William J. Kole
Iran raises death toll in clashes to at least 20
TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian state media reported on Sunday 13 more deaths in confrontations between protesters and security forces and the government condemned key European powers for expressing concern about the disputed presidential election.
The report brought Iran’s official death toll for a week of unrest to at least 20. English-language Press TV, which is broadcast only outside the country, said 13 people it called “terrorists” died Saturday in clashes between demonstrators contesting the result of the June 12 election and black-clad police wielding truncheons, tear gas and water cannons.
State television inside Iran also reported 100 injured in Saturday’s violence. But it quoted the deputy police chief claiming officers did not use live ammunition to dispel the crowds. Sunday’s reports also said rioters set two gas stations on fire and attacked a military post.
Amnesty International cautioned that it was “perilously hard” to verify the casualty tolls.
“The climate of fear has cast a shadow over the whole situation,” Amnesty’s chief Iran researcher, Drewery Dyke, told The Associated Press.
On Sunday, the streets of Tehran were eerily quiet.
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki held a news conference where he rebuked Britain, France and Germany for raising questions about reports of voting irregularities in hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election — a proclaimed victory which has touched off Iran’s most serious internal conflict since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Thousands of supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims he won the election, squared off against security forces in a dramatic show of defiance of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Underscoring how the protesters have become emboldened despite the regime’s repeated and ominous warnings, witnesses said some shouted “Death to Khamenei!” at Saturday’s demonstrations — another sign of once unthinkable challenges to the virtually limitless authority of the country’s most powerful figure.
Iran has also acknowledged the deaths of seven protesters in clashes on Monday. On Saturday, state media also reported a suicide bombing at the shrine of the Islamic Revolution leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini killed at least two people and wounded eight. Another state channel broadcast images of broken glass, but no other damage or casualties, and showed a witness saying three people had been wounded. But there was no independent verification of the shrine attack or the deaths.
State TV quoted an unidentified witness as saying a man wearing an explosives belt blew himself up at the mausoleum’s main gate.
Iran has imposed strict controls on foreign media covering the unrest, saying correspondents cannot go out into the streets to report.
Mottaki criticized Britain, France and Germany for raising questions about Ahmadinejad’s victory. Mottaki accused France of taking “treacherous and unjust approaches” and said Britain “has always created problems” in relations.
The New-York based International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said Sunday that scores of injured protesters who had sought medical treatment after Saturday’s clashes were arrested by security forces at hospitals in the capital.
It said doctors had been ordered to report protest-related injuries to the authorities, and that some seriously injured protesters had sought refuge at foreign embassies in a bid to evade arrest.
“The arrest of citizens seeking care for wounds suffered at the hands of security forces when they attempted to exercise rights guaranteed under their own constitution and international law is deplorable,” said Hadi Ghaemi, spokesman for the campaign, denouncing the alleged arrests as “a sign of profound disrespect by the state for the well-being of its own people.”
“The government of Iran should be ashamed of itself. Right now, in front of the whole world, it is showing its violent actions,” he said.
Karimi reported from Tehran and Kole from Cairo. Associated Press Writers Ali Akbar Dareini in Tehran, Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Sebastian Abbot in Cairo contributed to this report.
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