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TEHRAN, Iran — Months after the death of Mahsa Amini, a deep-seated sense of anger and desperation persists in the streets of Tehran, even as the protests that rocked Iran have diminished.
King Charles Has Switched Up the Plans for Donald Trump's State Visit to the U.K. UPS driver gets emotional as he says goodbye to dogs he bonded with for over a decade Mysterious radio burst came from ...
The IAEA had assessed that Iran has enriched uranium close to bomb-grade levels, although Iran says its program is for ...
2. How the protests started. On Dec. 28, about two weeks after the budget proposal, an anti-government protest was held in Mashhad, Iran's second-largest city and hometown of the supreme leader.
In the last month, Iran’s protesters have targeted the economic and political nerve centers of the regime. Videos showed people throwing rocks at police in the center of Tehran.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has issued an urgent public statement expressing grave concern over reported threats to 2023 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, allegedly made by agents of the ...
Iran escalates brutal crackdown on protesters 01:59. As Iranians' anger at their theocratic leaders raged into a fourth week, the Norway-based Iran Human Rights group said on Saturday the death ...
Loud chants for “women, life, and liberty” have shaken Iran’s streets for the past weeks. They’re part of the popular protests that erupted after young Kurdish-Iranian woman Mahsa Amini ...
Iran's anti-government protests: Iran's Gen Z is fed up.The protests aren't just about hijab, they're about regime change. The protests have been impassioned but peaceful.
Iran’s latest protests transcend Iran’s many social and ethnic divisions, breaking a decades-old barrier of fear and posing an unprecedented threat to the regime. CNN values your feedback 1.
Iranian students protest at the University of Tehran during a demonstration driven by anger over economic problems, in the capital Tehran on December 30, 2017.
Iran protests aren't just anti-war. They're siding with terrorism. | Opinion It's jarring to see so many people in America, which has the greatest set of freedoms in the world, cheering for an ...