Title : 10 Terrible Ways Iran Kills Its Own People
link : 10 Terrible Ways Iran Kills Its Own People
10 Terrible Ways Iran Kills Its Own People
For the past two months, the Iranian people have been fighting and dying in their ways to end the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei regime.
The protest is theb bloodiest experienced by Iran since the first Ayatollah came to power in 1979 and is just as terrible as anything that is happening in the world today.Outside Iran, though, there is little press about how much violence has become. According to estimates, 1,500 people have been killed so far, most of them shot dead by their own army and police for daring to protest the Ayatollah government.
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The protest is theb bloodiest experienced by Iran since the first Ayatollah came to power in 1979 and is just as terrible as anything that is happening in the world today.Outside Iran, though, there is little press about how much violence has become. According to estimates, 1,500 people have been killed so far, most of them shot dead by their own army and police for daring to protest the Ayatollah government.

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10
Police Shoot Protest Crowds
The protest in Iran began on November 15, 2019, when the regime announced they had tripled the price of gas. Immediately, protesters in 117 cities called for Ayatollah to come down, take to the streets and shout: "Death to the dictator!"
A demonstrator was killed - shot in the head by police - on the first night. And from there, things got worse.
Under the command of Ayatollah himself, police, revolutionary guards, and a paramilitary group called Basij began shooting dead the demonstrators. In some cities they rode motorbikes and opened fire on protesters; Elsewhere, Basij snipers raised demonstrators from a distance.
In the end, the police shot "randomly" into the crowd, in the words of one witness. They don't even choose the target. They fired at anyone who dared to be near the protest site.
An estimated 300 people died in the first three days alone.

The protest in Iran began on November 15, 2019, when the regime announced they had tripled the price of gas. Immediately, protesters in 117 cities called for Ayatollah to come down, take to the streets and shout: "Death to the dictator!"
A demonstrator was killed - shot in the head by police - on the first night. And from there, things got worse.
Under the command of Ayatollah himself, police, revolutionary guards, and a paramilitary group called Basij began shooting dead the demonstrators. In some cities they rode motorbikes and opened fire on protesters; Elsewhere, Basij snipers raised demonstrators from a distance.
In the end, the police shot "randomly" into the crowd, in the words of one witness. They don't even choose the target. They fired at anyone who dared to be near the protest site.
An estimated 300 people died in the first three days alone.
9
More than 2 Million People Fall into Poverty in 2 Years
Protests in Iran were never really about rising gas prices. That's just a critical point for a country that has been ready to explode for years.
1.6 million Iranians fell into poverty in 2018 alone, along with another half million in 2019. At present, an estimated 33% of the population lives in absolute poverty, and 6% starve to death.
Iranians protesting blame their government for their country's economic collapse. Ayatollah, the protesters said, "live like God" while "people live like beggars".
Indeed, Iran's 2020-2021 budget specifically exempts military-related groups and more than half the country's billionaires pay taxes altogether.
When the government announced that they would tackle the problem of poverty by raising the cost of their people's gas, that 33% of the population living in poverty pushed back.
"Most of the demonstrators are young. "Young men in their twenties with no money, no work, and no hope," said an eyewitness. "They want to see the end of the Islamic Republic and be ready to lose their lives."

