Anti-government protests intensify across Iran
Riot police attack peaceful demonstrators in heart of Tehran, as anti-regime protests break out in more cities around the country.
Riot police attack peaceful demonstrators in heart of Tehran, as anti-regime protests break out in more cities around the country.
Plan to block access to all “foreign messaging apps” and social media platforms wins legislative approval.
Protestors chant slogans against the supreme leader at the hub of the capital’s shopping district.
Demonstrations erupt in northwestern city; reports of rallies in the northeast and Kurdish city on Iraqi border.
Police respond violently, with continuous gunfire heard in Mashahr, Ahvaz, and Aligudarz.
Many demonstrators injured, arrested in western Iranian city.
Online videos show confrontations with paramilitaries in central city of Najafabad.
Government forces apparently using tear gas, potentially lethal pellet guns and rubber bullets against demonstrators.
Shouts of “Death to Khamenei” and “We don’t want the Islamic Republic” now heard at demonstrations.
Three demonstrators killed in Izeh according to online claims.
Many said to have been injured in Khuzestan capital and nearby city.
Exit taxes have yielded about $3.3 million for the state coffers.
Four protestors have allegedly been killed by police as of July 18.
Current Majles speaker oversaw transfer of 1,000 municipal properties to his wife’s charity when he was mayor.
Strikers are demanding the company’s owner be removed and the firm placed under state control.
According to a Tejarat News report, the sites involved comprise about 30% of the country’s mines.
Provincial hospitals have been dismissing patients after three days, regardless of condition, to demonstrate that they have empty beds.
The Islamic Development Organization of Iran, which reports directly to the supreme leader, introduces the Hamdam relationship app.
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has prohibited the import of any Western-made vaccines.
While residents of Tehran and other cities had no electricity for 8 hours, Khomeini’s mausoleum remained lit.
Police beat some protesting Isfahani farmers with batons.
Official statistics show that 60 percent of recent COVID-19 tests have come back positive.
Among Iranian vaccines, only the Barakat vaccine has received emergency production approval.
All government offices, judiciary facilities, and banks in the province will be closed as of July 3.
Iran’s former president took a thinly veiled swipe at the supreme leader, saying he feels sorry for the “person” who called the presidential election an “enormous victory.”