Fereshteh Emami

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Fereshteh Emami

Fereshteh Emami

@FereshtehEmami

Retired. Chelsea FC supporter. Tory. I like reading and walking. I also like the Lake District and animals, especially cats. Views are my own.

London Katılım Mart 2009
106 Takip Edilen261 Takipçiler
Fereshteh Emami retweetledi
Priti Patel MP
Priti Patel MP@pritipatel·
Iran’s malign influence is one of the biggest threats to global security and to British security. We stand with the brave Iranians in their fight for freedom against their terrorist supporting, despotic and oppressive government. Read my article in the telegraph here 👇 telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/01/0…
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Niyak Ghorbani (نیاک)
Niyak Ghorbani (نیاک)@GhorbaniiNiyak·
Today, something was written permanently into the memory of the Iranian nation. At a time when the Iranian people are standing under pressure, repression and bullets, Jews and the people of England stood beside us in London, not out of slogans, but out of conscience, humanity and an understanding of the truth. You became the voice of a people who have been forced into silence for decades. You amplified the cry for freedom. You showed that this struggle is not only the struggle of one nation, but the struggle of humanity against tyranny. We Iranians will not forget this support. We will not forget these friendships. These days, this solidarity, this courage in standing with truth, are now written into the history of a nation. And to all of you who stood with the Iranian people today, we say: You were not merely witnesses, you will be part of the victory. @StopTheHate_UK @OurFightUk
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Fereshteh Emami
Fereshteh Emami@FereshtehEmami·
@RobertJenrick Thank you Robert. As a British-Iranian immigrant I salute you and appreciate you. 💙
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Robert Jenrick
Robert Jenrick@RobertJenrick·
I’ve long supported the opponents of the Iranian regime and have been sanctioned by Iran for it - which I consider a badge of honour. It’s a regime that spreads hate and violence around the world and threatens British interests. I wish the brave people on the streets well.
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Fereshteh Emami
Fereshteh Emami@FereshtehEmami·
@KemiBadenoch Kemi I am so proud that you are supporting the downtrodden people of Iran. As a British-Iranian woman I am very grateful. 💙💙💙🇬🇧
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Kemi Badenoch
Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenoch·
The brave Iranians on the streets protesting against their despotic and oppressive government are a beacon of hope for us all. The Iranian regime denies its own people basic liberties while exporting terrorism and instability beyond its borders, threatening the UK and our allies. We stand with those risking everything for freedom.
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Fereshteh Emami
Fereshteh Emami@FereshtehEmami·
@flyabout7 I am so glad you helped yourself to the cat food sweetie ♥️ 💋
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Flying Pig 🚁
Flying Pig 🚁@flyabout7·
By their very nature, Lurchers are the sly, silent assassins of the dog world. Operating in the shadows and waiting to strike with ruthless efficiency when the opportunity arises. Like today, when I turned my back for two seconds to find him helping himself to the cat food!🤨
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Flying Pig 🚁
Flying Pig 🚁@flyabout7·
Zorsted. 😴 It was a very blustery 9 mile stroll today to help blow away the cobwebs. Towards the end, Ralph bumped into his pals Merlin & Mina and they all ran at full pelt while having great fun. 🐾💨 He hasn’t moved since. 🙄😁 #LazyLurcher #AdoptDontShop
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Fereshteh Emami
Fereshteh Emami@FereshtehEmami·
@AmbJapanUK Sir, I was born in the year of the horse. Happy new year to you and your family. 🇯🇵🇬🇧
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Hiroshi Suzuki
Hiroshi Suzuki@AmbJapanUK·
Paddington welcomes the Year of Horse 🐎 ㊗️!! Happy New Year 😄
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Jason Perry - Mayor of Croydon
Jason Perry - Mayor of Croydon@JasonForCroydon·
Happy New Year! Next Year is set to be a fantastic year for our Borough - with new businesses opening in our district centres and a restored sense of Croydon Optimism. Bring on 2026!
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Malcolm & Baby Dog
Malcolm & Baby Dog@Malcolm_theCat·
Friends! It’s New Year’s Eve and the last day of 2025. What a year it’s been! Baby Dog and I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for your Friendship, Kindness and Support this year. It means the world to us. Whatever you are doing tonight, please stay safe, and we will step into 2026 together. See you next year! 🍾 🥳 🎉
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Val
Val@TrumpsHurricane·
What would you rather watch other than a Taylor Swift concert ??
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Flying Pig 🚁
Flying Pig 🚁@flyabout7·
Wishing you all a very happy and final sausage Sunday of 2025! Thank you for joining Lord Ralphington for his sausage breakfast over the past year and here’s to more in 2026! 🐾🐾 #SausageSunday #AdoptDontShop
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annie
annie@ohhanxiety·
name ONE
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Flying Pig 🚁
Flying Pig 🚁@flyabout7·
@heatherthefair I couldn’t agree more. Ralph had been taken to be euthanised as his previous owner “no longer wanted him”. 😔 I’d lost my 17 yr old Border Terrier 2 months earlier when I saw him in the local shelter. I now have the sweetest, most loving dog ever. 🐾🐾 #AdoptDontShop
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Heather McKee
Heather McKee@heatherthefair·
What a lovely story, please consider adopting before buying a dog. Ronnie, our ex-racer greyhound, was the best decision we've ever made. We've had him just over four years now and even though it was a bit of a rocky start he was so worth the effort! I love my big silly boy very much.
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The Husky@Mr_Husky1

My wife and I only meant to make a quick appearance at the neighborhood festival. Music was playing, people were laughing, and the air smelled like grilled food and summer. We figured we’d say hello, grab a bite, and head home. We had no idea we were about to meet the dog who would change everything. The local shelter had set up a large pen with around a dozen dogs inside. It was a full-on chorus—jumping, barking, spinning in circles, all of them trying to be noticed at once. My wife immediately pointed at a small reddish dog and said, “That one. He’s adorable. We should take him.” I hung back a little. Not because I wasn’t interested—because I wanted to actually see. And that’s when I spotted him. A big white dog, sitting quietly off to the side, like he’d learned that being calm doesn’t win you attention. He wasn’t pushing to the front. He wasn’t making noise. In the middle of all that chaos, he was practically invisible. The shelter volunteers offered short walks. We took the little red dog first. It was… not great. He pulled like a sled dog, barely acknowledged us, and acted like the whole thing was an inconvenience. So we brought him back. I glanced toward the corner again and finally asked, “What about the big white one?” The volunteer’s smile softened. “He’s almost a year old,” she said. “He’s deaf. He was adopted once… and returned.” She didn’t have to say more. The rest was written all over her face: people see the word “deaf” and decide it’s too much. They don’t even try. We asked to walk him anyway. And within minutes, the decision made itself. He was gentle. Focused. He watched our hands, our shoulders, our steps—reading everything he could. Not confused. Not “broken.” Just tuned in differently, working hard to understand. The kind of dog who’s always trying to do the right thing. My wife looked at me. I looked at her. We both knew it at the same time: this wasn’t a test walk. This was our dog. His belongings were still back at the shelter, about 10 minutes away, so my wife drove to pick them up while I helped him into our car. The second he climbed in, he folded into the seat like a dog who’d been holding himself together for too long. Then he fell asleep instantly—twisted sideways, head tilted down, paws in the air, completely trusting, completely peaceful. I actually laughed out loud. Because in that ridiculous, upside-down sleep position, you could see the truth: he wasn’t guarding himself anymore. That deaf dog—chosen once, returned once—had finally landed somewhere he didn’t have to earn his place. No speech. No promises. He just knew. He was home. Credit - my best fury friend

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