Why are there protests in Iran and what has Trump said about US action?

BBC News – At least 2,400 protesters are reported to have been killed in Iran during more than two weeks of nationwide unrest which has threatened the rule of the Islamic regime. Thousands more are said to have been arrested.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened military intervention if security forces kill peaceful protesters. He has also now vowed to take “very strong action” if any of the detained protesters are executed.

 

When did the protests begin and why are people angry?

On 28 December, shopkeepers took to the streets of Tehran to express their anger at another sharp fall in the value of the Iranian currency, the rial, against the US dollar on the open market.

The rial has sunk to a record low over the past year and inflation has soared to 40%, which has resulted in crippling price rises for everyday items like cooking oil and meat. Sanctions over Iran’s nuclear programme have squeezed an economy also weakened by government mismanagement and corruption.

University students soon joined the protests and the demonstrations began spreading to other cities. There were wider calls for political change, with crowds frequently heard chanting slogans against the country’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Expressions of support for Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s late former shah (king), became more widespread throughout the first week of January, when thousands of people took to the streets of Tehran and other major cities.

According to the US-based Iranian Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), protests have been confirmed in 187 cities and towns in all 31 of Iran’s provinces since the start of the unrest.

HRANA has not provided an estimate for the total number of people believed to have taken part, although it has said that more than 18,000 protesters have been arrested.

 

How are the authorities responding to the protests?

Authorities have cracked down violently. A range of weapons including water cannon, rubber bullets and live ammunition have been reportedly used against protesters. Medics said hospitals were “overwhelmed” with dead and injured.

Iran’s judiciary chief vowed “swift and harsh” punishment, warning courts to show no leniency towards “rioters”.

On 14 January, HRANA reported that 2,417 protesters, 12 children, 147 people affiliated with the security forces and government, and 10 uninvolved civilians had been confirmed killed since the protests began. In addition, HRANA said it had received 829 other reports of deaths that remained under review.

An Iranian official had told Reuters news agency on 13 January that 2,000 people had been killed but that “terrorists” were to blame for protesters’ deaths.

Among those reportedly killed are Amir Mohammad Koohkan, 26, who was a football coach, and Rubina Aminian, 23, a Kurdish fashion student.

On 11 January, videos emerged from the Kahrizak Forensic Centre in Tehran showing people searching for the bodies of their loved ones. The BBC counted at least 180 shrouded bodies and body bags in the footage. Around 50 bodies were visible in another video from the facility shared on 12 January.

Iran is shrouded in an internet blackout, which experts say began on 8 January. Some Iranians are managing to use Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite internet service to counter the shutdown, but the terminals are banned in Iran and authorities are reportedly attempting to trace them.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said authorities had decided to cut the internet when what he called “trained terrorist groups” run from abroad became involved in the protests.

On 14 January, Araghchi’s ministry cited him as telling his counterpart from the United Arab Emirates that “calm has prevailed [in Iran] thanks to the vigilance of the people and law enforcement forces”.

His comments echoed those of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had told supporters at state-organised rallies across the country on 12 January that they had “neutralised the plans by foreign enemies that were meant to be performed by domestic mercenaries”.

 

Who is in charge of Iran?

Iran – a major power in the Middle East with a population of around 90 million – is ruled by the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

It has a parliament but this is heavily influenced by MPs loyal to Khamenei, who has the final say on the most important matters – including how to deal with the protests.

Iran was a key Western ally until 1979, when the shah was overthrown in an Islamic revolution and a devout Shia Muslim regime took over.

Since then the country has been run along strict religious lines. Criticism of the regime is not tolerated and personal freedoms have been heavily restricted.

A law requiring women to wear headscarves has been a particular source of deep resentment – and fuelled mass protests in 2022.

Iran has one of the highest execution rates in the world and is consistently ranked among the worst human rights offenders.

Western countries have had strained relations with Iran since the revolution, with the US and Iran becoming major adversaries.

Washington accuses Iran of destabilising the Middle East, especially through its support of armed groups, including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen.

For its part Iran accuses the US of interfering in the region.

The US has been a leading opponent of Iran’s nuclear programme, claiming it aims to build a bomb – something Iran denies. It bombed Iran’s nuclear sites in June 2025, while international sanctions on Iran over its nuclear activities have had a drastic effect on Iran’s economy.

 

What has Donald Trump said about US military action?

Donald Trump and his administration have repeatedly threatened to intervene in Iran if authorities killed peaceful protesters.

On 2 January, after the deaths of several people were reported, he said in a post on Truth Social that the US would come to the protesters’ rescue. “We are locked and loaded and ready to go,” he wrote.

On 11 January, Trump announced that countries doing business with Iran faced a 25% tariff on their trade with the US, ramping up pressure on Tehran.

A US official also told the BBC’s US news partner CBS that Trump had been briefed on options for military strikes on Iran.

The Wall Street Journal reported that other options available included imposing further sanctions, boosting anti-government voices online, or using cyber-weapons against Iran’s military.

On 13 January, the president called on Iranians to keep protesting, telling them in another Truth Social post to “take over your institutions” and “save the names of the killers”. “They will pay a big price,” he warned. He also said that “help is on its way,” without giving any details.

Later, he told CBC that the US would take “very strong action” against Iran if authorities executed protesters. “If they hang them, you’re going to see some things,” he said.

