Tag: Iran

  • World Cup 2022: England 6-2 Iran in pictures

    Bukayo Saka was at the double as England cruised through their opening World Cup match against Iran to banish memories of a dismal build-up to the tournament.

    Expectations were dampened ahead of the trip to Qatar after the Three Lions were relegated from the top tier of the Nations League having picked up just three points from six games.

    But Gareth Southgate’s men comfortably won what was touted as a tricky Group B encounter thanks to Saka’s brace and goals from Jude Bellingham, Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford and Jack Grealish.

    After Bellingham, 19, broke the deadlock in the 35th minute with his first international goal, Arsenal star Saka doubled the advantage eight minutes later.

    Sterling, 27, added a third in first-half stoppage time and 21-year-old Saka made it 4-0 midway through the second half.

    While the Three Lions faithful were still celebrating, Iran netted when Mehdi Taremi ran in behind Harry Maguire to lash the ball beyond Jordan Pickford.

    Iran’s joy was shortlived, however, as Rashford needed just three touches after climbing off the bench to make it 5-1 in the 71st minute.

    England’s fine start to their quest for glory was capped by a Grealish goal served up on a plate by fellow substitute Callum Wilson in the dying seconds of normal time.

    But in the 13th minute of added time at the end of the game, John Stones gave away a penalty that was converted by Taremi for his second of the afternoon.

    Scroll down through the pictures below to relive the best moments from the Group B opener. 

    England's starting XI for the World Cup clash with Iran
    England’s starting XI for the World Cup clash with Iran
    The first half was stopped while Iran keeper Alireza Beiranvand received a lengthy spell of treatment
    The first half was stopped while Iran keeper Alireza Beiranvand received a lengthy spell of treatment
    Iran keeper Alireza Beiranvand was eventually carried off on a stretcher after suffering a head injury
    Iran keeper Alireza Beiranvand was eventually carried off on a stretcher after suffering a head injury
    Mason Mount reflects on a missed opportunity after putting a shot into the side-netting
    Mason Mount reflects on a missed opportunity after putting a shot into the side-netting
    Harry Maguire's first-half header came back off the crossbar
    Harry Maguire’s first-half header came back off the crossbar
    Jude Bellingham's fine header broke the deadlock after 35 minutes
    Jude Bellingham’s fine header broke the deadlock after 35 minutes
    Jude Bellingham celebrates his goal with England team-mate Mason Mount
    Jude Bellingham celebrates his goal with England team-mate Mason Mount
    Bukayo Saka lashed home England's second goal in the 43rd minute
    Bukayo Saka lashed home England’s second goal in the 43rd minute
    Bukayo Saka looks to the heavens after doubling England's advantage
    Bukayo Saka looks to the heavens after doubling England’s advantage
    Raheem Sterling was on the end of a Harry Kane cross to make it 3-0 to England in first-half stoppage time
    Raheem Sterling was on the end of a Harry Kane cross to make it 3-0 to England in first-half stoppage time
    Raheem Sterling was all smiles after adding to England's first-half tally
    Raheem Sterling was all smiles after adding to England’s first-half tally
    Bukayo Saka slotted home his second of the game in the second half
    Bukayo Saka slotted home his second of the game in the second half
    Mehdi Taremi pulled one back for Iran in the 65th minute
    Mehdi Taremi pulled one back for Iran in the 65th minute
    Marcus Rashford made it 5-1 to England after being summoned from the bench
    Marcus Rashford made it 5-1 to England after being summoned from the bench
    Marcus Rashford celebrated with fellow sub Phil Foden after scoring
    Marcus Rashford celebrated with fellow sub Phil Foden after scoring
    Jack Grealish was on hand to make it 6-1 to England
    Jack Grealish was on hand to make it 6-1 to England
    Mehdi Taremi scored his second of the game from the penalty spot deep into second-half stoppage time
    Mehdi Taremi scored his second of the game from the penalty spot deep into second-half stoppage time

    Source: Livescore

  • Kane says England ‘did their country proud’ by thrashing Iran in World Cup opener

    Harry Kane says England’s players “did their country proud” by opening their World Cup campaign with a commanding 6-2 victory over Iran.

    Bukayo Saka scored twice, while Jude Bellingham, Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford and Jack Grealish were also on target as Gareth Southgate’s side recorded their biggest ever win in their opening match at a major tournament.

    Kane, who provided assists for Sterling and Rashford, saluted his team-mates after they made a real statement of intent in Group B at Khalifa International Stadium on Monday.

    “Obviously, [it was a] really good start to the World Cup campaign,” the Three Lions captain said in a video posted on Twitter.

    “Full credit to the boys. It’s never easy getting off to a winning start at a major tournament, and to score six goals shows we’re in a really good place.

    “There’s still a lot of work to do. Of course, we know that there’s a long way to go. But overall, [it was] really pleasing.

    “Congrats to Jude for his first England goal, no better place to do it. Bukayo [was] on fire with two great finishes.

    “Everyone out there today did their country proud. We move onto the next one now. Let’s keep it going for the next game.”

    England will look to build on their winning start when they face the USA at Al Bayt Stadium on Friday, before taking on Wales at Ahmed Bin Ali Stadium four days later.


    Source: Livescore

  • 2022 World Cup: England run over Iran

    England’s World Cup campaign opened in thoroughly convincing fashion as they outclassed Iran in Doha.

    The game was played out against the backdrop of more off-field controversy here in Qatar after England were forced to ditch plans to wear the OneLove armband promoting diversity and inclusivity under threat from Fifa of players being cautioned should they carry out the gesture of support.

    Gareth Southgate’s side strolled to victory, with Iran’s hopeless plight made worse by the early loss of goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand to concussion after a clash of heads with a team-mate.

    Jude Bellingham got England off the mark in this World Cup with a soaring header from Luke Shaw’s cross 10 minutes before the break and the game was wrapped up before half-time thanks to Saka’s fine strike and Raheem Sterling’s classy volley with the outside of his foot from Harry Kane’s cross.

    Iran’s supporters were given a moment of real delight when Mehdi Taremi scored a fine goal after 65 minutes but it only produced a ruthless response from England as Saka scored his second and substitute Marcus Rashford scored with his first involvement – both smooth, composed strikes.

    To put the gloss on an incredibly dominant display, Jack Grealish slotted home from close range after a good run and pull back by Callum Wilson.

    Iran did pull another back in injury time when Taremi slotted in a penalty after a John Stones foul.

  • 2022 World Cup: England thrash Iran in opener

    England’s World Cup campaign opened in thoroughly convincing fashion as they outclassed Iran in Doha.

    The game was played out against the backdrop of more off-field controversy here in Qatar after England were forced to ditch plans to wear the OneLove armband promoting diversity and inclusivity under threat from Fifa of players being cautioned should they carry out the gesture of support.

    Gareth Southgate’s side strolled to victory, with Iran’s hopeless plight made worse by the early loss of goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand to concussion after a clash of heads with a team-mate.

    Jude Bellingham got England off the mark in this World Cup with a soaring header from Luke Shaw’s cross 10 minutes before the break and the game was wrapped up before half-time thanks to Saka’s fine strike and Raheem Sterling’s classy volley with the outside of his foot from Harry Kane’s cross.

    Iran’s supporters were given a moment of real delight when Mehdi Taremi scored a fine goal after 65 minutes but it only produced a ruthless response from England as Saka scored his second and substitute Marcus Rashford scored with his first involvement – both smooth, composed strikes.

    To put the gloss on an incredibly dominant display, Jack Grealish slotted home from close range after a good run and pull back by Callum Wilson.

    Iran did pull another back in injury time when Taremi slotted in a penalty after a John Stones foul.

    Bellingham & Saka show class

    It is almost impossible to deliver any firm judgement on England’s World Cup prospects given the paucity of Iran’s opposition but this could hardly have gone better for Southgate as his one major selection decision reaped a rich dividend and the result was almost perfect.

    Iran were expected to provide stern resistance as they reside in the top 20 in the Fifa rankings and have a recent victory against Uruguay on their record but England made light work of the task once Bellingham gave them the lead.

    Bellingham is being touted as one of the big emerging names at this World Cup, the 19-year-old Borussia Dortmund star already a target for a host of the game’s elite names.

    And, even in the context of this game, Bellingham showed exactly why as he joined Saka as the dominant force in this game, scoring his first England goal with a magnificent header and bestriding midfield with a complete authority that belied his years.

    This was only the second time England have scored six goals in a major tournament but on this evidence you would not bet against the brilliant Bellingham being involved the next time it happens.

    Bellingham is a player with the world at his feet and a long career ahead of him at international level.

    Southgate picked Saka ahead of Manchester City’s Phil Foden, the only mildly contentious decision in his line-up, but there can be no arguments after a hugely impressive performance from the 21-year-old who has played such a big part as Arsenal head the Premier League.

    Saka scored twice and was a threat throughout and thoroughly deserved the warm applause he received when he was substituted.

    It will get harder for England as they now face the United States and Wales but this was the perfect start.

    Source: BBC

  • Ticket chaos leaves thousands waiting for entry to England-Iran

    The organisation of the Qatar World Cup will again be called into question after an issue with FIFA’s ticketing system left England and Iran fans struggling to get into Khalifa International Stadium.

    Ahead of the opening Group B game, and the second match of the tournament, on Monday, thousands of supporters were unable to gain entry to the ground in time for kick-off.

    This was due to a problem with the FIFA Ticketing app.

    There were thousands of empty seats when the game started, with the venue gradually filling up during the first half.

    In a statement released just prior to kick-off, FIFA said: “Some spectators are currently experiencing an issue with accessing their tickets via the FIFA Ticketing app. FIFA is working on solving the issue.

    “In the meantime, fans who are not able to access their mobile tickets should check the email accounts they used to register with the Ticketing app for further instructions.

    “In case fans cannot access their email accounts, the stadium’s Ticket Resolution Point will be able to support. We thank fans for their understanding as we work to fix the issue as soon as possible.”

    Source: Livescore

  • Iran confirms the release of two confiscated Greek tankers

    A memorandum has shown that , Tehran and Athens have agreed to foster the cooperation required to improve maritime security.

    Iran has confirmed the release of two Greek oil tankers it seized in the Gulf in May, bringing an end to a months-long diplomatic standoff between Athens and Tehran.

    According to the Iranian foreign ministry, an Iranian-flagged tanker seized in Greek waters had also left Greek waters.

    “The final agreement was reached today in Tehran,” the ministry said in a statement on Wednesday, confirming earlier media reports of a deal.

    According to a memorandum signed by the two countries, the parties have agreed to foster the cooperation necessary to improve maritime security, the statement added.

    The Greek shipping ministry confirmed the vessels Prudent Warrior and Delta Poseidon had left Iran.

    “Today is a very pleasant day for our sailors, but also for Greece in general, since an unpleasant and particularly complex case came to an end, following systematic efforts by the Greek government,” Greek Shipping Minister Giannis Plakiotakis said in a statement.

    Greek authorities in April impounded the Iranian-flagged tanker Lana, formerly Pegas, and its oil cargo near the coast of Evia, due to sanctions following legal action by the United States.

    The US later confiscated part of its oil cargo because of sanctions on Iran. The removal of oil from the Lana prompted Iranian forces in May to seize the two Greek tankers in the Gulf and sail them back to Iran.

    The Prudent Warrior’s destination was listed as the United Arab Emirates port of Khor Fakkan, according to Eikon data.

    Polembros Shipping, which manages the vessel, said 17 out of 24 Greek and Filipino crew members had been replaced.

    Merchant shipping remains prey to hazards in the Gulf. A tanker associated with an Israeli billionaire was hit off the coast of Oman on Tuesday, sustaining minor damage to its hull, Israeli-controlled Eastern Pacific Shipping said on Wednesday.

     

  • UK working to remove Iran from UN women’s rights body

    The UK is working to remove Iran from a UN body dedicated to women’s rights.

    David Rutley, a foreign office minister, was answering an urgent question about the protest in Iran.

    He said the UK was working with the US and others to remove Iran from the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.

    Mr Rutley said the protest had seen more than 300 deaths – of which 43 were children.

    The demonstrations started two months ago after Mahsa Amini, 22, died in custody after being detained by “morality police” for allegedly breaking strict hijab rules.

    There have been large protests in numerous parts of the country, as well as smaller, individual actions like clerics having their headwear knocked off and women breaking rules on wearing head coverings.

    Mr Rutley said death sentences are now likely to increase.

    Source: Skynews.com 

  • Iran unrest: Tehran court sentences first person to death over protest

    State media has reported that , an Iranian court has sentenced to death the first person arrested for participating in the country’s protests.

    The defendant, who was not named, was found guilty of “enmity against God” by the Revolutionary Court for setting fire to a government facility.

    Another court sentenced five people to prison terms ranging from five to ten years on national security and public order charges.

    A human rights organisation warned that authorities may be planning “hurried executions.”

    According to official reports, at least 20 people are currently facing charges punishable by death, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights.

    Its director, Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, called on the international community to take urgent action and “strongly warn the Islamic Republic of the consequences of executing protesters”.

    Protests against Iran’s clerical establishment erupted two months ago after the death in custody of a young woman detained by morality police for allegedly breaking the strict hijab rules.

    They are reported to have spread to 140 cities and towns and evolved into the most significant challenge to the Islamic Republic in over a decade.

    At least 326 protesters, including 43 children and 25 women, have been killed in a violent crackdown by security forces, according to Iran Human Rights.

    The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), which is also based outside the country, has put the death toll at 339 and said another 15,300 protesters have detained. It has also reported the deaths of 39 security personnel.

