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The Iranian Rial Continues to Collapse Against the US Dollar

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Amid the ongoing widespread economic crisis and the upward, record-breaking trend of foreign currency prices in Iran’s market, the price of each U.S. dollar surpassed 1.29 million rials.

Websites that track currency prices in Iran reported on Saturday, November 13, that the price of each U.S. dollar rose to more than 1.29 million rials, each euro to more than 1.5 million rials, and each British pound to more than 1.7 million rials.

At the same time, the price of the new-design gold coin known as the “Emami” also exceeded 1.38 billion rials.

Price Of U.S. Dollar In Iran Set A New Record

In recent weeks, an upward wave has swept through the currency and gold markets, setting successive records and charting a new path of rising prices.

News agencies affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), including the state-run Fars and Tasnim news agencies, simultaneously with the new dollar record, pointed the finger of blame at the government of Iranian regime president Masoud Pezeshkian and, contrary to their usual practice of not recognizing free-market exchange rates, criticized the price increases.

Ali Madani-Zadeh, the Iranian regime’s minister of economic affairs and finance, said on December 8 in response to the sharp rise in the dollar’s price: “In a wartime environment, damage amounting to several hundred trillion rials has been inflicted, and under these conditions you expect the dollar to become cheaper—when the country has been subjected to the most unprecedented military attack?”

He added: “In the middle of a war, do you expect inflation not to rise? If it had not risen, you should have been surprised.”

The rise in the dollar’s price in Iran has coincided with an increase in gasoline prices.

The three-tier gasoline pricing plan was implemented across Iran starting early Saturday, December 13.

Under this plan, subsidized gasoline continues to be offered at rates of 15,000 and 30,000 rials, while excess consumption, as well as gasoline for government vehicles, imported cars, and some high-priced vehicles, will be calculated at a rate of 50,000 rials.

In recent months, runaway inflation and the rising rates of foreign currencies have heightened concerns about the deterioration of Iran’s economic situation, a trend that intensified following the return of United Nations sanctions and the emphasis by officials of Iran’s regime on continuing the nuclear program.

Over the past year, the prices of food items in Iran have increased by an average of more than 66%.

The Price of Essential Goods Spike in Iran

As prices of goods, food items, and essential supplies continue to rise in Iran, the state-run ILNA News Agency quoted a labor activist saying that the price of a single grain of rice is now 800 rials.

ILNA reported on Thursday, December 11, that the price of medicine is once again increasing and, according to official reports, will rise by four to twelve times.

Nader Moradi, a labor activist, told this state-run outlet that the soaring prices of essential goods mean “the result of this trend is breaking the backs of poor and defenseless people. Pressure of this magnitude has no precedent in recent years.”

Iran: In Five Months, Raw Milk Prices Have Risen By What Would Normally Take Fifty Years

Criticizing the steep rise in basic living necessities, he added, “Today, each kilo of Iranian rice costs about 400,000 tomans. With a simple calculation, we see that the price of a single grain of rice is about 80 tomans (800 rials).” He also noted that each U.S. dollar is currently traded at around 125,000 tomans (1.25 million rials).

Moradi questioned what level rice prices will reach after the “removal of preferential currency” and asked what the “new price shock will do to people’s tables.”

In this context, the state-run Ham-Mihan newspaper wrote on December 9 that monthly, year-on-year, and point-to-point inflation of food items continues to climb. According to the report, from October 2024 to October 2025, “the price of each kilo of beans increased by 255%, rising from 124,000 tomans to 443,000 tomans.”

The report states, “For several years now, Iranian rice has disappeared from household tables, and studies show that this product, with a 155% increase, rose from an average of 124,000 tomans to 316,000 tomans in October.”

According to Ham-Mihan, the price of Iranian rice, depending on type and quality, ranges from 260,000 tomans to 480,000 tomans.

But beyond these items, other essential foods have also risen by 20% to 100%, including notable increases in bread prices.

Ham-Mihan also wrote that “red meat, depending on type, has increased by 25% to 30% in the past year and now costs around 1 million tomans per kilo.”

According to reports, many of these price hikes were authorized by Iran’s regime, even as Masoud Pezeshkian’s government has repeatedly opposed increasing the minimum wage for workers.

Price Of U.S. Dollar In Iran Set A New Record

Earlier, on October 31, Morteza Afghah, an economist and faculty member at Ahvaz University, warned in an interview with the state-run Khabar Online that if Masoud Pezeshkian’s government fails to control tensions, Iran will face a “major stagflation,” predicting that “the inflation rate may exceed 60% by year’s end.”