His comments came as he convened his national security team, amid mounting speculation about what action the US could take.

Trump had said on 11 January that Iranian leaders “want to negotiate” because “they are tired of being beat up by the United States”.

On 12 January Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that the country was “fully prepared for war” if attacked, but added that it was also ready for negotiations that were “fair”.

 

Why is it difficult to get information about what is happening in Iran?

Iran restricts international news organisations like the BBC from operating inside the country. The state broadcaster and official agencies follow strict guidelines dictated by the state. Independent Iranian journalists routinely face persecution and harassment for any reporting that is critical of the authorities.

Internet access is also heavily restricted, with most of the major social media platforms and Western news agencies banned. However, Iranians have become adept at using a variety of methods such as VPNs to circumvent these restrictions.

But the ongoing blackout has almost completely cut off Iranians from the outside world, although international phone calls reportedly began to work again on 13 January.

Before the blackout came into force on 8 January, hundreds of videos from the protests were posted on social media. Iranians regularly spoke to foreign-based journalists to provide eyewitness accounts of the protests.

Since then, the flow of videos has been significantly reduced, and it has become extremely difficult to speak to people inside.

A minority of Iranians have access to Starlink, and have been posting a few videos of the latest developments.

Some have also managed to momentarily connect to the internet and share their observations with journalists, friends and family members living abroad.

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A student, a bodybuilder and a father of three among those killed during protests in Iran

CNN – Robina Aminian, a 23-year-old studying at university in Tehran, had dreams of moving to Milan to pursue a career in fashion. Her Instagram account showed her proudly displaying various traditional Kurdish outfits.

On Thursday, she left the Tehran Shariati Technical University, where she was studying fashion design, to join an anti-regime rally that was gathering in the capital, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights NGO (IHRNGO).

“She was a strong girl, a courageous girl, and she was not someone you could control and make decisions for. She fought for things she knew were right and fought hard,” her uncle Nezar Minouei told CNN.

“She was thirsty for freedom, thirsty for women’s rights, her rights,” her uncle said. “Overall, she was a girl who was alive, who lived.”

At the protest, Aminian was killed by gunfire, according to Hengaw, a Norway-based human rights organization.

Despite a days-long internet blackout, CNN is learning details about some of the Iranians killed as security forces launch a violent crackdown on anti-government protests sweeping the country.

More than 500 protesters have been killed over the past 16 days during anti-government demonstrations, including nine children, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA). CNN cannot independently verify these figures.

The latest death toll comes as several people inside Iran have told CNN that Iranian security forces are responding to dissent with violent force. Two people in Tehran, speaking on the condition of anonymity for security reasons, said they saw security forces brandishing rifles on Friday and killing “many people.” Another eyewitness said she saw “bodies piled up on each other” in a hospital.

Wave of unrest

Aminian’s family detailed the harrowing scenes they were confronted with when they went to collect her body, according to Minouei, having driven from their home in Kermanshah in western Iran to Tehran.

Her father said Aminian’s body was being kept with the bodies of numerous young people aged between 18 and 22 years old. “Almost all of them had been shot in the head and neck,” Minouei said.

Authorities initially refused to return the daughter’s body, the uncle said. When the family was finally able to retrieve her remains, they were forced to bury her with their own hands without a ceremony, he added.

“As a family, we are heartbroken, but our head is held up high because our girl was martyred on the road to freedom, on the road to a better life that she fought for,” Aminian’s uncle said.

Despite the risks, defiant protesters have continued to turn out in large numbers across the country. The demonstrations, triggered by crippling economic conditions, have spread to numerous cities across all of Iran’s 31 provinces.

Iranian protesters risk death on multiple fronts, whether being shot down by security forces in the streets, or being charged with “moharebeh” translated as “waging war against God,” for vandalizing property, the punishment for which includes execution.

In Kermanshah in western Iran, Ebrahim Yousifi, a father of three, was shot in the head during protests on Thursday, his cousin told CNN. Yousifi, a 42-year-old hospital worker, leaves behind two sons and a daughter, according to the cousin, who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons.

Since Thursday, communication with the family has been “completely cut,” the cousin said, as an internet blackout in Iran drags on, with experts warning it is unprecedented in its reach.

“Even our relatives in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq have been unable to reach anyone in Iran to confirm whether his body has been returned. The authorities’ response in Kurdish regions has been considerably more severe than in many other parts of the country,” his cousin said.

Mehdi Zatparvar, a former champion bodybuilder and coach, was killed on Friday during protests in the city of Rasht in Gilan province in northwestern Iran, Hengaw, a Norway-based human rights organization, reported.

The 39-year-old athlete was a two-time World Classic Bodybuilding champion, according to the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation. Zatparvar held a master’s degree in sports physiology, and was widely regarded as an experienced coach in Gilan, Hengaw said.

Zatparvar wrote in his most recent Instagram post, “We only want our rights, the voice that has been stifled for forty years must be shouted out,” according to the pro-reform outlet IranWire. His Instagram account has now been taken down.

Rising death toll across the country

An internet blackout across the country extended into a fifth day Tuesday, but some details have been coming out, often through human rights groups with connections inside the country.

A number of victims from protests that shook the city of Azna in Iran’s western Lorestan province on January 1 are now also being identified.

