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'I was shocked when I heard the news,' said Mina Ahmadi, a student at Beheshti University north of Tehran.

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His death occurred outside the local office of the Foundation for Martyrs and War-Disabled People, a wealthy and powerful government agency that helps the families of those killed and wounded in Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution and subsequent wars. It put a spotlight on the rising public fury and frustration as Iran's economy sinks, unemployment soars and the price of food skyrockets. Parazideh's suicide in the city of Yasuj shocked many in Iran, and not just because he was the son of Golmohammad Parazideh, a prominent provincial hero of the country's 1980-88 war with Iraq that left hundreds of thousands dead.

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He died from his burns two days later, on Oct. He soon returned to the gates of the building, poured gasoline over himself, and put a lit match to his neck. They tried to reason with him, promising a meager loan, but he left unsatisfied. Local media reported that Parazideh told officials he would throw himself off their roof if they couldn't help. The father of three in southern Iran walked into a local office of a foundation that helps war veterans and their families, pleading for assistance. TEHRAN, Iran - Ruhollah Parazideh, a wiry 38-year-old with a thick mustache and hair flecked with gray, was desperate for a job.