(30 Oct 2022) SHOTLIST
RESTRICTION SUMMARY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Paris – 30 October 2022
1. Wide of protest at Republic Square in Paris
2. Close of banner of Mahsa Amini
3. Various of protest
4. Close of banner (English) reading: "They are killing us because we want freedom"
5. Various of women protesting
6. Mid of Dider Idjadi, Sociology Professor and protestor
7. SOUNDBITE (French), Dider Idjadi, Sociology Professor and protestor:
"Does the movement need to stop and wait for a potential opening and support from a faction within the army? No, it needs to continue its way and with such dynamics, a group or a part of the military can abandon the regime and join the people. The logic of the movement today is to continue in the same direction without any doubt and there is a certain determination that we can see."
9. Bahareh Akrami speaking at the protest
10. Protesters holding banners
11. SOUNDBITE (French), Bahareh Akrami, protestor
"People need to know that 257 persons have been killed and that at least 30 of them were children. Therefore, I think people will continue to protest and we don't see demonstrations fading away according to what we hear from those taking part in them. They say they will go all the way because they don't have anything left to lose."
12. Various of protesters
STORYLINE:
Hundreds of people gathered at a rally on Sunday in Paris to show support to Iranian protesters, chanting and holding banners.
The show of solidarity comes as demonstrations continued across Iran for the sixth straight week, even as Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard issued a new warning on Saturday to anti-government protesters.
Sociology Professor Dider Idjadi believed that it is possible the army will eventually abandon authorities and side with the protesters.
"The logic of the movement today is to continue in the same direction without any doubt and there is a certain determination that we can see", Idjadi said at the rally.
The Guard and other security forces have violently cracked down on demonstrations with live ammunition, anti-riot pellets and tear gas.
Despite the violet crackdown, the movement is showing no sign of abating, said Bahareh Akrami.
"They say they will go all the way because they don't have anything left to lose", Akrami added.
The Iranian government has repeatedly alleged that foreign powers have orchestrated the protests, without providing evidence.
The protests have become one of the most serious threats to Iran's ruling clerics since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The protests first focused on the state-mandated hijab, or headscarf, for women but quickly grew into calls for the downfall of Iran's theocracy itself.
At least 270 people have been killed and 14,000 have been arrested in the protests that have swept over 125 Iranian cities, according to the group Human Rights Activists in Iran.
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