Hairdresser and modeling enthusiast Shayan Asadollahi was killed by government forces on January 1, according to the pro-reform activist outlet IranWire. With more than 50,000 followers on Instagram, the 28-year-old would post hairstyling videos to his social media.

That day, 17-year-old Reza Moradi Abdolvand was also targeted by security forces in Azna and fell into a coma, according to IranWire. After a days-long hospital stay, the auto body repair apprentice passed away on Monday, January 5.

Ahmadreza Amani, 28, was training to become a lawyer and was an intern with the Yazd Bar Association, according to IranWire. Four days after the January 1 protest, the government buried his body and disclosed its location to his family afterwards, according to IranWire.

The dead also include an artist and sculptor from the eastern city of Mashhad, according to Hengaw.

Mehdi Salahshur, a married father of two, was killed when security forces fired on protesters with live ammunition, Hengaw said, citing a report it had received.

In addition to his own artwork, Salahshur was a sculpture instructor and owned a stone-carving workshop, according to Hengaw.

In a sign of just how far the protests have spread, protesters have also been reportedly killed on the island of Qeshm in the far south of the country near the strait of Hormuz.

One of them, Ako Mohammadi, was a 22-year-old Kurdish man originally from Salas Babajani in the country’s northwest. He was shot and killed by government forces while protesting in the city of Qeshm on the east of the island, according to Hengaw.

Citing “an informed source,” the human rights organization said Iranian authorities had demanded money in order to return his body.

CNN has been unable to independently verify these reports due to the ongoing communications blackout in Iran. CNN has sought comment from Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

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Why are people protesting in Iran? Everything you need to know

Sky News – Protests in Iran have been ongoing since December. Hundreds of people are reported to have died, with thousands more arrested. Here is what you need to know.

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Human Rights Activists (HRA) condemns the use of lethal force against protesters amid Iran’s nationwide internet blackout

Human Rights Activists (HRA) is gravely alarmed by escalating violence against protesters across Iran amid the government’s blanket internet shutdown. Nationwide protests began on December 28, 2025, and as of the morning of January 13, 2026,  HRA has independently confirmed 1,850 protester deaths, including 9 children, and more than 16,700 arrests. An additional 770 deaths are under investigation. HRA maintains that these numbers are likely much higher, given ongoing internet and communication blockages. These rapidly escalating numbers are particularly concerning as Iran’s head of police has called for increased control over protests. 

Reports indicate the use of extreme and increasingly lethal tactics against protesters, including the deployment of military-grade firearms, pellet/shotgun-style weapons, and close-range shootings, violating the right to life under international law. 

The use of lethal force is never a lawful tool to disperse protesters or suppress dissent. Under international human rights standards, law enforcement must prioritize all non-violent means to control crowds or stop a threat, even if civil unrest turns violent. Any use of force by law enforcement must be strictly necessary and proportionate. 

All credible allegations of unlawful killings and other excessive or arbitrary use of force require prompt, independent, and effective investigation, and those responsible must be held accountable.

HRA is also deeply concerned by the intentional nationwide internet shutdown, imposed on the thirteenth day of protests, which facilitates impunity for the continued excessive use of force against protesters. The blackout obstructs the ability to organize peacefully, to access life-saving information and emergency services, the ability of families to locate loved ones, and the capacity to independently document and verify abuses. It also violates fundamental rights to freedom of expression, access to information, and peaceful assembly.

HRA calls on Iranian authorities to:

  1. Immediately end the use of lethal force against protesters and bystanders, including the use of firearms, pellet weapons, and close-range shooting.
  2. Issue clear public orders to all security and law enforcement units requiring compliance with international standards on the use of force, including protection of minors
  3. Ensure safe access to medical care for the injured and cease harassment or targeting of medical personnel, volunteers, and first responders, and individuals seeking medical care as a result of protest-related injury.
  4. Restore full internet access and cease all network disruptions or blackouts.

HRA calls on the international community to:

  1. Publicly condemn the use of lethal force against protesters and the nationwide internet shutdown, and reaffirm that such actions violate Iran’s obligations under international human rights law.
  2. Press Iranian authorities to immediately cease the unlawful use of force, restore full internet access, and ensure compliance with international standards governing law enforcement conduct, including the protection of children.
  3. Support independent, impartial, and effective investigations into all credible allegations of unlawful killings, excessive use of force, arbitrary arrests, and other serious human rights violations, including through international mechanisms where domestic remedies are ineffective.
  4. Take steps to support accountability efforts, consistent with international law, for individuals and entities responsible for grave human rights violations, to combat impunity and deter further abuses.
  5. Strengthen international monitoring and reporting, including by relevant UN human rights mechanisms, to document violations arising from the protests and the internet blackout and to report publicly on developments.
  6. Support the protection of civilians, including journalists, human rights defenders, medical personnel, volunteers, and first responders, and call for unhindered access to medical care for those injured during protests.

HRA will continue to document violations, verify identities, and incidents to the highest possible standard under current constraints, and will continue to share updates as information becomes verifiable.

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A student, a bodybuilder and a father of three among those killed during protests in Iran

CNN – Robina Aminian, a 23-year-old studying at university in Tehran, had dreams of moving to Milan to pursue a career in fashion. Her Instagram account showed her proudly displaying various traditional Kurdish outfits.

On Thursday, she left the Tehran Shariati Technical University, where she was studying fashion design, to join an anti-regime rally that was gathering in the capital, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights NGO (IHRNGO).

