Iranian protesters face deadly regime crackdown amid western silence

Thousands of Iranians are protesting against the Ayatollah-led regime, facing brutal violence from security forces that has reportedly killed between 12,000 and 20,000 people since the revolt began. The government has shut down internet access nationwide, while Iranian dissidents criticize the Western left for remaining silent on the crackdown. This uprising stems from economic hardships and long-standing grievances against the Islamist rulers.

Protests have erupted across Iran in recent weeks, with hundreds of thousands of people taking to the streets against the regime that has ruled for 47 years. Demonstrators are braving live ammunition from Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps forces and militias, as evidenced by emerging videos and images of body bags. A CBS News report indicates that between 12,000 and 20,000 protesters have been killed since the national revolt started, though some estimates suggest at least 3,000 deaths with the true number likely higher.

The regime's response includes a near-total internet blackout lasting several days, severing communication for Iran's population of over 92 million. Economic woes fuel the unrest: the rial trades at a fraction of a penny, exacerbated by U.S. sanctions under the Trump administration, Israeli military actions since October 7, 2023, including a 12-day war last year, and a U.S. strike on the Fordow nuclear facility. Shortages of water and power have compounded public frustration with the mullahs' unfulfilled promises of an Islamic utopia.

This is not Iran's first uprising; a major protest movement occurred in 2009, which the Obama administration largely ignored while pursuing negotiations leading to the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal. The Trump era reversed this with maximum pressure, but the Biden administration has discussed reviving the deal.

Iranian dissidents have lashed out at the Western left's silence. Famed activist Masih Alinejad stated, "The hypocrisy is shocking... The silence of Left and liberal in America, in Europe, is not an accidental silence; it is an ideological silence." An anonymous Iranian on X posted on January 13, 2026: "To the... Left, the communists, the Democrats, and the ‘human rights’ hypocrites who chose silence... Your hypocrisy is written in our blood. #IranMassacre." Another Iranian woman explained on January 11, 2026, that the left's quietude stems from ideological narratives favoring groups like Hamas, ignoring Iran's theocratic violence: "Iranian people are not silent. They are being silenced."

No major protests have occurred on Western college campuses in support of Iranians, and media coverage was initially scant. Former President Trump has urged protesters to continue and document abusers. A regime change could reshape geopolitics, potentially weakening Iran's support for groups like Hezbollah, Houthis, and its supplies of oil to China and drones to Russia.

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Dramatic nighttime scene of Iranian protests in Tehran under internet blackout, with crowds clashing against riot police amid tear gas and fires, symbolizing deaths, detentions, and international threats.
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Iran protests spread under near-total internet blackout as rights group reports at least 62 dead; Khamenei and Trump trade threats

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Nationwide protests in Iran that began on December 28, 2025, after a sharp currency slide and broader economic distress entered a second week as authorities imposed a sweeping internet and communications blackout and security forces moved to intensify a crackdown. A U.S.-based rights group said at least 62 people have been killed and more than 2,300 detained, while exiled opposition figure Reza Pahlavi urged further demonstrations and appealed to President Donald Trump for support as European leaders and the United Nations called for restraint.

Activists have reported at least 6,126 people killed in Iran's violent suppression of nationwide protests, with the death toll exceeding any similar unrest in decades. The protests, sparked by economic woes including the rial's collapse, began on December 28 and prompted a U.S. aircraft carrier group's arrival in the Middle East amid threats of military action. Iran's government disputes the figures, claiming a lower toll.

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Protests against Iran's regime have entered their sixth day, sparked by economic woes, resulting in at least six to seven deaths from security force crackdowns. President Donald Trump warned that the United States would intervene if the regime kills peaceful demonstrators, prompting threats from Iranian officials. The unrest echoes past movements, fueled by inflation and currency collapse.

Dødstallet i Irans pågående protester, som startet 28. desember 2025 på grunn av økonomiske problemer og siden har spredt seg over hele landet, har steget til minst 490 ifølge HRANA, opp fra 62 rapportert tidligere denne uken. Sykehus i Teheran er overbelastet, internettavbruddet fortsetter, og demonstranter bruker smuglede Starlink-terminaler for å kommunisere. Svenske statsminister Ulf Kristersson fordømmer volden.

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Ongoing protests in Iran represent the most significant challenge to the Islamic theocracy since its founding in 1979, according to experts. Demonstrators are calling for wholesale political change, bypassing reform and elections. The movement's broad reach and demands for the return of the pre-1979 monarchy highlight deepening discontent with clerical rule.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has warned that any US military strike would ignite a regional war in the Middle East. The statement comes amid heightened tensions following President Donald Trump's threats against Iran over its crackdown on protests. Khamenei also labeled the demonstrations a coup, as Iran prepares military drills in the Strait of Hormuz.

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In Paris, the foreign ministers of the G-7 nations—Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United States—along with the EU high representative issued a joint statement strongly condemning Iranian authorities' brutal repression of antigovernment protesters. They expressed deep alarm over the high number of reported deaths and injuries, and warned of additional restrictive measures.

 

 

 

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