Iran’s Foreign Ministry Summons UK, Norway Envoys Over Protests

Iran’s foreign ministry has summoned the British ambassador in Tehran over what it calls “a hostile atmosphere” created by London-based Persian media outlets.

Iran’s foreign ministry has summoned the British ambassador in Tehran over what it calls “a hostile atmosphere” created by London-based Persian media outlets.
The official website of Iran’s government IRNA reported on Sunday that Simon Shercliff was called in by the ministry on Saturday to convey Tehran’s protest to the UK government for hosting the media channels.
There are three London-based major Iranian satellite TV channels beaming programs into Iran; Iran International TV, Manoto TV and BBC Persian.
During the meeting, the British envoy was told that by hosting these media outlets, London is interfering in Iran’s affairs, and that Tehran considers this an action against the national sovereignty of our country.
The ministry said that in recent days the media channels have put “incitement of violence and spread of riots” on top of their agenda, referring to the nationwide unrest following the death of Mahsa Amini, the young woman who died in the hands of hijab enforcement police.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry also summoned the Norwegian ambassador over “meddlesome” remarks by the Parliament President, Masud Gharahkhani, an Iranian-Norwegian in support of and solidarity with Iran’s protests, saying his "prejudgment” about the unrest is “wrong” and “unconstructive”.
Numerous protest rallies also have taken place outside the Islamic Republic’s embassies and consulates in cities around the world.
On Saturday night, two motorcycle-riding men threw a bottle of Molotov cocktail at the building of Iran’s embassy in the Greek capital Athens.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian says the Americans have sent Iran a message “in recent days” expressing their resolve to reach a deal in good faith.
“We told them to realistically translate their words into action so that we can reach a deal,” he said on Saturday, referring to a final agreement on the revival of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Amir-Abdollahian, who is still in New York holding meetings on the sidelines of the 77th UN General Assembly session, highlighted that he has made it clear to representatives of the European Union and signatories to the JCPOA that Iran possesses the required will and determination to reach an agreement.
“It is now the American side that must have the courage to take a decision in order for us to talk about striking a good, strong, and durable agreement,” the Iranian foreign minister pointed out.
Since the start of the popular protests in Iran over the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in custody of hijab police, the prospect of restoring the deal seems even dimmer.
US Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley said Saturday, “While Iran’s government brutalizes peaceful demonstrators and tries to choke off Iranians’ access to the global internet, the United States is taking action to help the Iranian people communicate with one another.”
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman said earlier in the day that the US Treasury's move to issue a General License to boost support for internet freedom in Iran is an effort to "violate Iran's sovereignty" and will not remain unanswered.

The Islamic Republic's tactic to deal with any major unrest has been firing at protesters, arresting activists, then staging a rally to show it has legitimacy.
The government did the same during the protest that followed the death in custody of a young woman which enraged large groups of Iranians including, most noticeably, women and youths. The regime used force and then tried to put up a show of force, which was the rally on Friday along a half-a-mile route turned out to be a fiasco.
Even the news program on Channel 3 of the state television on Friday was not convinced that the lacklustre rally was a definitive answer to more than a week of protests in Tehran and over 80 other cities. As Abolfazl Najafi Tehrani, an Iranian cleric wrote on Twitter on Saturday, the government is likely to lure and bus demonstrators from small towns around Tehran for yet another "definitive" show of support on Sunday.
In another odd event, the Channel 3 evening news, showed nearly all the user-generated videos of protests that had been aired by foreign-based satellite televisions beaming into Iran, but at the end of every clip it pointed out that protesters insulted the regime’s values, which was true, as demonstrators have made it clear that they do not want the Islamic Republic and clerical rule.
During the past 43 years, the Islamic Republic has done everything possible to impose its "values" on Iranians. However, the presence of tens of thousands of Iranians born after 2000 in the protests revealed that state propaganda has not been successful. Protesters showed to politicians that the teachings of the Islamic Republic are different from those of Islam. They grew up to know the Islamic Republic through major financial corruption cases, inefficient economic and foreign policy, and coercive domestic politics.
A large gathering in front of the notorious Evin prison on Saturday, the beginning of the week in Iran, of individuals looking for their "disappeared" family members, revealed the extent of the government's violence against protesters during the past week. There are long lists of those who have disappeared in recent days on various social media platforms.
Nonetheless, the protests continue with an ever-increasing momentum in the streets of Iran. The government specially cannot believe the large scope and severity of the protests in the religious cities of Qom and Mashad, where protesters fiercely "disciplined" the security forces. Cities such as Rasht, Qazvin, and Tehran have been the scenes of massive anti-government rallies particularly on Friday night.
The continued confrontation after the Islamic Republic's staged-managed rally of its supporters, show the government and protesters, are still testing each other's determination. According to reports, government forces killed at least 35 protesters until Friday. But the actual casualty toll is obviously much higher, as it has always been. In 2019, it took several weeks after the end of the protests for the media to realize that at least 1,500 protesters were shot dead. However, this round of protests still continue with slogans getting increasingly serious. What they chant in the streets is no longer about hijab or the heavy-handed morality police. Based on what they do and say, they want nothing less than a regime change. Whether this is feasible or not, will, among other things, depend on the government and the protesters' determination and their ability and logistics to continue the confrontation.