    Iran’s leaders have portrayed the protests as “riots” instigated by the country’s foreign enemies.

    Last week, judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei declared that “key perpetrators” should be identified as soon as possible and handed sentences that would have a deterrent effect on others.

    He warned that “rioters” could be charged with “moharebeh” (enmity against God), “efsad fil-arz” (corruption on Earth) and “baghy” (armed rebellion) – all of which can carry the death penalty in Iran’s Sharia-based legal system.

    Those possessing and using a weapon or firearm, disrupting national security, or killing someone could receive “qisas” (retaliation in kind), he said, apparently responding to a call for retributive justice from 272 of the 290 members of Iran’s parliament.

    More than 2,000 people have already been charged with participating in the “recent riots”, according to judiciary figures.

    On Sunday, local media cited judiciary officials as saying that 164 had been charged in the southern province of Hormozgan, another 276 in the central province of Markazi, and 316 in neighbouring Isfahan province.

  • Iranian who lived in Paris airport for 18 years dead

    An Iranian man who had been living in a Paris airport for the past 18 years has died.

    Mehran Karimi Nasseri, caught in diplomatic limbo, made a small area of Roissy Charles de Gaulle airport his home in 1988.

    His experience inspired Tom Hanks’ 2004 film The Terminal.

    Mr Nasseri was eventually granted the right to reside in France, but he returned to the airport a few weeks ago, where he died of natural causes, according to an airport official.

    Born in 1945 in the Iranian province of Khuzestan, Mr Nasseri first flew to Europe in search of his mother.

    He spent some years living in Belgium, having been expelled from countries including the UK, the Netherlands, and Germany for not having the correct immigration documents. He then went to France, where he made the airport’s 2F Terminal his home.

    Nestled on his bench surrounded by trolleys containing the possessions he had accumulated, he spent his days writing about his life in a notebook and reading books and newspapers.

    His story attracted international media attention and caught the eye of Stephen Spielberg, who directed The Terminal, starring Hanks and Catherine Zeta-Jones.

    After the film’s release, journalists flocked to speak with the man who had inspired a Hollywood movie. At one point, Mr Nazzeri, who called himself “Sir Alfred,” was giving up to six interviews a day, Le Parisien reports.

    Despite being granted refugee status and the right to remain in France in 1999, he stayed at the airport until 2006, when he was taken to a hospital to be treated for an illness. He then spent time living in a hostel using the money he had received for the film, the French newspaper Libération reports.

    Mr Nasseri returned to the airport a few weeks ago, where he lived until he died, an airport official said.

    He was found with several thousand euros in his possession, the official added.

     

  • Kremlin: Putin, Raisi hold talks, discuss bilateral agenda

    The Kremlin says Russian President Vladimir Putin held talks with his Iranian counterpart Ebrahim Raisi.

    “The leaders discussed a number of current issues on the bilateral agenda with an emphasis on the continued building up of interaction in politics, trade, and the economy, including transport and logistics,” the Kremlin said in a statement.

    The leaders agreed that the contacts between Russian and Iranian institutions will be increased, it added.

    Kyiv and its Western allies have accused Moscow of using Iranian-made drones in recent weeks to carry out attacks in Ukraine, where it launched a “special military operation” in February.

     

  • Taraneh Alidoosti: Prominent Iranian actress poses without a headscarf.

    To show solidarity with anti-government protests, a prominent Iranian actress posted an image of herself without a headscarf on Instagram.

    Taraneh Alidoosti, best known for her role in the Oscar-winning film The Salesman, also held a sign in Kurdish that read “Woman, Life, Freedom.”

    Protesters have adopted the slogan as a rallying cry.

    The protests sparked by Mahsa Amini’s death in police custody are now in their seventh week.

    The 22-year-old died after being arrested by morality police in Tehran for allegedly breaking Iran’s strict rules requiring women to wear a hijab, or Islamic headscarf, to cover their hair.

    Ms Alidoosti is one of Iran’s most successful actresses and has more than eight million followers on Instagram. She starred in The Salesman, which won an Academy Award in 2016 for the Best International Feature Film.

    She has previously vowed to remain inside Iran at any price and has paused her career to support the families of those killed in the security forces’ clampdown on demonstrators.

    Local human rights activists say least 328 people have been killed and 14,800 others have been detained.

    The star’s post is the latest gesture of support by leading figures in the arts and sports of Iran.

    Last month, Iranian star footballer Sardar Azmoun backed demonstrators amid increasing violence from the government. The Bayern Leverkusen forward condemned security forces in an Instagram story, saying: “Shame on you for easily killing the people and viva women of Iran. Long live Iranian women!”

  • Iran denounces skater who flouted hijab rule abroad amid protests

    Niloufar Mardani is the latest athlete to not follow Iran’s hijab rules when competing abroad, in what has been interpreted as support for anti-government protests.

    Iranian authorities have denounced a professional skater who competed abroad without adhering to the country’s mandatory hijab rules amid protests sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini.

    Protests that erupted following 22-year-old Amini’s death in the custody of the country’s so-called morality police, after she was arrested for alleged non-compliance with a mandatory dress code, are approaching the end of their second month.

    On Sunday, Niloufar Mardani, who has been a member of the national Iranian speed skating team for years, stepped on a podium in Turkey to receive her first-place award while not wearing a headscarf – as is mandatory for female athletes representing Iran even when competing outside of the country.

    A picture circulating on social media of Mardani on the podium in Istanbul also showed her wearing a black shirt with the word “Iran” on it.

    In a short statement, Iran’s sports ministry emphasised “maintaining Islamic values in sports competitions” and said Mardani had not competed in clothing approved by the ministry.

    “This athlete has not been a member of the Iranian national team since last month and attended this competition as part of a personal trip without obtaining necessary permits,” the statement said, before adding that the Iranian team had not participated in the tournament.

    Last month, professional rock climber Elnaz Rekabi represented the Iranian national team in an international tournament in South Korea while not wearing a headscarf, making headlines across the globe.

    A crowd had gathered to welcome her in the early hours of the morning when her flight touched down in Tehran as some believed she had taken her veil off in an act of defiance. In an interview with state television at the airport, Rekabi apologised and said that there had been an “inadvertent” issue with her hijab as she had been quickly called to compete.

    The issue of the hijab has featured prominently in the country’s ongoing protests, with videos online showing some women burning their veils or cutting their hair.

    But male athletes have also made headlines in recent weeks as footballers have repeatedly refused to celebrate after scoring goals in the country’s league matches.

    On Sunday, Saeed Piramoun, a member of the Iranian national beach football team, held up his hair and mimed cutting it off after scoring Iran’s winning goal in the final match against Brazil in an international tournament in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The symbolic move was seemingly aimed at supporting the protests.

    Piramoun and other members of the national team had refused to sing along with the national anthem at the start of the match, and at the end of it, they refused to celebrate as they lifted the world champions’ trophy.

    A number of fans chanted anti-establishment slogans inside the stadium and proceeded to do the same outside following the match, prompting the official newspaper of the Iranian government to warn the UAE of “consequences for its hostile political action” of not stopping the crowd from chanting.

    The Iranian beach football federation on Monday vowed action against “those who did not adhere to professional and sports ethics” in line with regulations. Reporters were barred from speaking with the members of the team at the airport upon their return.

    Iran’s upcoming participation in the FIFA World Cup in Qatar has also caused controversy, with Ukraine and some others calling for the Iranian team’s removal, although it appears highly unlikely that would happen.

    ‘Teach an example’

    The protests have persisted despite stringent internet restrictions and a crackdown by security forces.

    More than 1,000 indictments have been issued for people identified as being leaders of what authorities have called “riots” in various provinces, according to the judiciary. Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei has ordered courts to fast-track cases.

    Earlier this week, 227 of the 290 members of Iran’s parliament signed a statement read aloud at a public session that called for a response to people engaging in “moharebe” (literally meaning “waging war against God”) that would “teach an example”.

    Several “rioters” were charged with moharebe in the first public court cases held earlier this month, which could potentially carry the death penalty.

    Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, the judiciary’s spokesman, Masoud Setayeshi, also promised a response that would “teach an example and be deterring” to suspects.

    Teenagers and young people have been arrested during the protests, but the exact number of the arrested – along with those who have been killed – is unclear. Setayeshi said a “handful” of school and university students and teachers have been arrested.

    Setayeshi also said a “final decision” is near on the cases of Niloofar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohammadi, two women journalists working for local newspapers who were arrested after covering Amini’s death and her funeral.

    They have been charged with “collusion with intent to act against national security” and “propaganda against the establishment” after Iran’s intelligence community earlier this month said they were trained by the CIA.

    Earlier this week, the country’s tourism and culture minister, Ezatollah Zarghami, discussed the issue of teenagers’ arrest from the perspective of an interrogator whom he spoke with and who has interrogated people arrested during the “riots”.

    “He [the interrogator] said I have interrogated major political people for a lifetime but my most difficult interrogations were of several hundred people arrested on the streets. Neither could I understand what they were saying, nor did they understand what I am saying,” he said.

    Source:Aljazeera.com

  • Iran International: Iran has threatened journalists in the UK reports a TV channel

    Two British-Iranian journalists working for the UK-based Persian-language TV channel Iran International have been warned of a possible threat to their lives, according to a UK law enforcement source.

    The Metropolitan Police informed the pair of a recent increase in “credible” threats from Iranian security forces, according to parent company Volant Media.

    It condemned the “escalation of a state-sponsored campaign to intimidate Iranian journalists working in foreign countries.”

    The Iranian government has not responded.

    However, they announced sanctions against Iran International and BBC News Persian last month, accusing them of “incitement of riots” and “support of terrorism” over their coverage of the anti-government protests that have engulfed the country over the past two months.

    The two UK-based channels are already banned from Iran, but a press freedom watchdog says they are among the main sources of news and information in a country where independent media and journalists are constantly persecuted.

    Volant Media said in a statement that it was “shocked and deeply concerned” by the threats its journalists had received, which it attributed to Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC), a powerful military force with close ties to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    “The Metropolitan Police have now formally notified both journalists that these threats represent an imminent, credible and significant risk to their lives and those of their families. Other members of our staff have also been informed directly by the Metropolitan Police of separate threats.”

    It added: “These lethal threats to British citizens on British soil come after several weeks of warnings from the IRGC and Iranian government about the work of a free and uncensored [Persian]-language media working in London.”

    Volant Media warned that the IRGC “cannot be allowed to export their pernicious media crackdown to the UK” and called on the British government to “join us in condemning these horrific threats and continue to highlight the importance of media freedom”.

    In a statement to the BBC, the Metropolitan Police said: “We do not comment on matters of protective security in relation to any specific individuals.”

    BBC home affairs correspondent Daniel Sandford reports that the UK law enforcement source would not discuss the suggestion in the Daily Telegraph that a “hostile Iranian surveillance team” was spotted outside the homes and offices of the journalists.

    Last year, United Nations experts expressed their “grave concern over the continuation of reported harassment and intimidation of the BBC News Persian staff and their family members, which appears to be aimed at preventing them from continuing their journalistic activities”.

    It set out the pattern of harassment that BBC journalists have suffered over the past decade, including “the systematic attacks, including harassment, asset freezing, serious threats, and defamation campaigns implemented by the authorities against BBC News Persian journalists”.

    The UN experts also raised concern about the surveillance of BBC journalists and the harassment of their sources in Iran, the interrogation of journalists’ family members, and the pressure placed on journalists “to leave their jobs” – all of which they said might have a “chilling effect” on journalism.

    Iran’s response to the UN experts accused the BBC journalists of aiming to “overthrow the Islamic Republic” – a claim the BBC insisted was false.

    US prosecutors also announced last year that four Iranian intelligence officials had been charged with plotting to kidnap a New York-based journalist critical of Iran. The indictment did not name the target, but Masih Alinejad, an Iranian-American author and activist, said it was her.

    Iran’s government said the allegations were “ridiculous and baseless”.

  • Iran’s security forces and state media cover up the death of a protester – source

    BBC Persian has announced that , Iranian security forces are collaborating with state media to falsely claim that a killed protester was a loyalist Basij militiaman.

    Milad Ostad-Hashem, 37, was shot in the back with a live round on September 25 in Tehran, according to his death certificate.

    According to a close source, his family claimed that security forces fired it.

    However, security officials pressed them to believe state media reports that he was a Basij member killed by “rioters,” according to the source.

    “Security forces threatened to kill their [Milad’s parents] two other sons and bury Milad’s body secretly in a remote place if they did not co-operate,” the source said.

    The family finally agreed to the officials’ demands because of Milad’s eight-year-old daughter.

    “They wanted her to know where her father’s grave is,” the source said, adding that she still thought Milad would come back.

    The family were also forced to pay almost $700 (£630) for the cost of the bullet that was used to kill their son, according to the source.

    Milad was shot as he rode a motorbike after taking part in protests in the capital.

    CCTV footage obtained by BBC Persian shows the immediate moments after he was hit. He is seen pulling over and vomiting blood before falling down.

    Another video recorded by eyewitnesses shows passers-by checking Milad for signs of life but then saying that he has already passed away. His body is seen covered in blood.

    “The bullet entered his lungs,” the source said.

    However, state TV offered a very different narrative.

    It described Milad as a member of the Basij, a notoriousmilitia that has been involved in the deadly crackdown by authorities aimed at suppressing the anti-government protests that have swept the country.