Moradi told ILNA, “No matter how much wages increase, they cannot compensate for this compounded inflation. With these right-wing and contractionary policies, workers’ purchasing power and the real value of wages will decline even further next year.”

Workers are paid in tomans while costs rise in dollars

Currently, the base monthly wage for workers covered by labor law is close to 11 million tomans, and with benefits it reaches about 15 million tomans. In contrast, labor groups aligned with the regime say that the monthly cost-of-living basket has reached 58 million tomans (approximately 465 dollars).

Yet even this modest wage is paid with delays of one to several months in many factories and companies, leading repeatedly to labor strikes and protests.

Moradi added that “there is no oversight” regarding Iran’s inflation trend, explaining, “There are constant reports about financial imbalance and the rally of rising dollar and gold prices. On December 10, the dollar reached over 124,000 tomans; look how far wages have collapsed—the base wage is under 100 dollars.”

He continued, “The minimum wage plus universal benefits for a worker with one child is about 15 million tomans. Considering the dollar price on December 10 (124,870 tomans), this amounts to about 120 dollars.”

Moradi said, “A worker who works eight hours a day and forty-four hours a week ends up earning 120 dollars a month—and must survive an entire month on this meager income.”

He called for comparing “this tiny amount” with the wages of minimum-income workers in other countries, including neighboring states, stressing: “The result is clear: Iranian workers have fallen sharply below the poverty line.”

Minimum wages in Iran’s neighboring countries and the United States

Reports indicate that the minimum wage in Iraq this year is about twice that of Iran: 240 dollars per month.

The minimum wage in Turkey ranges from 620 to 730 dollars, in Turkmenistan around 400 dollars, in Azerbaijan about 235 dollars, in Pakistan 130 to 140 dollars, in Armenia about 190 dollars, and in Afghanistan between 70 and 80 dollars.

In the United States, although the federal minimum wage is 7 dollars and 25 cents per hour, different states set higher pay rates for workers.

Hourly pay is 16.66 dollars in Washington State, 16.50 dollars in California, 14 dollars in Florida, and 13 dollars in Alaska.

The minimum wage is 15 dollars per hour in Delaware, Illinois, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and New York; 12.41 dollars in Virginia; 15 dollars in Maryland; and 17.95 dollars in the District of Columbia, where the U.S. capital is located.

In several states—including Utah, Idaho, North Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Kansas, Texas, Indiana, North Carolina, and New Hampshire—the hourly minimum wage remains 7.25 dollars.

Meanwhile, people in the U.S. can purchase a kilo of basmati rice for between 2.75 dollars and 4.50 dollars, depending on the store—roughly the price range that Moradi referred to in his interview with the state-run Mehr News Agency.

Kurdish Political Prisoner Sentenced to Death After Minutes-Long Trial

A Kurdish political prisoner named Ramin Zeleh, from the city of Naqadeh and held in the local prison, has been sentenced to death by Branch One of the Revolutionary Court in Mahabad, overseen by Judge Siyami, on the charge of “baghi” (armed rebellion). The ruling was delivered to him on Saturday, December 6. According to reports, the charge is based on an allegation that he “belonged to one of the Kurdish political parties,” a common accusation used by Iran’s regime against Kurdish activists. Mahabad and Naqadeh are located in Iran’s northwest, an area with a large Kurdish population.

Iran: 304 Executions in One Month, 1,735 In 2025 So Far

Arrest without a judicial warrant and 508 days of incommunicado detention under security pressure

Ramin Zeleh was arrested by security forces on July 22, 2024, without any judicial warrant authorizing entry into his home or his arrest. After security forces raided his house, he was taken to an unknown location, and his family remained unaware of his condition for a long time. Since his arrest, this political prisoner has spent more than 508 days under interrogation, detention, and intense security pressure.

Informed sources say that Zeleh’s family has been under constant pressure and repeated threats from security forces throughout this period to prevent them from sharing information about their son’s condition. The threats included warnings about the consequences of publicizing the case—an intimidation tactic frequently used by Iran’s regime—causing extreme anxiety and severe emotional distress for the family.

Denial of access to a lawyer and a minutes-long trial

According to a source close to the case, Ramin Zeleh was denied access to a lawyer of his choosing at all stages of his arrest and interrogation, and even afterward. He was completely deprived of the right to independent counsel, and the court appointed a state-selected public defender whose name and identity are unknown even to his family. This is a common pattern in politically motivated cases handled by Iran’s Revolutionary Courts.

Lawmakers at EU Parliament Back NCRI’s “Third Option” Amidst Historic Execution Surge in Iran

The trial of this Kurdish political prisoner was held in an online session lasting only a few minutes—a hearing that offered neither the opportunity to defend himself nor to present evidence. According to reports, the judicial process was so rapid and opaque that even the court-appointed public defender played no meaningful role in defending him. Based solely on this brief session, the death sentence was issued and delivered.