Iran's exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi has called on Iran’s security forces to join the people and stand against the Islamic Republic’s repression machine.
In an exclusive interview with Iran International on Saturday Pahlavi said, "The army is the guardian of the country and the border, but today there is a situation where the internal enemy is shooting at the people... the military forces should be a shield for the defenseless people."
The exiled prince added that people will accept the security forces, noting that "People say that we do not intend to take revenge and we will accept you, but you should join us and not defend the system."
Iran's traditional army (Artesh) has been kept in a weak position by the Islamic Republic and is controlled by officiers from the revolutionary Guard (IRGC). Still, many hope that one day the army might come to the defense of protesters and stop the IRGC and other regime forces from using military and brutal force against the people.
Pahlavi also said that one of the measures needed to organize protests is to present a united front and select a leader for the opposition to interact with other countries.
The world must know what the alternative for the Islamic Republic is, he said, noting that political forces should cooperate beyond the streets.
"We may have different political inclinations in Iran tomorrow, but at this stage we have a common goal to save the country," he added.
Pahlavi held a meeting with a delegation from the European Parliament regarding the ongoing protests in Iran, urging European leaders to support the Iranians who are out on the streets for their demands.
In a tweet earlier in the day, he urged European countries to recall their ambassadors from Tehran.
Many demonstrators during a series of protests since 2017 have chanted slogans in support of the Pahlavi kings, seeing the 20th century dynasty as the force that modernized Iran, with building educational, industrial, military, legal and other infrastructure needed for development. However, Reza Pahlavi has said he is not aspiring to restore monarchy and the people should decide what form of government they prefer once the Islamic Republic is overthrown.
At the same time, voices among Iranians say that the current protests need a leadership and an alternative government to the clerical regime.
The latest round of nationwide protests in Iran appears to be different from the protests that have rocked the Islamic Republic since 2017.
The protests that started in Tehran on September 16 followed the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, and not triggered by financial hardships Iranians have been experiencing in recent years.
The aim of most protesters, however, appears to be regime change and full freedom, not just partial concessions by the government.

As Saturday dawned in Iran two trends could be discerned. First, many began to say this is a revolution, not just protests, and second, it is led by women.
Another major development was that the people did not wait for the habitual afternoon hours to begin their protests. Demonstrations began early at least in Tehran and Shiraz, as the regime kept attempting to control the popular movement, which has spread too far and too wide geographically for the few hundreds of thousands of security forces.
Government disruption of access to the internet certainly prevented news and videos to reach us from all locations in Iran, but some reports indicated it was the most active day of protests so far.
There are unconfirmed reports on social media quoting anti-riot police forces and regime loyalists as saying that they are exhausted physically and emotionally after six days of relentless protests. This might be true, but they are still using force wherever they get a chance.
At other locations they retreat, such as in Oshnavieh in the Kurdish populated west, where protesters drove the Revolutionary Guard out of its barracks and from the town on Friday, practically becoming the first urban area to be in the hands of the people. A tweet by a resident said people are determined not to allow government forces to return but they cannot defend against attacks by heavy weapons.
Reports say government forces are trying to take the town back, with helicopters and drones flying over Oshnavieh all day on Saturday.
Our live coverage ended at 01:00 o'clock local time on Sunday.
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People are shouting from buildings in a district west of tehran, "Khamenei is a killer - His rule is null and void."
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A tweet says, "A picture of Tehran streets that in this moment are witness to a revolution that has amazed the world. Iranian youth have smelled victory and tasted liberty. This is a one-way path toward victory."

