25 Million Iranians Have Contracted Coronavirus, 30–35 Million Others Are Exposed to Virus: RouhaniWhile Resalat daily questioned how anyone could believe that the state was concerned about the economy when they “ruined the economy within the last seven years”. This is an important point because the government has long tried to blame sanctions for the economic decline, even though the real cause is the ayatollahs’ missile building, terrorism funding, and institutionalized corruption. They also asked what the economic cost is of thousands of deaths per day. “We would certainly see severe consequences and pay a heavy price with so many people losing their lives. Unfortunately, the bottom line is that the methodology of preventing and spreading the coronavirus has been completely wrong from the beginning. So far, the government has made no effort to control the virus,” Jahan-e Sanat daily wrote. We should note that Rouhani is not alone in weaponizing COVID-19 against the people; after all, it was Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei who called it a “blessing” and many other officials have refused to come out in opposition to it. Hamdeli daily asked on Saturday how many people would have to die every day for the government to make a COVID-19 plan. “If the government cuts the budgets of institutions that have no interest in the present and the future of the country, yet have a budget line, or cuts the salaries of tens of millions of government officials, it may be able to alleviate some of its financial problems. The government could also then help people amid the coronavirus crisis,” Hamdali wrote on November 14. This suggests that the ayatollahs’ plan to use COVID-19 and the rising death toll to prevent another protest has failed.
Iran Media Acknowledges Ayatollahs’ Plan to Use COVID Against People
Iran: Public Murder and Torture to Halt Protests
Iran Arrests Thousands Arbitrarily Fearing an ProtestOn the other hand, the Iranian government commits crimes against humanity under the excuse of religious punishments. Public stoning, hanging, and amputating people’s fingers are only some instances of tortures mandated by the ayatollahs’ penal code. Moreover, the ayatollahs promote acid attacks on defenseless girls and women under the pretense of ensuring men’s zeal. On October 2, the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s Representatives in the city of Isfahan, central Iran, and Bojnourd, northeastern Iran, called their thugs to assault “norm-breaker” women. “The atmosphere of the society should be made insecure for these people, who are also few in number, and they should not be allowed to break the norms easily in the streets and parks,” said Khamenei’s Representative in Isfahan Yousef Tabatabai. “The phenomenon of bad hijab and lack of hijab in society is like a virus among the people, and it must be confronted. In addition to the police and the judiciary, to deal with the lack of hijab, people should also get involved in this matter and be moral polices. Therefore, we must be sensitive to non-coronaviruses,” said Abolghasem Yaghoubi, the Friday prayer leader and Khamenei’s representative in North Khorasan province. However, Iranian citizens never gave in to the government’s oppressive measures and restrictions, and they frequently show their objection to the ayatollahs’ actions. In the past two years, these objections have emerged in the form of nationwide protests. As the authorities said, the people seek an opportunity to express their wrath against the entire ruling system. Truly, increasing the suppression and restrictions is a testimony to public anger and distrust toward the rulers. This is the main issue that authoritarian regimes try to conceal by a flagrant crackdown on simple cries. However, the government is simultaneously losing its credit even among its loyalists, which put its survival on the verge of collapse. In this respect, a “reformism-theorist” Abbas Abdi describes recent protests as “illness,” adding that the establishment can just “contain the illness’s symptoms” with suppression. According to Abdi, once the government thought it had defeated social disappointment and “healed the patient,” the “illness emerged with more intensity” in November 2019. In his interview with Etemad daily, Abdi described Iran’s condition as a powder keg, which might explode with a small spark. “The problem has not been resolved, and sooner or later, another event can detonate this powder keg. Therefore, we must go further than that decision and learn from the protests. We must await the repetition of these incidents,” Etemad wrote on November 16.
Amnesty Condemns Bloody Crackdown on Iran’s November Protests
Iran’s Government Arrests Youth in Connection With November 2019 Protests
What Happened in November 2019?