Deprivation of phone calls and family visits

Sources state that throughout his detention, Ramin Zeleh has been deprived of the right to phone calls and family visits. This ban applied during both his interrogation period and his subsequent confinement in detention centers and prison. Most of the time, his family had no information about his health or his whereabouts—a practice routinely used by Iran’s regime to pressure political detainees.

Pressure on the family and severe security restrictions

The family of this political prisoner has been denied access to his case file, and according to relatives, they have repeatedly been threatened by security forces that “if you speak out, the case will become more complicated.” Such pressure has prevented them from publicly expressing their concerns.

Uncertainty in the judicial process and concern among human rights activists

The issuance of a death sentence for a political prisoner after a minutes-long trial held without his chosen lawyer has heightened concerns among human rights activists. According to informed sources, Ramin Zeleh’s case has been marked by serious violations of basic rights from the beginning, with no indication that any principles of fair trial or due process were observed.

Trump Threatens to Destroy Tehran’s Nuclear Weapons Capabilities If It Rebuilds It

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Donald Trump, the president of the United States, once again threatened Iran’s regime and said:

“They can try, but it’s going to take them a long time to come back. But if they do want to come back, and they want to come back without a deal, then we’re going to obliterate that one, too.”

During a meeting with reporters at the White House on Thursday evening, December 11 2025, Trump described the attack on the Iranian regime’s nuclear facilities as a foundation for peace. He said this attack resulted in the most complete destruction of Iran’s nuclear capacity, which made peace possible because previously everyone feared Iran, and now they do not.

Iran’s Regime Is Clearing One of Its Nuclear Facilities, Study Shows

Referring to the heavy damage suffered by Iran, Trump said: “They can probably never start there again. If they ever started, they’d probably choose a new site.”

Hours before Trump’s remarks, Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran’s regime, in a meeting with a group of state-aligned eulogists, referred to repeated comments about “the renewed occurrence of military conflict in Iran” and described them as “a deliberate act to create concern and doubt among citizens.”

He also added that the United States stands at the center of this wide and active front, with some European countries surrounding it.

Renewed threat against Iran’s regime

The U.S. president directly threatened Iran’s regime, saying Washington is able to disable Iran’s missiles very quickly.

Referring to the ongoing regional war, Trump described all wars as brutal and destructive and called the battle over Iran’s nuclear capabilities a turning point in regional developments, saying: “This attack was the most complete destruction of Iran’s nuclear capabilities. This war was a devastating blow… The blow they received was so severe that I don’t think they’ll want to try again.”

Trump again emphasized that “no other country” was capable of carrying out such an attack and described the United States as having “the best weapons and the best military in the world.” He added:

“If Iran had not been so effectively disabled, none of our allies in the region would have been able to reach the agreements we have now.”

Praising the leaders of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, he said Iran “is no longer the country it once was” and that its standing “has dramatically declined,” although he warned that Tehran may attempt to revive its nuclear program in the future: “They can try, but it will take a long time to get back to where they were.”

Iran’s regime’s desire for a deal with the U.S.

In another part of his remarks, Trump claimed that Iran’s regime is now willing to negotiate with his administration and said:

“They very much want to make a deal with me. And I also want to make a deal with them if possible. Before the bombing, we were reasonably close to making a deal.”

Trump described the twelve-day war as a “missed opportunity” for Iran’s regime and added: “They could have made a deal where there were no casualties or buildings destroyed. We would have targeted their nuclear facilities and that would have been the end of it. They could have made a great deal, but they missed that opportunity. And now they want to make another one.”

Over the past six months, the war of words between Trump and Iran’s regime has continued, with Trump repeatedly threatening to strike Iran’s nuclear and missile facilities again.

On October 20, during a joint press conference with the prime minister of Australia, Trump described the airstrike on Iran’s nuclear facilities as one of the largest military operations in history. He said war is a strange thing: bad things may happen, but sometimes it produces good outcomes.

That same day, Iran’s regime supreme leader dismissed Trump’s comments about “bombing Iran’s nuclear industry and wiping it out” as mere “fantasy.”

Another major point of contention between Khamenei and Trump has been negotiations with the United States. Trump consistently claims Iran wants to resume talks, while Khamenei rejects any form of negotiation with the U.S.

On November 14, before departing for Florida for the weekend, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that Iran, like many others seeking talks with the U.S., wants to negotiate a deal.

Earlier, during a November 6 meeting with Central Asian leaders, Trump had said Iran’s regime asked the White House whether sanctions could be lifted. He stressed that he is willing to listen to such requests and that lifting sanctions is possible.

