Senin, 28 November 2022

Xi Jinping faces stiffest challenge to rule as Covid outrage sparks mass protests - Financial Times

Xi Jinping faces one of his greatest challenges as president of China after tens of thousands of people took to the streets over Beijing’s strict coronavirus controls and suppression of freedom of speech.

At least 10 cities, including Shanghai, Beijing, Wuhan and Chengdu, were shaken by rare political protests over the weekend, triggering clashes with police and security officers that led to a spate of detentions, including of two foreign journalists.

The sudden outbreak of civil disobedience was sparked by outrage after a deadly apartment fire in Urumqi, Xinjiang, was partly blamed on coronavirus restrictions. While most of the protests appeared to have been stamped out by Monday, they followed months of frustration, especially among China’s young people, with relentless lockdowns, quarantines, mass testing and electronic surveillance under Xi’s zero-Covid policies.

Markets in China soured in early trading on Monday, with the Hang Seng China Enterprises index in Hong Kong falling 4.5 per cent and the renminbi losing ground against the US dollar.

In Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the first coronavirus cases emerged, online videos showed thousands of people marching down a popular shopping street, in what appeared to have been the weekend’s biggest single protest.

One person involved told the Financial Times the crowd numbered tens of thousands and “liberated” locked-down neighbourhoods by removing fencing around residential compounds. Demonstrations also broke out in other locations across the city.

The government has urged universities to send students home as soon as possible to quell further dissent on campuses, according to a provincial education official.

In Beijing, the capital, hundreds of students staged peaceful demonstrations on Sunday at the prestigious Tsinghua and Peking universities. Students in Beijing, as well as protesters in other cities, held blank pieces of paper, a rejection of worsening censorship under Xi’s administration.

In the capital, protesters also gathered at a central canal on Sunday, chanting: “We don’t want PCR tests, we want freedom.” By Monday morning, a dozen police vehicles were stationed at entrances to the canal.

A bus full of police officers idled nearby and groups of others paced up and down paths that run along the water.

John Kirby, a spokesman for the US National Security Council, said on Monday US President Joe Biden has been briefed on the protests and is monitoring the situation closely. He said the Biden administration doesn’t support widespread lockdowns in the US at this stage of the pandemic.

“There are people in China that have concerns about that. And they’re protesting that and we believe they should be able to do that peacefully,” Kirby said.

As the vigils over the Urumqi deaths transformed into protests against Xi’s policies, analysts said their scale and stark political demands had not been seen in China for decades. They warned that protesters faced brutal reprisals if dissent flared again.

Xi is the nation’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong after recently securing an unprecedented third term as leader of the Chinese Communist party. A hallmark of his leadership has been expansion of the state’s draconian surveillance security apparatus and swift crackdowns on dissent.

“You’d expect them to have a heavy-handed repressive approach, but that risks creating martyrs, fuelling another wave and giving a rallying cry to the protesters that have already come out,” said John Delury, a China expert at Yonsei University in Seoul.

“They are smart enough to be aware of the dangers, but they can’t just let it happen either.”

Yuen Yuen Ang, from the University of Michigan, said that while China had always experienced sporadic protests, Beijing feared a “nationwide” movement.

“The protests . . . were not about narrow, local issues. Instead, people were protesting against zero-Covid — a national policy and Xi’s personal agenda, one he had declared that China must ‘stick to without wavering’ only recently in October,” she said.

“This constitutes a challenge to central authority at the highest level.”

At the site of a vigil that began on Saturday evening at a crossroads in Shanghai, police had by Monday morning lined the streets with blue barricades. There was a handful of people taking photos and a long queue of police cars, but no other signs of the large gathering that had escalated on Wulumuqi Road on Sunday.

The incident, which provided some of the most dramatic scenes of civil disobedience in China since the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, continued late into Sunday evening. One person at the site said police eventually started to arrest people “group by group”.

The blue boards were placed to block off the main road from the pavement, where hundreds of people had congregated and occasionally broken out into shouts or jostles with police.

In Shanghai, a BBC reporter was among those detained. In a statement, the British broadcaster said journalist Ed Lawrence was “beaten and kicked” by the police and held for several hours before being released. A Reuters reporter was also briefly detained in Shanghai.

Confusion has spread over the zero-Covid policy. On Monday, Beijing postponed annual civil servant exams, scheduled to be taken by a decade-high 2.5mn people this weekend, citing Covid-19 controls. But in other parts of the country there were signs local officials had eased some restrictions in response to rising public discontent.

