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The Jerusalem Post

Iran says there were no school poisonings, blames foreign 'enemies'

 
 A group of schoolgirls in Iran. (photo credit: FLICKR)
A group of schoolgirls in Iran.
(photo credit: FLICKR)

The wave of suspected attacks has affected thousands of schoolgirls and provoked public anger.

Iran's intelligence ministry on Friday accused foreign "enemies" and dissidents of fomenting fears over suspected poisonings of schoolgirls, saying its investigation found no actual poisoning.

The wave of suspected attacks has affected thousands of schoolgirls and provoked public anger, after months of protests against Iran's clerical rulers following the death of a young woman held by police for allegedly flouting strict hijab rules.

"The enemies' role in fueling this crisis is certain and undeniable. Individuals, groups and Western media (especially in Persian language)... have focused on this in the past few months, as well as foreign politicians and international bodies," said a ministry report carried by state media.

"In field findings and laboratory investigations ... no toxic substance able to cause poisoning was observed ... and there have been no deaths or long-term physical conditions," the report said, blaming mischievousness and mass hysteria among students.

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 A group of schoolgirls in Iran. (credit: FLICKR)
A group of schoolgirls in Iran. (credit: FLICKR)

The report accused unnamed dissidents of provoking fears to produce propaganda videos and warned of "prosecution of individuals, groups, media who accused the government ... and aligned themselves with enemies."

Authorities have accused the Islamic Republic's "enemies" of using the suspected attacks to undermine the clerical establishment. But suspicions have fallen on hardline groups operating as self-declared guardians of their interpretation of Islam.

When did the poisonings start?

The suspected poisonings began in November in the holy Shi'ite Muslim city of Qom and spread to 28 of Iran's 31 provinces, according to activist HRANA news agency, prompting some parents to take children out of school and protest.

For the first time since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, schoolgirls have joined the protests that spiraled after Mahsa Amini's death in morality police custody.

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