UN Finds Iran’s Violence Against Children ‘Unacceptable’
Stéphane Dujarric, the spokesman for the UN Secretary-General António Guterres
Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General António Guterres condemned the Iranian government’s killing of children, saying any sort of violence against children is completely “unacceptable and unexplainable.”
Stéphane Dujarric told Iran International’s correspondent that the UN continues to remain “concerned about the reports of fatalities, including women and children, as related to large scale protests,” referring to the high number of casualties among children amid the ongoing uprising sparked by the death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.
According to rights groups inside and outside Iran, at least 28 children have been killed in protests that have swept Iran since mid-September, with hundreds more mostly detained in adult prisons.
Dujarric also echoed remarks by UNICEF head Catherine Russell, calling for the protection of children and adolescents amid Islamic Republic’s crackdown on popular protests.
Expressing concerns about Iran’s excessive use of force against protesters, he said that “it's important that the security forces refrain from using disproportionate force to avoid any further casualties.”
He also called on the Islamic Republic’s authorities to “listen to the legitimate grievances of the population especially and including in respect to the rights of women.”
Voicing willingness “to engage and hold dialogue with the protesters,” the UN spokesperson said, “We encourage all good faith efforts to that end.”
He also reiterated calls “to respect human rights, including the right to freedom of expression, the right to peaceful assembly and the right to freedom of association,” and also underlined the need for accountability.
Widespread protests across Iran Wednesday, marked by security forces' use of guns and beatings, once again showed the degree of anger against the clerical regime.
Tehran Youth, presumed to be a group of young activists who have taken the lead in current antigovernment protests had issued the call for Wednesday’s protests after security forces used military weapons against protesters in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj earlier this week.
Multiple reports by social media monitoring groups said that there was a near total internet shutdown in major cities, not only for mobile phones but also landline home connections.
Nevertheless, people found ways to send news and videos of the protests that started around noon and began to spread and expand in mid-afternoon hours.
The government, fearing a repeat of last Saturday’s protests that showed the power of the opposition, deployed an array of security forces that used different levels of violence in different locations.
Protests in Tehran began around noon, the time set by activists and quickly spread to different parts of the capital and other cities. Protesters have adjusted their tactics by avoiding large gathering that can be easily targeted by security forces. Instead, they form groups in different parts of a city and in multiple streets, dividing government forces. They also engage in running battles, making security forces guess where a crowd might gather next.
Despite Internet shutdown, by 13:30 local time, reports emerged of protests taking place In Mashhad, Esfahan, Rasht, Keramn, Chabahar and Sanandaj, Arak and other cities and towns.
Videos received from Kurdish-majority cities in western Iran showed a general strike of retail businesses.
Daily protests have continued in Sanandaj and other cities in the west this week, with security forces resorting to military weapons since Sunday to drive back protesters.
One tweet by an activist said that government employees in Tehran were ordered not to leave their offices before 16:00 local time, to prevent their participation in protests.
Shargh newspaper in Tehran reportedthat the Internet shutdown has closed down 300,000 online businesses with tens of millions of dollars of daily turnover, such as taxi and food delivery services, flowers, all sorts of goods and hundreds of other services.
Reports by labor groups from southern Iran said that security forces were deployed in large numbers around oil and petrochemical facilities to prevent the continuation of strikes and protests by workers that started on Monday. Security forces were coordinating with managers of plants, who are mostly wealthy regime insiders.
Below we posted news and videos throughout the day as we received them.
Our live coverage lasted close to eleven hours and ended just past midnight Tehran time.
BREAKING - Multiple social media users in Tehran are reporting a fire in the notorious Evin prison, where most political prisoners and many protesters are kept. People in the vicinity heard an explosion followed by a fire and gunshots. We have one verified photo and two videos from a distance.
A well-known Iranian journalist currently in Europe quotes his local sources in the oil-rich Khuzestan province as saying that intense confrontations are taking place between protesters and security forces in Masjed Solayman and Lali. Also, street skirmishes took place in the provincial capital Ahvaz. Mobile Internet connection is non-existent and for now there are no videos.
As darkness fell in early evening, a new wave of protests started in many cities on Saturday. Protesters have come out into the streets in Tehran's working class districts of Nazi Abad and Sadeghiyeh.
Here is a video from Mashhad, an important religious center for the ruling clergy.
Multiple reports on Twitter say that protests have intensified in in the northwestern city of Tabriz, with one report saying that people have pushed back security forces in one part of the city.
Reports indicate the western Iranian city of Kermanshah is engulfed in protests. Sources say that gun shots can be heard from different parts of the city.
The political deputy of Bushehr Province governor says 200 people have been arrested during protests and "the leaders of the riots who have been identified will soon be detained."
After days of confrontations with government forces people in Saqqez are still protesting. This is the hometown of Mahsa Amini whose death in police custody triggered the protests in mid-September.
Young people have come out in Tehran's working class district Nazi Abad as darkness fell, lighting a fire in the street and chanting "Death to the dictator".
A video sent to Iran International from the southern city of Shiraz show special units beating protesters on the street as a woman screams at them to stop.
Hengaw human rights monitoring group reported at about 15:30 local time that Revolutionary Guard forces fired at schoolgirls in the town of Bukan who were chanting slogans in the street. The whole area was sealed off and ambulances were seen.
