Iran's president Raissi tries to ease anger as Mahsa Amini protests continue
Iranian President on Tuesday appealed for national unity and tried to allay anger against the country’s rulers, even as that have engulfed the country for weeks continued to spread to universities and high schools.
Raisi acknowledged that the Islamic Republic had "weaknesses and shortcomings," but repeated the official line that the unrest sparked last month by the death of a in the custody of the country’s morality police was nothing short of a plot by Iran’s enemies.
"Today the country’s determination is aimed at cooperation to reduce people’s problems," he told a parliament session. "Unity and national integrity are necessities that render our enemy hopeless".
His claims echoed those of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who blamed the United States and Israel, the country’s adversaries, for inciting the unrest in his first remarks on the nationwide protests on Monday.
It's a familiar tactic for Iran's leaders, who have remained mistrustful of Western influence since the 1979 Islamic Revolution and commonly blame domestic problems on foreign enemies without offering evidence.
The protests, which emerged in response to the death of , whose Kurdish name can be spelled as Zhina or Jina, after her arrest for allegedly not wearing the hijab "correctly", have embroiled dozens of cities across the country and evolved into the most widespread challenge to Iran’s leadership in years.
A series of mounting crises have festered and helped fuel public rage, including the country's political repression, ailing economy and global isolation.
Iran’s security forces have sought to with tear gas, metal pellets, and in some cases live fire, rights groups say. Iran’s state TV reports that violent confrontations between protesters and the police have killed at least 76 people, but human rights groups say the number is much higher.
As the new academic year officially began this week, the demonstrations spread quickly to university campuses, long considered sanctuaries in times of turmoil. Videos on social media showed students expressing solidarity with peers who had been arrested and calling for the end of the Islamic Republic. Roiled by the unrest, many universities moved classes online this week.
The in Tehran became a battlefield on Sunday as security forces surrounded the campus from all sides and fired tear gas at protesters who were holed up inside a parking lot, preventing them from leaving. The student union reported that police arrested hundreds of students, although many were later released.
In one video on Monday, students marched and chanted, "Jailed students must be freed!" at Tarbiat Modares University in Tehran. In another, students streamed through Khayyam University in the conservative city of Mashhad, shouting, "Sharif University has become a jail! Evin Prison has become a university!" - referring to Iran's notorious prison in Tehran.
Protests also appeared to grip gender-segregated high schools across Iran on Monday, where groups of young girls waved their state-mandated hijabs and chanted "Woman! Life! Freedom!" in the city of Karaj west of the capital and in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj, according to widely shared footage.
The response by has sparked widespread global condemnation. On Monday, President Joe Biden said his administration was "gravely concerned about reports of the intensifying violent crackdown on peaceful protesters in Iran, including students and women".
Furious over Iran’s response to the demonstrations, the British foreign office summoned in London.
"The violence leveled at protests in Iran by the security forces is truly shocking," said British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.