The protests spread to Hong Kong on Monday night. Dozens of mostly mainland students and workers and some local residents gathered in the city centre and at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, defying a 2020 security law that effectively bans political demonstrations.

“We need to contribute in ways that we can from outside mainland China . . . We hope this can be beneficial to our nation’s democratic spirit,” said one 24-year-old mainlander who declined to give her name because of safety concerns.

Additional reporting by Gloria Li, Nian Liu, Qianer Liu, Wang Xueqiao, Cheng Leng, Arjun Neil Alim, Maiqi Ding, Primrose Riordan, Chan Ho-him, Hudson Lockett and Felicia Schwartz

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2022-11-28 21:28:22Z
1671056854

Minggu, 27 November 2022

Protests against harsh lockdown rules intensify in China as UK journalist 'beaten and kicked by police' covering unrest - Sky News

Protests against stringent COVID restrictions have intensified across China - as a British journalist was seen being beaten and kicked by police.

Demonstrators and police clashed in Shanghai on Sunday night, despite being forcibly removed by police using pepper spray only a few hours earlier.

It marked the third night of chaos which has spread to some of the country's biggest cities, including Wuhan, the first epicentre of the coronavirus almost three years ago.

Analysis: Why this is a major challenge to ruling Communist Party

On Sunday night, the BBC said one of its journalists, Ed Lawrence, was working as an "accredited journalist" when he was "beaten and kicked by police" while covering the protests.

Footage on social media showed him being dragged to the ground in cuffs, while in another video, he was seen saying: "Call the consulate now."

According to officials, Mr Lawrence was arrested "for his own good" in case he caught coronavirus from the crowd, but the BBC said it was "extremely concerned" about his treatment and added: "We do not consider this a credible explanation."

A Sky News team in Shanghai had witnessed police moving quickly and decisively, pushing protesters to try to disperse them but the crowd did not leave.

They also saw several people on the streets of Shanghai being arrested by police on Monday morning.

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Sky News witnesses Shanghai protest

Meanwhile, protest against President Xi Jinping's zero-COVID lockdown policy has spread outside the Far East, with between 100 and 300 people gathering outside the Chinese Embassy in London.

A woman from a group called China Deviants told Sky News they had decided to voice their anger against President Xi's regime because "people in China are being oppressed".

She added: "We have been oppressed for years, for decades, and we want to change that. We need to stand up against this authoritarian regime."

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

She said, like many of her fellow countrymen and women in China, their anger had boiled over after a fire in the city of Urumqi on Thursday which killed at least 10 people.

The city has been under harsh lockdowns for more than three months to combat the spread of the coronavirus under China's "zero-COVID" policy.

Read more:
The 'green code' app: How China's Zero COVID policy is turning cities, parks, restaurants and shops into digitised fortresses

Videos on social media had showed an arc of water from a distant fire truck falling short of the fire, sparking waves of angry comments online. Some said fire engines had been blocked by pandemic control barriers or by cars stranded after their owners were put in quarantine, but this has not been verified.

Read more:
Who are the Uyghur people and why do they face oppression by China?

The woman, who covered her face for fear of punishment, said: "It sparked rage. We stand up to raise voices for those people. We stand for justice.

"We want to speak, and we want people to hear it."

China Deviants is a non-profit group and is calling for others to join them to "reject dictatorship".

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Sky's Dominic Waghorn assesses the protests that have swept through several Chinese cities

A statement from the group said: "We are committed to awakening the Chinese people against the dictator, letting the Chinese people and the international community realise that: a non-elected government cannot represent the voice of the Chinese people.

"We need democracy and freedom, and we reject dictatorship."

As protesters returned to Shanghai, Amnesty International described their move as one of "remarkable bravery".

Read more:
Beijing 'effectively under lockdown'
Lockdown frustration grows in China's epicentre

China is adhering to its tough zero-COVID policy even while much of the world tries to coexist with the coronavirus.

The country recorded a fifth straight daily record of 40,347 new COVID-19 infections on Sunday.

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2022-11-28 04:30:00Z
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Chinese Communist Party faces threat not seen since protests that led to Tiananmen Square massacre - Sky News

These protests are momentous. Wherever they lead, they are already hugely significant.

