Kurdish leader about protests in Iran: “Azerbaijani military in Xirir are concerned about situation”

Living in Iraqi Erbil Mustafa Hijri, the head of the separatist democratic party of Kurdistan (in Iran), turned to compatriots-Kurdam in connection with protests, who have been shaking the Islamic Republic for six weeks, urging them to show restraint and not turn the revolution into violence and arbitrariness “.

Hijri video message, in which the leader of the separatist party states that Iran’s authorities are interested in the growth of violence to suppress protests in the country, all Kurdish media were distributed.

Mustafa Hijri called on the Kurds to “give priority to peaceful struggle”, to hold protests in parallel with demonstrations in other regions of Iran, including in the cities of Southern Azerbaijan.

In his video message, Mustafa Hijri also said that, according to the information he received, Azerbaijani officers in the leadership of the Islamic Revolutionary Corps are concerned with gestive suppression measures that the KSIR military are used against demonstrators.

It should be noted that the situation in Iran is getting worse: international media report that on September 16, when street protests began, Ayatalla arrested the Ayatalla regime almost twelve and a half thousand Iranians and killed about 250 people.

As you know, the Iranian regime and in the past came across mass protests against the obligatory wearing of the hijab. However, this time national protests grew into interethnic clashes. Since the law enforcement officers of the Iranian police killed 22-year-old Kurdyanka Mahsu Amini, the KSIR units began to systematically suppress the protests of the Kurdish minority.

In September, Iranian state media reported that the headquarters of the Komal party, the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan and the PJAK Party in the north of Iraq were fired on missiles and drones of the KSIR. As reported by the regional government of Kurdistan, the official executive body of the Autonomous Kurdistan region in the north of Iraq, seven Kurds were killed during attacks.

Although the recent protests in Iran began in cities where the Kurdish population mainly lives, they quickly spread to other regions of the country, including South Azerbaijan. In Tabriz and other cities of this region, they have not yet taken a mass nature, but Iran’s authorities do not hide fears in connection with the possible beginning of the new national movement of ethnic Azerbaijanis.