The Group of Seven: We condemn the suppression of the Iranian authorities for the protests

The Group of Seven: We condemn the suppression of the Iranian authorities for the protests

The countries of the Group of Seven today, on Friday, declared their support for the ongoing protests in Iran and denounced the “brutal” repression of the Iranian government as well as Tehran’s alleged “destabilising” behaviour around the world.

The conclusion of a two-day conference of foreign ministers in Monster said, “We are members of the Group of Seven, and we declare our solidarity for the fundamental aspirations of the Iranian people for a future in which human rights and security are upheld.”
The statement also condemned the “brutal and non -powerful use” in the campaign to suppress the protests that erupted in Iran about two months after the murder of Mesa Amini on September 16.

She stated that youngsters and peaceful protestors are subjected to excessive force by the Iranian government.
The Iranian protests have been going on for the sixth week in a row at this point. The “International International” station reported the most recent field events, stating that security bullets were used to shoot and murder demonstrators in front of the Qudamiya building in Khash, a city in the southeast of the nation.

Activists stated that as the demonstrators gathered in the streets and began chanting against Khamenei, the security forces began using tear gas in the city.
While Iranian security forces continued the fire incident to deal with the demonstrations in Isfahan, irate demonstrators attacked security personnel in Tabriz.

40 Iranian human rights attorneys publicly criticised the country’s leaders and declared their opinion that the repression efforts that had previously been crushed by the opposition for decades would fail this time and that the protestors calling for a new political system would triumph.

“The administration is still stuck in delusions and believes that it can silence mouths by repression, detention, and fighting, but the stream of people will finally drop the regime,” the lawyers, some of whom were in the country and others who were not, said in a statement reported by Reuters.


protests that broke out when Muhsa Amini (22 years old) died as a result of ethics police holding her on September 16 due to her “inappropriate clothing,” the dominant religious establishment.
The Iranian political system is a convoluted amalgam of the president, elected parliament, and religious authority.
The president is in charge of running the government on a daily basis, but he also has obligations to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has a very hostile attitude toward the West.

The power to object to legislation and decide who can run in elections rests with a supervisory body made up of judges and clerics who are loyal to the supreme leader and have a tendency to impose severe political and social limitations.
The demonstrations that erupted at the country level, in which there are chants of death to Khamenei, is one of the biggest challenges of the existing regime since the revolution in 1979..

The Iranian government’s repression of demonstrations is condemned by the Group of Seven.

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