    The government’s official newspaper and news agencies linked to Revolutionary Guards, which controls the Basij, published a picture of Milad performing religious rituals and described him as a “martyr”.

    Photo showing Milad Ostad-Hashem taking part in a religious ritual
    Image caption, Milad took part in religious rituals, loved hip-hop and hated the regime, a source said

    The source said: “He took part in religious rituals, but he also loved hip-hop music and hated this regime.”

    On the day of Milad’s funeral, the source added, the cemetery was packed with members of the Basij in order to help state TV keep up the pretence that he had been one of them.

    BBC Persian has found authorities put similar pressure on the families of other slain protesters.

    Security forces killed Abolfazl Adinezadeh, 17, by firing a shotgun at him at point-blank range in the city of Mashhad on 8 October, a source close to his family said.

    The source said the family was pressured to say he was a Basij member, but that they refused to do so.

    The family of Erfan Rezai, 21, who security forces allegedly shot with a pistol at close range in Amol on 21 September, was meanwhile pressured to say he was a bystander killed by “rioters”, sources close to them told BBC Persian.

    Shortly before his death, he had been filmed tearing down a government poster showing the supreme leader, a source said.

  • Saudis tell US that Iran may attack the kingdom: Officials

    The United States says threats are concerning, and that it will defend Saudi Arabia and other Middle East allies.

    The United States has responded to reports of threats from Iran against Saudi Arabia by saying it is concerned and will not hesitate to respond if necessary.

    “We are concerned about the threat picture, and we remain in constant contact through military and intelligence channels with the Saudis,” the National Security Council said in a statement on Tuesday. “We will not hesitate to act in the defence of our interests and partners in the region.”

    The Wall Street Journal newspaper first reported on Saudi Arabia sharing the intelligence with the US earlier on Tuesday.

    Neither Saudi Arabia nor Iran has commented on the matter publicly.

    Iran has alleged, without providing evidence, that Saudi Arabia and other rivals have been behind anti-government protests that have been ongoing in the country since mid-September.

    In October, the commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned Saudi Arabia to tone down coverage of the protests in Iran by Farsi-language satellite news channels, including Iran International, a Saudi-backed satellite television channel based in London.

    “This is our last warning because you are interfering in our internal affairs through these media,” Major-General Hossein Salami said. “You are involved in this matter and know that you are vulnerable.”

    The heightened concerns about a potential attack on Riyadh come as the Biden administration criticises Tehran for its crackdown on the protests and condemned it for sending hundreds of drones – as well as technical support – to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.

    One of the officials who confirmed the intelligence sharing to the Wall Street Journal described it as a credible threat of an attack “soon or within 48 hours”. No US embassy or consulate in the region has issued alerts or guidance to Americans in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere in the Middle East based on the intelligence. The officials were not authorised to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Asked about reports of the intelligence shared by the Saudis, Brigadier General Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said US military officials “are concerned about the threat situation in the region”.

    “We’re in regular contact with our Saudi partners, in terms of what information they may have to provide on that front,” Ryder said. “But what we’ve said before, and I’ll repeat it, is that we will reserve the right to protect and defend ourselves no matter where our forces are serving, whether in Iraq or elsewhere.”

    US State Department spokesperson Ned Price said America was “concerned about the threat picture,” without elaborating.

    Strained relations

    The latest concerns come at a time of strained relations between Riyadh and Washington after the Saudi-led OPEC+ alliance last month decided to cut oil output targets, which raised fears of a gasoline price spike in the US.

    The US and Saudi Arabia blamed Iran in 2019 for being behind a big attack in eastern Saudi Arabia, which halved the oil-rich kingdom’s production and caused energy prices to spike. The Iranians denied they were behind the attack.

    The Saudis have also been hit repeatedly in recent years by drones, missiles, and mortars launched by the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. Saudi Arabia formed a coalition to battle the Houthis in 2015 and has been internationally criticised for its air attacks in the war, which have killed thousands of civilians.

    In recent weeks, the Biden administration has imposed sanctions on Iranian officials for the brutal crackdown on demonstrators after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September after her arrest by Iran’s morality police. The administration has also hit Iran with sanctions for supplying drones to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.

    At least 288 people have been killed and 14,160 arrested during the protests, according to the group Human Rights Activists in Iran. Demonstrations have continued, even as the feared paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has warned Iranians to stop.

    Source: Aljazeera

     

  • Iranian police launch an investigation after a video shows a man being beaten, shot

    Central command says offenders will face legal consequences according to the rules.

    Police in Iran has launched an investigation after a video showed riot police repeatedly kicking and then shooting a man.

    The two-minute clip was posted on social media on Tuesday, in the seventh week of the protests that erupted across Iran after the death of a young woman in custody.

    It shows policemen walking in an alley at night and using their batons to beat a man lying on the ground. The man, whose lower body and feet are visible in the angle of the video, tries to protect his head and body from the hits and kicks.

    The officers in riot gear then leave him on the ground but moments later, another police member arrives and starts beating him with a baton. The final moments of the video, which was shot on a mobile phone from an overlooking building, show a policeman shooting the man at point-blank range with what appears to be a pellet shotgun.

    On Wednesday, the central command of the Iranian police said in a short statement carried by state media that it had launched an investigation to determine the exact time and place of the incident and identify violating officers.

    “The police in no way condones violence and unconventional behaviour and offenders will certainly face legal measures according to the rules,” it said.

    British-based rights group Amnesty International also posted the video on Twitter, calling it “another horrific reminder that the cruelty of Iran’s security forces knows no bounds” and urging the United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate.

    The release of the video comes amid the protests that broke out shortly after the death of Mahsa Amini on September 16.

    The 22-year-old woman died in a hospital in Tehran after collapsing in a “re-education” centre that she had been taken to by the country’s so-called “morality police” following her arrest due to alleged non-compliance with a mandatory dress code. Her family has challenged an official investigation that found she was not beaten and died of pre-existing conditions.

    Dozens of people, including security forces, are believed to have been killed during the protests, but authorities have not published an official tally. Many more have been wounded or arrested, and Iran this week began holding the first court cases for “rioters”.

    The UN has expressed “concern” about developments in Iran, while the United States and Albania are due to hold an informal Security Council meeting on the protests on Wednesday that can be attended by all UN members.

    Iranian officials have denounced the meeting as politically motivated and criticised the special UN rapporteur on human rights in the country for agreeing to brief it.

    In a speech delivered on Wednesday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, repeated once again his claim that the United States, Israel, and others have been behind unrest across Iran.

    The events of the past few weeks constitute not only “street riots” but also a “hybrid war”, Khamenei said.

    “Enemies, meaning the US, the Zionist regime (Israel), some insidious and treacherous European powers, and some groups came to the field with everything at their disposal and tried to hurt the nation using their intelligence and media organisations and social media and employing past experiences in Iran,” he added.

    The supreme leader for the first time said some of the many young people who have taken to the streets in the protests were “our own children”, but had been misled and acted as a result of “excitement and feelings, and some carelessness”.

     

  • Ukraine: Iran will supply Russia with over 200 drones this month

    Ukraine’s defence ministry has announced, Iran intends to send over 200 drones to Russia at the start of this month.

    The ministry said the drones include the Iranian-made Shahed-136, dubbed “kamikaze drones” because they fly at a target and detonate, plus the Mohajer-6 and Arash-2s.

    It added: “It is known that the UAVs will be delivered via the Caspian Sea to the port of Astrakhan. Drones will arrive in a disassembled state. In the future, on the territory of the Russian Federation, they will be collected, repainted, and applied with Russian markings, in particular.”

    Shahed-136 drone

    Ukraine claims Russia has already used more than 400 “kamikaze drones” for its war in Ukraine, despite initially denying this was the case.

    It is thought Vladimir Putin may have ordered as many as 2,400.

    While Iran has continuously denied supplying Russia with Iranian-made drones, the UK and other Western allies have condemned their actions.

     

  • Iran’s IRGC confiscates a vessel carrying 11 million litres of fuel

    Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) seized the crew and cargo of a foreign ship carrying 11 million litres (2.9 million gallons) of smuggled fuel reports a local judiciary official.

    Mojtaba Ghahremani, the judiciary chief of Hormozgan’s southern province, announced on Monday that the IRGC’s naval force had confiscated the unnamed vessel in Gulf waters.

    “The captain and crew of this foreign tanker are also detained as investigations and legal procedures are being completed,” he said in a video message released by the semi-official Tasnim news website, while flanked by IRGC and judiciary personnel on the ship’s deck.

    The nationality of the vessel or its crew was not announced, but Ghahremani said the value of its cargo amounted to 2.2 trillion rials (about $6.6m).

    Tasnim also released a clip that showed the smuggled fuel on the tanker.

    “All vessels which have delivered fuel to the violating tanker will also be subject to prosecution,” the judiciary official said.

    Ghahremani said the arrested smugglers will be slapped with a financial penalty of up to 10 times the value of the confiscated cargo in addition to receiving jail sentences, while the vessel will be seized in favour of the Iranian government.

    He also described the bust as a “major blow” to organized fuel

     

     

  • Protests continue as Iran holds its first court sessions for alleged ‘rioters’

    Iranian officials criticise a United Nations rapporteur, while a large number of journalists demand the release of their detained colleagues.

    Protests in Iran that began last month in response to the death of a young woman in police custody have been documented in cities across the country this week, even as protesters’ first court hearings have been held and internet restrictions remain in place.

    More protests were seen on social media at universities, particularly in Tehran and Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan’s northwestern province, where Mahsa Amini, 22, was from. She died on September 16 after being detained by Iran’s morality police.

    Social media footage showed clashes breaking out on Sunday at Tehran’s Azad University between students and security forces, who fired tear gas.

    The demonstrations persisted after Hossein Salami, the commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said on Saturday, “Today is the last day of the riots,” as he warned people “not to come to the streets”.

    An unknown number of protesting students was suspended from universities this week, reports on social media and foreign-based outlets said. It prompted their fellow students to demonstrate on Monday in their support, according to images on social media, which could not be independently verified.

    Meanwhile, a court in Tehran on Sunday held the first hearings for “rioters” accused, among other things, of intentionally killing police officers and burning public and government property. Several people are charged with “corruption on Earth” and “waging war against God”, which carry the death penalty.

    The Iranian judiciary said more than 1,000 indictments have been issued for people participating in “riots” across the country after a call this month by the judiciary chief to fast-track cases and hand out harsh sentences.

    Iranian media reported that one arrest was of Toomaj Salehi, a dissident rapper who had filmed himself participating in protests and regularly posted his opposition to the Iranian establishment on social media. His friends rejected reports that he was arrested in a border province while trying to flee the country. Salehi had been previously detained in September 2021 after releasing songs with lyrics decrying the establishment but was released on bail.

    ‘Let’s free the journalists’

    Amini died days after being detained by Iran’s morality police and taken to a “re-education centre” for allegedly not fully complying with the country’s mandatory dress code.

    Those arrested since the start of the protests include a slew of reporters and photojournalists. More than 500 local journalists have signed a statement that calls on authorities to release their colleagues. They say the detained journalists have been denied access to lawyers and charged prior to facing public trials and official submission of evidence.

    “Let’s not blind the eyes of the society,” said the statement on Sunday, which was carried on the front page of several newspapers. “Let’s free the journalists.”

    Its publication came two days after Iran’s intelligence community, in a rare joint report, accused two journalists – Niloufar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohammadi – of covering Amini’s death after being trained abroad by the United States spy agency.

    Hamedi had reported on Amini’s death from a hospital in Tehran and posted an image of the woman’s parents holding each other. Mohammadi had travelled to Amini’s hometown of Saqqez to cover her funeral. The editors-in-chief of the two newspapers they work for have said the reporters were on assignment and only did their job.

    Dozens of people are thought to have been killed during the protests and many more injured, but Iranian authorities have yet to release an official tally. Dozens of members of the security forces have also been killed. Several of them died this week, according to authorities, who release their names and hold state funerals for them.

    Speaking with the family of a security officer killed in Tehran, President Ebrahim Raisi promised, “We will under no circumstances allow the enemy’s designs for harming our security.”

    Top Iranian authorities, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, have accused the United States and Israel of being behind the unrest.

    Some officials have signalled that they are open to reforms as a result of the protests, provided protests are differentiated from “riots” and efforts to “overthrow the establishment”.

    “The country’s political establishment is a definitive platform for any type of reforms and changes to secure popular interests, and some of this change consists of reforms in governance within the framework of the Islamic Republic’s political establishment that must lead to new governance,” Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said.

     

    Foreign tensions rising

    The persistent protests and lingering internet restrictions have put the Iranian state at odds with a number of other countries and officials.

    The US and Albania are preparing to hold an informal meeting of the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday to discuss what Washington has called “brutal suppression” of the protests.

    Speaking to reporters on Monday, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani criticised Javaid Rehman, the special UN rapporteur on human rights in Iran, for a “deeply anti-Iranian approach” and for agreeing to participate in the Security Council meeting, which Tehran considers to be politically motivated.

    “Unfortunately, human rights have become a tool for pursuing the political goals of some countries, especially the US,” Rehman said.

    On Sunday, a group of prominent women from 14 countries – including Nobel laureates Malala Yousefzai and Nadia Murad, former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former US first lady Michelle Obama – published an open letter calling for Iran’s immediate expulsion from the UN Commission on the Status of Women.

    German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said the European Union was examining whether to classify the Revolutionary Guard as a “terrorist” organisation for its response to the protests, something the Iranian foreign ministry on Monday called “illegal”. The US already designated the elite force as a “terrorist” group in 2019.