One group of protesters in Shariati Avenue in Tehran. People have changed tactics from large gathering to protests in various parts of a large city to divide the security forces and make them constantly run around different districts.
A report received at around 15:00 local time says protesters have blocked some highways linking oil and petrochemical plants in southern Iran to prevent security forces from traveling to hotspots where workers are on strike or are protesting.
Defense attorneys and people protesting outside Tehran Bar Association demanding fair trial for thousands of protesters arrested since mid-September. The government denies access to a lawyer form many detainees or appoints its own attorneys who follow instructions by the notorious Judiciary.
Later, a leading attorney, Saeed Dehghan was quoted as saying that three attorneys participating in the protest were detained.
Tear gas was used against the protest gathering of defense attorney.
The president of the European Commission has called on Iranian authorities to stop the violence against protesters, saying “women must be able to choose.”
Ursula von der Leyen said Wednesday that “The brave Iranian women demand freedom and equality -- values that Europe believes in and must speak up for.”
Describing the current uprising in Iran sparked by the death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini as "a cry for equality and women's rights," she said Europe's message must be “crystal clear.”
Noting that the “shocking violence” by the Islamic Republic's repression machine “cannot stay unanswered," she reiterated calls for sanctions on those responsible for the clampdown. “We have to work on sanctions together.”
The European Union has not given any indication of what sanctions may be agreed at the foreign ministers’ meeting on October 17. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told Bild am Sonntag, a Sunday newspaper, that Berlin would support measures freezing the assets and banning the EU entry of those responsible for “brutal suppression,” referring to antigovernment protests.
The bloc last agreed to human rights sanctions on Tehran in 2021. No Iranians had been added to that list since 2013, however, as the bloc has shied away from such measures in the hope of reviving a nuclear accord with Iran after the United States withdrew in 2018. Those talks have now stalled. It currently has an array of sanctions on about 90 Iranian individuals which have been renewed annually every April.
While protests are raging across Iran Wednesday, Islamic Republic’s ruler Ali Khamenei called the uprising "scattered riots" designed “by the enemy.”
Khamenei, who had already tried to downplay the antigovernment protests last week, made the remarks on Wednesday as protests began in major cities across the country amid a near total internet shutdown and choppers hovering above Tehran. Earlier in the month, he claimed protests were planned by the US and Israel and not staged by "ordinary Iranians."
"These scattered riots are the passive and clumsy design of the enemy against the great and innovative developments and movements of the Iranian nation," the Supreme Leader said.
Without providing any explanation, he said, “The Iranian nation made great moves in a short period of time, which were 180 degrees opposite to the global arrogance’s policies, and they were forced to react,” referring to the United States and other Western powers.
Describing the protests, that are garnering more support from the international community, as a “minor incident,” he said, “The constructions, great executive works, effective legislation, big judicial works, and important issues in foreign policy should not be sidelined by these minor incidents.”
Tehran Youth, presumed to be a group of young activists who have taken the lead in current protests issued the call for Wednesday’s nationwide protests after security forces used military weapons against protesters in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj earlier this week.
Protests over the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman who died in the custody of the hijab police, started in her hometown Saqqez and capital but soon spread all over Iran.
Former US President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle have expressed solidarity with Iranian women and girls who have “inspired the world” through their protests.
The Obamas issued a statement Tuesday on the occasion of International Day of the Girl, saying they are "in awe" of those who have joined the reignited fight for women's rights in Iran.
Condemning the clampdown on popular uprising sparked by the death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, they said, "The rights they seek are universal: equality, the ability to make their own choices about how they look and dress and express their identities, and the freedom to do so without facing harassment, intimidation, and violence.”
Addressing protestors, the Obamas said, "We are moved by your acts of protest, and bear witness to your bravery in facing down the brutality of a regime resisting calls for change. You are delivering a powerful message that injustice should not be tolerated."
They sympathized with those who have tragically lost loved ones and expressed hope that “the future will ultimately belong to the young women and girls of Iran who are refusing to be silent.”
“You remind us that true power comes not from clinging to the past, but from the effort to build a better future," they said.
Iranian protest song by singer-songwriter Shervin Hajipour, which has become the anthem of the current uprising, has flooded the submission box for the Grammys’ newest special award category.
The song “Baraye...” -- which means “For the Sake Of” in Persian -- received 95,000, or over 83 percent, of the 115,000 total submissions for the award following a campaign on TikTok urged users to nominate the song, which is the de-facto manifesto of the protests.
It has been reuploaded to YouTube and other social media platforms, and “was used by Iranians all over the world as a rallying cry,” a crowdsourced guide for nominating the song for a Grammy says.
The special merit award is meant to honor a song “that has had a profound social influence and impact,” the Recording Academy said on its website. Submissions are open through October 14.
The Recording Academy was “deeply moved” by the social media campaign, Chief Executive Officer Harvey Mason, Jr. said in an e-mailed statement. “While we cannot predict who might win the award, we are humbled by the knowledge that the Academy is a platform for people who want to show support for the idea that music is a powerful catalyst for change.”
Hajipour, who shared his song amid the protests over Mahsa Amini’s death in custody of hijab police, was himself arrested and released on bail and later was banned from leaving Iran on charges of anti-regime propaganda and inciting violence. He composed the song from tweets and other social-media posts from protestors commemorating Mahsa Amini.