By Published On: November 15, 2022Categories: NEWS
On Saturday, university students in Tehran and other cities resumed anti-regime protests. They warned the regime not to execute detained protesters, chanting, "This is the last message; we will rise if you execute," referring to a November 6 call by 227 regime MPs to execute detained protesters.

On Saturday, university students in Tehran and other cities resumed anti-regime protests. They warned the regime not to execute detained protesters, chanting, “This is the last message; we will rise if you execute,” referring to a November 6 call by 227 regime MPs to execute detained protesters.

 

November 14 marked the 60th day of anti-regime protests in Iran, following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman arrested by morality police in Tehran on September 13 for allegedly violating the country’s strict dress code for women. Protests erupted in response to the event, which has since spread to at least 220 cities. According to sources from the Iranian opposition People’s Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK), the regime’s forces have killed over 550 people and arrested over 30,000. The MEK has released the names of 402 protesters who were killed.

 

 

“Imprisoned students must be freed,” they chanted, and “Students, raise your voices and shout for your rights.” Concurrently, defiant youths continued anti-regime activities, including attacks on pro-regime banners and Revolutionary Guards bases. High school students in Kashmar, Razavi Khorasan Province, destroyed the images of regime founder Khomeini and current dictator Khamenei.

In Tehran, dozens of citizens gathered outside the notorious Evin prison to inquire about the whereabouts of their detained loved ones. Following the regime’s heinous crime in Evin prison on October 15, prisoners’ families frequently demonstrated outside the prison. Officials, however, refuse to inform them of their children’s fate.  Protesters set fire to a local base of the regime’s oppressive IRGC paramilitary Basij Force in Babolsar, Mazandaran Province, and Mahabad, West Azarbaijan Province.

 

 

 

High school students protested once more in Sanandaj, Kurdistan Province, against the mullahs’ regime. Locals in Saqqez are on strike, continuing nationwide protests against the regime. Amnesty International Secretary-General Agnes Callamard issued a statement calling for the establishment of an accountability mechanism. “The United Nations Human Rights Council must assist in breaking down systemic impunity by establishing an independent investigative and accountability mechanism.”

European lawmakers also expressed their solidarity with the Iranian cause. UK-France foreign ministers condemned Iran’s violent repression of legitimate peaceful protests and Iran’s support for Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine, including through drones used for indiscriminate targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure.

 

 

Federal Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany Olaf Scholz also condemned the mullahs’ regime’ suppression, supporting sanctions as “one way in which we are stepping up the pressure on the regime.”

In solidarity with their compatriots protesting throughout Iran, freedom-loving Iranians and MEK supporters are continuing photo exhibitions, rallies, and gatherings in Stockholm, Vienna, Amsterdam, and Berlin. Such gatherings and exhibitions are scenes of Iranian expatriates exchanging information about the most recent protests in Iran, the atrocities committed by the regime, and the Iranian people’s resolve to continue the revolution in order to topple the mullahs’ authoritarian rule.

 

 

 

 


MEK Iran (follow us on Twitter and Facebook), Maryam Rajavi’s on her siteTwitter & Facebook, NCRI  (Twitter & Facebook), and People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran – MEK IRAN – YouTub

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!