Mar 24, 2023 14:14 UTC
  •  Iran: France must observe human rights, avoid violence

Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian says the French government should observe human rights and avoid violence against peaceful protesters.

In a French-language post on his Twitter account on Friday, Amir-Abdollahian strongly condemned the crackdown on the peaceful demonstrations of the French people.

"We call on the French government to respect human rights and avoid resorting to force against the people of its own country who are pursuing their demands peacefully," the top Iranian diplomat tweeted.

On Thursday, protesters gathered across France to demonstrate their opposition to the legislation to raise the retirement age by two years to 64.

Unions claimed 3.5 million people turned out across the country, while the authorities suggested the figure was much lower, at just under 1.1 million.

In the capital Paris, union leaders claimed that a record 800,000 people took part in a mostly peaceful march through the city – the police gave the figure as 119,000 – to demand that the government drop the fiercely contested change.

According to interior minister Gerald Darmanin, a total of 457 people were arrested and 441 security forces injured. He said 903 fires lit in the streets of Paris in the most violent day of protests since January.

On Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron rejected calls to stop pushing through his deeply unpopular pension plan.

In a series of posts published on his Twitter page earlier on Friday, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kan’ani called upon French authorities to respond to the demands of hundreds of thousands of mainly peaceful protesters who have marched across the country against President Macron’s pension reform, rather than to stoke unrest in other countries.

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