“She was a strong girl, a courageous girl, and she was not someone you could control and make decisions for. She fought for things she knew were right and fought hard,” her uncle Nezar Minouei told CNN.

“She was thirsty for freedom, thirsty for women’s rights, her rights,” her uncle said. “Overall, she was a girl who was alive, who lived.”

At the protest, Aminian was killed by gunfire, according to Hengaw, a Norway-based human rights organization.

Despite a days-long internet blackout, CNN is learning details about some of the Iranians killed as security forces launch a violent crackdown on anti-government protests sweeping the country.

More than 500 protesters have been killed over the past 16 days during anti-government demonstrations, including nine children, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA). CNN cannot independently verify these figures.

The latest death toll comes as several people inside Iran have told CNN that Iranian security forces are responding to dissent with violent force. Two people in Tehran, speaking on the condition of anonymity for security reasons, said they saw security forces brandishing rifles on Friday and killing “many people.” Another eyewitness said she saw “bodies piled up on each other” in a hospital.

Wave of unrest

Aminian’s family detailed the harrowing scenes they were confronted with when they went to collect her body, according to Minouei, having driven from their home in Kermanshah in western Iran to Tehran.

Her father said Aminian’s body was being kept with the bodies of numerous young people aged between 18 and 22 years old. “Almost all of them had been shot in the head and neck,” Minouei said.

Authorities initially refused to return the daughter’s body, the uncle said. When the family was finally able to retrieve her remains, they were forced to bury her with their own hands without a ceremony, he added.

“As a family, we are heartbroken, but our head is held up high because our girl was martyred on the road to freedom, on the road to a better life that she fought for,” Aminian’s uncle said.

Despite the risks, defiant protesters have continued to turn out in large numbers across the country. The demonstrations, triggered by crippling economic conditions, have spread to numerous cities across all of Iran’s 31 provinces.

Iranian protesters risk death on multiple fronts, whether being shot down by security forces in the streets, or being charged with “moharebeh” translated as “waging war against God,” for vandalizing property, the punishment for which includes execution.

In Kermanshah in western Iran, Ebrahim Yousifi, a father of three, was shot in the head during protests on Thursday, his cousin told CNN. Yousifi, a 42-year-old hospital worker, leaves behind two sons and a daughter, according to the cousin, who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons.

Since Thursday, communication with the family has been “completely cut,” the cousin said, as an internet blackout in Iran drags on, with experts warning it is unprecedented in its reach.

“Even our relatives in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq have been unable to reach anyone in Iran to confirm whether his body has been returned. The authorities’ response in Kurdish regions has been considerably more severe than in many other parts of the country,” his cousin said.

Mehdi Zatparvar, a former champion bodybuilder and coach, was killed on Friday during protests in the city of Rasht in Gilan province in northwestern Iran, Hengaw, a Norway-based human rights organization, reported.

The 39-year-old athlete was a two-time World Classic Bodybuilding champion, according to the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation. Zatparvar held a master’s degree in sports physiology, and was widely regarded as an experienced coach in Gilan, Hengaw said.

Zatparvar wrote in his most recent Instagram post, “We only want our rights, the voice that has been stifled for forty years must be shouted out,” according to the pro-reform outlet IranWire. His Instagram account has now been taken down.

Rising death toll across the country

An internet blackout across the country extended into a fifth day Tuesday, but some details have been coming out, often through human rights groups with connections inside the country.

A number of victims from protests that shook the city of Azna in Iran’s western Lorestan province on January 1 are now also being identified.

Hairdresser and modeling enthusiast Shayan Asadollahi was killed by government forces on January 1, according to the pro-reform activist outlet IranWire. With more than 50,000 followers on Instagram, the 28-year-old would post hairstyling videos to his social media.

That day, 17-year-old Reza Moradi Abdolvand was also targeted by security forces in Azna and fell into a coma, according to IranWire. After a days-long hospital stay, the auto body repair apprentice passed away on Monday, January 5.

Ahmadreza Amani, 28, was training to become a lawyer and was an intern with the Yazd Bar Association, according to IranWire. Four days after the January 1 protest, the government buried his body and disclosed its location to his family afterwards, according to IranWire.

The dead also include an artist and sculptor from the eastern city of Mashhad, according to Hengaw.

Mehdi Salahshur, a married father of two, was killed when security forces fired on protesters with live ammunition, Hengaw said, citing a report it had received.

In addition to his own artwork, Salahshur was a sculpture instructor and owned a stone-carving workshop, according to Hengaw.

In a sign of just how far the protests have spread, protesters have also been reportedly killed on the island of Qeshm in the far south of the country near the strait of Hormuz.

One of them, Ako Mohammadi, was a 22-year-old Kurdish man originally from Salas Babajani in the country’s northwest. He was shot and killed by government forces while protesting in the city of Qeshm on the east of the island, according to Hengaw.

Citing “an informed source,” the human rights organization said Iranian authorities had demanded money in order to return his body.

CNN has been unable to independently verify these reports due to the ongoing communications blackout in Iran. CNN has sought comment from Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

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Internet service in Iran cut off or restricted as deadly protests reach a possible tipping point

CBS News – Iranian authorities cut off phone service and internet access Thursday in the capital and in several parts of the country as mass protests and chanting against the government continue, with dozens of people killed in the demonstrations and thousands arrested. Multiple sources in Tehran told CBS News the internet was down in the capital.

