Tehran Anti-Riot Squads Cordon Ahvaz Water Shortage Protests

A car belonging to the anti-riot units coming from the Iranian capital, Tehran, arrives in Ahvaz.
A car belonging to the anti-riot units coming from the Iranian capital, Tehran, arrives in Ahvaz.
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Tehran Anti-Riot Squads Cordon Ahvaz Water Shortage Protests

A car belonging to the anti-riot units coming from the Iranian capital, Tehran, arrives in Ahvaz.
A car belonging to the anti-riot units coming from the Iranian capital, Tehran, arrives in Ahvaz.

In a brutal crackdown on water shortage protests, Iranian authorities deployed special riot police taskforces to surround Arab towns in the southwestern Ahvaz province.

On Saturday evening, activists talked about the arrival of a convoy of special anti-riot squads linked to the Tehran police.

The force, according to activists, came in from Tehran on dawn on Saturday, riding on motorbikes and mounting special armored vehicles.

On Sunday, footage circulated on social media showed the inbound units combing the streets of the city of Al-Sus, located in northern Ahvaz, after a night in which the scope of the protests expanded.

Meanwhile, the Iranian parliament saw Ahvazi lawmakers chiding Parliament Speaker Mohammad Ghalibaf for rejecting their request for holding an extraordinary session to discuss how water was being mismanaged in the province.

They wanted to tackle how water was being drawn from the dozens of dams built north of Ahvaz when the province’s towns and cities were left to face a crippling environmental drought triggered by summer temperatures soaring to over 50 degrees Celsius.

The Islamic Consultative Assembly News Agency (ICANA) published a video showing Majid Naserinejad, a representative of the agricultural city of Shadegan, sharply criticizing Ghalibaf’s overlooking the request put forth by Ahvazi lawmakers.

Ahvaz (Khuzestan) is separated from most Iranian territories by the Zagros Mountain range.

“The situation in Khuzestan is not good. Let the head of government come here and answer,” said Naserinejad in his parliamentary address.

“The first person of the government must come here and answer,” he affirmed, demanding accountability from the outgoing Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

“The situation of the people is deteriorating, their livestock has died, their lives have been destroyed, everything has been destroyed. Who should take care of this? [Outgoing President Hassan] Rouhani must answer,” said Naserinejad, who is also a member of the Parliament’s Energy Commission.



Mexican Authorities to Seal Secret Tunnel on US Border

 A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
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Mexican Authorities to Seal Secret Tunnel on US Border

 A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)

A clandestine tunnel discovered on the US-Mexico border allowing entry from Ciudad Juarez into the Texan city of El Paso will be sealed by Mexican authorities, an army official said Saturday, adding that its construction was under investigation.

Discovered on January 10 by US and Mexican security agencies, the tunnel measures approximately 300 meters (1,000 feet) in length on the Mexican side and is equipped with lighting, ventilation and is reinforced to prevent collapses.

Hidden in a storm sewer system operating between both cities, its access is about 1.8 meters high and 1.2 meters wide (6 feet high and 4 feet wide), making for easy passage of people or contraband, said General Jose Lemus, commander of Ciudad Juarez's military garrison, which is guarding the tunnel.

The tunnel's construction "must have taken a long time... it could have been one or two years," Lemus told reporters, declining to give details about how long it had been operating as well as its possible builders and operators.

He said the Mexican Attorney General's Office was responsible for the investigation and would be in charge of determining if there was complicity by the authorities due to the fact that it was built without them noticing.

Lemus also said clues about the tunnel's existence and location were discussed by human traffickers on social media platforms like TikTok.

Ahead of the US presidential inauguration of Donald Trump on Monday, both sides of the US-Mexico border have reinforced security measures, as the returning Republican has vowed a massive deportation of migrants soon after he takes office.

In the state of Chihuahua, which includes Ciudad Juarez, authorities reported a fire in a temporary camp for undocumented migrants, which led to the evacuation of 39 adults and 17 minors, according to the state police.

According to the Mexican newspaper Reforma, the fire was started by some of the migrants who were camping there to resist attempts by immigration authorities to detain them and transfer them to Mexico City for later deportation.

The National Institute of Migration did not respond to AFP's requests for comment.