AFP Asia Business

Iran Guards chief says ‘finger on trigger’, warns US against ‘miscalculations’

The commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on Thursday warned Israel and the US against “miscalculations” in the wake of mass protests, saying the force had its “finger on the trigger”.US President Donald Trump has repeatedly left open the option of new military action against the Islamic republic after Washington backed and joined Israel’s 12-day war in June.A fortnight of protests starting in late December shook the clerical leadership under supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but the movement has petered out in the face of a crackdown that activists say has left thousands dead.Guards commander General Mohammad Pakpour warned Israel and the United States “to avoid any miscalculations, by learning from historical experiences and what they learned in the 12-day imposed war, so that they do not face a more painful and regrettable fate”.”The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and dear Iran have their finger on the trigger, more prepared than ever, ready to carry out the orders and measures of the supreme commander-in-chief — a leader dearer than their own lives,” he said, referring to Khamenei.His comments came in a written statement quoted by state television marking the national day in Iran to celebrate the Guards, a force whose mission is to protect the 1979 Islamic revolution from internal and external threats.Activists accuse the Guards of playing a frontline role in the deadly crackdown on protests. The group is sanctioned as a terrorist entity by countries including Australia, Canada and the United States and campaigners have long urged similar moves from the EU and UK.Pakpour took over as Guards commander last year after his predecessor Hossein Salami was one of several key military figures killed in an Israeli strike during the 12-day war, losses which revealed Israel’s deep intelligence penetration of the Islamic republic.Giving their first official toll from the protests, Iranian authorities on Wednesday said 3,117 people were killed.The statement from the Islamic republic’s foundation for martyrs and veterans sought to draw a distinction between “martyrs”, who it said were members of security forces and innocent bystanders, and what it described as “rioters” backed by the US.Of its toll of 3,117, it said 2,427 people were martyrs.However, rights groups say the heavy toll was caused by security forces firing directly on protesters and that the actual number of those killed could be far higher and even extend to over 20,000.Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said “the future for the Iranian people can only be in a regime change”, adding that “the Ayatollah regime is in quite a fragile situation”.

‘Too dangerous to go to hospital’: a glimpse into Iran’s protest crackdown

Young protesters shot in the back, shotgun pellets fired in a doctor’s face, wounded people afraid to go to hospital: “Every family has been affected” by the deadly crackdown on Iran’s recent wave of demonstrations, said one protester.Speaking to AFP in Istanbul, this 45-year-old engineer who asked to be identified as Farhad — not his real name — was caught up in the mass protests that swept his home city of one million people just outside Tehran.With Iran still largely under an internet blackout after weeks of unrest, eyewitness testimony is key for understanding how the events unfolded.Angry demonstrations over economic hardship began late last year and exploded into the biggest anti-government protests since the 1979 Islamic revolution.”On the first day, there were so many people in the streets that the security forces just kept their distance,” he told AFP.”But on the second day, they understood that without shooting, the people were not going to disperse.”As the protests grew, the security forces began a major crackdown under the cover of a communications blackout that began on January 8.In an interview on the European side of Istanbul, this quietly-spoken oil industry worker said he was in his car with his sister on the night when the shooting began.”We saw about 20 military people jumping from cars and start shooting at young people about 100 metres away. I saw people running but they were shooting at their backs” with rifles and shotguns, he told AFP.”In front of my eyes, I saw a friend of ours, a doctor, being hit in the face by shotgun pellets,” Farhad said. He does not know what happened to him.Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have accused the security forces of firing rifles and shotguns loaded with metal pellets directly at protesters’ heads and torsos.”I saw two people being carried, they were very badly injured, maybe dead,” Farhad said.A lot of people also died “in their cars because the bullets were coming out of nowhere”. – ‘Afraid to go to hospital’ -The scale of the crackdown is only slowly emerging. Despite great difficulty accessing information, the Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights says it has verified the deaths of 3,428 protesters killed by the security forces, but warned the true figure could be much higher, citing estimates of “between 5,000 and 20,000”.Those who were injured were often too afraid to go to hospital, Farhad said. “People can’t go to the hospital because the authorities and the police are there. Anyone with injuries from bullets or shotgun (pellets) they detain and interrogate,” he said. “Doctors have been going to people’s houses to give them medical assistance.”He himself was beaten with a baton by two people on a motorbike and thought his arm was broken, but did not go to hospital because it was “too dangerous”.Many “opened their homes to let the demonstrators inside and give them first aid”, including his sister and her friend who took in “around 50 boys, and gave them tea and cake”. There were a lot of very young people on the streets and “a lot of girls and women”, he told AFP, saying he had seen children of “six or seven” shouting slogans against Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The security forces were also staging spot checks for anyone with protest-related injuries or footage on their phones, he said. “It’s so dangerous because they randomly check phones. If they see anything related to this revolution, you are finished. They are also making people lift their shirts to look for signs of bullet or shotgun injuries. “If they see that, they are taken for interrogation.”Speaking just before he flew back to Iran — “because I have a job to go to” — he insisted he was “absolutely not afraid”.Despite everything, people were still ready to protest “because they are so angry”, he explained. He is convinced US President Donald Trump will soon make good on his pledge to intervene, pointing to recent reports of US warships arriving in the region. “The system cannot survive — in Iran everybody is just overwhelmed with this dictatorship. We have had enough of them.”