UK Slaps New Sanctions on Iranian Officials Over Protest Crackdown

The United Kingdom has imposed a new package of sanctions on ten Iranian individuals and one organization, citing their role in dealing with recent unrest. The sanctioned officials include Iran's Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni and several regional police and IRGC commanders. UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper condemned the "brutality and repression" faced by protesters and stated the sanctions aim to hold authorities accountable. The move follows similar sanctions by the United States and the European Union, while Iran has blamed the unrest on foreign interference.

Key Points: UK Sanctions Iranian Officials Over Protest Repression

  • UK sanctions 10 individuals & 1 organization
  • Targets include Interior Minister, police chiefs
  • Part of over 550 total Iran sanctions
  • Follows similar US and EU measures
2 min read

UK imposes new sanctions on Iranian officials

Britain imposes sanctions on 10 Iranian individuals, including Interior Minister, over role in crackdown on recent unrest. EU and US take similar action.

"The Iranian people have shown extreme courage in the face of brutality and repression - Yvette Cooper"

London, Feb 3

Britain imposed another package of sanctions against ten individuals and an organization, blaming their role in dealing with the recent unrest in Iran, according to a statement by the country's foreign office.

Those sanctioned include Iran's Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni, Police Chief in Lorestan Province Mohammad Reza Hashemifar, Public Security Police Chief Seyed Majid Feiz Jafari, Commander of Fars Province in Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Yadollah Bouali, as well as several other military and judicial personnel, according to the statement.

Britain has already imposed more than 550 relevant sanctions on Iranian individuals and organizations, including the IRGC in its entirety, Xinhua news agency reported, quoting the statement.

The move came after similar measures taken in recent days by the United States and the European Union.

Since late December, weeks of protests over the sharp depreciation of the rial swept cities across Iran. The demonstrations, initially peaceful, escalated into clashes that caused casualties and damage to public property, including mosques, government buildings, and banks.

"The Iranian people have shown extreme courage in the face of brutality and repression over recent weeks simply for exercising their right to peaceful protest," said UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper.

"The reports and shocking scenes of violence that have been seen around the world are horrific," Cooper said, adding that this package of sanctions seeks to hold Iran's authorities "to account" for the crackdown.

Tehran has blamed the unrest on the United States and Israel. In response to an anti-Iran resolution adopted by the European Parliament, Iran condemned it as "meddlesome."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
It's concerning to see the violence against protestors. Every citizen has the right to peaceful protest. However, as an observer from India, I hope for a peaceful resolution that respects human rights without further destabilizing the region. 🙏
A
Arjun K
The West imposing sanctions has become a routine. Do they really help the common people? In Iran, it might just make life harder for ordinary citizens while the officials remain unaffected. We need more dialogue, less punishment.
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Priya S
The report mentions the protests started due to economic issues like currency depreciation. This is something we Indians can relate to. When the common man struggles to make ends meet, frustration is natural. The focus should be on solving the root economic cause.
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Vikram M
Respectfully, I must disagree with the UK Foreign Minister's statement. While violence is condemnable, calling all protests "peaceful" when the article says they escalated into clashes causing damage to mosques and banks is a one-sided view. The full picture matters.
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Karthik V
India has always believed in the policy of non-interference. The EU and US should learn from that. Sanctions rarely achieve their stated goals and often hurt the very people they claim to protect. Time for a new approach based on mutual respect.

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