Protests erupted across Iran on November 15, 2019, in response to the government’s tripling of fuel prices overnight, which would hit impoverished people the hardest. This quickly turned into the biggest anti-establishment protests since the 1979 revolution, with people loudly and proudly calling for regime change. Videos of the protests and the government’s crackdown appeared online, where they were authenticated and analyzed by Amnesty’s Digital Verification Corps. On November 16, Amnesty says that “at least 100 unarmed protesters and bystanders” were killed, even though international human rights law bans the use of lethal force unless there is an “imminent threat of death or serious injury”. The government then ordered an internet blackout, which was confirmed by several freedoms of expression non-governmental organizations, and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei ordered the security forces to go further. Between November 21 and 27, the internet was slowly restored, although much evidence of the state’s human rights abuses was lost. Many witnesses told Amnesty that they deleted videos and the like from their phones for fear of being caught with it. Amnesty had already released the evidence of those first 100 deaths at this point, although Iran’s Mission to the United Nations and other Iranian authorities denied this. But, through relentless crosschecking of information from relatives, human rights activists, and journalists, Amnesty has now verified 304 people murdered by the security services, 220 of whom died within 48 hours of the internet shut down. The verification is as follows:- 233 identified by first and last name
- Six by first or last name
- 65 by age, gender, and location of the injury
- Mohammad Dastankhah, 15, shot in the heart and lungs on his way home from school
- Azar Mirzapour, a 49-year-old nurse and mother of four, walking home from work, who had called her family to say she was just minutes away
- Bahman Jafari, 28, was shot in the heart and stomach on his way to work
Women’s Role in Leading Iran’s November 2019 Protests
Iran: Nationwide Protests to Gas Prices Draws Reaction from OfficialsDuring the massacre, the government cut off the internet and mobile networks so that protesters couldn’t communicate with each other or the outside world. At least 1,500 people, including 400 women, were killed, while 8,000 were injured and some 12,000 arrested. Many of the wounded were arrested and many of those arrested have been tortured. Some detainees have even been sentenced to death. This is one of the most horrific crimes against humanity in this century and must be dealt with accordingly. “Security forces shooting unarmed demonstrators from behind while they were running away, and shooting others directly in the face and vital organs – in other words shooting to kill. These are clear violations of international norms and standards on the use of force, and serious violations of human rights,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet. While Amnesty International verified this “shoot-to-kill policy” in a report on May 20, 2020. “The fact that so many people were shot while posing no threat whatsoever shows the sheer ruthlessness of the security forces’ unlawful killing spree,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Research and Advocacy Director for the Middle East and North Africa. Amnesty said that in all but four cases the victims were shot by Iranian security forces, including the IRGC, paramilitary Bassij, and, the police. The other four cases included two people suffering fatal head injuries after being beaten by the security forces and two who suffocated from tear gas.
Tehran Increases Suppression and Terrorism at the Expense of Workers
Iran’s 2020 Budget, in Support of Suppression and CorruptionThis is while these impoverished workers have run the country’s production cycle for decades. They have spent most of their lives to keep Iran’s economy going. But their compensation has been nothing but poverty, suppression, and living pressures. On the other hand, their monthly salaries are one-fifth of the poverty line announced by the Parliament (Majlis) labor law in April. Their employers, many of whom are backed by the government and relatives of government officials, do not pay the paychecks of workers and leave them in more misery. These facts prompt workers to raise their voices for their inherent rights and not give in to more pressure.
In this respect, workshop personnel of Azad-rah Kariz company of the city of Rudbar in Gilan province held a rally on Thursday, November 5, demanding their three-month arrears. Furthermore, on November 2, around 1,000 lifeguards working on the Caspian Sea coast protested delays in their salaries, according to ILNA. On October 18, a group of workers of Serish-Abad municipality from the environs of Qorveh city in Kurdistan province held a rally, protesting non-paying their salaries and arrears, ILNA reported on the same day. Also, the secretary-general of Nursing Home Mohammad Sharifi-Moghaddam criticized the budgets spent on different sectors under the name of nurses. “Many nurses ask which one of these multi-billion-dollar budgets have been distributed precisely and based on fairness?” Isfahan Emrouz website quoted Sharifi-Moghaddam as saying on October 31.After months of arguments, officials finally admitted to raising the workers' monthly wages from $114 to $146.
— Iran Focus (@Iran_Focus) June 1, 2020
The ayatollahs refuse to raise Iranian workers' payment while they pay at least $1,500 to each foreign combatant who fights Syrian protesters to hold al-Assad in power. pic.twitter.com/4NsHogxBOi
A Look Back at Last Year’s Protests in Iran
How Does the Government Respond to Complains?
