CIA, ISRAEL & SAUDI RESPONSIBLE FOR THE UNREST IN IRAN : IRANIAN PROSECUTOR BLAMES
Iranian chief prosecutor blamed on Tuesday - CIA agent was the
"main projector" of deadly demonstrations in Iran with assistance
from Israel and Saudi Arabia.
Planning for the plot - dubbed "Consequential Convergence
Doctrine" - was initiated four years ago by an operative from the Central
Intelligence Agency, Iran's prosecutor Mohammad Jafar Montazeri was quoted by
the state-run IRNA news agency as saying.
Saudi Arabia paid for al the expenses and the CIA operative and an
agent affiliated with Israel's Mossad intelligence agency were in charge of
masterminding the unrest, he said.
The US government has denied having any hand in the protests and the CIA
declined to comment on the allegations.
At least 22 people have been killed and more than 450 arrested since
anti-government demonstrations erupted across Iran on December 28.
The protests, which have focused on economic and political grievances,
have been the largest display of public dissent since pro-reform rallies swept
the country in 2009.
Iran's interior minister said about 42,000 people took part in the week
of demonstrations. Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said in a statement Thursday the
figure was "based on precise statistics we have".
"The relevant authorities have reported that there have been at
most 42,000 people, and that is not a very high number," Fazli said.
The US State Department said on Thursday it had the authority to hold
the Iranian government responsible for the protester deaths.
"We condemn in the strongest possible terms the deaths to date and
the arrests of at least 1,000 Iranians," State Department spokeswoman
Heather Nauert told reporters.
"We have ample authorities to hold accountable those who commit
violence against protestors, contribute to censorship, or steal from the people
of Iran. To the regime's victims, we say: You will not be forgotten," she
said.
Iranian army chief General Abdolrahim Mousavi offered to assist police
against anti-government demonstrators, though the protests have died down in
recent days.
"In the event it is necessary, the army would take part in the
fight against those led by the devil," Mousavi said on Thursday, according
the Asriran news portal.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other hardliners in
the country's theocratic leadership have insisted for days the protests were
fomented by foreign powers.
But moderate President Hassan Rouhani said the demonstrations were
about jobs and human rights.
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