Iranians protest 'Bloody Friday' security force crackdown as nationwide unrest continues

Nov 13, 2022

Tehran [Iran], November 13 : Thousands of Iranians have protested in the nation's southeast to mark a September crackdown by security forces known as "Bloody Friday".
Sune Engel Rasmussen, writing in The Wall Street Journal said that despite mass arrests and violence, Iranian authorities have failed to suppress the two-month-long protest movement that started after the death of a Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, who had been detained by morality police for allegedly flouting the Islamic Republic's strict dress code imposed on women.
More than 82 people died on Friday, September 30, as security forces cracked down on demonstrations in Sistan-Balochistan, rights groups say. The province is one of the largest and poorest in Iran and is home to an ethnic Sunni Muslim minority.
In recent days, hundreds of people have gathered in the provincial capital of Zahedan to mark 40 days--an important period in Islamic mourning--since the incident, which protesters have called "Bloody Friday."
In one of the most serious challenges to the clerical establishment in decades, Protesters gathered in front of Zahedan's main mosque chanting "death to Khamenei," the country's supreme leader, and "death to Basiji," a paramilitary militia tasked with protecting the Islamic Republic against domestic dissent, according to social media footage verified by Storyful, which is owned by News Corp.
Some protesters were chanting, "I will kill whoever killed my brother." Other videos featured the sound of gunfire that activists attributed to security forces opening fire on protesters, said Rasmussen.
At least 16 were killed last week in Khash, another city in Sistan-Balochistan, according to Iran Human Rights, a watchdog based in Oslo.
More than 300 people, including around 40 minors, have been killed across the country since the protests erupted in September, Iran Human Rights said this week.
The failure to suppress protesters across the country is a sign that the movement remains a stark challenge to the Iranian leadership. Initially centred around demands to abolish the mandatory Islamic veil, or hijab, the movement morphed into calls to overthrow the Islamic leadership, reported The Wall Street Journal.
Protesters gather almost daily in some parts of the country, such as the western Kurdistan province where Amini was from. Elsewhere, such as in the capital Tehran, rallies are routinely held a couple of times a week, often in or around universities.
In the past week, 227 of the 290 lawmakers in Iran's parliament called on the country's judiciary to issue and carry out the death penalty for protesters. Iranian Chief Justice Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei asked judges to intensify and speed up sentences for hundreds of arrested protesters, said Rasmussen.
Authorities have sought to intimidate Iranians from participating in rallies by placing plainclothes police in the crowds to seize and arrest protesters.
One 32-year-old protester in Tehran said on Friday she had been arrested twice by security forces in civilian clothing who pulled her out of a crowd. The first time she was held and interrogated for 10 hours, while police officers kicked her face and body. She was released when they didn't find any compromising material on her phone. The second time she was released more quickly, she said because the prisons were full, reported The Wall Street Journal.
"They are very dangerous," she said about the plainclothes police, her voice breaking. "But that's not enough to stop us from protesting."
The protests in Sistan-Balochistan have been different in nature from rallies elsewhere in the country. The province is home to a Sunni minority and a separatist movement that the government in Tehran views as a terrorist organization.
Separatist slogans appear to have been largely absent from recent rallies in the province, but they have faced a more violent crackdown than elsewhere, activists say.
The protests in Sistan-Balochistan have also consisted almost exclusively of men, compared with other parts of Iran where women have been at the forefront. Women's rights activists in the province, where the protests every Friday have emanated from mosques, have objected on social media to the absence of women in the rallies, reported The Wall Street Journal.