    Tehran has responded to human rights sanctions by the US, EU the United Kingdom, and Canada with sanctions of its own and has said new measures on US and Canadian officials and entities would be imposed.

    Iran this week blocked a host of services by Google, including its maps and Android apps store after the store flagged a major state-backed application as being unsafe because of suspicions of “spying” on users’ data. Authorities denounced Google’s move as being politically motivated.

    State-affiliated media showed footage of “large numbers of students and professors” who were reported to be taking part in demonstrations denouncing a “terrorist” attack on a major Shia religious shrine in Shiraz last week. It killed 15 people and wounded dozens.

    Authorities organised rallies in the southern city and elsewhere to denounce the attack. Top Iranian officials have linked the attack to “riots” and pledged to take revenge as a website linked with ISIL (ISIS) claimed responsibility.

     

     

  • Mahsa Amini protests: Iran and US set for UN confrontation

    A rare Iranian joint intelligence report reveals that the arrested journalists who reported on Mahsa Amini’s death were trained abroad by the US.

    Tehran and Washington are clashing again over weeks-long protests in Iran, as the US prepares to convene the United Nations Security Council to discuss the unrest sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police last month.

    According to Reuters and Iranian state media, the US and Albania, another major critic of the Iranian government, will hold an informal UN Security Council meeting on Wednesday.

    Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi and Iranian-born actress and activist Nazanin Boniadi – whom the Iranian state considers to be anti-establishment – will speak at the meeting, along with UN investigator on human rights in Iran, Javaid Rehman, according to Reuters. Other UN member states and rights groups can reportedly attend the meeting as well.

    But while the outlet cited a note outlining the event as saying the meeting will “highlight the ongoing repression of women and girls and members of religious and ethnic groups in Iran”, Tehran has offered a different account.

    The Iranian government’s website, IRNA, on Saturday, cited unnamed “diplomatic sources” as saying Washington is organising the meeting in response to a rare joint report by the Iranian intelligence ministry and the intelligence division of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) late on Friday that blamed the US as the main culprit behind the protests.

    “Instead of responding to the points raised in the Iranian intelligence community, the US is fleeing forward and exhibiting selective support for human rights with specific political goals,” the source was quoted as saying.

    Iran’s mission to the UN made the same point in a statement referring to the US as the “prime suspect of the riots” in Iran.

    “The US and its allies have consistently taken advantage of such a platform (the UN) to advance their political agendas, even at the expense of violating international rules and the UN Charter,” it said, accusing Washington of double standards in supporting Iranians.

    Women and ethnic Kurd and Baluch populations have featured prominently in the protests.

    The commander of the elite IRGC warned protesters on Saturday against taking to the streets. “Do not come to the streets! Today is the last day of the riots,” Hossein Salami said, according to Reuters.

    Iran’s top authorities, including Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei, have publicly blamed the US, Israel and others as being the orchestrators of unrest across the country, during which many dozens are thought to have been killed, with more injured or arrested.

    UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric on Friday voiced concern and urged the Iranian authorities to address the “legitimate grievances of the population” while condemning “all incidents that have resulted in death or serious injury to protesters”.

    What’s in the Iranian intelligence report?

    The lengthy joint intelligence report that Tehran claims has motivated the upcoming UNSC meeting paints a picture of accounts that inform Iranian authorities’ stance on the protests.

    According to the report, the US and some of its allies had planned – and delayed – unrest similar to what is happening across Iran right now for a long time, and had designs for different stages prior to, during, and following such unrest.

    The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has been at the forefront of the US efforts and has been aided by the intelligence services of Israel, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom and other countries, it asserted, citing “completely credible” information.

    The Iranian intelligence community claimed the US has spent billions of dollars over the years to create a network of sympathetic organisations and individuals, holding many gatherings and courses to teach “hybrid wars and soft overthrow” of the Iranian establishment.

    These all-paid courses, it said, have been held in Italy, South Africa, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates among others, with or without the knowledge of those countries’ governments.

    The report uses the initials of two female Iranian journalists, whom it says were “trained by the courses of the US mafia regime in foreign countries” and “played the role of being the first sources to manufacture news for foreign media” on developments concerning Amini that led to the protests.

    The reporters accused by Iranian intelligence are Niloofar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohammadi, who were arrested shortly after protests broke out last month and remain imprisoned in Evin prison in Tehran. Hamedi was among the first to report on Amini’s death at the hospital, while Mohammadi travelled to Amini’s hometown of Saqqez to report on her funeral.

    The intelligence report also alleges that CIA officials met with Kurdish separatist groups in neighbouring Iraq’s northern Erbil region in late September to ask them to amplify their role in Iran’s unrest. The IRGC in late September and early October repeatedly pounded positions in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region to punish the “terrorist groups” it said were based there.

    Foreign-based Persian-language television channels, which Tehran blacklisted this week, and social media platforms like Twitter and Instagram, which have been banned, were also featured in the intelligence report as being influenced and manipulated by Washington in its efforts to counter the Iranian state.

     

     

  • Iranians demonstrate in Kyiv against the delivery of drones to Russia

    Iranians, who live in Ukraine, have been pictured protesting against Iran’s government and deliveries of Iranian drones to Russia, in Kyiv.

    Protesters held signs featuring pictures of Iran’s leader and Russia’s president, alongside the Ukrainian flag.


    Iranian-made drones have been used by Russian forces to attack Ukraine.

    However, Iran has denied Ukrainian and Western accusations that it is supplying drones to Russia.

    Source:Skynews.com

     

  • Ukrainian minister has demanded that Iran stop supplying weapons to Russia

    Ukrainianian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he had received a call from his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian on Friday.

    Within it, Mr Kuleba said he had demanded that Tehran stop sending weapons to Russia.

    Ukraine and its Western allies have accused Iran of sending “kamikaze” drones to Russia – which have then been used to devastating effect.

    Iran denies the charge, which relates to attacks in major Ukrainian cities.

    “I demanded Iran to immediately cease the flow of weapons to Russia used to kill civilians and destroy critical infrastructure in Ukraine,” he saidUkrainian minister demands Iran stop ‘supplying weaponry to Russia’
    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he had received a call from his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian on Friday.

    Within it, Mr Kuleba said he had demanded that Tehran stop sending weapons to Russia.

    Ukraine and its Western allies have accused Iran of sending “kamikaze” drones to Russia – which have then been used to devastating effect.

    Iran denies the charge, which relates to attacks in major Ukrainian cities.

    “I demanded Iran to immediately cease the flow of weapons to Russia used to kill civilians and destroy critical infrastructure in Ukraine,” he said

    Source: Skynews.com 

     

  • Iran protests: Police fired after clashes in Zahedan

    Two police officers have been fired as a result of the ongoing protests in Iran.

    According to state media, the dismissal was due to “malpractice” by police during clashes in the city of Zahedan on September 30.

    Dozens were killed in those protests, which erupted in response to allegations that a senior police officer had raped a teenage girl.

    Although not directly related, widespread unrest following the death of another young woman in police custody poses a serious challenge to the Islamic Republic.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, died on 16 September.

    She had been detained three days earlier by the morality police in Tehran and fell into a coma after collapsing at a detention centre.

    She was arrested for allegedly wearing her Islamic headscarf “improperly”.

    There were reports that officers had beaten her with a baton and banged her head against a vehicle, but police denied she had been mistreated and said she had suffered a heart attack.

    It is not clear how many people died in the 30 September clashes which have now led to the dismissal of the two senior police officials in the south-eastern city of Zahedan, the capital of Sistan Baluchistan province.

    Some reports by human rights organisations have put the number at more than 80.

    There have been regular protests in the city since then – on Friday security forces were said to have again fired at crowds after prayers at the city’s mosques.

    It is rare for Iranian authorities to sack senior officials involved in suppressing protests against the country’s top leadership.

    Sistan Baluchistan province, which borders both Pakistan and Afghanistan, has a sizeable Sunni Muslim population. Iran is a majority Shia country.

    Authorities have said the security forces were attacked by armed Baluchi separatists – something the imam of the city’s biggest mosque has denied.

    Norway-based Iran Human Rights says at least 234 protesters, including 29 children, have been killed by security forces in crackdowns around Iran so far. Iran’s leaders have portrayed the unrest as “riots” instigated by foreigners.

    Footage posted on social media and verified by the BBC shows widespread recent protests in many cities – an upsurge that came after police reportedly opened fire on protesters in Saqqez, home city of Ms Amini, on Wednesday, 40 days after she died.

    The BBC and other independent media are banned from reporting from inside Iran, making state media and other reports hard to verify. Authorities have also heavily disrupted the internet, hampering the ability of protesters to post on social media.

    The Islamic Republic of Iran has seen protests before. But not like this.

    The authorities are still trying to dismiss and discredit them as “rioters influenced by foreigners”.

    It’s hard to square that with extraordinary images of teenage schoolgirls rejecting obligatory headscarves, and of women of all ages walking bare-headed in public spaces.

    It’s hard, too, to see Iran returning to days where so-called morality police can police women’s dress the way they’ve done for decades.

    This is now about more, much more than what women wear.

    In the past, major uprisings have fizzled out or were forcibly suppressed, after months of unrest. But, with every week, this wave seems to strengthen.

    The full force of Iran’s security apparatus has yet to be unleashed. The authorities will do whatever it takes to preserve the Islamic Republic.

    But Iran’s protesters, especially a new generation of women and men, also seem ready to do whatever it takes to change their lives, and much more.

     

  • Iran protests: Clashes after crowds gather at Mahsa Amini’s grave

    Clashes have been reported in Mahsa Amini’s hometown between Iranian security forces and protesters after crowds gathered near her grave to mark 40 days since her death in custody.

    Security personnel in Saqqez’s Zindan Square fired live rounds and tear gas, according to a Kurdish rights group.

    The semi-official news agency Isna reported a clash on the city’s outskirts.

    Earlier, thousands of mourners at the Aichi cemetery shouted “Woman, life, freedom” and “Death to the dictator”.

    They are two of the signature chants of the anti-government unrest that has swept across Iran since Ms Amini died.

    The 22-year-old Kurdish woman was detained by the morality police in the capital, Tehran, on 13 September for allegedly wearing her hijab “improperly”.

    She fell into a coma after collapsing at a detention centre and died three days later. There were reports that officers beat her on the head with a baton and banged her head against a vehicle, but the police denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered a heart attack.

    Many Iranians were enraged and the first protests took place after Ms Amini’s funeral in Saqqez, when women ripped off their headscarves in solidarity. The protests spread quickly and evolved into one of the most serious challenges to the Islamic Republic since the 1979 revolution.

    Women have been at the forefront, defiantly waving their headscarves in the air, setting them on fire, and even cutting their hair in public.

    Schoolgirls have also been demonstrating in playgrounds and on the streets in an unprecedented show of support.

    Norway-based Iran Human Rights says at least 234 protesters, including 29 children, have been killed by security forces in a violent crackdown on what Iran’s leaders have portrayed as “riots” fomented by foreign enemies.

    Riot police and members of the paramilitary Basij Resistance Force were reportedly deployed in large numbers in Saqqez and other parts of Kurdistan province on Wednesday, in anticipation of fresh unrest on the 40th day of mourning for Ms Amini – a culturally significant occasion for Iranians.

    However, videos showed thousands of residents walking along a highway and through a field – apparently to bypass roadblocks – to reach the Aichi cemetery.

    “They tried to stop us from entering the cemetery… but I managed to get in,” Reuters news agency quoted a witness as saying.

    Kurdish human rights group Hengaw, which is also based in Norway, posted several videos that it said showed a large crowd shouting “Down with traitors” and “Kurdistan, Kurdistan, the fascists’ graveyard”.

    In another clip, men and women were seen waving scarves and shouting “Freedom, freedom, freedom”.

    It was not clear whether members of Ms Amini’s family were at the cemetery. Activists said security forces had warned them not to hold a mourning ceremony and had threatened the safety of their son.

    State news agency Irna, meanwhile, cited what it claimed was a statement from the family saying that they would not hold an event in order to avoid “unfortunate issues”. But a source close to the family told the BBC they had written no such message.

    Kurdistan Governor Esmail Zarei Koosha said the situation in Saqqez was calm on Wednesday morning and denied that roads had been shut.

    “The enemy and its media… are trying to use the 40-day anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s death as a pretext to cause new tensions, but fortunately, the situation in the province is completely stable,” he was quoted as saying by Irna.

    Later, Hengaw posted videos it said showed a crowd of protesters walking towards the governorate’s office in Saqqez and clashes between protesters and security forces in the Qukh neighbourhood.

     

    Isna reported that “a limited number of those present at Mahsa Amini’s memorial clashed with police forces on the outskirts of Saqqez and were dispersed”. It added that the local internet service was cut off “due to security conditions”.

    Hengaw also reported protests in the nearby cities of Sanandaj and Mahabad as well as general strikes in cities and towns across Kurdistan.

    Authorities closed all schools and universities in the province “because of a wave of influenza”, according to state media.

    Opposition activist collective 1500tasvir said protests were also held on Wednesday at Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, as well as at universities in Tehran, the north-eastern city of Mashhad, and in Ahvaz, in the southwest.

    Video also appeared to show that security forces fired tear gas inside Amirabad girls’ school in Tehran in response to a protest by students.

     

  • Protests in Berlin and other US cities in support of Iranian women

    Thousands of people took to the streets of Berlin and other US cities to show their support for Iranian women facing government repression.

    Protests have taken place in Berlin, Washington, and Los Angeles in solidarity with Iranian women who have been subjected to a violent government crackdown.