The NetBlocks monitoring organization said Thursday evening local time in Iran that its live data showed Iran was “now in the midst of a nationwide internet blackout; the incident follows a series of escalating digital censorship measures targeting protests across the country and hinders the public’s right to communicate at a critical moment.”

Attempts to dial landlines and mobile phones from Dubai to Iran could not be connected, the Associated Press reported.

Security forces confronted protesters in several cities and towns, firing tear gas. One CBS News source in the capital said there were “huge crowds out across Tehran. Unprecedented,” and confirmed that the internet was down for most people in the city. He said some people, with more robust, more reliable business accounts could still get online. Not long after, that source became unreachable, suggesting the blackout had widened even further.

There were reports on social media, largely by anti-regime activists, that web service was also down or severely restricted in the cities of Esfahan, Lodegan, Abdanan, and parts of Shiraz.

The web outages came as Iranians began chanting out of their windows against the regime, following a call by exiled Iranian Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, the son of the former U.S.-backed shah, to make their voices heard at 8 p.m. local time (noon Eastern). Analysts and insiders told CBS News the scale of the response to Pahalvi’s call could determine whether the deadly, 12-day-old protests fizzle out as previous rounds of unrest have, or grow into a major challenge to the government, and provoke a possible wider crackdown.

“All of the huge crowds in my neighborhood are pro-Pahlavi and from several areas my sources report the same — pro-Pahlavi crowds are prevailing, undeniably,” the source in Tehran told CBS News, calling it “monarchists responding to Reza.”

So far, the unrest has left at least 42 people dead, including at least four members of the security services, and seen more than 2,260 others detained, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency.

President Trump told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt Thursday that his administration is monitoring the protests in Iran. He threatened to take severe action if authorities kill protesters.

“I have let them know that if they start killing people, which they tend to do during their riots — they have lots of riots — if they do it, we are going to hit them very hard,” Mr. Trump said.

Speaking to reporters Thursday at the White House, Vice President JD Vance said the U.S. stands by anybody in Iran engaged in peaceful protest. Asked if the U.S. would take part in any Israeli strikes on Iran, Vance called on Iran to have real negotiations with the U.S. over their nuclear program.

“I’ll let the president speak to what we’re going to do in the future,” Vance said.

NetBlocks said earlier that its “data show the loss of connectivity on #Iran internet backbone provider TCI in the restive city of Kermanshah as protests spread across the nation in their 12th day; the incident comes amid rising casualties with indications of disruptions in multiple regions.”

Iranian authorities regularly restrict or disable internet access when they expect significant protests or other potentially destabilizing events.

President Mahsoud Pezeshkian, seen as a reformer but subordinate to Iran’s longtime Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, intimated ahead of his election in 2024 that he would free up the internet and make more websites accessible. It remains tightly restricted, however. Social media sites such as TikTok, Facebook and X are officially banned, as is access to U.S. and European news sites, including CBS News.

Many young, tech-savvy Iranians have become adept at getting around the restrictions, but it’s a cumbersome process, and when the regime slows down internet speeds at politically sensitive times, the whole system can become unusable.

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Death toll from nationwide protests in Iran spikes to at least 2,000, activists say

Associated Press – The death toll from nationwide protests in Iran spiked Tuesday to at least 2,003 people killed, activists said, and Iranians made phone calls abroad for the first time in days after authorities severed communications during a crackdown.

The number of dead, as reported by the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency, dwarfs that in any other round of protest or unrest in Iran in decades and recalls the chaos surrounding the country’s 1979 Islamic Revolution. These demonstrations, which began little over two weeks ago in anger over Iran’s ailing economy, soon targeted the theocracy, particularly 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Images obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press from demonstrations in Tehran show graffiti and chants calling for Khamenei’s death — something that could carry a death sentence.

Soon after the new death toll became public, U.S. President Donald Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform: “Iranian Patriots, KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!!”

He added: “I have cancelled all meetings with Iranian Officials until the senseless killing of protesters STOPS. HELP IS ON ITS WAY.” Trump did not give details.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, speaking to the Qatar-funded satellite news network Al Jazeera in an interview aired Monday night, said he had continued to communicate with U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff.

The communication “continued before and after the protests and are still ongoing,” Araghchi said. However, “Washington’s proposed ideas and threats against our country are incompatible.” He had no immediate reaction to Trump’s latest online comments.

 

Death toll spikes

The activist group said 1,850 of the dead were protesters and 135 were government-affiliated. Another nine children were killed, along with nine civilians it said were not taking part in protests. It said over 16,700 people had been detained.

With the internet down in Iran, gauging the demonstrations from abroad has grown more difficult. The AP has been unable to independently assess the toll. Iran’s government hasn’t offered overall casualty figures.

Skylar Thompson with the Human Rights Activists News Agency told the AP the new toll was shocking, particularly since it reached four times the death toll of the monthslong 2022 Mahsa Amini protests in just two weeks.

She warned this toll would still rise: “We’re horrified but we still think the number is conservative.”

Iranians’ calls gave a glimpse of life after being cut off from the outside world Thursday night.

Witnesses described a heavy security presence in central Tehran, burned-out government buildings, smashed ATMs and few passersby. Meanwhile, people remain concerned about what comes next, including the possibility of a U.S. attack.