However, the workers are faced with suppression, threats to dismissal, and even detention in response to their vital demands. For instance, in a joint plan, the government and judiciary have detained many activists of the Haft-Tappeh Sugarcane complex and issued long-term prison sentences for them. Iranian authorities practically consider no right for their own people despite spending billions of dollars’ worth of Iran’s national assets on exporting terrorism and warmongering in the Middle East and around the world. Instead, they crack down on any objections and economic grievances with violence. A year ago, these days, the IRGC and security forces killed at least 1,500 citizens who had taken onto the streets to protests gas price hikes. Security forces also detained thousands more and transferred them to dungeons and safe houses controlled by the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), where many detainees lost their lives under torture. On September 2, Amnesty International published damning details provided through interviews with around 60 detained protesters. They recounted how authorities, interrogators, and judicial officials used inhuman torture and other ill-treatment to force them to make televised confessions. Moreover, the government incites ethnic conflicts in other countries, such as Yemen. “Tehran’s regime has spent hundred-millions of dollars to aid Houthis in Yemen and has equipped them with ballistic missiles, drones, and the technology of explosive speedboats,” Al-Hurra website reported on October 20. “In recent years, Iran has spent around $100 million per year to support Hamas and Islamic Jihad groups… Tehran’s regime has also boosted the Lebanese Hezbollah with military technology and an annual monetary aid valued at $700 million,” Al-Hurra added. Also, the U.S. Representative to the United Nations Kelly Craft blamed Iranian authorities for involving in Yemen’s conflicts. “For six years, Iran has fueled conflict, bloodshed, and misery in Yemen through its financial and military support to the Houthis. The Iranian regime’s involvement has undermined prospects for peace and made hunger, disease, and desperation a daily reality for millions of Yemenis,” she tweeted on October 29.Of course, the mentioned expenditures are separated from the government’s ongoing expenses in Syria, Iraq, and other regional states. However, the people of Iran frequently rejected the government’s influence in other countries, chanting, “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon, my life is for Iran,” and “Let go of Syria, think about us.” In such circumstances, officials from both factions feel public wrath against their mismanagement, economic failures, and costly aggressive policies imposed skyrocketing expenditures on society.For six years, Iran has fueled conflict, bloodshed and misery in Yemen through its financial and military support to the Houthis. The Iranian regime’s involvement has undermined prospects for peace and made hunger, disease and desperation a daily reality for millions of Yemenis.
— Ambassador Kelly Craft (@USAmbUN) October 29, 2020
Iran: People No Longer Tolerate Current Governing SystemIn this respect, they time and again warn each other about igniting a new round of protests. However, the government that has disturbed public trust and has responded to any cry with bullets knows no way but intensifying suppression, which paves the way for more protests.
Two Political Prisoners Denied Medical Care Despite Covid-19 Symptoms
Suffocating Iranians Under the Burden of Inflation
60 Million Iranians Below the Poverty Line“We had a lot of hardships and problems throughout 2018 and 2019, but our food shelves were not empty, and people were not in dire need of basic necessities,” Rouhani had claimed on May 27, according to state TV. In April, Rouhani also claimed that the shelves of stores in Western countries were empty and everything could be found in Iran. Those statements aroused the hatred of all the people because the shelves of stores were not empty due to their growing poverty and they could no longer afford to purchase basic necessities. “The momentary increase in the price of basic goods and the lack of basic goods have led to citizens’ dissatisfaction. In the meantime, the lack of supervision is heard more than ever among the people’s grievances, and the weak strata of society have no choice but to reduce their daily purchases,” according to a report wired on October 23 by the Tasnim news agency. “The market has been abandoned in the true sense of the word, and the heavy pressure of this abandonment and carelessness by the officials is on the people, especially the weak,” the report added. The same news agency, according to the Statistics Center, published the inflation rate in September of this year, in which it acknowledged the crushing inflation and its growing trend. “The inflation rate in October reached 4.41 percent. In other words, households in the country have spent an average of 4.41 percent more than September 2019 to buy a ‘set of identical goods and services,’” the Tasnim report concluded. According to the Statistics Center, the inflation rate has been increasing compared to the last few years. The state-run Eghtesad Online website, in October, acknowledged the highest inflation rate in the last ten years. “Monthly inflation recorded in the first month of the autumn season is the highest monthly inflation since the early 2000s. Also, average prices in October this year compared to the same month last year increased by more than 41 percent,” the website wrote. These conditions have doubled pressures on the Iranian people, a burden that is literally preventing people from making ends meet.
