Iranian leaders try linking protesters to mosque rampage

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Iran's supreme leader and its president tried Thursday to link the nationwide protests roiling the country to an Islamic State-claimed gun attack on a famous mosque that killed 15 people.

The comments come as Iran's theocracy has been unable to contain the demonstrations, sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after her detention by the country's morality police.

There is no evidence linking extremist groups to the widespread, largely peaceful demonstrations that have been repeatedly targeted by a heavy-handed security force crackdown in the country.

The protests, the most serious unrest to grip Iran since its 2009 Green Movement demonstrations, have vented anger over Iran's cratered economy and its theocracy. Over 200 people have been killed, with thousands of others arrested by police, activists say.

On Wednesday, a gunman opened fire on worshippers at Shiraz's Shah Cheragh mosque, the second-holiest site in Iran. State media said at least 15 people were killed in the assault, which authorities initially attributed to multiple gunmen.

Footage released Thursday by authorities showed the gunman walking near the mosque with a large backpack, then later moving inside with a Kalashnikov-style assault rifle. Barefoot worshippers inside try to flee as the man opens fire, then hunts those hiding behind whatever they could find. Blood could be seen on the mosque's floor.

Riot police later captured the man, who authorities have yet to identify.

The Islamic State group late Wednesday claimed responsibility for the attack on its Amaq news agency. It said an armed IS militant stormed the shrine and opened fire on visitors.

In a speech Thursday, President Ebrahim Raisi described the ongoing protests as "riots" that allowed for the shooting to take place, without providing evidence linking them.

"The enemy wants the riots to pave the way for terrorist attacks. The enemy is always the enemy," Raisi contended. "They go to a holy shrine... and open fire at innocent worshipers."

Iran's 83-year-old supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, blamed the attack on a "plot of the enemies."

"We all have duties to deal a blow to the warmongering enemy and its treacherous and foolish cohorts," Khamenei reportedly said. "All our people ranging from the security bodies and the judiciary body and activists in the field of media must be united against the wave that disregards and disrespects people's lives, their security and their sacred things."

Iranian authorities have blamed the unrest in part on foreign enemies like the United States and Israel, without providing evidence, and authorities have arrested a number of foreign nationals accused of taking part in the demonstrations.

On Thursday, the Foreign Ministry summoned the German ambassador, accusing Berlin of interfering in Iran's internal affairs and supporting terrorism, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. Germany also summoned Iran's envoy.

The moves came after German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in a statement on Wednesday that "there can be no 'business as usual' in bilateral relations with a state that deals in such an inhuman way with its own citizens."

Baerbock said there would be national entry restrictions on top of European Union sanctions, and Germany has been looking at what other measures are available in the trade and financial sectors. She said any remaining talks on economic and energy issues would be suspended.

Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami meanwhile warned that "violence cannot be answered with violence" in a statement carried online. Khatami's name and image have been banned in Iranian media since 2015 over his reformist political views, which call for changing the Islamic Republic from within.

"If [the people] see that the conditions of this life are not provided [by the government], they have the right to criticize and even protest," Khatami said.

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