Protests in Iran sparked by economic woes now nationwide, activists say
Protests in nearly 50 cities challenge Iran's regime amid soaring inflation and rial collapse, with over 2,200 arrests and dozens killed, officials and monitors report.
- Recently, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported more than 340 demonstrations across Iran's 31 provinces, pressuring Iran's theocracy after protests began with merchants in Tehran.
- Iran's currency collapse has plunged its rial currency into free fall at over 1.4 million to $1 after United Nations sanctions reimposed in September, with annual inflation hitting 40% and new gasoline pricing introduced.
- Authorities: Rights groups report at least 38 deaths and more than 2,200 arrests while Iranian state media and domestic activist networks inside Iran limit reporting, and journalists covering protests face restrictions.
- Protesters broadened demands to include anti-government chants, while Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said rioters must be put in their place and U.S. President Donald Trump warned of strong consequences Sunday.
- Context-first: Iran's nuclear activities and past U.S. strikes frame regional strain, with the IAEA warned Iran could build as many as one nuclear bomb, and U.S. intelligence assessing Tehran has yet to begin a weapons program.
265 Articles
265 Articles
Iran shuts down internet in crackdown on escalating protests
Iran restricted internet and phone access overnight to quell escalating protests across the country, as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned that he won’t back down against the demonstrators. The death toll since the unrest began late last year has…
Government Cuts Off Internet in Iran as Protests Reach Critical Mass
by Matt Margolis, PJ Media: In what appears to be a prelude to a massive crackdown on the protesters filling city streets in Iran, the regime has cut off internet access in several key provinces, including the capital city of Tehran. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reports that 39 people have been killed during the 12-day […]
Anger is growing in Iran against the backdrop of economic and political frustrations. Despite repression, protests are spreading as the very unpopular regime is weakened by an economic and financial crisis.
Iranians fight back despite internet blackout: ‘Death to the dictator!’
Iran’s supreme leader signaled Friday that Tehran would crack down hard on protesters who have demonstrated against the theocratic regime for nearly two weeks after dramatic images showed riots breaking out across the country Thursday night. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 86, condemned what he called “a bunch of rioters [who] destroyed a public building just to...
Iran cuts internet as protests escalate
What happenedIranians took to the streets across the country Thursday and protested through Friday morning, but the “full scope of the demonstrations couldn’t be immediately determined” due to “Iran’s theocracy cutting off the nation from the internet and international telephone calls,” The Associated Press said. At least 62 people have been killed since protests over Iran’s ailing economy broke out on Dec. 28 and then “morphed into the most sig…
In Iran, mobilizations against expensive life took a political turn to call at the end of the Shiite theocracy. The Supreme Leader warned this Friday, January 9th that he would not "recircle" in front of the movement. TF1's JT shows you the images. - "Death to the dictator!": images of the mobilization that amplifies against the Iranian (International) regime.
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