Whether or not Europe stands with us, whether or not your journalists do their jobs, whether or not your politicians demonstrate the courage to act, I will fight for my people and my country.
اول میگن تروریستا مردم رو کشتن، بعد میگن ۴۰ هزار تا نبوده کشته سازی نکنین، یکم که عصبانی میشن میگن آره ما ۴۰ هزار تا کشتیم بازم بیاید طوری میکشیمتون که مراد ویسی تا سالها اسم جاویدنام ها رو بخونه.
بی وطن های قاتل.
ببینید من در رابطه با بچههای دی ماه هیچ شوخیای با هیچکسی ندارم؛
ینی شما عزیز ترین آدم زندگیم باشی کوچیک ترین توهین یا شوخی ای با جون از دست رفتهی اون ۴۰۰۰۰ عزیز بکنی جوری دهنتو میگام که هیچ حرمتی بینمون نمونه.
امیرعلی حاجیزاده، فرمانده وقت نیروی هوافضای سپاه پاسداران، ۲۳ شهریور ۱۳۹۶:
کسی که باعث شد برنامه موشکی تا این حد گسترش پیدا کند و امروز در هر شهر و شهرستان و استان یک پایگاه موشکی داشته باشیم، دکتر قالیباف است
Masoumeh Ebtekar - also known as "Screaming Mary" - was the spokeswoman for the Islamic terrorists who stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in 1979 and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days - subjecting them to beatings, starvation, and mock executions.
In 2014, the Obama Administration granted visas to her son and his family to enter the United States. In June 2016, the Obama Administration gave them lawful permanent resident status via the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program.
This week, I terminated their lawful permanent resident status and today, Seyed Eissa Hashemi, Maryam Tahmasebi, and their son are now in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement pending their removal from our country.
Her family should never have been allowed to benefit from the extraordinary privilege of living in our country.
America can never become home for anti-American terrorists or their families - and under the Trump Administration, it never will.
فتوای قتل من توسط آخوند تکفیری تکتیراندازصادر شد. نه خون من سرختر از خون هزاران فرزند ایران است که دیماه ۱۴۰۴ کف خیابان جاری شد، نه جان من ارزشمندتر از جان ستار و ندا و مهسا و نیکا و سارینا و کیان.
تا نفس دارم در هر جای جهان با خامنهای خونخوار و رژیم جنایتکارش خواهم جنگید.
🚨Don’t stop talking about Iran.
Davoud Sohrabi was a young athlete. Strong. Healthy. Full of life.
On January 8, during the protests in Tehran, he was shot in the eye. Shot. In. The. Eye.
He didn’t die right away. He fought. He stayed in a coma for 50 days. Fifty days his family stood by his hospital bed, hoping he’d wake up. Praying. Waiting.
On March 4, he died from the severity of his injuries.
Let’s be clear: this wasn’t an accident. This wasn’t “crowd control.” Someone aimed at his head. Someone pulled the trigger.
If you’re outside Iran and still thinking this is just politics, understand what that means. A government shot a young athlete in the eye during a protest and left him to slowly die in a hospital bed for 50 days.
Fifty days of false hope.
Davoud had a name. He had dreams. He had a future.
Now he’s another young life taken by a regime that answers protest with bullets.