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Published 25 Feb, 2023 06:55am

Custodial death in Zahedan sparks protests

PARIS: Protesters in southeastern Iran on Friday took to the streets displaying slogans against the Iranian government despite an intense security presence and apparent blocking of the internet, activists said.

Footage posted on Telegram by the Baluch Activists Campaign (BAC) showed protesters brandishing slogans including “Death to the dictator”, as they marched through the centre of Zahedan, the capital of Sistan-Baluchistan province that borders Pakistan and is Iran’s poorest region.

Anger for the latest protests was fuelled by reports that a medical doctor died in police custody after being arrested over the protests.

Ebrahim Rigi had been arrested in Zahedan last year but was released on bail and then summoned again into custody where he was fatally beaten by police agents, said the Hal Vash website that monitors Sistan-Baluchistan province.

There was no immediate comment from Tehran and it was not immediately possible to confirm the reports.

At least 131 people have been killed in a crackdown on the protests in the region, according to Oslo-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) group.

Most of these deaths were recorded on a single day in Zahedan on September 30, dubbed “Bloody Friday”, during which rights groups accuse security forces of indiscriminately firing on protesters.The BAC and Hal Vash said there was an intense security presence in Zahedan on Friday, with worshippers seeking to prevent security forces from entering the city’s main mosque ahead of Friday prayers.

The internet monitor NetBlocks said there was a “significant disruption to internet connectivity” in Zahedan amid the tensions.

Friday prayers at the city’s main place of worship, the Grand Makki Mosque, have during the protest movement been marked by sermons by outspoken senior cleric Molavi Abdolhamid who has supported the protesters and been bitterly critical of the Tehran authorities. “Listen to the people and the opposition,” activists including the BAC cited Molavi Abdolhamid as telling the government in his latest sermon.

“If you cannot solve the problems of the people, step aside and let someone who can come and solve the problems,” he said.

Published in Dawn, February 25th, 2023

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