China has witnessed bigger protests in Hong Kong, but nothing on the mainland has come close to this since 1989.

Unrest is actually commonplace in China but demonstrations are usually small, localised and easily quashed.

What will worry China's leadership about these protests is their size, their spread across the country, and their persistence.

The authoritarian Chinese Communist Party has not seen a threat like this since the pro-democracy movements of the late 1980s that culminated in the brutal Tiananmen Square massacre.

The spark this time was an apartment fire in the western city of Urumqi that took at least 10 lives.

But these protests have been coming for months.

Seething anger and resentment at the government's zero-COVID policies has been building. There is something more fundamental going on, though.

According to popular wisdom, ever since that infamous massacre at Tiananmen, the Chinese Communist Party and the people have had a deal.

We will make you more prosperous and keep society stable, and you will let us get on with running the country.

Stability and prosperity mean everything to the Chinese because, as they have learned since childhood, theirs has been a history of chaos, poverty and upheaval. The people have trusted their government to make sure that stays in the past.

During lockdown, however, the people have begun to doubt their government and its competence to rule.

Under the zero-COVID policy, people have been locked in their communities for months and they fear the state's heavy handedness is killing people - in this case burned alive, locked in an apartment block in Urumqi.

And making matters worse, under lockdown, the economy has not continued on its ever upward trajectory.

People stand in front of a line of police officers in Shanghai
Image: People confront a line of police officers in Shanghai

The Chinese know the rest of the world is moving on from COVID while they are not. The sight on their televisions of World Cup crowds in their thousands without masks is proof of that. That compact between state and people is no longer delivering like it used to and it means we are in uncharted waters.

And more unrest is almost certainly on its way.

President Xi Jinping has staked a huge amount on China's zero-COVID policy.

Instead of saving lives by importing more effective vaccines from the outside world - but losing face - his government has tried to eliminate the virus wherever it appears with draconian social controls.

But it has not worked and China is battling outbreaks in a multiplying number of cities. If people continue to protest and defy the lockdowns, the virus will spread.

China is not prepared medically, though.

As Professor Kerry Brown, of King's College London, puts it: "They have to quite quickly put in place emergency measures for the health service to take a kind of spike in numbers that might need to be hospitalised."

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Rare street protests in China as police charge in

Tracking, tracing and locking down may work with a quiescent population, but for an angry citizenry losing trust in the authorities, it does not.

"If you continue with the policies that have been in place at the moment, you're going to get more and more of these protests and they could morph into something far more threatening," Prof Brown added.

What the Chinese government fears most is a nationally organised opposition, knowing it has spelled the doom of dynasties in the past.

When a harmless spiritual movement called Falun Gong went countrywide in the 90s and its followers surrounded Zhongnanhai, the government compound in Beijing, in a peaceful protest, the leadership was terrified and used the most draconian repression to stamp it out.

It has invested billions in an emerging Orwellian surveillance state to anticipate dissent and unrest and prevent it from spreading.

It now faces nationwide unrest erupting spontaneously. It will no doubt use all the resources of its totalitarian state to try to repress it, but faces its biggest challenge in more than three decades as it tries to do so.

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2022-11-27 20:04:06Z
1671056854

Shanghai rocked by protests as zero-Covid anger spreads - Financial Times

China has been rocked by some of its most significant acts of civil disobedience in years after vigils in Shanghai and other big cities to mark a deadly fire in Xinjiang region turned into protests over Xi Jinping’s draconian zero-Covid policies.

Social media posts have blamed the deaths of 10 people in the blaze on Thursday in an apartment block in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Covid-19 restrictions, despite denials from authorities.

At Wulumuqi road in Shanghai, named after the Xinjiang city, hundreds of people attended a vigil late on Saturday night. Video footage and photographs of the incident, verified by the FT, showed clashes between police and protesters in the early hours of Sunday.

Earlier, some protesters were standing on police cars and others chanted “we don’t want PCR tests”. Some shouted for the Chinese Communist party and President Xi Jinping to “step down”.

The expression was a direct echo of a rare protest when a poster was hung on a bridge in Beijing last month, which included a list of slogans based around the expression “[we] don’t want”, including “we don’t want lockdowns, we want freedom”.

“I know what I’m doing is very dangerous, but it’s my duty,” said one student who rushed to attend the vigil after seeing it online. Another said the event began as a quiet commemoration of the people who died in the fire in Urumqi, but later got “out of control”.

