Iran says 40 foreigners arrested during Amini protests
TEHRAN: Iran has arrested 40 foreign nationals during over two months of protests sparked by the death in morality police custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, the judiciary said on Tuesday.
“Forty foreign nationals implicated in the recent riots have been arrested,” judiciary spokesman Masoud Setayeshi said in comments carried by its Mizan Online news website. He did not elaborate on the nationalities of those detained and gave no other details.
Iranian officials have repeatedly accused Western governments of stoking the protests over Amini´s death. A number of Westerners, some of them dual nationals, were already in custody in Iran before the latest protests broke out in September.
French teachers´ union official Cecile Kohler and her partner Jacques Paris were detained in May, following teachers´ strikes earlier in the year. Both have been charged with espionage and have been held in isolation since their arrests, French trade union sources have said.
“The two French spies remain in custody and their case is in the final decision stage,” Setayeshi said on Tuesday, without elaborating. In early October, state television broadcast what it said were “espionage confessions” by the two French detainees.
The French government condemned the airing of the alleged confessions as “shameful, revolting and unacceptable” and described the pair as “state hostages” for the first time. Five other French nationals are also in custody in Iran.
Iran´s courts have convicted nearly 2,500 people of involvement in the Amini protests, the judiciary spokesman said. “Nationwide, preliminary verdicts have been handed down against 2,432 people so far.
A further 1,118 people have been charged and are awaiting trial in the capital Tehran,” Setayeshi said. The verdicts handed down so far are all preliminary because they are subject to appeal to the supreme court.
The revolutionary court in Tehran has already handed down six death sentences over the protests after convicting the accused of being “enemies of God” or “corrupt on Earth”, both capital offences in Iran.
Meanwhile, Iranian security forces have killed 72 people, including 56 in Kurdish-populated areas, in the past week alone in their crackdown on the protests sparked by Mahsa Amini´s death, a rights group said on Tuesday.
The protests, which erupted in mid-September following the death of Amini, 22, in the custody of the morality police, have turned into the biggest challenge for Iran´s clerical leadership since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
With the wave of protests cutting across ethnicities, social classes and provincial boundaries, authorities have responded with an intensifying crackdown that has sparked an international outcry.
Iran has also launched repeated cross-border missile and drone strikes, most recently Tuesday, against exiled Kurdish opposition groups it accuses of stoking the protests from their bases in neighbouring Iraq.
-
Bruce Springsteen Reveals Singer He Finds To Be Greatest Rock And Roll Voice -
Ben Affleck Recalls 'throwing Up' During 'Armageddon's Final Scene -
Kevin Costner Marks 71st Birthday With Decades-old Throwback Photos -
Why Royal Lodge Fell Into Disarray Under Andrew: Insider Exposes Loophole -
Hoda Kotb 'so Proud' As Today 'magic Reignites' With Sheinelle Jones -
Kate Middleton Avoids Nanny Involvmenet In Prince George Matters -
Colin Jost Jokes About Scarlett Johansson Losing Highest-grossing Actor Crown To Zoe Saldana -
‘Traitor’ Prince Harry Has ‘spooked’ His Family: ‘He Has To Pay A Price Of Re-entry’ -
Andrew’s Daughter Princess Eugenie Sparks Seismic Change After Stepping Away -
Meghan Markle Shares NEW Photos From Day Out At The Zoo -
'Game Of Thrones' New Series Returns To 'home' -
Prince Harry Touches Down In Heathrow For The Witness Box -
Harry’s Turmoil Turns To Agony Over Meghan Markle’s Hope: ‘Time Will Tell If He’ll Bare It’ -
Reese Witherspoon Jokes About Jennifer Garner’s 'dark Side' -
'Lion King' Co-director Roger Allers Breathes His Last At 76 -
Prince Harry’s Security ‘isn’t Just For His Family’: Expert Rewires Security Woe