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| Iranian President Hassan Rouhani attends a parade on the occasion of the country's annual army day on April 18, 2018 in Tehran (AFP Photo/ATTA KENARE) |
Tehran
(AFP) - Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said Saturday that officials were
failing to respond effectively to mounting popular protests, in part because
they are being threatened by unnamed behind-the-scenes forces.
Recent
weeks have seen social media filled with videos and reports of protests, but
since they are barely covered by domestic media and access is restricted for
foreign journalists, they have been hard to verify.
They
include protests by farmers over water shortages in Isfahan; by ethnic Arabs
over the treatment of minorities in the southern province of Khuzestan; and
over administrative reforms in the southwestern city of Kazeroon.
The videos
appear to show these localised protests taking on broader slogans against the
Islamic establishment, such as: "Our enemy is right here and falsely they
say America is our enemy".
But in a
wide-ranging speech carried on state television, Rouhani said officials were
failing to respond and appeared to have taken "a vow of silence".
"As
people haven't got enough information... as people don't see plans for the
future, as people see the current problems, they may get upset and angry, come
to the streets and cry out," he told senior officials in Tehran.
"(But)
we speak little to the people. Our government managers have taken a vow of
silence. I don't know who told them to. I don't know what they are scared
of."
Rouhani
said a major problem was that officials were being intimidated by unnamed
"supervisory bodies".
He did not
name them, but Rouhani has previously clashed with the powerful Revolutionary
Guards and the conservative-dominated judiciary over their outsized role in
politics and the economy.
"When
in the morning (an official) is going to work, somebody sends him a text
message, another calls him, another threatens him... the country cannot be run
like this," he said.
In the past
month, Tehran's reformist mayor Mohammad-Ali Najafi and the deputy head of the
environment agency Kaveh Madani both quit their posts following pressure from
hardliners, though Najafi claimed he left for health reasons.
"Don't
pay attention to some letters, some threats. If you are scared to respond, send
them to me," Rouhani said.

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