     

  • US: Iranian drone trainers are assisting Russian soldiers in Crimea

    The US says Iranian military trainers are in Crimea teaching Russian soldiers how to utilise Iranian-made drones to attack targets in Ukraine.

    “We can confirm that Russian military personnel based in Crimea have been piloting Iranian UAVs and using them to conduct kinetic strikes across Ukraine, including in strikes against Kyiv in recent days,” US State Department spokesman Ned Price told a daily briefing with reporters.

    “We assess that … Iranian military personnel were on the ground in Crimea and assisted Russia in these operations,” Price said.

    He added “we do have credible information,” but did not provide evidence.

     

  • Israel and Ukraine discuss air defence systems following drone strikes

    Ukraine’s foreign minister says he has spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu about the harm inflicted by “Russian missiles and Iranian-made drones.”

    Ukrainian and Israeli officials met to discuss Kyiv’s request for Israeli air defence support, just days after Russia purportedly used Iranian “kamikaze” drones in a new wave of air strikes on war-torn Ukraine.

    Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Thursday he had spoken on the phone to Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid and “discussed in detail” the provision of air and missile defense systems and technology.

    “I informed him [about the] unspeakable suffering, loss of life, and destruction caused by Russian missiles and Iranian-made drones,” he tweeted.

    Lapid’s office said in a statement on Thursday that the Israeli prime minister had expressed “deep concern” over the military ties between Russia and arch-foe Iran.

    Ukraine this week accused Russia of using four Iranian-made drones to bomb Kyiv and said its air defences have shot down 223 Iranian drones since mid-September.

    The Kremlin said it had no knowledge of its army using Iranian drones in Ukraine and Tehran said the claims that it is providing Russia with weapons are “baseless”.

    European Union countries, however, said they had found evidence supporting Kyiv’s claim and on Thursday adopted sanctions on Iran over its provision of drones to Russia.

    The phone call between Kuleba and Lapid came two days after Ukraine stepped up appeals for Israeli help with air defence systems to intercept Iranian drones and ballistic missiles.

    In the request, Ukraine also demanded that Israel train its forces in operating the systems, Axios reported.

    Israel has walked a delicate diplomatic line since the start of the Russian invasion in late February, seeking to preserve ties with Moscow.

    While condemning Russia’s move, it has limited its assistance to humanitarian relief, citing a desire to ensure the well-being of Russia’s Jews and to continue cooperation with Moscow over war-ravaged neighbour Syria.

    On Wednesday, Israeli defence minister Benny Gantz reiterated Tel Aviv’s position that it would not sell weapon systems to Ukraine.

    According to a statement by his office, however, Gantz had asked Ukraine “to share information about their needs for air defence alerts”.

    Israel would be able to “assist in the development of a life-saving civilian early-warning system”, the statement said. Ukraine’s ambassador had asked for systems that would shoot down the drones instead.

    Russia warned on Monday that an Israeli move to bolster Kyiv’s forces would severely damage relations between Moscow and Tel Aviv.

     

     

     

  • Iran promises to provide surface-to-surface missiles to Russia

    Iran has agreed to supply Russia with surface-to-surface missiles and additional drones, according to two senior Iranian officials and two Iranian diplomats.

    On October 6, Iran’s First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber, two senior Revolutionary Guard officials, and an official from the Supreme National Security Council arrived in Moscow for talks with Russia about the delivery of the weaponry.

    “The Russians had asked for more drones and those Iranian ballistic missiles with improved accuracy, particularly the Fateh and Zolfaghar missiles family,” said one of the Iranian diplomats, who was briefed about the trip.

    “Where they are being used is not the seller’s issue. We do not take sides in the Ukraine crisis like the West. We want an end to the crisis through diplomatic means,” the diplomat said.

    However, the Iranian diplomat rejected that weapon transfers breach a 2015 UN Security Council resolution.

     

     

  • Elnaz Rekabi: Iranian climber claims her hijab fell off inadvertently at competition

    According to an Instagram post, a female Iranian climber who competed with her hair uncovered did so because her headscarf “inadvertently” fell off.

    Those protesting against Iran’s clothing code praised Elnaz Rekabi, 33 when a video showed her breaking it at the Asian Championships in South Korea.

    Friends had been unable to contact her, according to BBC Persian on Monday.

    On Tuesday, the Instagram post apologised for “getting everybody worried” and said she was flying home.

    “Due to bad timing, and the unanticipated call for me to climb the wall, my head covering inadvertently came off,” it explained.

    The post added that she was on her way back to Iran “alongside the team based on the pre-arranged schedule”.

    BBC Persian’s Rana Rahimpour says that too many people the language used in this post looks like it has been written under duress.

    Other Iranian women who have competed abroad without wearing a headscarf in the past have said they came under pressure from Iranian authorities to issue similar apologies, she adds. Some of them decided not to go back to Iran.

    Women in the country are required to cover their hair with a hijab and their arms and legs with loose clothing. Female athletes must also abide by the dress code when they are officially representing Iran in competitions abroad.

    File photo showing Elnaz Rekabi wearing a hijab as she competes at the indoor World Climbing and Paraclimbing Championships in Paris on 14 September 2016
    IMAGE SOURCE, AFP Image caption, Elnaz Rekabi wore a hijab at the indoor world championships in Paris in 2016

    Earlier, the Iranian embassy in South Korea said Ms Rekabi had left Seoul for Iran on Tuesday morning. It also strongly denied what it called “all fake news, lies and false information” about her.

    The International Federation of Sport Climbing (IFSC) said it had been in contact with Ms Rekabi and the Iranian Climbing Federation, and that it was “trying to establish the facts”.

    “It is important to stress that athletes’ safety is paramount for us and we support any efforts to keep a valued member of our community safe in this situation,” it added. “The IFSC fully supports the rights of athletes, their choices, and expression of free speech.”

    A source told BBC Persian on Monday that Ms Rekabi’s passport and mobile phone were confiscated, and that she left her hotel in Seoul two days before her scheduled departure date. Her family and friends lost contact with her after she said she was with an Iranian official.

    Two years ago, an Iranian international chess referee said she had received death threats after a photo circulated that appeared to show her without a hijab at the Women’s World Chess Championship in Shanghai.

    Shohreh Bayat insisted that she had been wearing a headscarf loosely over her hair at the time, but she subsequently stopped covering her hair and claimed asylum in the UK after being warned that she could face arrest in Iran.

    “I had to choose my side because I was asked to write an apology on Instagram and to apologise publicly,” Ms Bayat told BBC World News on Tuesday.

    “I was given a list of things to do. I knew that if I just followed those things that I did not believe in if I apologised for not wearing a headscarf, then I could not forgive myself.”

    Asked what she thought about Elnaz Rekabi’s Instagram post, she said: “I think actions speak louder than words. And she made a very powerful statement in not wearing a headscarf.”

    Ms Bayat has called on the international community to act over the violent crackdown by Iranian authorities in response to nationwide protests against the compulsory hijab laws and the clerical establishment.

    The protests were sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman arrested by morality police in Tehran on 13 September for allegedly wearing her headscarf too loosely.

    The police denied reports that she was beaten on the head with a baton and said she suffered a heart attack.

    On Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Office said it was deeply worried by the “unabated violent response by security forces against protesters, and reports of arbitrary arrests and the killing and detention of children”.

    “Some sources suggest that as many as 23 children have been killed and many others injured in at least seven provinces by live ammunition, metal pellets at close range, and fatal beatings,” spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani said.

    She added that a number of schools had also been raided and children arrested by security forces, while some principals had been arrested for not cooperating.

    Norway-based Iran Human Rights has reported that 215 people have been killed by security forces. Authorities have denied killing peaceful demonstrators and instead blamed foreign-backed “rioters”.

     

  • Iran accuses ‘Great Satan’ US of inciting chaos and violence 

    President Raisi has joined Supreme Leader Khamenei in condemning the United States for inciting fatal protests over the death of a woman in government custody.

    Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi accused US President Joe Biden of “inciting disorder” after expressing sympathy for protests against the murder of Mahsa Amini, who died in Iranian government custody nearly a month ago.

    The protests started in mid-September after Amini, 22, died following three days in the custody of Iran’s “morality police” for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women.

    “The remarks of the American president – who is inciting chaos, terror, and the destruction of another country – serve as a reminder of the eternal words of the founder of the Islamic Republic who called America the Great Satan,” Raisi said, referring to the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei.

    “The enemy’s plot must be countered by effective measures to resolve people’s problems,” Raisi said, according to a statement from the president’s office.

    Dozens of people have died in the protests. Most have been protesters, but members of the security forces have also died. Hundreds of demonstrators have been arrested.

    On Friday, Biden said, “We stand with the citizens, the brave women of Iran.”

    “It stunned me what it awakened in Iran,” the US president said. “It awakened something that I don’t think will be quieted for a long, long time.”

    Iranian foreign affairs spokesman Nasser Kanani said on Sunday, “Iran is too strong for its will to be swayed by the interference … of a politician tired of years of failure.”

    “We will together defend the independence of Iran,” Kanani wrote on Instagram.

    The US issued new sanctions against Iranian officials on October 6 over what it called the “violent suppression of protests”.

    The US Treasury last month also placed sanctions on the morality police.

    Raisi accused the United States of starting unrest in the past, saying because of “the failure of America in militarisation and sanctions, Washington and its allies have resorted to the failed policy of destabilisation”.

    This month, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed the US and Israel for instigating the protests, accusing them of trying to stop Iran’s “progress”.

     

  • Russia-Ukraine war: Kyiv suffer kamikaze drones attacks say officials

    At least four explosions have occurred in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, with a presidential adviser accusing “kamikaze drones” launched by Russia.

    “It shows their desperation,” said Andriy Yermak, head of Ukrainian President Zelensky’s staff.

    Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said residential buildings in the central Shevchenkivskiy area had been damaged.

    A week ago, the capital was hit by Russian missiles at rush hour, part of nationwide attacks which left 19 dead.

    This morning’s attacks were from drones – the low buzzing of these slow-moving weapons is becoming familiar across the country.

    Kyiv reverberated to the rattle of gunfire as anti-aircraft batteries frantically tried to shoot them down. Video on social media appeared to show one interception.

    The explosions on Monday began at around 06:30 local time (03:30 GMT), and there were at least five in total. The most recent was at around 08:10 local time.

    Two were close to the city centre, with sirens and car alarms heard across the area.

    What’s being targeted is hard to determine. The mayor’s office says residential and non-residential buildings have been hit. Railway officials say explosions were seen close to Kyiv’s main station.

    Recent attacks have targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. It will be surprised if that’s not the case today.

    Writing on the Telegram social media site, Mr Klitschko said there were four strikes in Kyiv, although residents heard five or six explosions. He also told people to stay in air raid shelters.

    But despite the warnings, the streets are far from deserted. Between the first and second set of strikes, plenty of people seemed to be going about their Monday morning business.

    Mr Yermak described the kamikaze attacks as Russia’s “death throes”, and that Ukraine needed more air defence systems “as soon as possible”.

    What are kamikaze drones?

    • Small aerial weapons, also known as loitering munitions, that are destroyed after striking the target
    • Unlike other drones – which are supposed to return home after dropping missiles – kamikaze drones are disposable
    • The name derives from the Japanese pilots who volunteered to crash their planes in suicide missions in World War Two
    • President Zelensky has previously accused Russia of using Iranian-made drones – Iran denies supplying them while Russia has not commented

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said last week’s strikes were in retaliation for the bombing of a key bridge linking Russia to occupied Crimea, which he blamed on Ukraine.

    It was the first time during the war that the centre of Kyiv had been directly targeted.

    Earlier this week, Mr Putin said there was no need for more large-scale strikes on Ukraine. Most designated targets had been hit, he said, adding that it was not his aim to destroy the country.

    Kamikaze drone in sky
    IMAGE SOURCE,YASUYOSHI CHIBA Image caption, A drone seen in Kyiv on Monday

    An officer fires at a flying drone stood in front of car.
    IMAGE SOURCE,YASUYOSHI CHIBA Image caption, A Ukrainian in Kyiv fires at a drone

     

  • Iran protests: Outrage over police sex assault video

    A video showing Iranian anti-riot forces sexually assaulting a female demonstrator while attempting to arrest her has sparked outrage on social media.

    Users expressed their fury, with many demanding “justice” and the resignation of the police chief. Some pro-government users condemned the perpetrators as well.

    Despite blocks on some social media tools, Iranians are still managing to share powerful images of the protests.

    The country has been rocked by the most intense unrest in decades.

    The protests erupted last month when anger over the death in police custody of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian Mahsa Amini boiled over. Officials say she died from an underlying health condition, but her family says she died after being beaten by the morality police.

    Numerous videos of the protest have gone viral both inside and outside of Iran. This latest video, which happened in Tehran’s Argentina Square on Wednesday, shows a group of officers in protective gear and helmets surrounding a woman on the main road.

    One of them grabs her by the neck and leads her into a crowd of about two dozen police, many of whom are on motorcycles.

    While the woman is being forced towards one of the bikes, another officer approaches her from behind and puts his left hand on her bottom.

    The woman then crouches on the ground as more officers surround her. A female voice behind the camera is heard saying: “They are pulling her hair.”

    Drivers in vehicles next to where it is happening start sounding their horns, a form of protest in similar situations seen in the past few days across the country.

    The woman, who appears to have no hijab or headscarf, is then seen standing up and running away from the scene.

