Published: 17:21, May 21, 2020 | Updated: 02:07, June 6, 2023
Iran dismisses new US sanctions as 'fruitless and repetitive'
By Reuters

In this file photo, Iranian Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli speaks during a press conference in the Iraqi holy city of Najaf on September 29, 2019 to coordinate the Shiite Muslim commemoration of Arbaeen. The US government imposed sanctions on May 20, 2020 on Fazli, who also chairs Iran's National Domestic Security Council, seven law enforcement officials, and an Islamic Revolutionarys Guards Corps commander for human rights abuses. (HAIDAR HAMDANI / AFP)

DUBAI - Iran dismissed on Thursday new US sanctions on several Iranian officials, saying they were a sign of the complete inefficiency of Washington’s previous sanctions on the Islamic Republic, state television reported.

The United States on Wednesday imposed sanctions on several Iranian authorities, including the interior minister, accusing them of engaging in serious cases of human rights abuse

“Washington’s fruitless and repetitive sanctions against Iranian officials is a sign of weakness, despair and confusion of the US administration,” state TV quoted Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi as saying.

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The United States on Wednesday imposed sanctions on several Iranian authorities, including the interior minister, accusing them of engaging in serious cases of human rights abuse.

The US Treasury Department said Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani-Fazli gave orders authorising the Law Enforcement Forces (LEF) of Iran to use lethal force in response to anti-government protests in November, leading to the killing of protesters, including at least 23 minors.

Hundreds of young and working-class Iranians took to the streets on Nov. 15 to protest against the government’s decision to increase fuel prices. The protests turned political, with demonstrators burning pictures of senior officials and calling on clerical rulers to step down.

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Iran’s top authority, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, denounced the unrest as a “very dangerous conspiracy” by Iran’s enemies.

An opposition website said in January that at least 631 people were killed during the unrest and London-based Amnesty International said more than 300 people had been killed.

Both accounts have been dismissed by the Islamic Republic, which has yet to give a death toll. The Iranian judiciary has sentenced dozens of protesters to long terms in prison.

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