Iran rebuffs UN criticism of crackdown on water shortage protests

At least four people have been killed in past week during rallies in country’s southwest

By AFP Today, 1:34 am

Iranians in Khuzestan, Iran's main oil-producing region protest severe water shortages with protests erupting in several towns and cities since July 15, 2020. (Screencapture/Twitter)

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran on Saturday rejected “false accusations” by the UN rights chief on protests over water shortages in the country’s southwest, where at least four people have been killed since last week.

Khuzestan, Iran’s main oil-producing region and the wealthiest of the country’s 31 provinces, has been gripped by drought since March, with protests erupting in several towns and cities since July 15.

Iranian media and officials have said at least three people have been killed, including a police officer and a protester, accusing “opportunists” and “rioters” of shooting at demonstrators and security forces.

State television said a fourth person was killed on Thursday and two wounded during “rioting” in the western province of Lorestan, where it said people had taken to the streets “on the pretext of the water problems in Khuzestan”.

UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet on Friday told Iran to address the chronic water shortage in Khuzestan instead of cracking down on protesters.

“Shooting and arresting people will simply add to the anger and desperation,” she said, adding that the “catastrophic” situation had been building up for many years.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Saturday that Bachelet’s comments “on the recent events in Khuzestan (are) regrettable,” decrying “false accusations and incorrect information.”

The rights chief had failed to consider the government’s “great efforts” to “relieve the suffering of the population,” Khatibzadeh said in a statement, adding that this demonstrated the “political” character of the declaration.

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President Hassan Rouhani said Saturday that “despite the action taken, certain problems in Khuzestan province must still be quickly resolved,” adding that people had “the right to protest” against the situation.

Human rights groups abroad have accused Iran of using unlawful and excessive force to quell the Khuzestan protests and have cited a higher death toll than that reported by Iranian media.

Content retrieved from: https://www.timesofisrael.com/iran-rebuffs-un-criticism-of-crackdown-on-water-shortage-protests/.