    At this point, the same voice on the clip is heard saying: “Look at him [the security force officer], he is laughing”.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

    The footage has been verified by the BBC’s Persian service.

    Tehran’s Police Public Relations office has said the incident is being investigated, state news agency Irna reported.

    The police statement does not give details of what happened, but says that “enemies using psychological warfare tried to cause public anxiety and incite violence”.

    The fact that the incident happened in public has led human rights activists to question what security forces might also be doing behind closed doors.

    “Have you brought out the harassment of the girls of this land from [your] prisons into the open streets with the aim to shout out [at us] in public your obscenity, lechery and filth?” posted a social media user by the name of Atefeh.

    Mistreatment, including sexual and psychological abuse, has been reported by many inmates, especially political prisoners, for years.

    Many Iranians commented on social media that the video from Tehran had made them more determined to go out on the streets to protest, with one person saying they intended “to put their anger and fury into action”.

     

  • EU will not slap more sanctions on Iran over alleged drone deal with Russia

    European Union foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg on Monday would not take any decisions on additional Iran sanctions after reports of drones delivered from Tehran to Moscow, Reuters has reported, citing an unnamed senior EU official.

    The official added that the 27-nation bloc is still trying to find independent evidence for the alleged use of Iranian drones by Russia in Ukraine.

    Iran, which blames NATO as the root of the Ukraine conflict, has denied supplying Russia with arms.

    “The Islamic Republic of Iran has by no means supplied any side with arms to be used in the war in Ukraine, and its policy is to oppose arming either side with the aim of ending the war,” Hossein Amirabdollahian, Iran’s foreign minister, told his Polish counterpart on Sunday.

    Source: Aljazeera.com

     

  • Iran Hijab protests: Senior Iran official first to publicly criticize regime’s hijab crackdown

    Ali Larijani, a close advisor to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and a former speaker of parliament, is the first prominent politician to publicly demand that the government reconsider its harsh punishment of women and girls who do not dress according to the Islamic dress code.

    A senior Iranian official has questioned excessive state enforcement of the country’s compulsory hijab laws – following the death of Mahsa Amini in custody.

    Ali Larijani, 65, an adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and a former parliamentary speaker, warned in an interview with the Iranian daily Ettela’at that a “rigid response” to the widespread protests that have followed her death “is not the cure”.

    The 22-year-old died while in the custody of Iran’s morality police last month after being detained for alleged violations of the country’s strict dress code.

    Mr Larijani is the first senior political figure to publicly call for a rethink on the government’s crackdown on women and girls who do not adhere to the Islamic dress code.

    In an apparent break from the uncompromising line shown by the regime, he said in the interview: “The hijab has a cultural solution, it does not need decrees and referendums.

    “I appreciate the services of the police force and Basij [parliamentary militia], but this burden of encouraging the hijab should not be assigned to them.

    “Do not doubt that when a cultural phenomenon becomes widespread, a rigid response to it is not the cure.

    “The people and young people who come to the street are our own children. In a family, if a child commits a crime, then they try to guide him to the right path, the society needs more tolerance.”

    He noted that during the period of the last Shah’s rule before the 1979 Iranian revolution, wearing of the hijab was not encouraged by the state but many women wore it voluntarily.

    Mr Larijani continued: “Islamic government means that people manage their own affairs. It is the same in terms of social justice. If the affairs are managed by the people, their talents will flourish.”

    He added: “The problem is that if in a society, young people do not implement one of the sharia rulings correctly from an intellectual and social point of view, this is not 100% wrong.”

    Ms Amini, an Iranian Kurd, was arrested in Tehran on 13 September for wearing “inappropriate attire” and died three days later.

    Iran’s government insists she was not mistreated, but her family says her body showed bruises and other signs of beating.

    Her death has led young women to cut their hair and defiantly tear off and wave their headscarves, spearheading protests which have quickly spread nationwide – and to other cities across the globe, including London.

    The protests, which have called for the overthrow of the Iranian regime, have been met by a harsh government crackdown, including beatings, arrests and the killing of demonstrators.

    Human rights groups say at least 201 people have been killed in Iran, along with hundreds injured and thousands arrested by security forces.

    At least 20 members of the security forces have reportedly been killed.

     

  • Nika Shakarami: Videos depict an Iranian teen protesting just before dying

    According to her mother, who spoke to BBC Persian, videos aired online show an Iranian teen protesting hours before she passed away.

    On September 20, Nika Shakarami, 16, is pictured burning her headscarf while standing on a dumpster in Tehran as people yell anti-Islamic Republic slogans.

    She later disappeared after telling a friend she was being chased by police.

    Her mother, Nasrin, also denied she was in a CCTV video put out by officials to support their claim that her death was not connected to the protests that day.

    Mrs Shakarami has accused security forces of murdering her daughter, but officials have said she died after being thrown from a building that was under construction, possibly by workmen.

    Last week, Iranian state TV broadcast blurry footage showing a teenage girl or woman whom it identified as Nika walking down an alley and entering a building through a door.

    But Mrs Shakarami told BBC Persian on Monday that the person in the video was not her daughter. Another source close to the family also said that they did not walk like Nika.

    Mrs Shakarami also alleged that her sister Atash and brother Mohsen had been forced into making false statements about Nika’s death while they were in detention.

    “They threatened to detain my brother’s four-year-old child,” she said.

    Mohsen was shown on TV last Wednesday night speaking against the current protests, as someone off camera seems to whisper to him: “Say it, you scumbag!” Atash was meanwhile seen saying that Nika “was killed falling from a building”. They were released after making the statements.

    Nika Shakarami
    IMAGE SOURCE,BBC PERSIAN SOURCE Image caption, Nika Shakarami’s mother said family members had been ordered to lie about how her daughter died

    Nika’s family has said they located her body at the mortuary 10 days after she went missing, and that they were only allowed by officials to see her face for a few seconds in order to identify her. Atash has also said that the Revolutionary Guards told her that Nika was in their custody for five days and then handed over to prison authorities.

    Mrs Shakarami said Nika had disappeared hours after attending the protest seen in videos that have surfaced on social media in recent days.

    One of the videos shows a girl dressed in black standing on a dumpster on a street and waving a burning headscarf. A crowd around her is heard chanting “death to the dictator” – a reference to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters. Another video shows the same scene from a different angle.

    “Like Nika, I have been against compulsory hijab since I was a child. But my generation was not brave enough to protest,” Mrs Shakarami told BBC Persian.

    “People my age accepted years of suppression, intimidation, and humiliation, but my daughter protested and she had every right to do so.”

    “Generation Z” – defined as those born between 1997 and 2012 – has been at the forefront of the protests sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who was detained by the morality police for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict hijab law.

    Nika is not the only young female protester to have been killed during the unrest.

    The family of Hadis Najafi, 22, have said that she was shot dead by security forces while protesting in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran, on 21 September.

    Another 16-year-old girl, Sarina Esmailzadeh, allegedly died after being severely beaten on the head with batons by security forces during protests in Karaj on 23 September, according to Amnesty International.

    On Monday, the Iranian Society for Protecting the Rights of the Child reported that a total of 28 children had been killed during the protests.

    Many other children had been arrested and were being held at detention centres, the group said.

     

     

     

     

  • Iran protester: ‘You know that you might never come back’

    Protests in Iran are continuing despite a crackdown by security forces that one human rights group says has killed at least 201 people. The unrest erupted in response to the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman detained by the morality police for allegedly breaking the strict hijab rules.

    There are heavy restrictions on independent and foreign reporting in the country. But the BBC Today programme’s Nick Robinson was able to interview Fawaz – not his real name – who has been protesting on the streets in Tehran.

    The atmosphere is quite tense and yet it is exciting. People are hopeful this time and we hope that a real change is just around the corner. I don’t think people are willing to give up this time. Now, we are seeing women in the street who are not wearing a hijab. They are walking past and people are quite supportive. Drivers in the street honk whenever they see a woman is not covered up. They don’t cover up their heads.

    Usually, the protests start in the evening, in the afternoon. And they are in different locations in a city, so people do not just gather round in one specific area. If you just go out, you can hear cars honking. In some parts, people are out in the street. They are protesting against the security forces. And at night, the people who do not want to leave their houses are shouting slogans like “down with the dictator” out of their windows. You can hear some sort of protest everywhere, almost every night. That feels good, that feels really good.

    Nick Robinson: What sort of people are joining the protests?

    Everyone. The prominent figures in this are actually women. They are to some extent leading this. Their rights are part of human rights. That is why some people might call it a feminist movement. But what is setting this apart is the inclusion of minorities and women at the front. And it’s widespread. It is not just in big cities. It is in smaller cities.

    NR: When you confront the security forces, how are they reacting?

    When you take to the streets you should expect anything. Deep down, you know that you might never come back. You might get arrested, and detained for days, months, or even years, as we have seen before. So far, I have been lucky. I have been beaten with a baton [by security forces], I have been kicked. But I have seen worse. The situation is quite stressful, but it is quite hopeful as well. It is stressful because you never know whether the person standing next to you is a member of the security force. And yet it is hopeful because you can see that your voice is finally being heard, especially this time on an international level, despite all the [internet] filtering that is going on in Iran.

    NR: You go out on the streets knowing, in your words, that “you might never come back”. This is something you are prepared to die for?

    Yes.

    NR: Why?

    Somewhere, at one time, for this to end we need to do something. We should accept the challenges and the facts as well. If we want to say something, we know that we are going to give something for it as well, sometimes with our lives.

    NR: For you, is this a protest about whether women wear the hijab? Or is it something much bigger than that?

    It is about something much bigger than that. If you look at the slogans at the protests, what people are saying on the streets, it has never been – even at the beginning – about the hijab. The hijab was just the spark. It has always been about basic human rights. We’ve always wanted more. We’ve wanted what you might take for granted as a normal life. We want life, liberty, justice, accountability, freedom of choice and assembly, and a free press. We want access to our basic human rights and an inclusive government that is actually elected by the people through a proper election and that works for the people.

    NR: We are not using your real name for this interview. Are you taking a risk speaking to the BBC?

    Yes, it’s a great risk because it is considered a crime in Iran if you speak to foreign news broadcasts. You might easily get arrested, punished, or imprisoned. The consequences are severe.

    NR: Do you have hope that the change that you so desperately want might happen this time?

    Hope is all we have and I am willing to stick to it. I hope at least our voices will be heard. That’s all I can say about this.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Nika Shakarami: Videos show Iran teenager protesting before death

    Videos posted online show an Iranian teenager protesting hours before her death, her mother has told BBC Persian.

    Nika Shakarami, 16, is seen standing on a dumpster and burning her headscarf in Tehran on 20 September, as others chant slogans against the Islamic Republic.

    She later disappeared after telling a friend she was being chased by police.

    Her mother, Nasrin, also denied she was in a CCTV video put out by officials to support their claim that her death was not connected to the protests that day.

    Mrs Shakarami has accused security forces of murdering her daughter, but officials have said she died after being thrown from a building that was under construction, possibly by workmen.

    Last week, Iranian state TV broadcast blurry footage showing a teenage girl or woman whom it identified as Nika walking down an alley and entering a building through a door.

    But Mrs Shakarami told BBC Persian on Monday that the person in the video was not her daughter. Another source close to the family also said that they did not walk like Nika.

    Mrs Shakarami also alleged that her sister Atash and brother Mohsen had been forced into making false statements about Nika’s death while they were in detention.

    “They threatened to detain my brother’s four-year-old child,” she said.

    Mohsen was shown on TV last Wednesday night speaking against the current protests, as someone off camera seems to whisper to him: “Say it, you scumbag!” Atash was meanwhile seen saying that Nika “was killed falling from a building”. They were released after making the statements.

    Nika ShakaramiIMAGE SOURCE,BBC PERSIAN SOURCE
    Image caption, Nika Shakarami’s mother said family members had been ordered to lie about how her daughter died

    Nika’s family have said they located her body at the mortuary 10 days after she went missing, and that they were only allowed by officials to see her face for a few seconds in order to identify her. Atash has also said that the Revolutionary Guards told her that Nika was in their custody for five days and then handed over to prison authorities.

    Mrs Shakarami said Nika had disappeared hours after attending the protest seen in videos that have surfaced on social media in recent days.

    One of the videos show a girl dressed in black standing on a dumpster on a street and waving a burning headscarf. A crowd around her is heard chanting “death to the dictator” – a reference to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters. Another video shows the same scene from a different angle.

    “Like Nika, I have been against compulsory hijab since I was a child. But my generation was not brave enough to protest,” Mrs Shakarami told BBC Persian.

    “People my age accepted years of suppression, intimation and humiliation, but my daughter protested and she had every right to do so.”

    “Generation Z” – defined as those born 1997 and 2012 – have been at the forefront of the protests sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who was detained by the morality police for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict hijab law.

    Nika is not the only young female protester to have been killed during the unrest.

    The family of Hadis Najafi, 22, have said that she was shot dead by security forces while protesting in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran, on 21 September.

    Another 16-year-old girl, Sarina Esmailzadeh, allegedly died after being severely beaten on the head with batons by security forces during protests in Karaj on 23 September, according to Amnesty International.

    On Monday, the Iranian Society for Protecting the Rights of the Child reported that a total of 28 children had been killed during the protests.

    Many other children had been arrested and were being held at detention centres, the group said.

    Source: BBC

  • Iran protests: Germany requests sanctions in response to the brutal repression

    The foreign minister of Germany has demanded that perpetrators behind Iran’s harsh crackdown on demonstrators be brought to justice.

