Pro-regime rallies in Tehran as US imposes sanctions

AFP  |  Tehran 

Pro-regime rallies were held around today with authorities seeking to put the recent violent unrest to bed, as slapped fresh sanctions on and called for an emergency meeting.

Iranian officials blamed a plot by the CIA, and for the unrest that convulsed much of the country for five days -- part of the increasing tensions playing out between and its neighbours since came to power.


For a third straight day, there were large pro- rallies, this time in 40 locations around province and several cities including and after Friday prayers, as authorities declared the unrest over.

"We are here to show that we can solve our problems ourselves, and will never allow Saudi Arabia, the and to intervene... and we are behind the revolution until our last drop of blood," Mohsen, an IT engineer in the crowd, told AFP.

The US imposed sanctions against five Iranian firms alleged to have been working on an illegal ballistic missile programme, linking the move to the protests.

On the streets of Tehran, a heavy police presence lingered though there were no reports of fresh protests overnight.

There were some reports of small anti- demonstrations in provincial towns, but these could not be verified.

Police asked people to send photos and videos of "trouble-makers", reported, and to identify a number of suspects already caught on camera.

It remains difficult to gauge who was involved in the unrest that began December 28, claiming 21 lives -- mostly protesters -- and leading to hundreds of arrests.

Hassan Rouhani's supporters have blamed conservative rivals for stoking anger over economic issues, which quickly grew out of control and saw attacks on security forces, buildings and symbols of the regime.

The conservatives deny the accusations and say Rouhani must do more to help the poor, with parliament already moving to repeal an unpopular fuel tax hike in his recent budget.

The Security Council was set to hold an emergency meeting on the issue on Friday at the request of the

blamed the unrest on a plot dating back four years by the United States, and

"The main of this plan is Michael D'Andrea," Montazeri said, referring to the of the CIA's desk.

"They launched (social media) campaigns with the theme of 'no to high prices', 'no to paying bills'," he said, adding that the plan was to start unrest in the provinces before moving on

Montazeri also claimed there were efforts to infiltrate the Islamic State group into the country.

"Eternal bedfellows #KSA (Saudi Arabia) and #-- following Trump's lead -- all endorse violence, death and destruction in Why are we not surprised," tweeted

Many officials have nonetheless recognised the genuine economic grievances of many Iranians, particularly a jobless rate at close to 30 percent for young people.

Iran's economic growth rebounded to more than 12 percent last year after sanctions were lifted under a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, but analysts say much of the windfall has come from that generate few jobs.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, January 05 2018. 22:10 IST