On November 17, one day before Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s trip to the United States, a letter from Masoud Pezeshkian, the president of Iran’s regime, was sent to Saudi Arabia. The Saudi state news agency reported that the letter had reached bin Salman but did not disclose its contents.

Later, Reuters, quoting several informed sources, wrote that Tehran had asked Riyadh to persuade Trump to revive nuclear negotiations.

Iran’s Influenza Vaccines Stock Depleted as Cases Surge

Payam Tabarsi, an infectious disease specialist, referring to the rise in influenza cases in Iran, said that the number of critically ill and hospitalized patients has increased and that the stock of influenza vaccines has also been depleted.

On Thursday, December 10, Tabarsi told the state-run Mehr News Agency that the most effective way to prevent influenza is “observing hygiene protocols” and that people at risk should avoid crowded places.

He added, “If people can obtain the vaccine, it is not too late to get vaccinated, and there is still time until March 2026. However, given the current vaccine shortage, the main emphasis is on hygiene and reducing exposure to the virus.”

357 Dead From Air Pollution In Tehran In One Week

Homayoun Sameh Najafabadi, a member of the Health Commission of the Iranian regime’s parliament, said on December 10 that the high cost of the influenza vaccine and the lack of insurance coverage prevented many people from accessing it, leading to “this situation.”

He added, “The fatal risk of influenza has become higher than that of COVID-19. In other words, the lethality of influenza is very high.”

In recent weeks, coinciding with the peak of severe influenza and rising air pollution in major cities, citizens have been facing a new wave of respiratory infections.

Hossein Kermanpour, head of public relations for Iran’s regime Ministry of Health, announced on December 10 that 101 people have died due to the new wave of influenza in the country, “most of whom had not been vaccinated.”

At the same time, Ghobad Moradi, head of the Communicable Diseases Management Center at Iran’s regime Ministry of Health, said that the share of circulating respiratory infections has “reached about 16 to 17%,” a figure he says is “above the 10% global warning threshold,” indicating that the country has entered an influenza peak and many provinces have exceeded the alert level.

Widespread influenza wave in the country

Ahmad Mehri, an epidemiologist and public health expert, announced on December 11: “The country is facing a widespread influenza wave, with more than 30% of respiratory samples testing positive, three to four times the warning threshold defined by the surveillance system, and almost all provinces are affected by this wave.”

He warned, “The main concern in this wave is the consequences of critical illness and the risk of death. Children, the elderly, pregnant women, patients with diabetes or hypertension, cancer patients, and those taking immunosuppressive drugs are at higher risk than others.”

Air Pollution In Khuzestan Caused More Than 1,600 Deaths In Past Year

Meanwhile, the simultaneous severe air pollution alongside the influenza peak has doubled citizens’ concerns.

Minoo Mohraz, an infectious disease specialist, said on December 11 that air pollution alone does not cause influenza but can exacerbate the symptoms of respiratory illnesses.

She added, “Patients with allergies, asthma, and respiratory problems are more vulnerable under these conditions, and the circulation of the influenza virus can be more dangerous at such times.”

On December 8, Mohraz also told the state-run newspaper Shargh: “The current influenza wave is more severe than previous waves, and with the increase in cases, the likelihood of mortality and lethality also exists.”

Drug shortages and difficult days ahead

Mohammad Abdehzadeh, head of the Health Economy Commission of Tehran Chamber of Commerce, told the state-run ILNA news agency on December 11: “The drug shortage in the country is not a one-day or two-day problem, nor is it just this year or last year; it has existed for various reasons, and its roots are clear.”

He attributed the drug shortage to three factors: “lack of foreign currency resources,” “shortage of rials,” and “untimely drug pricing,” emphasizing, “These three reasons have always caused chronic drug shortages in past years.”

Abdehzadeh said pharmaceutical companies face difficulties in obtaining foreign currency and collecting their rial claims, and if these problems are not resolved, the last three months of the year will be “difficult days” for the country’s drug market.

He continued: “Currently, the total claims of pharmaceutical companies from both government and private companies and pharmacies have reached over 1.5 quadrillion rials (approximately 1.25 billion dollars). This means that nearly half of the pharmaceutical market’s turnover consists of claims that producers have not been able to collect in rials.”

Abdehzadeh also announced on December 10 that the severe drug shortage will continue in the last quarter of the year (from January to March 2026), and producers and importers are queuing daily to address issues with drug imports at the Central Bank and Ministry of Health.

While the widespread influenza wave affects children, the elderly, and high-risk groups, repeated warnings and reports about drug shortages and high prices have cast a heavy shadow over patients’ lives and the healthcare system.

