Iran: Former MP Accuses Senior Officials of Ignoring Pleas to Stop Crackdown on Protests

 People protest against increased gas price, on a highway in Tehran, Iran November 16, 2019. (Reuters)
People protest against increased gas price, on a highway in Tehran, Iran November 16, 2019. (Reuters)
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Iran: Former MP Accuses Senior Officials of Ignoring Pleas to Stop Crackdown on Protests

 People protest against increased gas price, on a highway in Tehran, Iran November 16, 2019. (Reuters)
People protest against increased gas price, on a highway in Tehran, Iran November 16, 2019. (Reuters)

A video interview with former Iranian MP Mahmoud Sadeghi revived talks about the Iranian authorities’ crackdown on the popular protests that swept the county in 2019 over the hike of petrol prices.

The interview revealed details of a closed-door meeting between deputies in the former parliament and senior officials in the security services, including the Secretary-General of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani. Sadeghi said that the senior security officials have ignored calls to stop the killing of protesters.

Iran witnessed massive protests in mid-November 2019 in wake of the government’s sudden decision to raise gasoline prices by 300 percent.

The protests began in the outskirts of the oil city of Ahvaz, in the southwest of Iran, before spreading across the country, prompting the authorities to cut off internet service and use live ammunition to disperse the demonstrators.

Minister of Interior Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said in an interview last summer that about 230 people died in the protests, adding that some were killed by unlicensed weapons.

Sadeghi said that the security officials responded by “no” when he asked them during that meeting about whether the authorities found evidence on the role of Iranian opposition groups and parties in the protests and strikes.

“They definitely didn’t find anything; all of the protesters were civilians…,” the former MP told the interview, adding: “I told Mr. Shamkhani at the time: What would you do if the people did not withdraw? Would you kill them? Shamkhani replied: “We will strike.”

In the first official response to Sadeghi’s statements, the General Secretariat of the Supreme Council for National Security hinted at prosecuting the former deputy, saying his account was “false” and “unrealistic.”

The new information revealed by Sadeghi come a month after Shamkhani made controversial remarks in an interview with the state ISNA news agency, blaming the administration of President Hassan Rouhani for “mismanagement” and “lack of coordination” in implementing the decision to raise the fuel prices.



Iran Says 'Has Every Right' to Enrich Uranium, Dismissing US Concerns

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (C) arrives for the launching of his book 'The Power of Negotiation', at the Muscat International Fair on the sidelines of his attendance at the third round of indirect talk between Iran and the US, in Muscat, Oman, 25 April 2025. EPA/ALI HAIDER
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (C) arrives for the launching of his book 'The Power of Negotiation', at the Muscat International Fair on the sidelines of his attendance at the third round of indirect talk between Iran and the US, in Muscat, Oman, 25 April 2025. EPA/ALI HAIDER
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Iran Says 'Has Every Right' to Enrich Uranium, Dismissing US Concerns

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (C) arrives for the launching of his book 'The Power of Negotiation', at the Muscat International Fair on the sidelines of his attendance at the third round of indirect talk between Iran and the US, in Muscat, Oman, 25 April 2025. EPA/ALI HAIDER
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (C) arrives for the launching of his book 'The Power of Negotiation', at the Muscat International Fair on the sidelines of his attendance at the third round of indirect talk between Iran and the US, in Muscat, Oman, 25 April 2025. EPA/ALI HAIDER

Iran defended on Saturday its "right" to enrich uranium despite growing Western concern that Tehran may be seeking nuclear weapons and as talks with the United States were delayed.

According to AFP, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a post on X that "Iran has every right to possess the full nuclear fuel cycle," citing Tehran's long-standing membership of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

"There are several NPT members which enrich uranium while wholly rejecting nuclear weapons," Araghchi said.

Under the NPT, signatory states are obliged to declare their nuclear stockpiles and place them under the supervision of the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Iran and the United States have engaged in nuclear talks since April 12, their highest-level contact since Washington withdrew from a landmark deal with Tehran in 2018, during Donald Trump's first term as US president.

A fourth round of talks initially scheduled for Saturday has been postponed, mediator Oman said earlier this week, citing "logistical reasons".

In a Thursday interview with Fox News, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called on Iran to "walk away" from enrichment, saying that "the only countries in the world that enrich uranium are the ones that have nuclear weapons."

Iran currently enriches uranium to 60-percent purity -- far above the 3.67-percent limit set in the 2015 deal with the United States and other world powers, but below the 90 percent needed for weapons-grade material.

The stockpile remains a concern for Western powers.

On Monday French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said Iran was "on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons" and said UN sanctions could be reimposed if Tehran's actions threatened European security.

Iran rejected the comments from France -- a signatory to the 2015 nuclear deal -- as "simply absurd".

Araghchi has previously called Iran's right to enrich uranium "non-negotiable".