News on Iran Protests & DemonstrationsIran Protests Increase and Spread Across the Country

Iran Protests Increase and Spread Across the Country

-

Iran's protests archive image

By Jubin Katiraie

Iran saw an increased number of large protests over the past few days with people from all occupations and social classes demanding their rights.

In Khuzestan province, villagers near Jofair city blocked a road on Saturday, during their protest over severe water shortages. The local said that various officials have vowed to fix this issue on numerous occasions, but that no measures are ever taken after they leave.

These problems persist, despite the fact that this is one of the wealthiest provinces in Iran with numerous oil and gas companies extracting the roughly 2 billion barrels of oil and several layers of natural gas, while locals are forced to live in poor conditions. Residents have threatened to shut the oil and gas companies down if their demands are not met.

Meanwhile, employees of the Khuzestan Province Village Telecommunications Company also held a rally; this one outside the provincial department office regarding their employment status and poor living conditions.

In Urmia, landowners held a rally to demand the approval of construction projects on their lands, with some of them having waited 20 years for permission to affix their lands to the expanding city areas.

While livestock owners in Naqadeh, Kurdistan province, gathered outside the governor’s office to protest a recent order by local officials that limit the lands they can feed their livestock on.

While Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence in the city and Security (MOIS) in Shushtar, Khuzestan province, raided various locations 6 am on Saturday and arrested over 30 young people, some of whom are under the age of 18. It is not yet clear why they have been targeted by the MOIS.

Just eight arrested individuals have been identified. They are:

  • Hamid Zogheibi, 32, who is married with three children
  • Hakim Ka’bi, 31, married
  • Ali Badawi, 29
  • Mohammad Badawi, 21
  • Ayoub Tarafi, 28
  • Amer Rahime, 20
  • Hamid Agili, 18
  • Mostafa Agili, 15

On Friday, truck drivers in Isfahan held a rally to protest being laid off for the past four months and effectively left in limbo.

One driver said: “We haven’t been able to cross the border for the past four months. If we don’t work, we’ll die of hunger. More than 200 oil tankers are waiting at the border. Trucks from Isfahan province have been stopped at the customs in Sistan & Baluchistan province for four months now.”

 

Read More:

Iran: Ayatollahs Are Concerned About Post-Coronavirus Era While the Country Has Yet to Pass the Peak

Latest news

Iran’s Car Market Experiences Sharp Surge in Prices Afte War-Induced Stagnation

Media outlets in Iran report that the prices of many domestically produced cars have increased by 3 billion to...

UN Officials Call for a Halt to Executions and Repression in Iran

Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, in a statement published on April 29, strongly condemned...

Iran’s National Currency Has Declined by 120% Over the Past Year

Reports from Iran indicate a sharp surge in the price of the U.S. dollar in the open market in...

US Preparing for a Long-Term Blockade of Iran’s Ports

The Wall Street Journal, citing US officials, reported that US President Donald Trump has ordered preparations for a long-term...

War Economy and Stagflation in Iran

Unemployment and inflation in a war for which the Iranian regime is the primary cause are no longer merely...

Transfer of a death-row political prisoner to solitary confinement in Urmia, Iran

Punitive transfer of death-row political prisoner Mehrab Abdollahzadeh to solitary confinement in Urmia Prison Mehrab Abdollahzadeh, a political prisoner sentenced...

Must read

BBC enlisting new satellites to broadcast in Iran

AP: The BBC is using two extra satellites to...

U.S. warns Turkey against selling Adabank to Iran, Star reports

Bloomberg: The U.S. government warned Turkey against selling Adabank...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you