Iran’s Supreme Leader accused the US on Monday of forming “a crisis group” tasked with creating crises and incitement in Iran, Al-Mayadeen has reported.
“This American crisis group has realised that sectarian and national differences and the women’s issue are the most important points around which incitement can take place,” Ali Khamenei told a crowd of Iranians who came to visit him from the provinces of Sistan and Baluchestan and South Khorasan. “The enemies are serious in their hostility and plans against Iran, but we are also very serious in confronting them.”
According to Khamenei, the US plans come at a time when “the forces of global arrogance have weakened and new regional and global powers have risen.” This, he insisted, is “the basic line of transformation in the world.”
In earlier remarks, the Iranian leader pointed out that, “The Iranian people have become more powerful in confronting the front of arrogance and Zionism.” Young Iranians, he said, must pay attention to the fact that the “enmity of arrogance” with the Iranian people will not end. “The Americans have placed Iran in the axis of evil, and their goal is to return Iran to before the revolution and make it dependent [on the West].”
It was reported last year october that, Iran’s president on Thursday accused the U.S. of conducting a “failed policy of destabilization” targeting his nation, as Iranian protesters continued to call for the downfall of its rulers despite a violent and wide-ranging crackdown.
President Ebrahim Raisi has repeatedly dismissed the unrest sparked by the death of a 22-year-old woman in policy custody as a purported Western plot, without providing evidence. His latest remarks came after protests erupted in cities across Iran on Wednesday, with videos showing security forces apparently firing toward demonstrators.
The protests, in which girls and women of all ages have removed their mandatory headscarves, or hijabs, have become one of the greatest challenges to Iran’s theocracy since the country’s 2009 Green Movement. Raisi, a hard-line protégé of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has likened the protesters to “flies” and sought to downplay the unrest.
“The Iranian nation has invalidated the American military option and, as they themselves have admitted, brought the policy of sanctions and maximum pressure a humiliating failure,” Raisi said Thursday to a conference in Astana, Kazakhstan.
“Now, following America’s failure in militarization and sanctions, Washington and its allies have resorted to the failed policy of destabilization,” he said, according to a transcript of his remarks.
Raisi did not otherwise address the demonstrations, which took place across at least 19 cities on Wednesday.
Gathering information about the demonstrations remains difficult amid the internet restrictions and the arrests of at least 40 journalists in the country, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Iran’s government insists 22-year-old Mahsa Amini was not mistreated, but her family says her body showed bruises and other signs of beating after she was detained for violating the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code.
It remains unclear how many people have been killed or arrested so far in the protests.
An Oslo-based group, Iran Human Rights, estimated Wednesday that at least 201 people have been killed. This includes an estimated 90 people killed by security forces in the eastern Iranian city of Zahedan amid demonstrations against a police officer accused of rape in a separate case. Iranian authorities have described the Zahedan violence as involving unnamed separatists, without providing details or evidence.
In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said America wasn’t focusing on possible negotiations with Iran over its tattered nuclear deal amid the demonstrations. Those talks collapsed in the months before Amini’s Sept. 16 death.
“Right now our focus…is on the remarkable bravery and courage that the Iranian people are exhibiting through their peaceful demonstrations,” Price said. “And our focus right now is on shining a spotlight on what they’re doing and supporting them in the ways we can.”
Canada meanwhile announced additional sanctions against 17 individuals and three entities in response to what it said was “the Iranian regime’s systematic human rights violations and ongoing actions that destabilize regional security.”
Meanwhile, an Iranian-American who had been furloughed from prison while serving a 10-year sentence on internationally criticized spying charges was put back into Tehran’s Evin prison, his lawyer said. Siamak Namazi had been furloughed from prison as his 85-year-old father, Baquer Namazi, was freed and allowed to travel to Oman and on to the United Arab Emirates for medical care.
“Iran’s decision to refuse to renew Siamak’s furlough is devastating, but ultimately unsurprising,” lawyer Jared Genser said. “For Iran to use Baquer’s departure and Siamak’s temporary release to portray itself as acting in good faith, only to immediately and needlessly throw him back behind bars, is a telling display of the precarious situation of the hostages.”