Lawmakers at EU Parliament Back NCRI’s “Third Option” Amidst Historic Execution Surge in Iran

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BRUSSELS — On December 10, 2025, the European Parliament served as the stage for a critical convergence of Iranian opposition leaders and Western policymakers. Marking International Human Rights Day, a high-profile conference hosted in Brussels brought together Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), alongside a coalition of former ministers, lawmakers, and international legal experts.

The proceedings focused on a stark dual reality: the Iranian regime’s unprecedented escalation of executions and the simultaneous consolidation of an organized resistance movement. Speakers detailed a human rights crisis that has surpassed historical benchmarks while outlining a “Third Option” for the international community—a policy framework that rejects both appeasement and foreign military intervention, relying instead on the Iranian people to dismantle the religious dictatorship.

https://www.ncr-iran.org/en/news/iran-resistance/eu-lawmakers-and-international-figures-call-for-accountability-in-iran-and-recognition-of-the-ncri-as-a-democratic-alternative/

A Regime “Hanging Human Rights”

The conference opened with a grim accounting of the regime’s recent violence. In her keynote address, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi presented statistics indicating that the clerical regime has accelerated its machinery of death to levels not seen in decades. She revealed that in November alone, the judiciary carried out “335 executions.”

Mrs. Rajavi described a government that “hangs human rights every single day,” highlighting the plight of 18 political prisoners currently sentenced to death solely for their affiliation with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK). She argued that this intensification of violence is a symptom of desperation rather than strength. “Never before have the mullahs been so much in need of intensifying repression because never before have they felt so close to being overthrown,” she told the assembly.

Dominique Attias, Chair of the European Lawyers Foundation, characterized the executions as a “deliberate strategy of terror.” She pointed to the regime’s systematic destruction of mass-grave sites—desecrating some 9,500 graves from the 1980s—as an “ultimate profanation” designed to erase evidence of past atrocities.

Stephen Rapp, the former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Global Criminal Justice, provided a legal context for these actions. Noting that nearly 2,000 executions have been recorded this year, Rapp classified the violence as ongoing crimes against humanity. “The pattern we see today echoes the logic of 1988,” Rapp observed, referring to the massacre of 30,000 political prisoners. He insisted that Western powers must ensure that the mislabeling of the PMOI as terrorists, which previously hamstrung the opposition, is “never again” repeated.

Demanding a Paradigm Shift in EU Policy

A central theme of the event was the inadequacy of current European policies toward Tehran. Former MEP Struan Stevenson, who moderated the session, dismissed the utility of limited military strikes against the regime’s infrastructure.

“Airstrikes… cannot uproot the epicenter of instability—the clerical dictatorship in Tehran,” Stevenson asserted. He urged the European Union to “end appeasement,” calling for the immediate closure of Iranian embassies used for repression and the designation of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization.

This security concern was reinforced by MEP Antonio López-Istúriz White, Chair of the Delegation for Relations with Mexico. Referencing the assassination attempt against former EP Vice-President Alejo Vidal-Quadras in Madrid, he warned that “no normalization of EU-Iran relations is acceptable” while transnational repression continues. López-Istúriz White cautioned that Tehran’s proxy networks pose a direct security threat that extends beyond the Middle East into Europe itself.

The “Third Option” and Resistance Units

Amidst the condemnation, speakers presented the NCRI’s “Third Option” as the only viable path to stability. Former MEP Dorien Rookmaker described the regime as “100 percent pure evil” and advocated for the formal endorsement of Mrs. Rajavi’s Ten-Point Plan, which envisions a secular, non-nuclear republic with gender equality.

Kumi Naidoo, former Secretary-General of Amnesty International, focused on the demographics driving this movement. He described Iranian women and the Resistance Units as “the heartbeat of the nationwide struggle.” Citing the case of Zahra Tabari, a 67-year-old engineer sentenced to death for holding a banner reading “Woman, Resistance, Freedom,” Naidoo argued that such extreme repression reveals the regime’s “political weakness” and fear of its own citizens.

Rejecting the Shah and the Mullahs

A critical distinction made throughout the proceedings was the forward-looking nature of the opposition. Dr. Sina Dashti, an Iranian-Swedish physician, offered testimony regarding the generational struggle against tyranny. He emphasized that Iranian society “rejects both monarchy and theocracy,” noting that the Shah’s suppression of democratic forces had paved the way for the current religious dictatorship.

Mrs. Rajavi reinforced this stance, stating that the Iranian people seek a democratic republic that rejects both the “Shah’s and the mullahs’ autocracies.” The consensus among speakers was that the expanding Resistance Units demonstrate a nationwide will to replace theocratic rule with free elections and the separation of religion and state.

