Zürcher Nachrichten - Iran says no leniency for 'rioters' as protests persist

EUR -
AED 4.304621
AFN 75.593204
ALL 96.003761
AMD 440.324149
AOA 1074.646617
ARS 1606.368482
AUD 1.657495
AWG 2.109447
AZN 1.996908
BAM 1.956142
BBD 2.359513
BDT 143.925194
BHD 0.441989
BIF 3480.587976
BMD 1.171915
BND 1.492761
BOB 8.09445
BRL 5.889113
BSD 1.171505
BTN 108.66504
BWP 15.725874
BYN 3.362389
BYR 22969.536814
BZD 2.355831
CAD 1.621181
CDF 2695.405254
CHF 0.925373
CLF 0.026616
CLP 1047.46234
CNY 8.001884
CNH 8.000478
COP 4275.75584
CRC 542.194911
CUC 1.171915
CUP 31.055751
CVE 110.775326
CZK 24.372613
DJF 208.27322
DKK 7.472055
DOP 70.754424
DZD 154.951069
EGP 62.213581
ERN 17.578727
ETB 183.463775
FJD 2.590523
FKP 0.871837
GBP 0.871008
GEL 3.152909
GGP 0.871837
GHS 12.914962
GIP 0.871837
GMD 86.140276
GNF 10286.489683
GTQ 8.961569
GYD 245.063622
HKD 9.178574
HNL 31.208555
HRK 7.531669
HTG 153.606889
HUF 374.749212
IDR 20033.537805
ILS 3.555837
IMP 0.871837
INR 109.093757
IQD 1535.208838
IRR 1542386.818778
ISK 143.2125
JEP 0.871837
JMD 185.222423
JOD 0.830934
JPY 186.731833
KES 151.353291
KGS 102.48443
KHR 4705.239712
KMF 492.204771
KPW 1054.739324
KRW 1740.650003
KWD 0.361775
KYD 0.976154
KZT 553.54077
LAK 25735.256962
LBP 104945.001518
LKR 369.714719
LRD 215.87119
LSL 19.266732
LTL 3.460361
LVL 0.70888
LYD 7.447567
MAD 10.903217
MDL 20.182122
MGA 4863.448252
MKD 61.632904
MMK 2461.60714
MNT 4213.429261
MOP 9.449525
MRU 46.870792
MUR 54.498438
MVR 18.118251
MWK 2035.035026
MXN 20.295989
MYR 4.646689
MZN 74.956135
NAD 19.266727
NGN 1593.078449
NIO 43.033165
NOK 11.157457
NPR 173.863665
NZD 2.007995
OMR 0.450597
PAB 1.171365
PEN 3.970494
PGK 5.05242
PHP 70.252842
PKR 326.906168
PLN 4.248719
PYG 7576.326235
QAR 4.272848
RON 5.09139
RSD 117.359143
RUB 90.323845
RWF 1711.582067
SAR 4.397751
SBD 9.432256
SCR 17.356499
SDG 704.321399
SEK 10.883815
SGD 1.492815
SLE 28.83341
SOS 669.753796
SRD 43.887095
STD 24256.277385
STN 24.903197
SVC 10.250794
SYP 129.553024
SZL 19.26047
THB 37.607189
TJS 11.133719
TMT 4.107563
TND 3.383363
TRY 52.326442
TTD 7.950392
TWD 37.220455
TZS 3052.839342
UAH 50.89841
UGX 4334.758799
USD 1.171915
UYU 47.268274
UZS 14256.348113
VES 557.641528
VND 30863.557222
VUV 139.704569
WST 3.216858
XAF 655.993465
XAG 0.015418
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.16716
XCG 2.11137
XDR 0.818128
XOF 658.034564
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.560659
ZAR 19.28422
ZMK 10548.646791
ZMW 22.285239
ZWL 377.356198
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • BCC