Protests in Iran were never really about rising gas prices. That's just a critical point for a country that has been ready to explode for years.
1.6 million Iranians fell into poverty in 2018 alone, along with another half million in 2019. At present, an estimated 33% of the population lives in absolute poverty, and 6% starve to death.
Iranians protesting blame their government for their country's economic collapse. Ayatollah, the protesters said, "live like God" while "people live like beggars".
Indeed, Iran's 2020-2021 budget specifically exempts military-related groups and more than half the country's billionaires pay taxes altogether.
When the government announced that they would tackle the problem of poverty by raising the cost of their people's gas, that 33% of the population living in poverty pushed back.
"Most of the demonstrators are young. "Young men in their twenties with no money, no work, and no hope," said an eyewitness. "They want to see the end of the Islamic Republic and be ready to lose their lives."
8
Iranian marines slaughter 100 people with machine guns
One of the most gruesome moments of Iranian protests took place on the outskirts of Mahshahr, where local farmers have struggled to survive since the government dam completely cut off their access to water.
Protesters in the city made a blockade on the road until military forces from the Iranian Islamic Revolution Guards Corps came and started shooting at the crowd. Out of fear of their lives, the protesters fled for their lives, with a group of around 100 people hiding a nearby swamp.
Revolutionary Guards do not stop. While frightened eyewitnesses filmed them, pick-up trucks filled with IRGC marines drove into the swamps and confused people, hiding unarmed in the swamp, with machine guns.
"The next day when we went there, the area was full of demonstrators' bodies, especially young people," said an eyewitness.
Between 40 and 100 people are believed to have died in the Mahshahr Marsh Massacre, but no one except those who killed them knows the exact number. The guards will not let the family recover their bodies.
One of the most gruesome moments of Iranian protests took place on the outskirts of Mahshahr, where local farmers have struggled to survive since the government dam completely cut off their access to water.
Protesters in the city made a blockade on the road until military forces from the Iranian Islamic Revolution Guards Corps came and started shooting at the crowd. Out of fear of their lives, the protesters fled for their lives, with a group of around 100 people hiding a nearby swamp.
Revolutionary Guards do not stop. While frightened eyewitnesses filmed them, pick-up trucks filled with IRGC marines drove into the swamps and confused people, hiding unarmed in the swamp, with machine guns.
"The next day when we went there, the area was full of demonstrators' bodies, especially young people," said an eyewitness.
Between 40 and 100 people are believed to have died in the Mahshahr Marsh Massacre, but no one except those who killed them knows the exact number. The guards will not let the family recover their bodies.
7 The
Government Turns Off The Internet To Make People Calm
Less than 24 hours after the protests in Iran began, the government shut down the internet.
Videos about the brutal killings of civilians were distributed throughout the country and beyond the border, and the Iranian government was worried about how the world and their people would react. Soon, all but 5% of the internet was blocked in a desperate attempt to keep people quiet.
The media also fainted. Iranian press members have reported being told that nothing "with the theme of rising gas prices will be publicized" by their superiors. Satellite TV connection is stuck. And some even report their cellphones being pulled out of their hands by passing police and checking protest videos.
Perhaps the scariest part of it all, however, is that government members can still access the internet using it. Iranians have reported that, when they walk near the protest site, their phone will light up with an anonymous text message:
"We know you are here."

Less than 24 hours after the protests in Iran began, the government shut down the internet.
Videos about the brutal killings of civilians were distributed throughout the country and beyond the border, and the Iranian government was worried about how the world and their people would react. Soon, all but 5% of the internet was blocked in a desperate attempt to keep people quiet.
The media also fainted. Iranian press members have reported being told that nothing "with the theme of rising gas prices will be publicized" by their superiors. Satellite TV connection is stuck. And some even report their cellphones being pulled out of their hands by passing police and checking protest videos.
Perhaps the scariest part of it all, however, is that government members can still access the internet using it. Iranians have reported that, when they walk near the protest site, their phone will light up with an anonymous text message:
"We know you are here."
6
More Than One Dozen Journalists Have Been Detained
Iran is now one of the countries with the most detained journalists in the world.
At least a dozen journalists have been thrown into prison since the Iran protests began. One report, published on November 27, was able to count 6 casual workers, 5 full-time journalists, and 3 photojournalists who had been thrown into Iran's detention centers for "anti-government propaganda" and "disturbing public order" - but no one knew how high is the number today.
A reporter, Mohammad Mossa'id, was arrested for a tweet that simply said: "Hello, Free World!" Mossa'id has used a proxy to deal with Iran's internet blackouts and issued short messages - and those three words are enough to land them in prison.
The Iran International TV channel, around the same time, was compromised by the Iranian government. They confiscated their belongings, declared them "enemies of the Islamic Republic", and closed their broadcasts.

Iran is now one of the countries with the most detained journalists in the world.
At least a dozen journalists have been thrown into prison since the Iran protests began. One report, published on November 27, was able to count 6 casual workers, 5 full-time journalists, and 3 photojournalists who had been thrown into Iran's detention centers for "anti-government propaganda" and "disturbing public order" - but no one knew how high is the number today.
A reporter, Mohammad Mossa'id, was arrested for a tweet that simply said: "Hello, Free World!" Mossa'id has used a proxy to deal with Iran's internet blackouts and issued short messages - and those three words are enough to land them in prison.
The Iran International TV channel, around the same time, was compromised by the Iranian government. They confiscated their belongings, declared them "enemies of the Islamic Republic", and closed their broadcasts.
5
Iran has lied about what happened
It is difficult to cover up protests when more than 7,000 people have been sent to prison and between 300 and 1,500 killed. But that did not stop Iran from trying.
Iranian spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaeili has claimed: "Bullets that kill people do not come from the weapons of the Iranian security forces."
However, thousands of videos and photographs of the massacre are out there, even after all the government's efforts to prevent them from seeing the light of day.
One of the most interesting works on Iranian protests came from a French news program, France24 Observers, which reviewed more than 750 images and videos and put them together to show clear and hard evidence that the massacre really happened. There are many points of view in almost every massacre, where the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Basij and police can be seen shooting at their own citizens.
It took until 3 December before they claimed to use all forms of violence to stop the demonstration. But even then, they continue to deny the numbers and insist - despite clear video evidence to the contrary - that everyone they kill is armed and violent.
It is difficult to cover up protests when more than 7,000 people have been sent to prison and between 300 and 1,500 killed. But that did not stop Iran from trying.
Iranian spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaeili has claimed: "Bullets that kill people do not come from the weapons of the Iranian security forces."
However, thousands of videos and photographs of the massacre are out there, even after all the government's efforts to prevent them from seeing the light of day.
One of the most interesting works on Iranian protests came from a French news program, France24 Observers, which reviewed more than 750 images and videos and put them together to show clear and hard evidence that the massacre really happened. There are many points of view in almost every massacre, where the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Basij and police can be seen shooting at their own citizens.
It took until 3 December before they claimed to use all forms of violence to stop the demonstration. But even then, they continue to deny the numbers and insist - despite clear video evidence to the contrary - that everyone they kill is armed and violent.
4
Protest Deliberately Denied Support for Health Care
Nurses and doctors in cities that have protested the regime have reported that they must fill more than every available space to treat all injured people.
"All [the beds] were filled with protesters injured from large gunshot wounds," a nurse told France24, with many of the young men needing amputations and serious operations to survive. "We see all kinds of wounds."
But the police did not stop shooting these people. The nurse claimed that a group of police entered his unit and forced them to give them the names of everyone who was injured in it.
Injured people, he said, would be denied all state funds for their hospital bills. Every estate for their recovery must come out of their own pocket. Most of the bills, according to his estimates, are more than 25 million Iranian tomans.
"They are poor and young," said the nurse. "How will they pay?"

