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Police officer killed in restive southwest Iran

July 21, 2021 / 6:13 PM
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Iranian riot police
Sharjah 24 – AFP: "Rioters" shot dead a police officer in southwestern Iran, state media reported Wednesday, following nearly a week of protests against water shortages in the drought-hit region.
The officer was killed in the port city of Mahshahr in Khuzestan province, the official IRNA news agency said.

"During Tuesday night riots in Taleqani (a neighbourhood of Mahshahr) officers... were shot at from a rooftop," it quoted acting county governor Fereydoun Bandari as saying.

"One officer was martyred and another injured in the leg."

Bandari did not specifically link the shooting to the past week's protests over water shortages.

Iran's Etemad newspaper said internet access was disrupted in the provincial capital, Ahvaz, and completely cut in the town of Shadegan, where state media reported on Saturday that a protester had been shot dead.

Khuzestan is Iran's main oil-producing region and one of its wealthiest, but has been hit by a persistent drought that has led to protests over water in several towns and cities since last week.

Over the past few days, Farsi-language media based abroad have broadcast videos that they said showed protests in Ahvaz, Izeh, Susangerd, Shadegan and Hamidiyeh as well as Mahshahr.

They said security forces had forcibly dispersed protesters but domestic media have played down the reports.

The videos shared on social media could not be independently verified.

Khuzestan governor Qasem Soleimani-Dashtaki on Tuesday denied reports of further deaths among protesters.

Khuzestan is home to a large Sunni Arab minority, which has frequently complained of marginalisation in Iran.

In 2019, the province was a hotspot of anti-government protests that also shook other areas of Iran.

Over the years, blistering summer heatwaves and seasonal sandstorms blowing in from Saudi Arabia and neighbouring Iraq have dried up Khuzestan's once fertile plains.

Scientists say climate change amplifies droughts, and their intensity and frequency in turn threaten food security.

July 21, 2021 / 6:13 PM

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