“My customers talk about Trump’s reaction while wondering if he plans a military strike against the Islamic Republic,” said shopkeeper Mahmoud, who gave only his first name out of concern for his safety. “I don’t expect Trump or any other foreign country cares about the interests of Iranians.”

Reza, a taxi driver who also gave just his first name, said protests remain on many people’s minds. “People — particularly young ones — are hopeless but they talk about continuing the protests,” he said.

 

Iranians reach out, but world can’t reach in

Several people in Tehran were able to call the AP on Tuesday and speak to a journalist. The AP bureau in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, was unable to call those numbers back. The witnesses said text messaging still was down and internet users in Iran could connect to government-approved websites locally but nothing abroad.

Anti-riot police officers, wearing helmets and body armor, carried batons, shields, shotguns and tear gas launchers, according to the witnesses. Police stood watch at major intersections. Nearby, the witnesses saw members of the Revolutionary Guard’s all-volunteer Basij force, who carried firearms and batons. Security officials in plainclothes were visible in public spaces.

Several banks and government offices were burned during the unrest, witnesses said. Banks struggled to complete transactions without the internet, they added.

However, shops were open, though there was little foot traffic in the capital. Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, where the demonstrations began Dec. 28 over the collapse of Iran’s rial currency, opened Tuesday. However, a witness described speaking to multiple shopkeepers who said security forces ordered them to reopen no matter what. Iranian state media had not acknowledged that order.

The witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

It also appeared that security service personnel were searching for Starlink terminals, as people in northern Tehran reported authorities raiding apartment buildings with satellite dishes. While satellite television dishes are illegal, many in the capital have them in homes, and officials broadly had given up on enforcing the law in recent years.

On the streets, people also could be seen challenging plainclothes security officials, who were stopping passersby at random.

State television also read a statement about mortuary and morgue services being free — a signal some likely charged high fees for the release of bodies amid the crackdown.

Khamenei, in a statement carried by state TV, praised the tens of thousands who took part in pro-government demonstrations nationwide on Monday.

“This was a warning to American politicians to stop their deceit and not rely on traitorous mercenaries,” he said. “The Iranian nation is strong and powerful and aware of the enemy.”

State TV on Monday aired chants from the crowd, which appeared in the tens of thousands, of “Death to America!” and “Death to Israel!” Others cried out, “Death to the enemies of God!” Iran’s attorney general has warned that anyone taking part in protests will be considered an “enemy of God,” a death-penalty charge.

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Iran: More than 2,000 protesters arrested, rights group says

Deutsche Welle – Iran’s judiciary said it will fast-track trials in response to the ongoing wave of protests across large parts of the country.

“In order to deal swiftly, accurately and comprehensively with the cases of the rioters,” special judicial chambers will be staffed by “experienced judges” Chief Justice Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, the head of Iran’s judiciary, was quoted as ‌saying by state ⁠media.

“From now on, there will be no leniency for whoever helps the enemy against the Islamic Republic and the calm of the people,” Ejei said, while accusing Israel and the United States of fueling the protests.

More than 2,000 people have been detained in the first 10 days of protests that have spread rapidly across Iran after anger erupted in Tehran in late December.

The unrest followed a sharp drop in the national currency against major foreign currencies.

President urges restraint

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency, which relies on an activist network inside Iran for its reporting and has been accurate during past unrest, said at least 36 people have been killed in the ongoing violence.

It said demonstrations have spread to 27 of Iran’s 31 provinces.

Iranian authorities have not given a death toll for protesters, but have said at least two members of the security services have died and more than a dozen have been injured.

Meanwhile, Iran’s reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian has reportedly ordered security forces not to crack down on economic protests.

In a video released by Iran’s Mehr news agency, Vice President Mohammad Jafar Ghaempanah said Pezeshkian ordered “no security measures” against protesters but added that forces must act against rioters.

“Those who carry firearms, knives and machetes and who attack police stations and military sites are rioters,” Ghaempanah said, adding that “we must distinguish protesters from rioters.”

Iran’s president is not the most senior figure in the Islamic Republic — that position belongs to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who over the weekend said “rioters must be put in their place.”

International pressure on Iran

The protests were triggered by turmoil in Iran’s foreign exchange market but have since grown to focus on broader frustrations, with some protesters chanting against the country’s clerical rulers.

Authorities have acknowledged the economic hardships highlighted by the demonstrators but accused networks linked to foreign powers of stoking the unrest.

President Pezeshkian had promised reforms to help stabilize the monetary and banking systems and protect purchasing power, but this has done little to quell the demonstrations.

Iran also remains under international pressure, with US President Donald Trump threatening last Friday to come to the aid of protesters if security forces fired on them.

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What to Know About Iran’s Protests—and Trump’s Threat of U.S. Intervention

The Time – Violent protests in Iran over the country’s weakening economy have now stretched beyond ten days, killing dozens of people and intensifying pressure on the Islamic Republic as it confronts its most sustained unrest in three years.

Rights groups have reported at least 45 deaths. A doctor in the capital Tehran told TIME that the death toll was much higher. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the doctor said at least 217 protester deaths, “most by live ammunition,” had been recorded across six hospitals around the capital.

TIME has not been able to individually confirm these numbers.

Among the dead are eight children and at least two members of Iran’s security forces, according to rights groups. Thousands more have been detained as authorities move to suppress demonstrations that show little sign of fading.

