Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in Berlin on Saturday in solidarity with the protest movement in Iran. According to the police, about 80,000 people took part in the rally. The organizers of the event initially expected 50,000 participants.
At the beginning of the demonstration, thousands of people from many parts of Europe had gathered at Berlin's Siegessäule (Victory Column) and the surrounding area.
The police reported of a "predominantly trouble-free" march. At the start of the event, pyrotechnics were ignited; later, there were isolated smoke pots.
Participants held up Iranian flags and signs criticizing Iran's leaders, many with the tagline "Women, Life, Freedom" in both English and German.
The demonstration in Berlin was organized by the Woman Life Freedom Collective, which stands up against oppression and discrimination in Iran. Numerous organizations supported the call.
Businesses in Iran strike, demos at universities in Tehran
As women-led nationwide protests sparked by the death of Jina Mahsa Amini entered the sixth week, shopkeepers and factory workers in several Iranian cities went on strike, activists said.
Witnesses also said anti-government protests broke out at several universities in Tehran despite tight security.
In addition, protests were reported Friday in Zahedan, a southeastern city with an ethnic Baloch population. State news agency IRNA said protesters shouted slogans, threw stones at motorists and damaged banks and other private property.
Iran: United States seeking concessions
Meanwhile, Iran accused the United States of seeking to gain concessions in talks aimed at restoring the 2015 international nuclear agreement, by supporting protests over Mahsa Amini's death.
"The Americans continue to exchange messages with us, but they are trying to fan the flames of what has been going on inside Iran in recent days," Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said during a visit to Armenia.
"I think they are looking to exert political and psychological pressure on Iran to obtain concessions in the negotiations," he said, referring to indirect talks between Tehran and Washington mediated by the European Union. Amir-Abdollahian also said that Iran will not make any concessions.
The mass protests against Iran's authoritarian government were triggered by the death of the 22-year-old Iranian Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini in police custody in mid-September. The morality police had arrested her for not complying with a headscarf mandate.