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A video posted on social media on October 15 purportedly shows Iranian protesters gathered on a road leading to Evin prison, northwest of Tehran, where a fire broke out over the weekend amid reports of an uprising.
A video posted on social media on October 15 purportedly shows Iranian protesters gathered on a road leading to Evin prison, northwest of Tehran, where a fire broke out over the weekend amid reports of an uprising.

More than three dozen human rights groups have condemned Tehran's deadly crackdown on protests over the death of a young women while in custody for "improperly" wearing a head scarf as Iranians showed no signs of backing down in unrest that has shaken the entire country.

Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and other groups voiced their "deep concern" about Iran's "mobilization of their well-honed machinery of repression to ruthlessly crack down" on the nationwide protests.

The Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights said on October 17 that at least 215 people, including 27 children, had been killed in the crackdown, which the European Union imposed new sanctions on Iran's information minister, the country's "morality police," and other senior officials.

The rights groups said evidence they had gathered showed "a harrowing pattern of Iranian security forces deliberately and unlawfully firing live ammunition and metal pellets, including birdshot, at protesters and bystanders including children."

"The United Nations Human Rights Council should act as a matter of urgency by holding a special session and -- given the gravity of crimes under international law and other serious human rights violations committed in Iran and the prevailing systemic impunity -- establish an independent, investigative, reporting and accountability mechanism," the groups said in the statement on October 17.

Mahsa Amini died on September 16 in Tehran, three days after she was seen being taken into custody by the morality police for allegedly wearing a hijab, or head scarf, improperly. Eyewitnesses say they could see her being beaten by security agents.

As word spread of the Amini's death, so too did anger, sparking protests in cities across the country in one of the deepest challenges to the Islamic regime since the revolution in 1979.

In the northwestern Iranian city of Ardabil, protesters continued to take to the streets after security forces raided a girls' high school on October 13.

Videos published on social media showed people chanting "Freedom, freedom" and also "Death to the dictator," a reference to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

WATCH: In an interview with RFE/RL’s Radio Farda, Jarrett Blanc, the deputy U.S. special envoy for Iran, brushed aside Tehran’s accusations that weeks-long mass protests in the country are orchestrated by the United States or Israel.

Allegations Of U.S. Involvement In Iran Protests Are 'Nonsense,' U.S. Envoy Says
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Reports indicate that following the raid on the school, 10 students were taken to an unknown place by security agents and seven were injured.

Meanwhile, the Hengaw Organization for Human Rights, a group that monitors Kurdish-inhabited areas of western Iran where Amini was from, announced on October 16 the arrest of five students by security forces in the western Iranian city of Sarvabad.

The situation at the notorious Evin prison, where many of those detained during the protests in Tehran are being held, remained unclear after a fire broke out over the weekend amid reports of an uprising.

Iran's judiciary raised the death toll to eight people who had been held on theft charges.

The judiciary's Mizan news agency described the incident as a "fight between inmates and a fire," though it offered no evidence to support the claim. Activists outside of Iran say they remain skeptical of the government's claims.

Prominent filmmaker Jafar Panahi managed to call his wife from Evin on October 16 to let her know that he and his fellow filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof are fine and that authorities had used tear gas during the unrest in Evin prison.

Panahi and Rasoulof were arrested in July because they had signed an open letter that called out corruption, theft, inefficiency, and repression in the Islamic republic.


The government has blocked the Internet to slow the flow of information between protesters. Tehran-based technology news website Digiato said that accessing virtual personal networks (VPNs) to circumvent the Internet restrictions had become almost impossible.

An online petition asking G7 countries to expel the Islamic republic's diplomats has so far collected nearly 220,000 signatures.

Written by Ardeshir Tayebi based on an original story in Persian by RFE/RL's Radio Farda
Mikalay Autukhovich attends a court session in Hrodna in July.
Mikalay Autukhovich attends a court session in Hrodna in July.

HRODNA, Belarus -- Belarusian businessman and political activist Mikalay Autukhovich, along with 11 others, has been handed lengthy prison terms on terrorism charges that he rejects as politically motivated.

A court in the western city of Hrodna on October 17 sentenced Autukhovich to 25 years in prison after finding him guilty of high treason and an array of other charges that amounted to accusing him of plotting a terrorist attack and conspiring to seize power.

Autukhovich, 59, is a former military officer and a veteran of the Soviet war in Afghanistan. He has helped the opposition raise funds for their efforts to oppose authoritarian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka, who in August 2020 claimed a sixth term in power in an election marred by accusations of rigging by the opposition and the West.

Investigators said Autukhovich and a group he led conducted several arson attacks against vehicles belonging to police officers and planned attacks on their property. Autukhovich has rejected all of the charges.

The other defendants in the case were convicted on the same charges, with the exception of high treason. Some were also found guilty of conspiracy and the preparation of actions to disrupt social order.

Paval Sava, Volha Mayorova, and Halina Dzerbysh were sentenced to 20 years in prison each, while Viktar Snehur was handed a 19-year prison term and Uladzimer Hundar received 18 years.

Iryna Melkher received 17 years, Syarhey Razanovich and Paval Razanovich were sentenced to 16 years in prison each. Lyubov Razanovich was sentenced to 15 years, Iryna Harachkina to six years and one month, and Anton Melkher received 2 1/2 years in prison in the high-profile case.

It is not known if any of them pleaded guilty. The trial was held at a detention center in Hrodna and presided over by Judge Maksim Filatau, who is under European Union sanctions for his support of the regime and its sometimes violent suppression of dissent following the disputed election.

Autukhovich previously spent seven years and five months in prison on charges of illegal weapons possession, which he and his supporters have also rejected as politically motivated.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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