The protests have spread to more than 348 locations across all 31 of Iran’s provinces since last week, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reported on Wednesday. HRANA has also documented more than 2,250 arrests so far, underscoring the scale of the state’s response. Iranian officials have not released their own comprehensive casualty or arrest figures.

On Friday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a brief televised speech in Tehran that the government would “not back down” to the protests and accused “vandals” of seeking to “please” President Donald Trump. The country’s Supreme National Security Council also stated that “no leniency” would be shown to “saboteurs.”

A day earlier, the Iranian government cut internet access and telephone lines across the country after anti-government protests erupted in the capital.

Sanctions tied to Iran’s nuclear program—combined with the lingering economic damage of a 12-day war last summer with Israel and the United States, during which U.S. forces struck key Iranian nuclear sites—have battered the country’s economy. The rial has collapsed to roughly 1.4 million to the dollar, fueling inflation that has pushed basic goods out of reach for many Iranians. Long-standing corruption and mismanagement have only deepened the crisis.

President Donald Trump said last week that if Iran “violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue,” adding: “We are locked and loaded and ready to go.”

Iranian officials have responded with increasingly blunt warnings. On Wednesday, Iran’s judiciary chief, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, said there would be “no leniency” for anyone he accused of aiding Iran’s enemies, explicitly framing the protests as part of a foreign-backed campaign. He accused Israel and the United States of using “hybrid methods” to destabilize the country, according to state media.

“The Islamic Republic considers the intensification of such rhetoric against the Iranian nation as a threat and will not leave its continuation without a response,” said Maj. Gen. Amir Hatami, Iran’s army chief, in remarks widely interpreted as a warning to Washington.

Khamenei reinforced that message over the weekend, declaring that “rioters must be put in their place”—language that analysts say effectively gives security forces license to escalate repression.

“The economic situation in Iran has been bad and has continued to get worse,” says Naysan Rafati, senior Iran analyst for the International Crisis Group. The protests, he adds, reflect a “general, very deep malaise” that cuts across class and geography.

The scope of protests across Iran

The current wave of demonstrations began in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, where shopkeepers protested the rial’s free fall. But what started as economic anger has quickly taken on broader political meaning.

“Whatever the initial spark might be—so in this case, economic—the tinder of discontent is much bigger than that,” Rafati tells TIME. “So you very quickly get specific triggers for protest that lead to wider anti-regime, anti-system sentiment.” The scale, he argues, “is significant,” even if the numbers fluctuate day to day.

Footage circulating on social media has shown protests from Tehran to provincial cities and university campuses. In the capital, a sit-in at the Grand Bazaar earlier this week prompted security forces to deploy tear gas and temporarily shut the market.

Western provinces—including Ilam, Kermanshah, Lorestan, and Hamedan—have seen the deadliest clashes so far, according to Kurdish-Iranian rights group Hengaw, which says those regions account for a majority of fatalities. Iranian state-aligned outlets have reported vandalism and confrontations following funerals for slain protesters, a familiar flashpoint in past uprisings.

The Iranian government’s response

The internet shutdown by the government on Thursday resulted in a near-blackout in connection levels across the country, according to the internet monitoring group NetBlocks and the Georgia Institute of Technology’s internet database. The blackout was ongoing more than 24 hours later.

Officials have not yet commented on the shutdown. The government has previously used this tactic in response to unrest, including during the 12-day war between Iran and Israel in June in what it said was a security precaution against Israeli infiltration.

Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday that “any violent or coercive behavior should be avoided” in handling the protests and called on his website for the “utmost restraint” in addition to “dialogue, engagement and listening to the people’s demands.”

Beyond cutting internet access and telephone lines, Iranian officials have attempted a mix of limited economic relief and force. The government recently announced a small monthly subsidy—about $7 per household—for food staples, a move that will reach more than 70 million people.

Mohammad Ja’far Ghaempanah, the president’s deputy for executive affairs, described the situation as a “full-fledged economic war” and called for what he termed “economic surgery.”

But history suggests such measures are unlikely to calm unrest on their own.

“The system has so far stuck to what’s been its typical playbook,” Rafati says: modest concessions alongside overwhelming repression. “The government was able to quell all of those protests, but it was never able to really address the underlying grievances. Those grievances compound.”

Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, argues that the impact of sanctions and the limited ability to trade has effectively turned Iran into a “one customer country” where China gets the vast majority of its oil. “You’ve had a combination of a number of factors that have come together and created this explosive cocktail,” he says.

Foreign investors have steered clear of Iranian markets, while Iranians themselves have taken money out of the country’s banks and purchased property elsewhere, creating a liquidity issue. Vatanka, who was born in Tehran, also attributes the economic conditions and failed Iranian response to the mismanagement of the theocracy, which he says “puts ideology and certain foreign policy priorities ahead of economic development.”

The role of the United States

Trump’s renewed warnings have added a volatile international dimension to the unrest. His comments came just days after U.S. forces captured Venezuela’s deposed president, Nicolas Maduro, following a months-long pressure campaign—an episode closely watched in Tehran.

Operation Midnight Hammer, the U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear facilities last June, and Washington’s recent actions in Venezuela have given Trump’s threats new credibility, analysts say.

“If your go-to tool for quelling these protests is repression, and now you have the prospect of a potential U.S. intervention
then you’re dealing with both dissent from below, but also the possibility of action from abroad,” Rafati says.

