Tehran, Jun 26: Iranian President Hassan Rouhani today said his country is in a "fight" with the US, a day after protesters angered by Iran's tanking economy confronted police in front of parliament.
In a televised speech, Rouhani blamed the US for Iran's woes and said the US is trying to damage the country by creating "an economic war."
"The US cannot defeat our nation, our enemies are not able to get us to their knees," he said.
Rouhani's comments came after protesters angered by Iran's tanking economy confronted police in front of parliament yesterday. It was the first such confrontation since similar demonstrations rocked the country at the start of the year.
The demonstration signalled widespread unease in the wake of President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw the US from Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers and restore sanctions on the country.
It wasn't immediately clear who led yesterday's protests. Iran's semi-official news agencies, Fars, ISNA and Tasnim, described the protests at the Grand Bazaar as erupting after the Iranian rial dropped to 90,000 to the dollar on the country's black market, despite government attempts to control the currency rate.
Videos posted to social media showed protesters at the bazaar heckling shopkeepers who refused to close.
A short time later, about 2 kilometres from the Grand Bazaar, videos shared by Iranians on social media appeared to show a crowd confronting police at parliament.
Iran's semi-official ISNA news agency reported today that authorities detained many of the rioters.
Prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi said the "main provocateurs" who planned the protest and threatened shopkeepers to close their stores were arrested. He did not elaborate on the number of people detained.
Still, semi-official ISNA news agency reported the country's parliament speaker, Ali Larijani, said today that the Rouhani administration hasn't done enough to confront the economic problems.
At the end of last year, similar economic protests roiled Iran and spread to some 75 cities and towns, becoming the largest demonstrations in the country since its 2009 disputed presidential election. The protests in late December and early January saw at least 25 people killed and nearly 5,000 arrested.
Iran has announced a list of 15 demands for improving relations with the United States, including a US return to the 2015 nuclear accord, in response to a similar list of demands made by Washington last month.
In May, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called for a wholesale change in Iran's military and regional policies, threatening the "strongest sanctions in history" if it refused. The US withdrew from the landmark nuclear agreement with world powers earlier that month.
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