Clashes during water shortage protests, Iran blames malicious outsiders: The U.S.

1 min read
November 29, 2021

Farmer protests about water shortage in Iran led to clashes between the police and protestors. Authorities blame malicious outsiders: The United States.

Zayanderud river bridge
A bridge on the Zayanderud river in Isfahan. The river is dry most of the year | © Romain Bréget, 2018

Farmers were protesting about water shortage in Isfahan, Iran’s third largest city, for two weeks. They had installed a camp on the dry riverbed.

But on November 25, security forces came in to dismantle the camp and burn their tents, Iran International reported. Authorities considered the issue had been addressed after a meeting a few days before.

As a reaction, people gathered in the city center on Friday, where authorities dispersed the protesters, reportedly using tear gas, batons and pellet shots. On Thursday, Internet connections were reportedly shut down to avoid spreading more videos and images on social media. The number of people injured or arrested was unclear.

Farmers originally requested their share of water for the Zayanderud river. However, the river has been dry most of the time in the last two decades between Isfahan and Yazd, a city about 300 km (186 mi) east of Isfahan.

Droughts and global warming worsen the situation, but the authorities’ management of water is also being challenged.

In fact, more than a million cubic meters of water are staying in a massive water tank less than 100 km (62 mi) upstream of Esfahan: the Zayanderud dam.

For Iran, the U.S. was behind the scenes of the protests

The dam started operating in the 70s in order to regulate floods and water distribution. The dam also supports a power station.

On November 21, the Iranian minister of Energy blamed the country’s worst drought in 50 years but also considered the issue was mainly related to the unfair distribution of water resources. Water management issues affect the provinces of Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, Isfahan, Yazd and Khuzestan.

Some of the projects meant to tackle water scarcity have been stopped for ten years, he further justified. For President Ebrahim Raisi, the “complex administrative system of the country causes skepticism among investors.”

But a week later, after the protest moved from the riverbed to the streets, the Chief Justice of Iran justified the police crackdown by some malicious outsiders who entered the ranks of the protest to disrupt peace. He claimed that “the enemy” — the United States — was behind the scene.

On November 27, a U.S. Department of State spokesperson declared being “deeply concerned about the violent crackdown against peaceful protestors in Isfahan.”

The protests come about two years after the “Bloody November” when the government cracked down on protestors and killed 1,500 people.

Moreover, on November 29, talks about Iran’s nuclear program resumed with the international community in Vienna after being suspended for five months.

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Clément Vérité

Clément is the executive editor and founder of Newsendip. He started in the media industry as a freelance reporter at 16 for a local French newspaper after school and has never left it. He later worked for seven years at The New York Times, notably as a data analyst. He holds a Master of Management in France and a Master of Arts in the United Kingdom in International Marketing & Communications Strategy. He has lived in France, the United Kingdom, and Italy.