Anger in the Iranian Mahabad .. and the security forces kill a demonstration

Anger in the Iranian Mahabad .. and the security forces kill a demonstration

The Iranian security forces shot and killed a young guy today, Thursday, as a result of firing during demonstrations in the city of Mahabad in western Iran, where heated demonstrations against the killing of Muhsa Amini are still taking place.

The Norwegian Human Rights Organization reported that a young Kurdish male “was slain by direct fire by Iranian security forces,” adding that he had been shot “in the forehead.”

Additionally, the pilgrims surrounded the police in the area as they took control of the streets in Mahabad in the West Azerbaijan Governorate, a city that is very significant to all the Kurds in the area because a Kurdish republic was formed there during the Second World War under the leadership of (Judge Muhammad), and the Shah was destroyed there after the war.

Mulla Mustafa Barzani, who later fled to Iraq and founded the Iraqi branch of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, was also executed by the court of Muhammad along with the first secretary of the KDP and the president of the Republic of Mahabad.
This occurs as Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi believes that the country’s ongoing protests, which are now in their sixth week, are paving the way for “terrorist strikes.”

He also referred to the demonstrators against the government as “rioters.”
During his visit to the Zanjan governorate, he made a statement that was broadcast on television in which he labelled the protests as “riots.” “Attacks by “terrorists,” like the one that hit the city of Shiraz in the country’s south, were made possible by this.
He also thought about that “Through these disturbances, which open the door for terrorist attacks, the enemy seeks to impede the nation’s progress.


It is significant that protests have not subsided across the nation since the death of the 22-year-old Kurdish lady on September 16, three days after she was detained by the Ethics Police while visiting Tehran with her younger brother on the grounds that she had broken the city’s strict dress codes.

According to numerous confirmed Analysts and observers over the past six weeks, her death sparked unheard-of protests in Iran three years ago, frequently presented by young men, young women, and students in a political message and challenge to the authorities, and an affirmation that the young segment or what is known as the generation “Generation Z” in Wadi and the authorities in another valley.

A demonstration is put down by security personnel in Iran’s Mahabad due to outrage.

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