Legal Urgency

The event concluded with urgent calls for legal intervention to protect those currently on death row. Mark Ellis, Executive Director of the International Bar Association, warned that the regime is actively trying to “bury evidence, silence victims, and entrench impunity.” He urged European nations to utilize universal jurisdiction to prosecute regime officials, emphasizing that perpetrators must not believe “time is on their side.”

International human rights lawyer Azadeh Zabeti underscored the immediacy of the crisis. She warned that the execution of the 18 PMOI supporters would amount to “deliberate political killings by the state,” calling on the international community to recognize the NCRI’s roadmap as the definitive solution to the crisis.

European Lawmakers Rally Behind NCRI’s “Third Option” as Executions in Iran Surge

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BRUSSELS — On December 10, 2025, the European Parliament became the focal point for a significant shift in the discourse regarding Iran. Marking International Human Rights Day, a high-profile conference brought together lawmakers from across the political spectrum, former prime ministers, and human rights advocates to address the escalating crisis in Tehran.

Hosted in Brussels, the event featured a keynote address by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI). The gathering served as a platform for European policymakers to declare that the era of accommodating the clerical regime has ended, urging the European Union to officially recognize the Iranian people’s right to overthrow the religious dictatorship and establish a secular democracy.

An “Exceptional Moment”

The conference opened against the backdrop of a regime described by speakers as being in free-fall. Mrs. Maryam Rajavi characterized the current situation as an “exceptional moment,” defined by economic collapse, regional isolation, and an irreversible crisis of legitimacy for the ruling mullahs.

“The regime has only one trajectory: downfall,” Rajavi stated. She argued that the collapse of Tehran’s regional “Axis of Resistance” and the nationwide expansion of protests have left the Supreme Leader devoid of any capacity for reform. However, she warned that this weakness has driven the regime toward unprecedented brutality.

Rajavi reported that the judiciary carried out “335 executions” in November alone, a figure she cited as proof that the regime now “hangs human rights every single day.” She highlighted the immediate threat facing 18 political prisoners currently on death row, sentenced solely for their support of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK).

“Never before have the mullahs been so much in need of intensifying repression because never before have they felt so close to being overthrown,” Rajavi told the assembly.

The Collapse of Appeasement

A recurring theme among the speakers was the categorical failure of Western diplomatic strategies that prioritize engagement over accountability. Former Belgian Prime Minister and MEP Guy Verhofstadt was blunt, stating that years of appeasement have “achieved nothing at all.”

Verhofstadt pointed to the killing of more than 2,600 protesters in the last sixteen months as evidence that the regime is immune to moderation. He urged the EU to list the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization and to implement sanctions specifically tied to the execution of political prisoners.

Italian Senator and former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi reinforced this view, suggesting that the regime’s brutality—exemplified by the killing of 46 prisoners in just five days—is a symptom of extreme weakness. “We have to admit that it is impossible” to moderate the regime, Renzi concluded. He argued that the only viable path forward is to support the democratic movement led by Rajavi, whose credibility is now recognized both inside and outside Iran.

The “Third Option”: No to Shah, No to Mullahs

With diplomacy failing and war undesirable, the conference coalesced around the NCRI’s “Third Option”: regime change enacted by the Iranian people. Crucially, speakers emphasized that this movement rejects all forms of dictatorship, past and present.

“Iranian society will neither return to the Shah’s dictatorship nor remain trapped under clerical rule,” Rajavi declared.

MEP Leoluca Orlando highlighted the PMOI’s sixty-year history of resistance, noting that the organization fought against the Shah’s SAVAK just as it fights against the mullahs’ IRGC today. He stated that this dual rejection demonstrates that Iranians refuse to accept autocracy, “whichever symbol—crown or clerical authority—it carries.”

MEP Pekka Toveri reinforced this, asserting that Iran’s future “is a democratic secular republic.” He warned that the international community must respect the Iranian people’s vision for a future free of hereditary or divine rulers. Toveri also noted that the resistance is not spontaneous; he described the PMOI Resistance Units as “a structural struggle for democratic change” capable of coordinating strikes under lethal surveillance.

Former MEP Ryszard Czarnecki cited specific operations, such as the burning of regime propaganda, as proof that “the Iranian people will not surrender.”

Fears of a New Massacre

The urgency of the session was underscored by fears that Tehran is preparing for a mass purge similar to the 1988 massacre of political prisoners. MEP Francisco Assis warned that the recent surge in death sentences is a harbinger of a “potential new massacre.” He argued that Europe cannot afford to repeat the “failure” of silence that occurred decades ago and called for a suspension of diplomatic relations until executions cease.

