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Women Students Tell Iran's President to 'Get Lost' as Unrest Rages

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A screengrab from video posted to Twitter on Oct. 8, 2022, by @1500tasvir purports to show Iranian women marching in an anti-government protest.
A screengrab from video posted to Twitter on Oct. 8, 2022, by @1500tasvir purports to show Iranian women marching in an anti-government protest.

Female students in Tehran chanted "Get lost" on Saturday as Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi visited their university campus and condemned protesters enraged by the death of a young woman in police custody, videos on social media showed.

Raisi addressed professors and students at Alzahra University in Tehran, reciting a poem that equated "rioters" with flies, as nationwide demonstrations entered a fourth week.

"They imagine they can achieve their evil goals in universities," Raisi said on state TV. "Unbeknownst to them, our students and professors are alert and will not allow the enemy to realize their evil goals."

A video posted on Twitter by the activist 1500tasvir website showed what it said were women students chanting "Raisi get lost" and "Mullahs get lost" as the president visited their campus. Another social media video showed students chanting: "We don't want a corrupt guest," in reference to Raisi.

Reuters could not immediately verify the videos.

A state coroner's report denied that 22-year-old Mahsa Amini had died from blows to the head and limbs while in the custody of the morality police and linked her death to preexisting medical conditions, state media said on Friday.

Amini, an Iranian Kurd, was arrested in Tehran on Sept. 13 for wearing "inappropriate attire" and died three days later.

Her death has ignited nationwide demonstrations, marking the biggest challenge to Iran's clerical leaders in years. Women have removed their hijabs in defiance of the clerical establishment while furious crowds called for the downfall of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The government has described the protests as a plot by Iran's enemies, including the United States, accusing armed dissidents — among others — of violence in which at least 20 members of the security forces have been reported killed.

Rights groups say more than 185 people have been killed, hundreds injured, and thousands arrested by security forces confronting protests.

After a call for mass demonstrations on Saturday, security forces shot at protesters and used tear gas in the Kurdish cities of Sanandaj and Saqqez, according to the Iranian human rights group Hengaw.

In Sanandaj, capital of the northwestern Kurdistan province, one man slumped dead in his car while a woman screamed "shameless," according to Hengaw, which said the man had been shot by security forces after he honked his horn as a sign of protest.

A senior police official repeated the claim by security forces that they did not use live bullets and told state media that the man had been killed by armed dissidents.

State media played down the protests across Tehran, the capital, reporting limited demonstrations in dozens of areas. It said many bazaar traders had shut their shops for fear of damage in the unrest, denying there was a strike.

Social media tells different story

But videos on social media showed what appeared to be the largest protests in the past three weeks in many Tehran neighborhoods, including a crowd filling the streets in the lower-income southern neighborhood of Nazi Abad.

Videos shared on social media showed protests in several major cities. One video showed a young woman lying unconscious on the ground after she apparently had been shot in the northeastern city of Mashhad, Iran's second most populous city.

The Norway-based Iran Human Rights said at least 185 people had been killed in the protests, with the highest number of killings in the restive Sistan-Baluchistan province in the southeast.

As state TV showed footage of Ayatollah Khamenei on its main evening news, the broadcast was briefly interrupted, apparently hacked, with his image, surrounded by flames, next to pictures of Amini and three other women allegedly killed during the protests.

The protests' signature slogan, "Woman, Life, Freedom," could be heard as the Edalate Ali hacker group posted its web addresses. The group last year hacked security cameras and exposed mistreatment of prisoners in a jail mostly holding political prisoners.

After a weekly meeting, Raisi and Iran's head of judiciary and parliament speaker called for unity.

"Currently, the Iranian society needs the unity of all its strata regardless of language, religion and ethnicity to overcome the hostility and division spread by anti-Iranians," they said in a statement.

Hengaw also carried a video of emergency personnel trying to resuscitate a person and said one protester had died after being shot in the abdomen by security forces in Sanandaj. Reuters could not verify the video.

One of the schools in Saqqez city's square was filled with girls chanting "Woman, life, freedom," Hengaw reported.

The widely followed 1500tasvir Twitter account also reported shootings at protesters in the two northwestern Kurdish cities.

A university student who was on his way to join protests in Tehran said he was not afraid of being arrested or even killed.

"They can kill us, arrest us but we will not remain silent anymore. Our classmates are in jail. How can we remain silent?” the student, who asked to remain anonymous, told Reuters.

Internet watchdog NetBlocks said the internet had been cut in Sanandaj again amid protests in Kurdish areas.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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