    According to Annalena Baerbock Germany, would see to it that the EU froze assets and enforced entry restrictions.

    She referred to those on “the wrong side of history” as those who “beat up ladies and girls on the street.”

    EU foreign ministers are expected to decide on sanctions on 17 October, according to Reuters news agency.

    Speaking to a German newspaper, Baerbock also criticised those who “condemn to death people who want nothing other than to live free”.

    She told Iranians: “We stand by you, and will continue to do so.”

    The proposed sanctions come after the death of Mahsa Amini sparked demonstrations throughout the country.

    The 22-year-old died in custody after being detained by Iran’s morality police on 16 September.

    Dozens of Iranians have lost their lives after taking to the streets to protest Ms Amini’s death.

    The Iran Human Rights group, based in Norway, said at least 185 people – including 19 children – had died since the unrest began.

    Iran’s state media say 20 members of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps, police, and security forces have been killed.

    Videos and images circulating on social media over the weekend appeared to show Iran’s security services entering schools and universities.

    Female students at a university in Tehran were reported to have chanted “get lost” to President Ebrahim Raisi when he visited on Saturday.

    Saturday also saw the country’s state television channel hacked.

    Viewers saw a mask appear on their screens followed by an image of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, surrounded by flames.

    Many in Iran are now calling for the end of Islamic clerical rule.

     

     

  • Protests in Iran: Two members of security forces killed

    Two members of Iran’s security forces have been killed in continuing protests against the authorities, state media have said.

    Videos on social media show students and schoolgirls joining the demonstrations across the country.

    Dozens of protesters have been killed since unrest began last month following the death of a young woman in custody.

    Mahsa Amini was detained in Tehran by the morality police for allegedly not covering her hair properly.

    The 22-year-old Iranian Kurd died in custody on 16 September, three days after her arrest.

    One member of the Basij paramilitary militia was “killed by rioters with a gunshot” at one of the protest sites in Tehran, according to Basij News, the official website run by the Basij organisation.

    A member of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) was also killed on Saturday during protests in Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province, Iranian media report.

    At least 20 members of the IRGC, Basij and police forces have been killed over the past three weeks of protests, the media say.

    Protests over the weekend were reported across the country, including Tehran and Sanandaj.

    “Police forces used tear gas to disperse the crowds in dozens of locations in Tehran,” the official news agency Irna reported, adding the demonstrators had “chanted slogans and set fire to and damaged public property, including a police booth and trash bins”.

    In similar protests in a number of other cities, demonstrators hurled Molotov cocktails at mosques, Basij centres and imams’ offices, the agency said.

    Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has called for tough measures against anyone responsible for cracking down on the protests.

    She described those who “beat up women and girls on the street” as being on the wrong side of history, and said she would ensure the EU imposed entry bans on individuals responsible and froze their assets.

    And in Norway, the Iran Human Rights group have said 185 people had been killed since the unrest began.

    “At least 185 people, including at least 19 children, have been killed in the nationwide protests across Iran. The highest number of killings occurred in Sistan and Baluchistan province with half the recorded number,” it said on Saturday.

    Separately on Saturday evening, state television was hacked by opponents of the government.

    Pictures of the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei with a target on his head appeared in a news bulletin, together with captions calling on people to join the protests.

    Also on Saturday, female students at al-Zahra University Tehran were reported to have chanted “get lost” during a visit there by President Ebrahim Raisi.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Protests in Iran: State-run live TV hacked by protesters

    Iran’s state-run broadcaster was apparently hacked on air Saturday, with a news bulletin interrupted by a protest against the country’s leader.

    A mask appeared on the screen, followed by an image of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei with flames around him.

    The group called itself “Adalat Ali”, or Ali’s Justice.

    It comes after at least three people were shot dead when protesters clashed with security forces in new unrest over the death of Mahsa Amini.

    Ms Amini was detained in Tehran by morality police for allegedly not covering her hair properly. The 22-year-old Iranian Kurd died in custody on 16 September, three days after her arrest.

    Her death has sparked an unprecedented wave of protest across the country.

    Saturday’s TV news bulletin was interrupted at about 18:00 local time with images which included Iran’s supreme leader with a target on his head, photos of Ms Amini and three other women killed in recent protests.

    One of the captions read “join us and rise up”, whilst another said “our youths’ blood is dripping off your paws”.

    The interruption lasted only a few seconds before being cut off.

    Such displays of rebellion against Ayatollah Ali Khamenei are historically rare, and he wields almost complete power within Iran. But following Ms Amini’s death, there has been some open dissent.

    Also on Saturday, social media videos emerged which seemed to show female students at a university in Tehran chanting “get lost” during a visit by President Ebrahim Raisi.

    Earlier in the day, two people were killed in Sanandaj, including a man shot in his car after he sounded his horn in support of protesters. A video shared online also showed a woman shot in the neck lying unconscious on the ground in Mashhad.

    In Sanandaj, a police official said a man had been killed by “counter-revolutionaries”, the state-run news agency IRNA reported.

    On Friday, Iran’s Forensic Medicine Organisation said Ms Amini had died from multiple organ failure caused by cerebral hypoxia – and not from blows to the head, as her family and protesters contend.

    Rights groups say more than 150 people have been killed since the protests in the Islamic Republic began on 17 September.

    Shops in several cities have shut in support of the protesters, including in Tehran’s bazaar where some set fire to a police kiosk and chased the security forces away.

    The protests reaching the bazaar in Tehran will ring alarm bells with Iranian leaders who have counted the merchants as among their supporters.

    Source: BBC

  • Protests in Iran: State-run live TV hacked by protesters

    Iran’s state-run broadcaster was apparently hacked on air Saturday, with a news bulletin interrupted by a protest against the country’s leader.

    A mask appeared on the screen, followed by an image of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei with flames around him.

    The group called itself “Adalat Ali”, or Ali’s Justice.

    It comes after at least three people were shot dead when protesters clashed with security forces in new unrest over the death of Mahsa Amini.

    Ms Amini was detained in Tehran by morality police for allegedly not covering her hair properly. The 22-year-old Iranian Kurd died in custody on 16 September, three days after her arrest.

    Her death has sparked an unprecedented wave of protest across the country.

    Saturday’s TV news bulletin was interrupted at about 18:00 local time with images which included Iran’s supreme leader with a target on his head, photos of Ms Amini and three other women killed in recent protests.

    One of the captions read “join us and rise up”, whilst another said “our youths’ blood is dripping off your paws”.

    The interruption lasted only a few seconds before being cut off.

    Such displays of rebellion against Ayatollah Ali Khamenei are historically rare, and he wields almost complete power within Iran. But following Ms Amini’s death, there has been some open dissent.

    Also on Saturday, social media videos emerged which seemed to show female students at a university in Tehran chanting “get lost” during a visit by President Ebrahim Raisi.

    Earlier in the day, two people were killed in Sanandaj, including a man shot in his car after he sounded his horn in support of protesters. A video shared online also showed a woman shot in the neck lying unconscious on the ground in Mashhad.

    In Sanandaj, a police official said a man had been killed by “counter-revolutionaries”, the state-run news agency IRNA reported.

    On Friday, Iran’s Forensic Medicine Organisation said Ms Amini had died from multiple organ failure caused by cerebral hypoxia – and not from blows to the head, as her family and protesters contend.

    Rights groups say more than 150 people have been killed since the protests in the Islamic Republic began on 17 September.

    Shops in several cities have shut in support of the protesters, including in Tehran’s bazaar where some set fire to a police kiosk and chased the security forces away.

    The protests reaching the bazaar in Tehran will ring alarm bells with Iranian leaders who have counted the merchants as among their supporters.

    Source: BBC

  • Nika Shakarami: Close source says Iran protester’s family forced to lie about death

    According to a source close to the family, relatives of a child who was killed during protests in Iran have been coerced into giving false statements.

    On September 20, Nika Shakarami, 16, vanished from Tehran after telling a friend she was being pursued by authorities.

    On Wednesday night, a state TV report showed her aunt, Atash, saying: “Nika was killed falling from a building.”

    Her uncle was also seen on TV speaking against the unrest, as someone seems to whisper to him: “Say it, you scumbag!”

    The source told BBC Persian that these were both “forced confessions” that came “after intense interrogations and being threatened that other family members would be killed”.

    Atash and Nika’s uncle, Mohsen, were detained by authorities after Atash posted messages online about her niece’s death and spoke to the media. The televised statements were recorded before they were released, according to the source.

    Relatives of a girl who died during protests in Iran have been forced into making false statements, a source close to the family has told BBC Persian.

    Nika Shakarami, 16, went missing in Tehran on 20 September after telling a friend she was being chased by police.

    On Wednesday night, a state TV report showed her aunt, Atash, saying: “Nika was killed falling from a building.”

    Her uncle was also seen on TV speaking against the unrest, as someone seems to whisper to him: “Say it, you scumbag!”

    The source told BBC Persian that these were both “forced confessions” that came “after intense interrogations and being threatened that other family members would be killed”.

    Atash and Nika’s uncle, Mohsen, were detained by authorities after Atash posted messages online about her niece’s death and spoke to the media. The televised statements were recorded before they were released, according to the source.

    Relatives of a girl who died during protests in Iran have been forced into making false statements, a source close to the family has told BBC Persian.

    Nika Shakarami, 16, went missing in Tehran on 20 September after telling a friend she was being chased by police.

    On Wednesday night, a state TV report showed her aunt, Atash, saying: “Nika was killed falling from a building.”

    Her uncle was also seen on TV speaking against the unrest, as someone seems to whisper to him: “Say it, you scumbag!”

    The source told BBC Persian that these were both “forced confessions” that came “after intense interrogations and being threatened that other family members would be killed”.

    Atash and Nika’s uncle, Mohsen, were detained by authorities after Atash posted messages online about her niece’s death and spoke to the media. The televised statements were recorded before they were released, according to the source.

    Atash told BBC Persian prior to her arrest on Sunday that the Revolutionary Guards had told her that Nika was in their custody for five days and then handed over to prison authorities.

    The judiciary has said that on the night she disappeared Nika went into a building where eight construction workers were present and that she was found dead in the yard outside the next morning.

    Tehran judiciary official Mohammad Shahriari was cited by state media as saying on Wednesday that a post-mortem showed Nika suffered “multiple fractures… in the pelvis, head, upper and lower limbs, arms and legs, which indicate that the person was thrown from a height”.

    He declared that this proved her death was nothing to do with the protests.

    However, a death certificate issued by a cemetery in the capital, which was obtained by BBC Persian, states that she died after suffering “multiple injuries caused by blows with a hard object”.

    Nika’s Instagram and Telegram accounts were also deleted after she went missing, according to Atash. Iranian security forces are known to demand that detainees give them access to social media accounts so that the accounts or certain posts can be deleted.

    Wednesday night’s state TV report also featured footage in which Atash was seen confirming that her niece’s body was found outside the building mentioned by the judiciary, even though that contradicted previous statements made by her and other members of the family.

    The family has said they located Nika’s body at the mortuary of a detention centre 10 days after she went missing, and that they were only allowed by officials to see her face for a few seconds in order to identify her. Atash said before she was detained that she did not go to the mortuary.

    Nika’s family transferred her body to her father’s hometown of Khorramabad, in the west of the country, on Sunday – on what would have been her 17th birthday.

    A source close to them told BBC Persian that the family agreed, under duress from authorities, not to hold a public funeral. But, the source said, security forces then “stole” Nika’s body from Khorramabad and secretly buried it in the village of Veysian, about 40km (25 miles) away.

    Hundreds of protesters later gathered in Khorramabad’s cemetery and chanted slogans against the government, including “death to the dictator” – a reference to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.

    Photos of Hadis Najafi (L) and Sarina Esmailzadeh (R)
    IMAGE SOURCE,TIKTOK/FACEBOOK Image caption, Hadis Najafi, 22, and Sarina Esmailzadeh, 16, died after taking part in protests in the city of Karaj

    Nika is not the only young female protester to have been killed during the unrest that erupted last month following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who was detained by the morality police for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict hijab law.

    The family of Hadis Najafi, 22, have said that she was shot dead by security forces while protesting in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran, on 21 September. Officials allegedly asked her father to say that she died of a heart attack.

    Another 16-year-old girl, Sarina Esmailzadeh, died after being severely beaten on the head with batons by security forces during protests in Karaj on 23 September, Amnesty International cited a source as saying. The source also told the human rights group that security and intelligence agents had harassed the girl’s family to coerce them into silence.

    Several videos made by Sarina before her death have now been posted on social media. In one record after finishing some school exams, she says: “Nothing feels better than freedom.”

     

     

  • EU parliament speech: Swedish MEP cuts her hair in solidarity with Iranian women after Mahsa Amini’s death

    Following the passing of Mahsa Amini, a Swedish MEP cut off her ponytail while speaking in the EU assembly in a gesture of solidarity with Iranian women.

    Women around the world have been taking to social media over the last few weeks to share their hair-cutting videos since the news of Miss Amini’s death emerged.

    Protests in Iran began after the 22-year-old died while in the custody of the country’s morality police.

    She was accused of breaking laws that require women to cover their hair with a hijab.

    She was accused of breaking laws that require women to cover their hair with a hijab.

    Iraqi-born MEP Abir Al-Sahlani was talking about the oppression of women in Iran during the assembly meeting in Strasbourg.

    “Until the women of Iran are free, we are going to stand with you.”

    She ended her speech by saying “Jin, Jiyan, Azadi” – Kurdish for “Woman, Life, Freedom” – as she snipped off her ponytail and held it up.