MEP Petras Auštrevičius urged the EU to work with the NCRI on universal jurisdiction cases to prosecute regime officials, citing substantial evidence gathered by the UN Fact-Finding Mission.

Former MEP Paulo Casaca concluded the calls for justice by describing the regime’s judges and prosecutors as “criminals against humanity.” He demanded a global blacklist and sanctions against those facilitating the execution spree, arguing that such pressure is essential to strengthen the Iranian people’s struggle “under the leadership of Madam Rajavi.” The consensus in Brussels was clear: the window for ambiguity has closed, and Europe must now align with the organized resistance seeking a democratic republic.

Iran’s Regime Sentences Seven Political Prisoners to Death

Karim Khojasteh, a political prisoner, was sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court in Rasht on the charge of “baghi” (armed rebellion). Akbar Daneshvarkar, Mohammad Taghavi, Babak Alipour, Pouya Ghobadi, Vahid Bani-Amerian, and Abolhassan Montazer—six other political prisoners—were also sentenced to death again by the Revolutionary Court in Tehran, despite their previous death sentences having been overturned.

Khojasteh was sentenced to death on the charge of “baghi” for alleged membership in the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (the country’s largest opposition group), by Branch One of the Revolutionary Court in Rasht.

According to Article 287 of the Islamic Penal Code, a “baghi” is defined as someone who takes up arms against the “foundations of the Islamic Republic.”

Khoshesteh was arrested on March 13, 2025, at his industrial workshop in Khomam, Gilan Province, and transferred to Lakan Prison in Rasht.

He had previously been arrested in July of the same year on the charge of “propaganda against the regime” and was temporarily released on November 29, 2024, after about four and a half months in detention, on bail of 500 million tomans (approximately 5 billion rials).

Karim Khojasteh, a political prisoner, was sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court
Karim Khojasteh, a political prisoner, was sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court

Daneshvarkar, Taghavi, Alipour, Ghobadi, Bani-Amerian, and Montazer—six political prisoners held in Ghezel Hesar Prison in Karaj—were again sentenced to death. They were tried on the same charge.

These six individuals, who have been imprisoned since autumn and winter 2023, were tried in November 2025 in Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, presided over by Iman Afshari. On December 7, their new death sentences were formally communicated to their lawyers.

These prisoners had previously been sentenced to death on November 30, 2024, by Afshari on the charge of “baghi through membership in opposition groups.” That ruling was overturned by the Supreme Court in July, and the case was sent to a parallel branch for retrial.

98th Week of the “No To Execution Tuesdays” Campaign in 55 Prisons Across Iran

Taghavi is a political prisoner from the 1980s, and Bani-Amerian, Ghobadi, and Alipour have also previously been imprisoned due to their political activities.

Mai Sato, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran, called on the regime on November 5—via a post on the social platform X—to halt the execution of these six political prisoners.

She wrote that these individuals are facing execution after a judicial process involving “torture, prolonged solitary confinement, and denial of fair trial rights.”

The regime’s delegation in Geneva issued an official statement in response to Sato, describing the defendants as members of teams linked to the “People’s Mojahedin Organization” and claiming that their judicial process was conducted according to “legal standards,” with defense lawyers present and with “all guarantees of a fair trial.”

Human rights organizations and activists have repeatedly warned in recent years about “show trials” and the violation of fundamental rights of political and ideological detainees in Iran, including the denial of access to a lawyer of their choice.

At present, in addition to prisoners convicted of non-political crimes who are executed daily in Iran’s prisons, around 70 political prisoners nationwide are at risk of having their death sentences confirmed or carried out. A very large number of them have been convicted on accusations of collaboration with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. More than 100 other individuals face the risk of receiving death sentences on similar charges.

U.S. State Department: The World Cannot Turn a Blind Eye to Executions in Iran

The U.S. State Department, noting that Iran’s regime uses executions to instill fear and silence dissent, stated that the world cannot turn a blind eye to the executions taking place in Iran.

The U.S. State Department emphasized in its statement: “The United States stands with the people of Iran and will continue to condemn these horrific violations.”

The statement said: “In November alone Iran executed at least 260 people, the highest monthly total in more than two decades, while officially announcing only two.”

Iran Human Rights Monitor reported that in 2025 alone, Iran’s regime executed 1,791 people — an unprecedented figure in the past thirty-seven years.

The Islamic Republic has intensified its use of the death penalty to silence dissent and instill fear across society.

Iran: 304 Executions in One Month, 1,735 In 2025 So Far

Iranian regime authorities hanged 335 prisoners, including 7 women, in November. Two of the victims were publicly executed.

