Iran: Security, Information Blockade to Quell Protests

People are affected by tear gas fired by Iranian riot police to disperse protesters in Tehran on December 30. Since the protests erupted last week, the government has been blocking social media websites to disrupt the spread of information about the demonstrations/AP
People are affected by tear gas fired by Iranian riot police to disperse protesters in Tehran on December 30. Since the protests erupted last week, the government has been blocking social media websites to disrupt the spread of information about the demonstrations/AP
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Iran: Security, Information Blockade to Quell Protests

People are affected by tear gas fired by Iranian riot police to disperse protesters in Tehran on December 30. Since the protests erupted last week, the government has been blocking social media websites to disrupt the spread of information about the demonstrations/AP
People are affected by tear gas fired by Iranian riot police to disperse protesters in Tehran on December 30. Since the protests erupted last week, the government has been blocking social media websites to disrupt the spread of information about the demonstrations/AP

As protests in Iran entered their second week on Thursday, authorities escalated their security and information blockade to quell anti-government marches, informed local sources said.

The UN Security Council is meeting on Friday to discuss Iran, after a US request for a special meeting on the protests.

Despite the official decision to ban demonstrations across the country, local sources said that sporadic protests were widespread on Thursday in the capital Tehran and other cities, including Isfahan, Baluchistan, in addition to Shiraz, Tabriz and Sananjad in the Iranian Kurdistan.

Eyewitnesses said that Special Forces intensified their presence in the center of the city of Mashhad, and particularly around government offices, while police-affiliated motorcycles were seen maneuvering in the streets.

And for the fifth consecutive day, families of detainees were seen protesting outside Tehran's Evin prison, to ask for the release of members of their families or at least, to uncover information about their fate.

Media reports indicated that the age of those detainees ranged between 15 and 25 year-old.

Lawyer and human rights activist Laila Ali Karami told Asharq Al-Awsat on Thursday that the Iranian Constitution admits the right of peaceful demonstrations.

“There are basic citizens rights allowing them to present their general demands through demonstrations and gatherings. It is the responsibility of security forces to guarantee the safety of those protestors instead of quelling them and considering them as enemies,” Karami said.

Separately, 59 artists and intellectuals living outside the country have signed a petition that demands the authorities to stop quelling demonstrators.

The petition also referred to the decision of cutting off the Internet and telephone lines, a decision that transforms Iran into a military country.

Commenting on events in the country, several reactions emerged Thursday at the political and military levels.

Iran's army chief Major General Abdolrahim Musavi said on Thursday that local police forces had mostly quelled the unrest.

"This blind sedition was so small that a portion of the police force was able to nip it in the bud, but you can rest assured that your comrades in the Republic's army would be ready to confront the dupes of the Great Satan (United States)," Musavi said, according to Reuters.



South Korea's Yoon Resists Questioning by Lying in Underwear

South Korea's former president Yoon Suk Yeol resisted prosecutors' attempts to interrogate him by lying down on the floor in his underwear. KIM HONG-JI / POOL/AFP
South Korea's former president Yoon Suk Yeol resisted prosecutors' attempts to interrogate him by lying down on the floor in his underwear. KIM HONG-JI / POOL/AFP
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South Korea's Yoon Resists Questioning by Lying in Underwear

South Korea's former president Yoon Suk Yeol resisted prosecutors' attempts to interrogate him by lying down on the floor in his underwear. KIM HONG-JI / POOL/AFP
South Korea's former president Yoon Suk Yeol resisted prosecutors' attempts to interrogate him by lying down on the floor in his underwear. KIM HONG-JI / POOL/AFP

South Korea's impeached former president Yoon Suk Yeol lay on his prison cell floor in his underwear to resist attempts to interrogate him, prosecutors said Friday.

Prosecutors obtained a fresh arrest warrant on Thursday to forcibly bring the former leader in for questioning over allegations of election tampering.

However, they were "unable to do so due to his strong refusal", prosecutor Oh Jeong-hee told reporters.

"The suspect refused arrest while lying on the floor without wearing his prison-issued clothing," she said.

"Due to concerns over safety incidents, physical force was withheld, and the execution of the warrant was temporarily suspended”.

Yoon was wearing "a sleeveless top and prison-issued briefs," prosecutors said, calling it the "most appropriate way" to describe his attire given the "serious nature of the situation".

There was no information on the color of his underclothing, they added.

Prosecutors informed Yoon they would have to carry out physical force if necessary in the next attempt, said AFP.

Yoon was arrested after he tried to impose martial law on December 3, sending troops to parliament to prevent lawmakers from voting down his declaration and plunging the country into political turmoil.

He faces a litany of charges, from insurrection to election tampering, but has refused multiple times to appear at his summons.

Yoon's legal team said the prosecutors had shown a "disturbing disregard" for "basic human decency".

"The special counsel turned what should have been a press briefing into a stage for personal humiliation," Yoon's lawyer Yoo Jeong-hwa told AFP.

"What kind of legal institution in a civilized country gives a real-time report and commentary to journalists on a detainee's clothing, especially in a cramped cell nearing 40 degrees (Celsius) (104 degrees Fahrenheit)?"

Yoon's lawyers said the former president suffers from "several underlying conditions that pose significant challenges to maintaining his health", making it difficult for him to fully cooperate with the investigation.