امروز صبح ساعت ۸، بعد از ۳ ماه و ۸ روز جنگ نابرابرش با سرطان پانکراس، بابا جلوی چشمام آخرین نفسش رو کشید، ۴۰ دقیقه زیر احیا رفت، و برنگشت
بابام از دستم رفت
⚠️ Update: #Iran's internet blackout has entered its 40th day after 936 hours of near-total disconnection from the outside world.
The wartime censorship measure continues even as the US and Iran regimes each declare victory, with the Iranian people once again left in the dark.
⚠️ Update: The internet blackout in #Iran is now in its 28th day after 648 hours, with Iranians having spent more than half the year to date cut off from international networks.
Authorities continue to refine a two-tiered system where only regime apparatchiks are allowed online.
NEW INVESTIGATION from NPOV: Large volumes of Iranian government–sourced media are appearing across @Wikipedia media system, shaping how the 2026 protests are being documented globally.
Over the past several weeks, 10,000+ images and videos from Iranian state outlets have been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons — Wikipedia’s media repository.
These files now dominate searches for terms like “Iran protests 2026” and “Khamenei.”
Our reporting found:
• Nearly all material traces back to three Iranian government outlets: Khamenei_ir (official site of Iran’s Supreme Leader), Mehr News Agency, and Tasnim News Agency.
• Almost the entire upload surge comes from a single Commons account (“999real”), registered in Nov 2023, with over one million Commons edits but fewer than 1,000 Wikipedia edits.
• That same account is now the third-largest contributor to Wikipedia’s Tasnim News Agency article — alongside editors with decades on the platform.
• Many videos carry Khamenei_ir watermarks and include speeches by Iran’s Supreme Leader. Others feature street interviews presenting protesters as violent or foreign-influenced, and regime gatherings as national unity events.
• Visual packages across Commons include coordinated branding, consistent graphic layouts, and English-language slogans drawn from recent speeches by Iranian leadership.
The files remain live. Uploads continue.
Full investigation below 👇
Not sure what has happened to the quality of journalism at @NPR but interviewing the son of the former deputy prime minister of the Islamic republic as an expert, without disclosing his ties to the regime, is not it @NPRinskeep
The photograph on the left dates back to the Iran-Iraq War, the 8-year war with Saddam, showing an Iranian soldier whose hands were bound before he was killed. The photograph on the right shows the hands of a protester who had been first detained and then killed by the Islamic regime. #IranMassacre #R2PforIran
Look at the bound hands. He was captured by these savage murderers and executed with his hands tied.
Such cruelty and barbarism will never go unanswered.
The Islamic Republic is the darkest, bloodiest stain on our thousands-year-old history. We will wipe this stain away—but we will remember these crimes forever, so they are never repeated.
به دستهای بسته این جانباخته میهن و آزادی وطن از چنگ جمهوری نکبت اسلامی بنگرید: او اسیر این وحشیان جانی و آدمکشان بوده. پس از به اسارت گرفتن و با دستان بسته او را به قتل رساندهاند. چنین شقاوت و توحشی هرگز بدون پاسخ نخواهد ماند. جمهوری نکبت اسلامی سیاهترین و خونبارترین لکه بر دامن تاریخ چند هزار ساله ماست. این لکه را از خود میزداییم اما این جنایات را برای همیشه به یاد میسپاریم تا هرگز دیگر تکرار نشود.
#IranMassacre
"I helped draft the indictment for the Srebrenica genocide in which some 8,000 Bosnian Muslims were massacred during July of 1995. By comparison, at least twice that number has been killed in Iran in half the time. This is an extermination. And unlike Bosnia, there is no war between military forces. There is only a war by the Islamic Republic against unarmed youth crying for a better future.", says Dr. Payam Akhavan, former Special Advisor on Genocide to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, addressing the @UN_HRC on the situation of human rights in Iran. #IranMassacre
Nothing on @BBCNews about #IranMassacre - not one article.
If I’m being kind it might be because the general population of Britain can’t quite believe there is now overwhelming evidence that so called “security forces” in another country are exterminating their citizens by the thousands mostly shooting them in the head at point blank range for peaceful protest when in Britain you can’t get the police to come out if you’ve had your car stolen.
https://t.co/eUDbVcFfO1
These are the facts:
After Iran is believed to have killed tens of thousands of civilian protesters, South Africa abstained from a UN Human Rights Council vote condemning Tehran, citing “concerns over external interference.”
South Africa claimed it demanded Iran withdraw from a joint naval exercise.
Iran didn’t. The exercise went ahead.
A promised seven-day Board of Inquiry?
It never happened.
In August 2025, the Chief of the SANDF travelled to Tehran on an officially approved visit.
According to reports the chief:
• said SA and Iran share “common goals”
• condemned Israel
• endorsed deeper alignment with Tehran
This is the same Iran accused of mass repression and executions.
So @DIRCO_ZA and @MYANC spare us the lectures on human rights.
And spare us the claim that the ICJ case is only about justice.
Your selective outrage is proof that this has nothing to do with morality.
I was the press attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran when I was taken hostage for 444 days by the zealous followers of Ayatollah Khomeini. During that time, the spokesperson for the hostage‑takers, Massoumeh Ebtekar—whom we called “Mary”—interrogated us with venom and publicly threatened to put us on “trial” and execute us on the spot.
Today, in a bitter irony, Ebtekar’s son, Issah Hashemi, lives comfortably in Los Angeles and works as an academic.
And now another example of this hypocrisy has been challenged. Dr. Fatemeh Larijani‑Ardeshir, daughter of Ali Larijani—the Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council and a key figure in the violent crackdown on Iranian protesters—was just “dismissed” from Emory University’s Winship Cancer Institute. This came only days after the U.S. Treasury sanctioned Ali Larijani and other architects of the Islamic Republic’s repression. Emory has not said whether her dismissal is tied to those sanctions.
For many in the Iranian diaspora—and for those of us who survived captivity—the presence of regime offspring living privileged lives in the U.S. has become a flashpoint for anger after decades of repression. We have watched the Islamic Republic murder thousands of protesters, extort grieving families for the bodies of their loved ones, and force them to bury their children in silence.
Meanwhile, the children of regime elites enjoy safety, freedom, and opportunity in the very country their parents condemn.
This contradiction is now at the center of a growing movement—one gaining momentum with each new revelation. Justice demands that we confront this hypocrisy.