Deadly Water Protests in Iran Spark Calls for Regime Change
JERUSALEM, Israel â" Massive protests in the Iranian province of Khuzestan have now spread to other parts of the country. The demonstrations began over a lack of water but have now grown to calls for regime change.
This week, thousands of angry Iranians are marching through the streets accusing the government of diverting water from their land as part of an ethnic war.
Faisal Maramazi, Executive Director of the Ahwazi Center for Human Rights, claims the Iranian government is using water âas a weaponâ to forcibly migrate the Ahwazi people away from lands the government needs for oil and gas.
Maramazi calls the severe water shortage an environmental catastrophe. Today, there are thousands of dead fish, dry riverbeds and devastated farmland. One shepherd says his flocks wonât drink the sewage-filled water. For humans, itâs become a matter of life or death. One woman was seen trying to drink water from a puddle.
âAn Awazi lady was telling the popular committee please donât stop coming to our village. We are dying because there is no water,â said Maramazi. âImagine in the 21st century Awazi people are nearly going to die because of the severe water crisis.â
In a violent crackdown, Iranian police are firing live ammunition, killing some protestors and injuring hundreds. Still, the protests continue.
âAwazi people have nothing to lose because everything [has] been taken from them,â Maramazi explained.
Outgoing president Hassan Rouhani dismissed the demonstrations, saying: "A few hundred people (protesters) are not the people of Khuzestan."
Other demonstrations have sprung up in Tehranâs metro, calling for the overthrow of the government and death to the dictator.
US Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) tweeted, âThe US should stand in support of the protesters instead of negotiation a deal with the evil regime in Tehran.â
That nuclear deal being renegotiated by the bidden administration would give the regime billions of dollars in sanctions relief in exchange for limits on its nuclear program. Some critics say the deal could clear the way for a nuclear Iran.
In what could be a significant development, posters online are calling on the countryâs second-largest ethnic group, the Azeri people in the north, to join the protests.
âIf the south Azerbaijani Turks come to the streets, everything will change in Iran and could collapse the Iranian regime in the nearest future,â said Maramazi.
It remains to be seen how far this movement will spread, and some remain skeptical of any regime could collapse at this time. Meanwhile, in an ominous sign, the government has shut down the internet in the Ahwazi province. After that move with protests in 2019, the regime killed 1,500 demonstrators.
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