PARIS: Iranian security forces massacred dozens last week in the southeastern province of Sistan-Balochistan when they opened fire on a protest in the city of Zahedan that erupted as Iran is convulsed by nationwide demonstrations, rights activists charge.
State media in Iran characterised the unrest that started on September 30 after Friday prayers as attacks by “extremists” on police stations that left five members of the Revolutionary Guards dead.
Activists however say the horrifying images of bloodied corpses with bullet wounds are emblematic of Tehran’s repressive polices towards a poor ethnic minority region.
Zahedan is the main city of Sistan-Balochistan, Iran’s poorest region, on the border with Pakistan. Zahedan is one of Iran’s few Sunni-majority cities and the region is populated by the Baloch ethnic minority who adhere to Sunni Islam rather than the Shiism predominant in Iran.
Activists have long complained the region has been the victim of discrimination by Iran’s Shia clerical leadership, with disproportionate numbers of Baloch killed in clashes every year and also hanged in executions.
The region has been the scene of attacks on the Iranian security forces that Tehran has blamed on Sunni extremist groups, while the border area is also seen as a hub for drug smuggling by armed gangs.
Amnesty International said that in 2021 at least 19 percent of all executions were of members of the “Balochi ethnic minority, whose share of Iran’s population overall is approximately five percent”.
“Killing Baloch does not cost much for the Iranian government,” said Abdollah Aref, director of the UK-based Baloch Activists Campaign (BAC) which advocates for the rights of the minority.The unrest erupted some two weeks into nationwide protests in Iran over the death of Mahsa Amini who had been arrested by the notorious morality police.
However the trigger for the protests were accusations that a regional police chief had raped a 15-year-old-girl in custody in the port city of Chabahar, also in Sistan-Balochistan. It is not clear why she was detained.
The accusation had been made public last month by the Friday prayer leader in the town of Rask south of Zahedan, prompting protests that then spread to the main city of the region.
According to Aref, a protest was planned after Friday prayers in Zahedan on September 30. Protesters then headed to the police station to protest against the alleged rape and also shouted slogans against supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Some people threw stones and the security forces then responded by opening fire while snipers were also positioned above, Aref told AFP.
“A lot of people were killed by snipers, including people not involved in the protests,” he alleged. The protests then spread across the city targeting other police stations.
“The police sought to send a message,” to the Baloch, he said.
Disturbing images on social media said to be from the aftermath of the clashes showed rows of men laid out in traditional Baloch shalwar kameez robes splattered with blood from fatal shot wounds.
At the time, internet monitor Netblocks reported access disruptions in Zahedan.
Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian stated Wednesday that “foreign interventionists, organised agents and terrorists, especially in Zahedan and the west of Iran, pushed the path of peaceful gatherings of people towards violence, riots and killing of innocent people, the police and security forces”.
According to the Norway-based group Iran Human Rights (IHR), basing its figures on those of the BAC, 63 named people were killed in Friday’s violence and its aftermath, and four more people in a separate incident where a military helicopter fired on an open-roofed car.
The BAC said in its latest update on Telegram that it has now confirmed 88 people were killed.
The protest “was bloodily suppressed by security forces. It has since been named Zahedan’s ‘Bloody Friday’,” claimed IHR.
Aref said that the death toll was accentuated by a shortage of blood and bandages, meaning many of the wounded died from their injuries.
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