    Iran requires women to wear the hijab so that it covers their hair completely.

    Miss Amini collapsed at a police station and died three days after she was arrested for wearing it too loosely.

    Iranian police say she died of a heart attack and was not mistreated, but her family have cast doubt on that account.

    Thousands of women across the world have been cutting their hair – a movement now spreading to celebrities, politicians, and campaigners.

    French actresses, including Juliette Binoche, Marion Cotillard, and Isabelle Huppert, have also taken part.

    58-year-old Binoche, who has appeared in films such as The English Patient, Chocolat, and Godzilla, was seen in video footage clipping off a handful of her hair and declaring: “For freedom.”

    In the video posted by soutienfemmesiran (Support for Women of Iran), text was shown that read: “Mahsa Amini was abused by the morality police until death followed.

    “All she stood accused of was wearing her veil in an inappropriate manner.

    “She died for having a few locks of her hair exposed.”

    Last week Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe cut her hair to show her support for the women of Iran.

    The British-Iranian citizen, who spent six years in jail in Iran, recorded a video of herself taking a pair of scissors to her hair.

     

  • Iran protests: Schoolgirls jeer at paramilitary speaker

    A recent online video appears to show schoolgirls heckling at a member of Iran’s dreaded paramilitary Basij force after nationwide anti-government demonstrations spread to the classroom.

    The teenagers wave their headscarves in the air and shout “get lost, Basiji” at the man, who was asked to address them.

    The BBC could not verify reports that it was filmed in Shiraz on Tuesday.

    The Basij has helped security forces crack down on the protests sparked by the death in custody of a young woman.

    Other footage circulated on social media shows a man shouting “death to the dictator” as another group of girls walk through traffic in the north-western city of Sanandaj and an elderly woman clapping as unveiled schoolgirls chant “freedom, freedom, freedom” at a protest on a street.

    In a fourth video, a teacher appears to threaten students with expulsion if they do not cover their heads after they stage a sit-down protest in a schoolyard.

    And a fifth, reportedly filmed in the city of Karaj, shows schoolgirls seen screaming and running from a man, thought to be a member of the security forces in plainclothes, who is driving a motorcycle along a pavement.

    The unrest was triggered by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who fell into a coma hours after being detained by morality police on 13 September in Tehran for allegedly breaking the strict law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf. She died in hospital three days later.

    Her family has alleged that officers beat her head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered a heart attack.

    The first protests took place in north-western Iran, where Ms Amini was from, and then spread rapidly across the country.

    Young women have been at the forefront of the unrest, but it was not until Monday that schoolgirls began participating publicly in large numbers.

    It came a day after security forces briefly besieged the prestigious Sharif University of Technology in Tehran in response to a protest on the campus. Dozens of students were reportedly beaten, blindfolded and taken away.

    Monday also saw the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, break his silence on the unrest and accuse the US and Israel, Iran’s arch-enemies, of orchestrating “riots”. He also gave his full backing to the security forces, which have been accused by human rights groups of killing dozens of people.

    On Tuesday, there were reports that the death toll resulting from clashes between security personnel and anti-government protesters in the south-eastern city of Zahedan had risen to 83.

    Zahedan is the capital of Sistan Baluchistan province, which borders both Pakistan and Afghanistan, and has a sizeable Sunni Muslim population.

    Authorities have said the security forces were attacked by armed Baluchi separatists – something the imam of the city’s biggest mosque has denied.

    The violence erupted on Friday, when protesters surrounded a police station and officers opened fire.

    Tensions in the city had been compounded by the alleged rape of a 15-year-old girl by a police chief elsewhere in Sistan Baluchistan.

    Iranian riot police stand in a street in Tehran, Iran (3 October 2022)
    IMAGE SOURCE,WANA NEWS AGENCY VIA REUTERS Image caption, Iran’s supreme leader has called on security forces to be ready to deal with more unrest if necessary

    In another development on Tuesday, state media cited Tehran’s chief prosecutor as saying the judiciary had opened an investigation into the death of Nika Shakarami, a 16-year-old girl who went missing after taking part in protests in the capital on 20 September.

    Her aunt has said that in her last message Nika told a friend that she was being chased by police, and that her family found her body in a mortuary at a detention centre 10 days later.

    Sources close to the family told BBC Persian that before they could bury Nika, security forces stole her body and buried it secretly in a village 40km (25 miles) from her father’s hometown of Khorramabad, in the west of the country.

     

     

  • Iranian schoolgirls protest against the government by taking off their hijabs

    In an unprecedented display of support for the protests rocking the nation, Iranian schoolgirls have been yelling against clerical authorities and waving their hijabs in the air.

    Videos verified by the BBC showed demonstrations inside schoolyards and on the streets of several cities.

    They echoed the wider unrest sparked by the death last month of a woman who was detained for breaking the hijab law.

    In Karaj, girls reportedly forced an education official out of their school.

    Footage posted on social media on Monday showed them shouting “shame on you” and throwing what appear to be empty water bottles at the man until he retreats through a gate.

    In another video from Karaj, which is just to the west of the capital Tehran, students are heard shouting: “If we don’t unite, they will kill us one by one.”

    In the southern city of Shiraz on Monday, dozens of schoolgirls blocked traffic on the main road while waving their headscarves in the air and shouting “death to the dictator” – a reference to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters.

    Further protests by schoolgirls were reported on Tuesday in Karaj, Tehran, and the north-western cities of Saqez and Sanandaj.

    A number of students were also photographed standing in their classrooms with their heads uncovered.

    Some were raising their middle fingers – an obscene gesture – at portraits of Ayatollah Khamenei and the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

    Iranian schoolgirls without headscarves raise their middle fingers towards portraits of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
    IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER Image caption, The protests by the schoolgirls began hours after Iran’s supreme leader defended the government’s response

     

  • Ukraine criticises Iran for providing drones to Russia

    Vladimir Putin doesn’t have many partners who are willing to send weaponry, despite the fact that the West has been arming Ukraine throughout the conflict.

    It has been widely reported that Russia has received Iranian drones for use in Ukraine – but Iran, according to Kyiv, has not been upfront with them about this.

    Now Ukraine has called them out on Twitter

  • Iran protests: Supreme Leader accuses US and Israel of inciting unrest

    In his first public remarks on the unrest, Iran’s supreme leader blamed the US and Israel for the anti-government rallies sweeping the nation.

    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claimed that Qurans had been destroyed and said that “riots” had been “manufactured” by Iran’s fiercest foes and friends.

    Additionally, he urged security forces to be prepared to handle any future unrest.

    The protests – the biggest challenge to his rule for a decade – were sparked by the death in custody of a woman.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, fell into a coma hours after being detained by morality police on 13 September in Tehran for allegedly breaking the strict law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf. She died three days later.

    Her family has alleged that officers beat her head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have said there is no evidence of any mistreatment and that she suffered “sudden heart failure”.

    Women have led the protests that began after Ms Amini’s funeral, waving their headscarves in the air or setting them on fire to chants of “Woman, life, freedom” and “Death to the dictator” – a reference to Ayatollah Khamenei.

     

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    Addressing a graduation ceremony of police and armed forces cadets on Monday, the supreme leader said Ms Amini’s death “broke our hearts”.

    “But what is not normal is that some people, without proof or an investigation, have made the streets dangerous, burned the Quran, removed hijabs from veiled women and set fire to mosques and cars,” he added, without mentioning any specific incidents.

    The ayatollah, who has the final say on all state matters, asserted that foreign powers had planned “rioting” because they could not tolerate Iran “attaining strength in all spheres”.

    “I say clearly that these riots and the insecurity were engineered by America and the occupying, false Zionist regime [Israel], as well as their paid agents, with the help of some traitorous Iranians abroad.”

    He also gave his full backing to the security forces, saying that they had faced “injustice” during the unrest.

    Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based group, said on Sunday that at least 133 people had been killed by security forces so far. They include 41 protesters whom ethnic Baluch activists said had died in clashes in Zahedan on Friday.

    State media have reported that more than 40 people have been killed,including security personnel.

    Ayatollah Khamenei’s comments came a day after security forces violently cracked down on a protest by students at Iran’s most prestigious science and engineering university, reportedly arresting dozens.

    The BBC’s Kasra Naji says the gunfire heard around the campus of Sharif University of Technology in Tehran on Sunday night spread fear among many Iranians that authorities had decided to make an example of the students.

    Security forces tried to the enter the campus, but the students drove them back and closed all the entrance gates.

    But, our correspondent adds, a siege developed and the students who tried to leave through an adjacent car park were picked up one by one and beaten, blindfolded and taken away.

    In one video posted on social media, a large number of people are seen running inside a car park while being pursued by men on motorbikes.

    The siege was lifted later in the night following the intervention of professors and a government minister.

    On Monday, students at the university announced that they would not go back to classes until all of their fellow students had been released from detention. The university meanwhile said it had moved classes online, citing “the need to protect students”.

    Protests were also reported at several otheruniversities around the country.

     

  • Spate of shootings: Police fear serial killer may be on loose in California

    Police investigating five fatal shootings in California believe a serial killer might be on the loose in the state.

    Detectives released a grainy image of a “person of interest” after the latest killing shortly before 2 am on Tuesday.

    The surveillance footage image shows an individual from behind who is dressed all in black, with a black hat.

    Stockton Police have said they could be a suspect or a witness.

    Rewards totalling $85,000 (£76,000) are being offered for information leading to an arrest after the shootings.

    Stockton Police Chief Stanley McFadden said the latest victim was a 54-year-old man, who was shot dead in a residential area.

    He was the fifth man fatally shot since 8 July within a radius of a few square miles in Stockton.

    A top Iranian official has urged security forces to deal with protesters harshly as videos emerged of people running down a street while gunfire rang out.

    Some of the most serious protests in the country for years have been taking place over the past two weeks following the death of Mahsa Amini.

    A top Iranian official has urged security forces to deal with protesters harshly as videos emerged of people running down a street while gunfire rang out.

    Some of the most serious protests in the country for years have been taking place over the past two weeks following the death of Mahsa Amini.

  • Siamak Namazi was permitted to spend a week outside the Iranian prison

    An Iranian-American citizen convicted of spying was freed from custody amid rumours that Iran and the US were discussing prisoner releases.

    According to his lawyer, he has been imprisoned in Iran for over seven years on espionage-related charges and has been given a one-week holiday from the Evin prison in Tehran.

    Siamak Namazi’s temporary release on Saturday came as his father, former United Nations official Baquer Namazi, who was also convicted on spying charges, was permitted to leave Iran for medical treatment.

    It was not clear if the moves might be a step towards Siamak’s full release, nor whether it signals the possible furlough or release of other United States citizens detained in Iran.

    Iranian Americans, whose US citizenship is not recognized by Tehran, are often pawns between the two nations, now at odds over whether to revive a fraying 2015 pact under which Iran limited its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

    Soon after news of Siamak’s furlough broke, Iran’s Nournews said an unnamed regional nation had mediated between Tehran and Washington for the “simultaneous release of prisoners”. The semi-official news agency also reported that “billions of dollars of Iran’s frozen assets because of the US sanctions will be released soon”.

    There was no official comment from the Iranian government.

    Jared Genser, an international human rights lawyer handling the Namazi cases, said on Twitter that he was “delighted to confirm for the first time in seven years that Siamak #Namazi is spending a night at home with his parents in Tehran”.

    “Baquer Namazi’s travel ban has been lifted. We won’t rest until they return to the US & their long nightmare has ended,” he added.

    Baquer Namazi, a former UNICEF representative, was detained in 2016 when he travelled to Tehran to see his son, a businessman arrested in Iran months earlier. Both Namazis were sentenced to 10 years in prison in Iran on what the US and UN say were trumped-up spying charges.

    Baquer Namazi was granted medical furlough in 2018 and his sentence was subsequently commuted to time served, but Iranian authorities had not permitted him to leave the country. Last October, he underwent surgery in Iran to clear a blockage in an artery to the brain that his family and supporters described as life-threatening.

  • Iran protests: Students stuck in Tehran during protests in Iran, reports

    Iranian police and students battled on Sunday at one of the nation’s most prestigious institutions according to reports in the official media and social media.

    Reports say a large number of students at Sharif University in Tehran have been trapped in the campus car park.

    Videos on social media appear to show students running away from security forces, with apparent gunshots fired.

    Anti-government protests erupted in Iran in September after the death of a woman detained by the morality police.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, fell into a coma hours after morality police arrested her for allegedly breaking headscarf rules.

    Officers reportedly beat Ms Amini’s head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have said there is no evidence of any mistreatment and that she suffered “sudden heart failure”.

    Protests started at her funeral and have spread across the country to become the worst unrest seen in the country for years.

    One video posted on social media shows students running from security forces on Sharif university’s campus. Sounds resembling gunshots can be heard from a distance.

    In another, security forces on motorbikes appear to shoot at a car holding the passenger filming the video.

    Iran International cites reports which say security forces attacked student dormitories and fired guns at their dorms. Other reports mention the use of tear gas on protesters.

    Sunday was the first day of term for many students attending Sharif university for the first time. Reports say crowds had gathered outside the campus’s main gate late in the evening after hearing about the clashes.

    The BBC is unable to verify the events at the university.

    The last two nights have seen an escalation in anti-government protests in Tehran and many other cities across the country, despite a growing death toll.

    Iran Human Rights, an NGO based in Norway, says 133 people have been killed across Iran to date.

    Authorities have promised to come down hard on the protesters, who they say have been put up to it by Iran’s external enemies.