
‘Too dangerous to go to hospital’: a glimpse into Iran’s protest crackdown
ISTANBUL (Web New) – Young protesters shot in the back, shotgun pellets fired in a doctor’s face, wounded people afraid to go to hospital: “Every family has been affected” by the deadly crackdown on Iran’s recent wave of demonstrations, said one protester.
Speaking to AFP in Istanbul, this 45-year-old engineer who asked to be identified as Farhad – not his real name – was caught up in the mass protests that swept his home city of one million people just outside Tehran.
With Iran still largely under an internet blackout after weeks of unrest, eyewitness testimony is key for understanding how the events unfolded.
Angry demonstrations over economic hardship began late last year and exploded into the biggest anti-government protests since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
“On the first day, there were so many people in the streets that the security forces just kept their distance,” he told AFP.
“But on the second day, they understood that without shooting, the people were not going to disperse.”
As the protests grew, the security forces began a major crackdown under the cover of a communications blackout that began on January 8.
Sitting inside a church on the European side of Istanbul, this quietly-spoken oil industry worker said he was in his car with his sister on the night when the shooting began.
“We saw about 20 military people jumping from cars and start shooting at young people about 100 metres away. I saw people running but they were shooting at their backs” with rifles and shotguns, he told AFP.
“In front of my eyes, I saw a friend of ours, a doctor, being hit in the face by shotgun pellets,” Farhad said. He does not know what happened to him.



