The demonstrations, the largest to strike Iran since its disputed 2009 presidential election, began Thursday in Mashhad over economic issues and have since expanded to several cities, with some protesters chanting against the government and the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Hundreds of people have been arrested.
Iranian state television aired footage of a ransacked private bank, broken windows, overturned cars and a firetruck that appeared to have been set ablaze. It reported that clashes last night killed 10 people.
Later today, state TV said clashes killed six people in the western town of Tuyserkan, 295 kilometers southwest of Tehran. It said clashes in the town of Shahinshahr, 315 kilometers south of Tehran, killed three more. It did not say where the 10th person was killed.
Earlier today, the semi-official ILNA news agency quoted Hedayatollah Khademi, a representative for the town of Izeh, as saying two people died there last night.
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Two protesters also were killed during clashes late Saturday in Doroud, some 325 kilometers southwest of Tehran in Lorestan province, authorities earlier said.
Yesterday, Iran blocked access to Instagram and the popular messaging app Telegram used by activists to organize. President Hassan Rouhani acknowledged the public's anger over the Islamic Republic's flagging economy, though he and others warned that the government wouldn't hesitate to crack down on those it considers lawbreakers.
"I demand all prosecutors across the country to get involved and approach should be strong," he said.
Rouhani also stressed today that Iran "has seen many similar events and passed them easily."
US President Donald Trump, who has been tweeting in support of protesters in Iran, continued into the New Year, describing the country as "failing at every level despite the terrible deal made with them by the Obama Administration."
"The great Iranian people have been repressed for many years," he wrote. "They are hungry for food & for freedom. Along with human rights, the wealth of Iran is being looted. TIME FOR CHANGE!"
He criticized the Iranian regime's response to the protests and also chided European governments for watching "in silence" as the protests turn violent.
While some have shared Trump's tweets, many in Iran distrust him as he's refused to re-certify the nuclear deal and as his travel bans have blocked Iranians from getting US visas.
State TV also has reported that some protesters invoked the name of the US-backed shah, who fled into exile just before Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution and later died.
That improvement has not reached the average Iranian, however. Unemployment remains high, and official inflation has crept up to 10 per cent again.
A recent increase in egg and poultry prices by as much as 40 per cent, which a government spokesman has blamed on a cull over avian flu fears, appears to have been the spark for the economic protests.
It wasn't immediately clear if the Guard would change its posture given the reported attacks on police stations and military bases. In Tehran today, streets were calm, though a heavy police presence was noticeable to passers-by.
Guard commander and Deputy Chief of Staff of Iran's Armed Forces Brig. Gen. Massoud Jazayeri said today that Trump's support of the protesters "indicates planning by the US for launching a new sedition in Iran.