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Protesters in Karaj, a city 20 miles west of the capital Tehran shout "Death to Khamenei" during unrest Saturday night.
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News came in about fierce protests in the religious city of Mashhad, Iran's second largest urban center. A protester is heard shouting, "Alamolhoda, we will not let you live," in reference to the ultra-conservative ayatollah in control of the city. He is also father-in-law of President Ebrahim Raisi, another hardliner cleric.
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A tweet says "Tehransar seized by protesters" but Iran International cannot verify this information. Protesters are shouting "scoundrels" at the security forces. The video shows a large group of protesters in the streets. Tehransar is a working class district west of Tehran.
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Demonstrators cut their hair during a protest following the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran, in Athens, Greece, September 24, 2022. REUTERS/Louiza Vradi

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People protest during a demonstration in support of Mahsa Amini, a young Iranian woman who died following her arrest by the country's morality police, outside the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Stockholm, Sweden, September 24, 2022. Fredrik Persson/via REUTERS

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People in the pre-dominantly Kurdish city of Sanandaj, who have been protesting for eight days, came out into the streets Saturday evening once again.
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Protests Staurday evening in Sattar Khan district of Tehran, one of the hotbeds of the movement in the capital in the past three days.
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Protests also started in Esfahan in early evening and continued into the night.
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Families of protesters arrested in the past few days gathered outside Tehran's notorious Evin prison to demand their release or find out about the whereabouts of their loved ones.
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Protesters forced security forces to retreat in Kashmat, a town with 100,000 population in the east.
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Secretary-General of French President Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party has invited the party's members and supporters to attend a demonstration to be held in support of Iranian women on Sunday at 4 p.m., at Trocadéro, Paris.
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A large protest in Shiraz, capital of Fars province, the heart of the Persian regions of Iran. A young woman took off her veil and standing on top of a car led the protesters in chanting, "Death to the dictator," a reference to the country's clerical ruler Ali Khamenei.
Protesters in an unknown location on Saturday are chanting "Death to the dictator:, a clear reference to Iran's 83-year-old ruler Ali Khamenei.
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The government is closing schools and universities often citing public health excuses as the youth get a chance to congregate on campuses and start protests. Here is a video of students gahtered at the University of tehran and chanting "Death to the dictator."
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A large crowd of protesters marched in Amol, northern Iran during daytime on Saturday. Amol has been a hotbed of protests in the past six days.

Legendary co-founder of Pink Floyd Roger Waters has expressed anger over the death of Mahsa Amini, the Iranian woman whose tragic fate has inspired an uprising in the country.
The English musician released a video on Friday, saying “We are all brothers, sisters and cousins; we are all related Mr. Ayatollah! Mahsa is my sister... She should be alive today. She and all her sisters must be able to decide whether or not their heads are covered.” “It's none of your business!" He added.
He said Mahsa was arrested by “some kind of weird moral police”, and “she was beaten to death,” adding that he was watching the footage of people protesting her death on the streets.
He also quipped that the ayatollahs may say it is none of my business and it is their country, but they are wrong, “I am a human being and I believe in human rights, and Mahsa Amini has human rights.”
“I am very very angry and I can understand why people are angry... all over the world,” he said.
He also mentioned Neda Agha-Soltan, who was shot dead by a militiaman belonging to Basij paramilitary forces in protests following the disputed Iranian election in 2009.
Waters also dedicated a song in his latest concert to Mahsa as a tribute to the young woman.
As Saturday dawned in Iran protests continued and two trends could be discerned. First, many began to say that this is a revolution and not just protests, and second, it is led by women.