Militant attack kills 4 paramilitary members in Iran’s east

Cairo, Dec 19 (AP) A militant attack killed 4 members of Iran’s paramilitary force on Monday in its restive southeast province bordering Pakistan, state media said.

Iran’s Sistan and Baluchistan province is home to separatist forces that have long opposed the country’s clerical rulers. The region has also turned into an epicentre for anti-government protests sweeping Iran in past months.

According to IRNA, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard led a manhunt for the attackers in the Sistan and Baluchistan province. The militants escaped across the border into Pakistan, it claimed.

No group immediately claimed the attack.

In a separate statement issued on Monday, the Revolutionary Guard said the attack took place near the town of Saravan and that the victims included a lieutenant from its force and three Basij, a paramilitary volunteer group loyal to the Islamic Republic, it said. No further details were provided by the Iranian authorities.

Sistan and Baluchistan province, which borders both Pakistan and Afghanistan, is home to the Baluchi, a predominately Sunni Muslim ethnic minority group. The area is also on a major route for drug trafficking to Europe and Arab Gulf nations.

Anti-government protests sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who died after being detained by the Iranian morality police in September, rapidly spread to the southeastern province.

The protests have morphed into one of the most serious challenges to Iran’s theocracy since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

At least 503 people have been killed in the countrywide demonstrations amid a heavy-handed security crackdown, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that’s been monitoring the protests since they began.

Nearly weekly demonstrations have been held in Zahedan, the capital of Sistan and Baluchistan. In September, 19 people, including a Revolutionary Guard commander, were killed in clashes at a police base in Zahedan, in what Iranian officials alleged was a separatist attack. (AP)