On Sunday afternoon, hundreds of people again gathered at the site of the vigil, with some carrying white flowers, a symbol of mourning in Chinese culture. Police closed the nearby roads, removed the flowers from a lamppost and told people to go home.

China has sought to keep the virus at bay through strict lockdowns and quarantine measures for nearly three years but the policy is coming under immense pressure from rising cases, popular discontent and a slowing economy. On Sunday, authorities reported the most daily infections on record for the fourth consecutive day, with the tally now close to 40,000.

Elsewhere on Chinese social media, footage of protests, initially of groups of people in Urumqi from Friday night but subsequently across the country, circulated widely but were also censored.

Videos showed students gathering at a vigil at the Communication University of Nanjing, while elsewhere images also emerged of a similar vigil at a university in Wuhan.

In Beijing’s Peking University, images circulated of graffiti on steps repeating some of the slogans from the bridge in October, including “we don’t want PCR tests, we want food”.

One student at the university said the graffiti was partly removed early on Sunday morning, and that a food truck was parked in front of it to block it from view.

Images showing protesters holding up white sheets of paper, to symbolise censorship, were spread widely on social media.

One person who attended the vigil in Shanghai confirmed that white pieces of paper were also held up there. They said one police officer told the crowd that he understood how everybody feels, but suggested they “keep it at the bottom of their hearts”.

Sheena Chestnut Greitens, a China expert and Jeane Kirkpatrick Visiting Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said the widespread unrest could “become a serious test of the tools of social control developed under Xi”.

Authorities are grappling with Covid outbreaks in many large cities, including Guangzhou, Chongqing and Beijing. China’s previous outbreaks have been successfully suppressed but they typically took place in single cities, such as in Shanghai early this year.

In Beijing, where restrictions have been ramped up in recent days but authorities have still stopped short of a full citywide lockdown, some residents confronted officials over compound-level closures to negotiate their release.

There were signs of people drawing on the protests to counter such restrictions elsewhere in China. A Shenzhen resident in his thirties told the FT that the sight of protests in Urumqi and Beijing provided “inspiration” after peaceful negotiations with officials to lift a lockdown of their compound failed.

He said he and his neighbours gathered at the gates and shouted “set us free” and that the restrictions were subsequently lifted.

“We were copying and pasting what Beijing and Urumqi residents did and it worked,” he said.

Additional reporting by Cheng Leng in Hong Kong, Edward White in Seoul and Joe Leahy in Beijing

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2022-11-27 07:23:56Z
1671056854

Sabtu, 26 November 2022

'Communist Party, step down!' - rare protests in China as anger grows over zero-COVID policy and a fatal fire - Sky News

Public anger in China towards continuing COVID-19 lockdowns has sparked rare protests in a number of major cities in recent days, with some demonstrators calling on the Communist Party to step down.

The latest demonstrations were prompted by a fire in a high-rise apartment block in the northwestern Xinjiang region on Thursday.

The fire, in the city of Urumqi, killed at least 10 people, and questions have been raised over whether China's strict lockdown policy stopped residents from escaping the flames.

Officials deny this, and a fire department spokesperson inspired further anger after appearing to blame residents for not being able to "rescue themselves".

Many Chinese cities have been under strict lockdown for months - many of Urumqi's four million residents, for example, have been unable to leave their homes for any reason since August.

In Shanghai on Saturday night, police used pepper spray on around 300 protesters who had gathered at Middle Urumqi Road with flowers and candles and holding signs that said "Urumqi November 24" in memory of the fire's victims.

In videos shared on social media and verified by Sky News the protesters were seen chanting slogans including "Xi Jinping, step down, Communist Party, step down", "Unlock Xinjiang, unlock China", "do not want PCR (tests), want freedom" and "press freedom".

More on China

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A protester who gave only his family name, Zhao, told The Associated Press that one of his friends was beaten by police and two friends were pepper sprayed.

He said police stomped on his feet as he tried to stop them from taking his friend away. He lost his shoes in the process, and left the protest barefoot.

In this image from video obtained by The Associated Press, police, foreground, watch protesters in Shanghai on Saturday, Nov. 26, 2022. Pic: AP
Image: Protests in Shanghai on Saturday. Pic: AP

Reuters reported it had seen a video showing Beijing residents in an unidentifiable part of the city marching around an open-air carpark on Saturday, shouting "end the lockdown".

