300 arrested after Sufis clash with Iran police, killing 5

Sufis are a branch of Islam that emphasizes direct mystical experience over mainstream religious practices. While they have been influential in many Muslim countries in history, they have been persecuted by both Sunni and Shia religious establishments.

February 20, 2018 04:10 pm | Updated 04:17 pm IST - Tehran:

 In this Feb. 11, 2018 file photo, Pakistani folk dancers perform during the Mystic Music Sufi Festival in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, Feb.11, 2018. The festival, which promotes the true message and sensibility of the Sufi poetry, is attended by dozens of performers across the country.

In this Feb. 11, 2018 file photo, Pakistani folk dancers perform during the Mystic Music Sufi Festival in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, Feb.11, 2018. The festival, which promotes the true message and sensibility of the Sufi poetry, is attended by dozens of performers across the country.

Overnight clashes between followers of a Sufi Islam leader and Iranian police killed five members of the security forces and injured 30, Iranian media reported on Tuesday, the latest tension between the mystical order and authorities. Over 300 were arrested.

Supporters of Sufi leader Nourali Tabandeh have been holding sporadic sit-ins near his home in Tehran, worried that the 90-year-old former deputy justice minister after Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution could be detained by police. That fear stems from the recent January protests in Iran in which police detained Sufis.

Mr. Tabandeh has had close relationships with liberal activists.

Sufis had rallied in front of a police station on Monday demanding the release of a detainee. They later rallied in front of Tabandeh’s home, where police started to try to disperse them. Previous rallies saw Sufi followers carrying clubs and knives, which they used to clash with police.

The semi-official Fars news agency said a Sufi follower rammed a bus into a group of police officers, killing three of them before being arrested late yesterday.

The official IRNA news agency today quoted police spokesman Gen. Saeed Montazeralmahdi as saying two members of the Basij forces also were killed in a stabbing and another car-ramming attack, which also injured 30.

Police arrested over 300 Sufi followers, including the drivers of both vehicles, he said. Mr. Tabandeh himself remains free.

Police have blocked off streets to the site of the clash and deployed a number of officers to the area.

Sufis are a branch of Islam that emphasizes direct mystical experience over mainstream religious practices. While they have been influential in many Muslim countries in history, they have been persecuted by both Sunni and Shia religious establishments.

In Iran, pressures increased on Sufis during former hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government.

During Iran’s 2009 disputed re-election of Mr. Ahmadinejad, Mr. Tabandeh supported one of Mr. Ahmadinejad’s main challengers, Mahdi Karroubi, who has been under house arrests since 2011.

In 2007, Sufis clashed Iranian security forces in the central Iranian town of Boroujerd after authorities decided to close a Sufi lodge. Authorities closed down a similar venue in the holy Shia city of Qom in 2006.

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