U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has slammed Iran for using “violence” and internet disruption to prevent memorials for those killed during a November crackdown on anti-establishment protests. Â
“The Iranian people have the right to mourn 1,500 victims slaughtered by @khamenei_ir during #IranProtests,” Pompeo tweeted Friday, directly accusing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on religious and political issues in the Islamic republic.Â
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According to the semiofficial ILNAÂ news agency, internet access was effectively cut off Wednesday in several Iranian provinces ahead of memorials planned Thursday.Â
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Several people were reportedly detained at a mourning in Karaj marking 40 days since the death of a slain protester.Â
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“The regime fears its own citizens and has once again resorted to violence and shutting down the internet,” Pompeo tweeted Friday.Â
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The protests in Iran were touched off by a significant increase in the price of gasoline. The United States said earlier this month that Iranian authorities might have killed more than 1,000 people in the crackdown in mid-November.Â
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Reuters quoted anonymous government officials as saying about 1,500 people had died during the protests, though that figure could not be confirmed.Â
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Amnesty International has said that at least 304 were killed and thousands injured in the unrest.Â
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Tehran has dismissed the figures by rights groups and others while failing to publish an official death toll.Â
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Agence France-Presse and Reuters contributed to this report. Â
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Source: VOA News: বিষয়
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