Sean Li, a resident of Beijing, told Reuters that a planned lockdown for his compound was called off on Friday after residents spotted workers putting barriers on their gates.

The residents had protested to their local leader and convinced him to cancel the plans.

Read more:
Beijing 'effectively under lockdown'
Lockdown frustration grows in China's epicentre

Signs in Shanghai during an anti lockdown protest on Saturday, Nov. 26, 2022, referencing a fire in Urumqi (Xianjang). Pic: AP
Image: Pic: AP

Mr Li said: "The Urumqi fire got everyone in the country upset.

"That tragedy could have happened to any of us."

Read more:
Who are the Uyghur people and why do they face oppression by China?

Urumqi saw protests on Friday night when a vigil for fire victims turned into an anti-lockdown demonstration.

People chanted "open up, open up" in videos that were shared on social media before being deleted by censors on Saturday.

But the protesters won some concessions, with parts of the city deemed low risk being given a bit more freedom from restrictions during the weekend.

Protests against government policy are rare in China but even more unusual in Xinjiang.

Xinjiang, home to China's persecuted Uyghur minority, has experienced some of the country's longest lockdown restrictions, with reports of people left starving earlier in the year.

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Frustration grows as COVID-19 cases surge

China's zero-COVID policy was initially well-received by citizens, who saw it as minimising deaths while other countries were battling huge casualties.

But support has fallen in recent months as Chinese people tire of restrictions that go far beyond what was seen during the UK's lockdown, for example.

China is the only major country that is still fighting the COVID-19 pandemic with mass testing and strict lockdowns.

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2022-11-27 05:01:47Z
1671056854

Ex-Pakistan PM Imran Khan calls off march to avoid ‘chaos’ - Al Jazeera English

Imran Khan also announced his party will resign from provincial assemblies in first rally since his assassination attempt.

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has called off the ‘long march’ to the capital Islamabad fearing chaos and announced his party would resign from state assemblies in a new bid to push for early elections.

“I have decided not to go to Islamabad because I know there will be havoc, and the loss will be to the country,” Khan said in his first public address in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, near the capital since an assassination attempt earlier this month.

Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, reporting from Islamabad, said Khan made a passionate plea to his supporters saying “chaos” would not be in the interest of Pakistan given that the country is facing an economic crisis.

The South Asian nation has been facing a dire economic situation – with galloping inflation and a nosediving rupee. It also had to secure an  International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan in August to avert default.

The cricketer-turned-politician and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have been holding countrywide protests to push the government for early elections since he was removed as prime minister in a vote of no confidence in April. He has claimed he was removed as part of a United States-led conspiracy. Though earlier this month, he said the US was not behind his ouster in a major U-turn.

The protests were to culminate in a march to Islamabad, which threatened to worsen political turmoil in the nuclear-armed country which is battling an economic crisis. A rally in Islamabad by his supporters in May had turned violent.

Supporters of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
Supporters of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s ‘Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’ party attend a rally in Rawalpindi [Anjum Naveed/AP Photo]

PTI to quit state assemblies

One of his biggest announcements was the plans to quit the two provincial assemblies and two administrative units.

“We will not be part of this system. We have decided to quit all the assemblies and get out of this corrupt system,” Khan said while addressing thousands of his supporters.

PTI has already resigned from the federal parliament but remains in power in two provinces and two administrative units – Gilgit-Baltistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

The Al Jazeera correspondent said that Khan’s decision to resign from the state assemblies of Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was aimed at pressuring the government to call snap elections.

“The dissolution of the state assemblies could create a major crisis as the country will have no option but to go for early elections – something Khan has been asking for since he was removed as PM in April,” Hyder reported.

“Now the ball will be in the government’s court.”

Khan made his Saturday speech hundreds of metres from the bulk of the crowd of around 25,000 to 30,000, separated by coils of barbed wire and a buffer of police officers.

In the November 3 assassination attempt, a gunman opened fire from close range as Khan’s open-top container truck made its way through a crowded street in Wazirabad city in Punjab province.

Tight security was in place, and a police official told local television channel Geo TV that a total of 10,000 personnel had been deployed for the event, with snipers positioned at various points for Khan’s security.

The former prime minister has named Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and a senior military official for plotting his assassination, but both the government and military have denied involvement. Sharif has called for a transparent inquiry. One person has been arrested over the incident and claimed to have acted alone.

