ANKARA – Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani on Wednesday expressed hope in atelephone call with Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan that theprotests which have rocked his country would end in a few days, a Turkishpresidential source said.
Erdogan told Rouhani that “peace and stability” in Iranian society had tobe preserved and said he concurred with his Iranian counterpart’s statementthat the right to protest should not lead to “violations of the law”.
“President Rouhani thanked President Erdogan for his sensitivity andexpressed hope that the protests would end in a few days,” said a statementby a Turkish presidential source.
The comments were not immediately confirmed by the Iranian side.
Turkey — which was hit by street protests against Erdogan (then premier)in 2013 — had already said it was concerned by the protests and warnedagainst any escalation.
The almost week-long unrest in Iran, the biggest challenge to the Islamicregime since the 2009 mass demonstrations, has so far claimed 21 lives.
Turkey, whose rivalry with Iran goes back to the regional battle forsupremacy between the Ottoman Empire and imperial Persia, has had onoccasion tricky moments in relations with Tehran.
Erdogan has repeatedly railed against “Persian imperialism” in the MiddleEast but relations have warmed in the last months as Moscow and Tehran worktightly with Ankara to bring peace to Syria.
Turkey’s conservative press has sounded grave unease over the protests,accusing the United States and its allies of fomenting the unrest as partof a plot to transform the Middle East. – Agencies