Iran's Former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Arrested For Inciting Unrest: Report
6
January, 2017
The
London-based Arabic daily newspaper Al-Quds
Al-Arabi reports
this morning that former Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has been arrested by security forces for allegedly
inciting unrest against the government, according to "reliable
sources in Tehran."
The
newspaper describes the former president's arrest in the southwest
city of Shiraz as coming after a series of provocative statements
given in support of anti-government protests that have gripped the
country for more than a week, and that
his detention was granted approval by Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei.
Starting
early in the protests, Ahmadinejad, who led the nation from 2005
to 2013 and has long been considered a hardliner, made public
statements denouncing
the Rouhani government as well as the clerical establishment as being
detached from the daily reality of ordinary Iranians.
Image source Al-Quds Al-Arabi
Starting
in November 2017 Ahmadinejad began making what was widely viewed
as a surprise political comeback while running a populist message,
focusing on the fight against corruption as his main emphasis and
attacking the rich and corrupt, along
with severe criticisms against the government for squandering public
funding intended for the people's welfare.
He's also reported to have broadly utilized social media for
aggressive rhetoric targeting the judiciary and challenging Iran's
supreme leader.
Al
Quds Al Arabi cites Ahmadinejad's visit to the western city
of Bushehr on December 28 as raising concern among authorities.
That particular Thursday is when large-scale protests were first
reported, primarily starting in Mashhad, Iran’s second largest
city. He is reported to have said, “Some
of the current leaders live detached from the problems and concerns
of the people, and do not know anything about the reality of
society.” He
also allegedly charged
Tehran with “mismanagement” and directed attacks against
President Hassan Rouhani,
saying his regime “believes that they own the land and that the
people are an ignorant society.”
Previously
this week there were rumors that his arrest was coming amidst an
ongoing investigation, as multiple regional and international reports
cited a commander
of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as indicating that "a
former leader of the country" had provoked people to protest. Al
Quds Al Arabi is currently describing Ahmadinejad's detention as
a "house arrest".
On
Friday at an emergency session of the UN called by the United States,
Iran's ambassador told the meeting that his government has "hard
evidence" that recent protests in Iran were "very clearly
directed from abroad." Iran has primarily blamed external
enemies for seeking to exploit major internal economic difficulties
the country is currently experiencing.
US
Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley characterized the week long unrest
in Iran as a "spontaneous expression of fundamental human
rights," claiming the protests were simultaneously playing
out in "over 78 locations" - though according to many
reports anti-regime
protests have largely died down while
giving way to possibly
larger pro-government rallies.
It
is possible that this latest news of Ahmadinejad's arrest on
charges of incitement, however, could renew mass anti-government
protests.
This
is a developing story...
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