Khan has offered no evidence to prove his claims.

Supporters of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
Khan made his Saturday speech hundreds of metres from the bulk of the crowd of around 25,000 to 30,000, separated by coils of barbed wire and a buffer of police officers. [Anjum Naveed/AP Photo]

‘Red alert’

Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah – who Khan accuses of being involved in the assassination plot – issued a “red alert” on Friday, warning of security threats at the rally.

The government says the assassination attempt was the work of a lone wolf now in custody.

Saturday’s rally took place two days after the government named a former spymaster as the next military chief.

General Syed Asim Munir’s appointment ended months of speculation over a position long considered the real power in the nuclear-armed Islamic nation of over 220 million people.

Munir served as chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency under Khan, but his stint ended after just eight months following a reported falling out.

The PTI leader, who has accused the military’s hand in his ouster, welcomed the new military chief. He praised the military as a professional force but added that they must obey the constitution.

Pakistan’s military, the world’s sixth-largest, is hugely influential in the country and has staged at least three coups since independence in 1947, ruling for more than three decades.

Pakistan's former Prime Minister and opposition leader Imran Khan.
In the November 3 assassination attempt, a gunman opened fire from close range as Khan’s open-top container truck made its way through a crowded street in Wazirabad city in Punjab province. [Anjum Naveed/AP Photo]

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2022-11-26 19:04:50Z
1664172108

Jumat, 25 November 2022

World Cup: Iran protesters confronted at World Cup game against Wales - BBC

Security staff speak with fans holding up a shirt with the name of Mahsa Amini and a flag advocating for women's rights during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group B match between Wales and IR Iran at Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium on November 25, 2022 in Doha, Qatar. People have continued demonstrating in Iran over the death of Mahsa Amini in September.Getty Images

Confrontations between pro-Iran government fans and protesters broke out at the country's second World Cup match in Qatar on Friday.

Some protesting fans said they had flags taken away from them while others were shouted at and harassed.

Stadium security officials also confiscated T-shirts and other items displaying anti-government sentiments.

Protests have been sweeping Iran since the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September.

Ms Amini was arrested in Tehran by the morality police for allegedly not covering her hair properly and died in police custody three days later. The demonstrations spread across the country with people demanding changes such as more freedoms or an overthrow of the state, and the government has responded with a deadly crackdown.

On Friday - at Iran's World Cup game against Wales - some protesters had Persian pre-revolutionary flags snatched from them by pro-government fans at the Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium.

Insults were also reportedly hurled at some people wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the words "woman, life, freedom" - a phrase that has become a rallying cry among protesters against Iran's authorities.

One Iranian spectator alleged that Qatari police ordered her to wash off the names of protesters killed by Iran's security forces from her arms and chest after pro-government fans complained.

Another woman said she was prevented from wearing a T-shirt with Ms Amini's face in the stadium.

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Women giving interviews to foreign press about the protests were also seen being harried by at least one group of men.

Some used their mobiles to film the women who were also subjected to verbal attacks and the men loudly chanting: "The Islamic Republic of Iran".

The match itself, which Iran won 2-0 against Wales, saw Iranian players booed and whistled at as they sang the country's national anthem before kick-off.

At their earlier game against England on Monday, the players remained silent during the anthem in an apparent expression of support for anti-government protests.

Some fans in the stadium wore hats with the name of former Iranian football player, Voria Ghafouri, written on them.

A critic of Iran's government, he was arrested in Iran on Thursday and reportedly taken away by authorities after being accused of spreading propaganda.

Capped 28 times for his country, Mr Ghafouri was part of Iran's 2018 World Cup team and his absence from the 2022 squad surprised many.

The Iranian-Kurdish player has been a high profile voice defending Iranian Kurds within the country.

Earlier this week, the UN Human Rights Council voted to set up a fact-finding mission to investigate the crackdown on the anti-government protests in Iran.

The UN said Iran was in a "full-fledged" crisis and more than 300 people had been killed and 14,000 others arrested over the past nine weeks.

Iran dismissed it as an arrogant political ploy.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiM2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy93b3JsZC1taWRkbGUtZWFzdC02Mzc2MjI3NtIBN2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy93b3JsZC1taWRkbGUtZWFzdC02Mzc2MjI3Ni5hbXA?oc=5

2022-11-25 19:31:26Z
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