, which began yesterday and is expected to continue today, over the crackdown that rights group Amnesty International said has cost the lives of at least 23 children.
The Co-ordinating Council of Teachers Syndicates said the “sit-in” would be in response to “systematic oppression” by the security forces at schools.
Activists have also accused authorities of a campaign of mass arrests and travel bans to quell the protests, with athletes, celebrities and journalists caught up in the dragnet.
An Iranian sport climber, who was reportedly placed under house arrest for competing abroad last weekend without a headscarf, thanked her supporters on Instagram overnight.
Elnaz Rekabi, 33, wore only a headband in an event at the Asian Championships in Seoul, in what many saw as gesture of solidarity with the Amini protests.
“I sincerely thank all those who came to the airport for welcoming me, I love you,” Rekabi said in her first social media comments since returning on Wednesday to a hero’s welcome.
The BBC and London-based Iran International television said on Friday that Rekabi had been placed under house arrest. Her phone had reportedly been seized from her before she flew home.
The New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran on Friday called on the International Federation of Sport Climbing to do more to protect Rekabi and all Iranian athletes.
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