one protester says of
security forces Troops beat demonstrators in Tehran square, sources say Many
remain too afraid for their safety to speak
Officials say many foreign nationals arrested in connection with unrest TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) -- Security forces
wielding clubs and firing weapons beat back demonstrators who flocked to a
Tehran square Wednesday to continue protests against an election they have
denounced as fraudulent, two witnesses said.
Hard-line Iranian students mock British, U.S. and Israeli flags outside
the British Embassy in Tehran on Tuesday.
"They were waiting for us," one source said. "They all
have guns and riot uniforms. It was like a mouse trap. "I see many people with broken arms,
legs, heads -- blood everywhere -- pepper gas like war," the source
said. The source said security forces
beat people like "animals."
Another witnesssaid hundreds of people were chased by security forces
and clubbed about a mile from the square. Yet another source, a man who spoke
to his wife in the area of the square, recounted what she told him in a phone
conversation. He said she saw security
forces shooting and beating people and saw blood on people's clothes and in the
streets. The woman said security forces had been carrying butcher knives and
batons. They were among the more than half a dozen witnesses who said security
forces who outnumbered demonstrators used overwhelming force to crush a planned
demonstration in Baharestan Square, in front of the parliament building. The witnesses said police charged the
demonstrators, striking them with batons, beating women and old men, and firing
weapons into the air in order to disperse them.
Watch a witness describe the beatings »
The melee extended beyond the square, according to one woman, who said
she was traveling toward Baharestan with her friends as evening approached
"to express our opposition to these killings these days and demanding
freedom. "But the black-clad police,
they stopped everyone," she said. "They emptied buses that were
taking people there and let the private cars go on ... and then, all of a
sudden, some 500 people with clubs of wood, they came out of the Hedayat
Mosque, and they poured into the streets, and they started beating
everyone." People were heard
yelling "death to the dictatorship, death to Ahmadinejad, death to
Khamanei and death to Basiji," she said. Government-run Press TV gave a
starkly different account, saying that about 200 protesters who had gathered in
front of the parliament and another group of about 50 people in another nearby
square were dispersed by security forces.
"A heavy presence of police prevented violence in the area,"
Press TV said. At the nearby Bank of
Melli hospital, a person who answered the phone said no one had been admitted
as a result of any clashes. The protests
came as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad met in Tehran with a delegation from
Belarus in his first official meeting since the disputed June 12 election
triggered widespread unrest. The official results of the election gave the
incumbent president a landslide victory, but his challengers have declared that
it was rigged and are seeking a new vote.
Ahmadinejad's claim of victory got further support from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
the supreme leader, who endorsed the results and reiterated Wednesday that the
government will not back down. Demonstrators must follow the law, he said.
According to official figures, 17 people have been killed in clashes with
government forces over the past 11 days. Anti-government demonstrators have
taken to the streets in at least four cities outside Tehran. But CNN has received unconfirmed reports of
as many as 150 deaths related to the popular uprising. The government's
response to it appears to have hardened in recent days. CNN has received
numerous accounts of night-time roundups by government forces of opposition
activists and international journalists from their homes. Some Tehran residents said they were too
afraid to talk about the political crisis over the phone to anyone in the
United States or Europe. Many protesters debated whether to venture into the
streets. Watch an Ahmadinejad supporter
describe the protests » "I am not
going outside my house at all," a 21-year-old college student from Tehran
said. "The streets are too dangerous, and just so very busy with police.
Ahhhh, when will our lives get back to normal?" At least 69 people have been killed
by a bomb blast in the eastern Sadr City area of Baghdad, Iraqi officials say.
Police said the device went off in a market place in the predominantly Shia
area of the Iraqi capital. More than 130
people were also reported to have been injured in the blast, one of the worst
in Iraq this year. It comes less than a
week before US soldiers pull out of all Iraqi cities, a move the US said would
not be affected by a recent surge in violence.
An interior ministry official told the AFP news agency the blast struck
the market place at about 1930 I saw cars flying in the air because of the
force of the explosion The official
said the bomb was hidden underneath a motorised cart carrying vegetables for
sale. "I heard a boom and saw a
ball of fire," said Najim Ali, a 30-year-old father who was injured in the
blast. "I saw cars flying in the
air because of the force of the explosion," he was quoted as saying by
AFP. Raad Latif, a local shop owner,
said the scene after the blast was "horrific". He said people ran to help the injured after
hearing the explosion but were initially kept back as security forces tried to
get emergency vehicles to the scene.
"After a while they came to their senses and allowed us to help as
much as we could. The scene was horrific," he told Reuters. Another witness told the Associated Press
news agency he heard a sound like "unbelievable thunder" and was
knocked to the ground by "a hurricane". Market stalls were set on fire and an
official told AP that people standing 600m away were hit by shrapnel. Under an agreement with the Iraqi
authorities, most of the 133,000 US troops in Iraq are due to leave the
country's cities and towns and withdraw to military bases by 30 June. US troops are due to withdraw from Iraqi
cities by the end of June Combat
operations across Iraq are due to end by September 2010 and all US troops will
be out of the country by the end of 2011.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the top US commander in the
country, Gen Ray Odierno, had told President Barack Obama that he felt
"confident in moving forward" with the withdrawal. "Gen Odierno has mentioned that we have
seen violence greatly decrease even in the past many months from what it
was," he said. Mr Gibbs said Mr
Obama had no plans to change the withdrawal arrangements. The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says the
location of the latest blast was significant, as Sadr City has been struck
often and provocatively in the past. The
attacks have been attributed to Sunni militants' attempts to provoke sectarian
tensions. Attacks have increased as the
US withdrawal approaches But this
tactic has failed since the Shia Mehdi militia, which used to retaliate, was
disbanded last year, says our correspondent, and the attacks now only succeed
in killing civilians. The attacks are
the latest in a violent week in Iraq. On
Monday, at least 29 people were killed in attacks in Baghdad and
elsewhere. Three people, including a
four-year-old child, were killed in the Shaab district of north Baghdad, while
a car bomb killed five people in the capital's central Karrada district. In the largest attack of the year, more than
70 people died in a truck bombing in Kirkuk on Saturday. But Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has
said the violence will not delay the withdrawal which, he said, would
ultimately be a triumph for the country.
He urged Iraqis: "Don't lose heart if a breach of security occurs
here or there."
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