How State-owned Companies Are Devouring Iranian Economy“Point-to-point inflation was still above 20 percent. All this shows how much more pressure the inflation spill we are facing this year has put on the household,” the Eghtesad Online website wrote on October 24. “People are confused due to various economic problems. It is as if no one is thinking about dealing with high prices and we do not know why wild horses have left prices alone. People, especially those with a fixed monthly income in front of inflation, do not know how to make a living,” Arman daily wrote on November 10. However, the government is doing its best to hide the cause of this inflation, which is caused by the sharp growth of liquidity due to the budget deficit. Citing a report by the Central Bank, Vatan-e-Emrooz daily on November 5 exposed the government’s obvious theft from people’s pockets. “According to the latest Central Bank report regarding the major monetary indicators at the end of September this year, the volume of liquidity has reached 28.95 trillion rials [$115.8 million]. Thus, the liquidity index in the first six months of this year has increased by 17.1 points, and in September of this year it has increased by 36.2 points,” the report reads.
Ayatollahs’ Pardoning of Political Prisoners Is a Ruse
- hooding or blindfolding
- forced into painful stress positions for long periods
- beating with sticks, rubber hosepipes, knives, batons, and cables
- punching, kicking, and flogging
- deprivation of food and water
- suspension from the ceiling
- months of solitary confinement
- deprivation of medical care
The clerical regime must be ousted from the UN and its leaders must face justice for their systematic violations of #HumanRights, crime against humanity and trampling human dignity. #Iran
— Maryam Rajavi (@Maryam_Rajavi) October 8, 2020
Tehran Restricts IAEA’s Access to Contested Nuclear Sites
Iranian Opposition Reveals New Details About Military Aspects of Tehran’s Nuclear ProgramThe Iranian government renewed skepticism about their nuclear activities by limiting international inspectors’ access to contested sites. Chair of the Parliament (Majlis) National Security and Foreign Policy Committee Mojtaba Zonnour announced the government’s new decision. “The Islamic Republic will continue to reduce the access granted to inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which is tasked with performing oversight on Iran’s contested nuclear sites,” Zonnour said on November 11. Therefore, because of severe limitations applied by Tehran, the agency can no longer perform supervisory actions and keep tabs on Iran’s nuclear advancements. All the while, the JCPOA architects believed that they would fulfill “unprecedented verifications” that have never been performed in history. The fact that the Iranian government keeps increasing its stockpile of low-enriched uranium with higher purity than allowed in spite of elusive talking points, trying to loosen sanctions against the ayatollahs’ adventure. Up to now, Tehran’s lobbies severely endeavor to incite the upcoming U.S. administration—either Democrat or Republican—to re-engage in negotiations with Tehran. However, the ayatollahs’ illegal stockpiling of low-enriched uranium proved that the problem has laid in Iranian leaders’ ominous intuitions, not in foreign governments.
End of Tehran’s Joy Over the Lifting of UN Arms Embargo
Iran Sees Darkest Days for Press Freedom
What Is the Iranian Cyber-Army’s Mission?“Sentencing prisoners of conscience including journalists to death is the most extreme way to suppress freedom of expression. It is time the Islamic Republic finally abandoned these cruel punishments from another era,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. Of course, the government arrests journalists under multiple different false reasons, including:
- propaganda against the state
- acting against national security
- dissemination of lies
- insulting
- collaboration with enemy governments
- espionage
- Zahra Kazemi: This Iranian-Canadian journalist was arrested outside Evin Prison in Tehran in 2003 for taking pictures of a protest by the families of Evin prisoners. She was beaten to death in custody by Tehran’s Prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi, but the government covered it up.
- Nada Sabouri: This journalist took part in a protest in 2014 following an attack by Evin Prison guards on detainees and was sentenced to 3.5 years in prison for “collusion against the system.”
- Tahereh Riyahi: This social editor for the semi-official BORNA news agency was arrested by the Intelligence Ministry in 2016 and accused of” propaganda against the state”. In her last phone call, she told her family not to wait for her anymore.
- Zeinab Rahimi: This former environmental journalist for the semi-official ISNA news agency, was dismissed in April for “communicating with the enemy”.
- Kowsar Karimi: The first to report on the demolition of houses in Abolfazl village, was arrested in September on the charge of “propaganda against the state”.
- Aliyeh Motallebzadeh: This photographer, women’s rights activist, and head of the Association Defending Freedom of the Press, was transferred to Evin Prison in October 2020 and is serving three years in prison.
- Negar Massoudi: This photographer and documentary filmmaker who was reporting on acid attacks against women in Isfahan, was arrested by Intelligence Ministry agents in October 2020.
- 50 female journalists were fired from the semi-official ANA news agency in September 2018 because of their gender.