The number of executions this month (November) was more than double the 155 in 2024, three times the 115 in 2023, six times the 57 in 2022, and eleven times the 30 in 2021.

According to NCRI, at Least 36 Prisoners Executed in the Past Three Days.

This brings the number of recorded executions in the first 17 days of the Persian month of Azar (since November 22) to over 200. During the same period, the regime’s judiciary sentenced a political prisoner to death on charges of supporting the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) and upheld the death sentences of six others on the same charge.

The rise in the issuance, confirmation, and implementation of death sentences in Iran in recent months has sparked widespread protest both inside and outside the country.

The U.K. Foreign Office called on November 21 for an immediate halt to executions in Iran.

On November 19, the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution condemning human rights violations in Iran, with 79 votes in favor and 28 against. This year’s text placed greater emphasis on executions, women’s rights, the suppression of protesters, and transnational repression.

Air Pollution in Late November Sent 170,000 People to Emergency in Iran

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The deputy health minister of Iran’s regime announced that with worsening air pollution, from November 22 to November 29, more than 170,000 people sought emergency care due to cardiovascular and respiratory illnesses.

On December 9, Alireza Raisi stated that emergency visits increased by 20% to 25% during this period. Most of the cases came from eleven provinces and cities such as Arak, Isfahan, Ahvaz, Tabriz, Tehran, Karaj, and Mashhad—areas experiencing the worst air pollution.

The deputy health minister estimated the annual health-related cost of air pollution at about 17 billion dollars and said more than 59,000 deaths each year are linked to pollution.

Air Pollution In Khuzestan Caused More Than 1,600 Deaths In Past Year

In recent weeks, air pollution has intensified across various cities in Iran and rising levels of pollutants have pushed air quality in some major cities into unhealthy and, in certain areas, red-alert conditions.

The state-run Fars News Agency reported on December 8 that the use of heavy fuel oil (mazut) in the country’s power plants had risen sharply during the first fifteen days of the month.

According to the report, on November 22 and 23, power plants consumed 56 million and 54 million liters of mazut respectively. The peak occurred on December 2, with 88 million liters burned.

Ismail Kahrom, an ecologist and environmental activist—against whom Iran’s regime judiciary filed charges on December 8—had previously warned that mazut used in Iran contains “seven times the global standard” for sulfur, and that the gasoline used in the country is also “not suitable.”

He had said that if mazut is poured into water, all creatures “from microbes to whales” would be poisoned; if poured into soil, it contaminates groundwater; and if burned in the air, it is “100% carcinogenic.”

The darkest year for the capital’s air in two decades

Ali Pirhosseinlou, former adviser to the deputy mayor for transportation and traffic in Tehran, stated that based on two decades of air quality monitoring data, the capital’s air has never been “this dark.”

On December 9, Pirhosseinlou wrote in a piece for the state-run daily Shargh that 2025 is the worst year on record in terms of air pollution in Tehran.

He added that air quality data has been collected from numerous monitoring stations across Tehran for about twenty years, and never has the data told such a grim story.

Despite repeated closures of schools, universities, and sports facilities, the severe air pollution continues across many cities.

The lowest number of days with acceptable air quality

Pirhosseinlou also wrote that the number of days with “acceptable” air quality this year has broken a twenty-year record—dropping to “about one-third of all days in the year.”

He added that in recent years this figure had “fluctuated between two-thirds and three-quarters of the year’s days,” except in 2022 and 2024 when it dropped to about half, and in 2011 when it fell slightly below half—“but even then, conditions were never as bad as this year.”

357 Dead From Air Pollution In Tehran In One Week

The former Tehran municipal official added that two developments pushed Tehran’s air quality “beyond tolerable limits” over the past two decades: “One was 2011, when intensified sanctions led to the distribution of petrochemical gasoline and smog blanketed Tehran, and the other was 2022 and afterward, when pollutant management in the city was effectively abandoned.”

Tehran Municipality censored air-pollution data

Pirhosseinlou emphasized that the municipality has neither ideas nor plans for reducing traffic and controlling mobile pollution sources, shows no determination to modernize mass-transit and diesel fleets, offers no hope for improving fuel quality, and presents no outlook for controlling the rapidly aging vehicle fleet.

He accused the Tehran Municipality of “restricting access to information” related to air pollution.

According to him, while the public previously had open access to data on the Tehran Air Quality Control Company’s website, now individuals must submit at least “twelve fields of personal information” along with a written request, and only after official approval can they access the data.

Earlier, Somayeh Rafiei, head of the Environment Caucus in the regime’s parliament, had criticized the “lack of transparent information” and “censorship” of air-pollution data in Iran.