Local Police in Iran Admit Killing Farmer at Protest Against Water Shortages
JULY 13, 2018
Police in the Iranian city
of Kazeroon have admitted killing a
farmer at a local protest against water resources in the region.
“After several warnings to the
crowd to disperse, the police opened fire into the air with pellet guns and in
the midst of it, one of the unruly individuals identified as ‘I. A.’ was
wounded in the neck area and transferred to the hospital where he died,” said police chief Col. Mohammad Ebadinejad on July 12, 2018.
The exact number of fatalities
was previously unconfirmed due to the authorities’ unwillingness to speak publicly
about the cases.
According to the state-run
Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), Ebadinejad’s statement was issued through
the public affairs office of the military governor in Fars Province.
The Center for Human Rights in
Iran (CHRI) has learned that the victim, Iman Ahmadi, lived in the nearby
village of Jahadabad. Two other farmers were also wounded by police fire but
their names have not been released.
The demonstrators, mostly
farmers, were protesting against local authorities for disconnecting their
water pumps from Shapour River, which irrigates local farms and orchards.
Officials claim the pumps are
causing water
shortages 65 miles south in Dashtesan County,
including the city of Borazjan, in neighboring Bushehr Province, according to
IRNA.
According to the Iran
Meteorological Organization, around 97 percent of the country is experiencing
drought to some degree.
Following the July 12 protest,
local roads were blocked and several farmers from the villages of Jahadabad and
Talkoushk were taken into custody.
In May 2018 at least two people
were reportedly killed and several wounded after police in Kazeroon opened fire on a protest against the
planned partition of the city, which would have turned a water-rich
neighborhood into a new city.
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