The members of the Iranian Women’s National Football Team are under significant pressure and ongoing threat from the Islamic Republic. As a result of their brave act of civil disobedience in refusing to sing the current regime’s national anthem, they face dire consequences should they return to Iran.
I call on the Australian government to ensure their safety and give them any and all needed support.
Disturbing message from an Iranian to the outside world:
Last night our hospital contacted the blood bank to arrange a blood transfer. Everything was coordinated.
The hospital vehicle went to pick it up, but security forces had surrounded the blood bank and wouldn’t let the hospital car through.
They openly said: “We shot them so they’d die. What do they need blood for?”
They are murdering the wounded inside hospitals.
Patients are being shot in the head.
This aligns with the photos we’ve seen: bodies showing signs of hospitalization, followed by a fatal bullet to the head.
This young lady is Aida Heydari. A 21 year old medical student, she was murdered by IRGC thugs in Sadeghieh Square protests on Jan 8th. Her family had to fight for days just to claim her body. Remember her.
Witnesses told Iran International that security forces prevented injured protesters from receiving medical care at a private clinic in Gilan province in northern Iran during demonstrations earlier this month.
According to the accounts, a doctor in the province had earlier said on social media that he was ready to offer free services such as first aid, stitches and wound care to those hurt in protests.
The witnesses said that on the day of the demonstrations, intelligence agents arrived at the clinic and ordered the doctor to stop seeing patients.
After a brief argument, the agents stayed outside the clinic and told people bringing injured protesters that it was closed, the witnesses said.
The accounts said the doctor was not allowed to leave the clinic until late at night, effectively keeping him inside.
As a result, many wounded protesters in the area were unable to receive treatment.
iranintl.com/en/202601225419
Peaceful protesters, innocent civilians. Our people are being beaten, blinded, tortured, imprisoned and brutally slaughtered for wanting freedom & dignity.
£1700 per bullet for families to retrieve the bodies.
Their sacrifices must not be forgotten or in vain🇮🇷
#IranMassacre
@CynicalLatina@EYakoby The regime needs silence to survive, so they do make a difference.
They make it politically difficult for leaders to ignore, destroys the regimes claims to represent Iranians, keep global attention on crackdowns & mass killings, & document crimes so they can’t be erased.
🇮🇷/🇬🇧 NEW: London police reportedly entered hospitals to arrest pro-Pahlavi supporters who had already been beaten by rival opposition groups and police.
Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s late Shah, lives in exile and remains the single most consistently invoked name by Iranians inside Iran calling for national leadership and restoration.
The UK government is very PRO-ISLAMIC REPUBLIC and has consistently favored accommodation with the Islamic Republic. It played a a key and decisive role in facilitating Ayatollah Khomeini’s take over of Iran and has since maintained policies that benefit the regime.
The British government has maintained policies that effectively shield the regime while suppressing anti-Islamic Republic voices within the Iranian diaspora.
Over the years, British authorities have failed to protect British-Iranians diaspora who oppose the Islamic Republic, allowing intimidation, harassment, and violent attacks against anti-regime and pro-Shah protesters. British-Iranians opposing the regime have faced intimidation, harassment, and violent attacks, often with little protection or accountability.
In multiple cases, regime-linked actors have been able to threaten and assault dissidents in the UK with little consequence, and in some instances with fatal outcomes.
What this video shows is not an isolated incident. It is evidence of a pattern: enforcement aligned with political convenience rather than principle.
The UK presents itself as a defender of free speech and democratic values. In practice, those freedoms appear selectively applied—extended only to speech that aligns with British foreign policy, not to those who challenge it.
What this ultimately shows is that the British government cannot be trusted to act honestly. It says one thing about democracy and does another when it is inconvenient. It protects a violent Islamist regime diplomatically while punishing those who oppose it on British soil. That isn’t complexity or diplomacy. It’s complicity. And history is very clear about how governments that side with tyrants while silencing their victims are judged in the end.
@koreanscot
BREAKING: Iranians who fled Iran speak out on the massacres being committed.
“12,000 to 20,000 killed is a joke. The media are misleading people. What’s happening on the ground is far worse than anything I can describe.”
"I’m in Mashhad and the situation is dire.
We sat up a makeshift surgery room in a garden (hospitals are regime occupied) and have a surgical team, with an anaesthesia specialist.
In the past four days we did many urgent surgeries on injured revolutionaries."
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