Whether Iran’s leadership can weather the current unrest remains uncertain. What is clear is that the protests have exposed deep fractures—and that the response from both Tehran and Washington could shape Iran’s trajectory for years to come.

“The Trump administration really is going after a regime change without calling it out,” he says. “And it’s playing a patient game, and is using all sorts of tools, including maximum pressure, which is mostly about economic sanctions, but occasionally it uses kinetic action.”

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Iran’s rulers face legitimacy crisis amid spreading unrest

Reuters – DUBAI, Jan 9 (Reuters) – With Iran’s anti-government unrest evolving rapidly and foreign pressure mounting, the clerical establishment appears unable, for now, to tackle what has become a crisis of legitimacy at the heart of the Islamic Republic.
The demonstrations, which began in Tehran last month, have spread to all of Iran’s 31 provinces but have yet to reach the scale of the 2022-3 unrest sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini while in detention for allegedly violating Islamic dress codes.
Starting in Tehran with shopkeepers in the Grand Bazaar angered by a sharp slide in the rial currency, the latest protests now involve others – mainly young men rather than the women and girls who played a key role at the Amini protests.
The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), has reported at least 34 protesters and four security personnel killed, and 2,200 arrested during the unrest, which analysts say highlights a deeper disillusionment with the Shi’ite status quo.
Iran suffered a nationwide internet blackout on Thursday, which internet monitoring group NetBlocks said extended into Friday. It coincided with calls from abroad for more protests from Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s last shah who was toppled in the 1979 Islamic revolution.
“The collapse is not just of the rial, but of trust,” said Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at the Middle East Institute in Washington D.C.
Authorities have tried to maintain a dual approach to the unrest, saying protests over the economy are legitimate and will be met by dialogue, while meeting some demonstrations with tear gas amid violent street confrontations.
Nearly five decades after the Islamic Revolution, Iran’s religious rulers are struggling to bridge the gap between their priorities and the expectations of a young society.
“I just want to live a peaceful, normal life 
 Instead, they (the rulers) insist on a nuclear program, supporting armed groups in the region, and maintaining hostility toward the United States,” Mina, 25, told Reuters by phone from Kuhdasht in the western Lorestan province.

PROTESTERS TAKE OVER THE STREETS

A former senior official from the establishment’s reformist wing said the Islamic Republic’s core ideological pillars — from enforced dress codes to foreign policy choices – did not resonate with those under 30 – nearly half the population.
“The younger generation no longer believes in revolutionary slogans — it wants to live freely,” he said.
The hijab, a flashpoint during the Amini protests, is now being enforced selectively. Many Iranian women now openly refuse to wear it in public places – breaking with a tradition which has long defined the Islamic Republic.
In the ongoing protests, many protesters are venting anger over Tehran’s support for militants in the region, chanting slogans such as “Not Gaza, not Lebanon, my life for Iran,” signalling frustration at the establishment’s priorities.
Tehran’s regional sway has been weakened by Israel’s attacks on its proxies – from Hamas in Gaza to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq – as well as by the ousting of Iran’s close ally, Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
In a video shared on X and verified by Reuters, protesters in the second-most-populated city of Mashhad, in the northeast, were seen bringing a large Iranian flag down from a pole and tearing it up.
People clashed with security forces in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar and cheering protesters marched through Abdanan, a city in southwestern Ilam province, other videos verified by Reuters this week showed.
In a video from the northeastern city of Gonabad, which Reuters was unable to verify, young men were seen rushing out of a seminary mosque to join a large crowd of protesters cheering them on in an apparent revolt against the clergy.

NO EASY WAY OUT FOR IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER

Vatanka from the Washington-based Middle East Institute said the Iranian clerical system had survived repeated protest cycles by repression and tactical concessions but the strategy was reaching its limits.
“Change now looks inevitable; regime collapse is possible but not guaranteed,” he said.
In other countries in the region such as Syria, Libya and Iraq, longtime leaders only fell after a combination of protests and military intervention.
U.S. President Donald Trump has said he might come to the aid of Iranian protesters if security forces fire on them.
“We are locked and loaded and ready to go,” he posted, without elaborating, on January 2, seven months after Israeli and U.S. forces bombed Iranian nuclear sites in a 12-day war.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, facing one of the most precarious moments of his decades-long rule, responded by vowing Iran “will not yield to the enemy.”
The former Iranian official said there is no easy way out for the 86-year-old leader, whose decades-old policies of building proxies, evading sanctions and advancing nuclear and missile programs appear to be unravelling.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has praised the protests, calling them “a decisive moment in which the Iranian people take their futures into their hands”.
Inside Iran, opinions are divided on whether foreign military intervention is imminent or possible and even firm government critics question whether it is desirable.
“Enough is enough. For 50 years this regime has been ruling my country. Look at the result. We are poor, isolated and frustrated,” said a 31-year-old man in the central city of Isfahan on condition of anonymity.
Asked whether he supported foreign intervention, he replied: “No. I don’t want my country to suffer military strikes again. Our people have endured enough. We want peace and friendship with the world — without the Islamic Republic.”
Exiled opponents of the Islamic Republic, themselves deeply divided, think their moment to bring down the establishment may be close at hand and have called for more protests. But how far they enjoy any support inside the country is uncertain.

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