    -0.5250

    80.055

    -0.66%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • NGG

    -0.0900

    90.23

    -0.1%

  • BTI

    -0.2150

    58.635

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    -0.8050

    204.185

    -0.39%

  • RIO

    1.1900

    98.32

    +1.21%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    22.69

    +0.44%

  • BCE

    -0.5650

    23.325

    -2.42%

  • BP

    0.4750

    46.375

    +1.02%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.01

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    17

    -1.18%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    33.23

    -0.33%

  • VOD

    -0.1850

    15.665

    -1.18%

Iran says no leniency for 'rioters' as protests persist
Iran says no leniency for 'rioters' as protests persist / Photo: Blanca CRUZ - AFP

Iran says no leniency for 'rioters' as protests persist

Iran will offer no leniency to "rioters", though the public has a right to demonstrate, the head of the country's judiciary said on Monday, following more than a week of sometimes-deadly protests.

Text size:

The remarks came after US President Donald Trump warned Iran would "get hit very hard by the United States" if the authorities killed more demonstrators.

Protests erupted on December 28 when shopkeepers in capital Tehran staged a strike over high prices and economic stagnation. They have since spread to other cities and expanded to include political demands.

"I instruct the attorney general and prosecutors across the country to act in accordance with the law and with resolve against the rioters and those who support them... and to show no leniency or indulgence," Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said, according to the judiciary's Mizan news agency.

He went on to add that Iran "listens to the protesters and their criticism, and distinguishes between them and rioters".

Demonstrations have taken place in 23 of Iran's 31 provinces and affected, to varying degrees, at least 45 different cities, most of them small or medium-sized and concentrated in the west, according to an AFP tally based on official statements and media reports.

At least 12 people have been killed since December 30 in localised clashes, including members of the security forces, according to official announcements.

According to Mizan, police intelligence officers in the capital have identified a suspected rioter hideout and seized "weapons, ammunition, and materials for making improvised explosive devices".

Since the protests began, officials have publicly struck a conciliatory tone when it comes to protesters' economic demands, while vowing to take a hard line against any chaos or destabilisation.

Iran's economy has been hit hard by tough international sanctions, with the national currency, the rial, losing more than a third of its value against the US dollar over the past year and inflation in double digits.

On Sunday, the government announced a monthly allowance for every citizen to alleviate economic pressure, equivalent to around 3.5 percent of the average monthly wage.

The reformist newspaper Arman Melli said Monday that the authorities had "heard the voices of the protesters", while the conservative papers Javan and Kayhan accused the United States and Israel of financially supporting rioters.

- Watching 'very closely' -

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump said the US was watching the situation "very closely".

"If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they're going to get hit very hard by the United States," he said on Sunday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, said his country stood "in solidarity with the struggle of the Iranian people and with their aspirations for freedom".

On Monday, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baqaei said at a press conference attended by AFP journalists that Israel was trying "to exploit the slightest opportunity to sow division and undermine our national unity".

Iran's prosecutor general Mohammad Movahedi-Azad last week warned against "externally designed scenarios" to harness the protests, promising a "decisive response".

Israel fought a 12-day war with Iran in June, which the US briefly joined with limited strikes on nuclear facilities.

- 'Movement by movement' -

The Fars news agency said on Monday that "the trend observed on Sunday night shows a notable decrease in the number of gatherings and their geographic reach compared to previous nights".

Local media's accounting of the protests is not exhaustive, and state-run outlets have downplayed their coverage of the demonstrations, while videos flooding social media are often impossible to verify.

On Monday, most shops in Tehran were open and residents were going about their business after the end of the weekend on Sunday, according to AFP reporters in the capital.

However, riot police were deployed at major intersections and officers were stationed in front of some schools. Several universities have resumed classes, but only online.

Protests have also taken place among the Iranian diaspora.

At a demonstration in Paris on Sunday, 29-year-old French-Iranian translator Sahar Aghakhani told AFP: "With each new protest, Iranian men and women gain ground. Movement by movement, we're getting closer to the end of the regime."

Iran has experienced several outbreaks of nationwide protests in recent years, most notably in 2022 over the death in custody of Mahsa Amini over the alleged breach of Iran's Islamic dress laws for women.

So far, the current protests have not reached the same scale.

F.E.Ackermann--NZN