Nurses and doctors in cities that have protested the regime have reported that they must fill more than every available space to treat all injured people.
"All [the beds] were filled with protesters injured from large gunshot wounds," a nurse told France24, with many of the young men needing amputations and serious operations to survive. "We see all kinds of wounds."
But the police did not stop shooting these people. The nurse claimed that a group of police entered his unit and forced them to give them the names of everyone who was injured in it.
Injured people, he said, would be denied all state funds for their hospital bills. Every estate for their recovery must come out of their own pocket. Most of the bills, according to his estimates, are more than 25 million Iranian tomans.
"They are poor and young," said the nurse. "How will they pay?"
3
Children Have Been Imprisoned in Overcrowded Prisons
At least 7,000 people have been arrested for participating in Iranian protests - but around 100 have been harshly punished. Some elected people have been sent out of their own cities and to Iran's most brutal prisons inside military bases run by Guards of the Islamic Revolution.
100 of them were not all male - some were only male. Teenagers who joined the protest were sent to prison, some not even old enough to shave. One father reported that he had three sons in prison. They are 14, 16 and 18 years old.
The only water given to prisoners at these military bases, according to a lawyer who fights for their freedom, is stored in dirty trash cans. They must drink it or die of thirst.
They are not given the right to call their families, and their families are not told whether their children are dead or alive.
No one knows for sure what happened to them inside the wall - but many fear the worst.
"Detainees are in danger of torture to get false confessions," Iran's Human Rights Director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said. "We are also worried that we will issue death sentences for some protesters."

At least 7,000 people have been arrested for participating in Iranian protests - but around 100 have been harshly punished. Some elected people have been sent out of their own cities and to Iran's most brutal prisons inside military bases run by Guards of the Islamic Revolution.
100 of them were not all male - some were only male. Teenagers who joined the protest were sent to prison, some not even old enough to shave. One father reported that he had three sons in prison. They are 14, 16 and 18 years old.
The only water given to prisoners at these military bases, according to a lawyer who fights for their freedom, is stored in dirty trash cans. They must drink it or die of thirst.
They are not given the right to call their families, and their families are not told whether their children are dead or alive.
No one knows for sure what happened to them inside the wall - but many fear the worst.
"Detainees are in danger of torture to get false confessions," Iran's Human Rights Director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said. "We are also worried that we will issue death sentences for some protesters."
2
Guardians of the Revolution Stole a Corpse From the Hospital
There is a reason why no one knows the exact number of victims in the Iran Protest. There are estimates as low as 300 and as high as 1,500 because no one has the opportunity to count corpses. The Iranian government will not allow them.
Hospital workers have reported that police and Revolutionary Guards have entered their building and retrieved the bodies of protesters who were killed and injured, pushing them before they could be added to the death toll.
Most never seen again. Mehdi Nekouee's family, for example, has struggled to find their son since the Revolutionary Guards dragged him out of the hospital where he was treated for gunshot wounds. Until now, there is still no news whether he is dead or alive.
Other families have reported that, when they begged the government to release the bodies, they were asked to pay $ 2,500 for the opportunity to bury their children.
"There are so many injured," said an eyewitness. "They can't be counted."

There is a reason why no one knows the exact number of victims in the Iran Protest. There are estimates as low as 300 and as high as 1,500 because no one has the opportunity to count corpses. The Iranian government will not allow them.
Hospital workers have reported that police and Revolutionary Guards have entered their building and retrieved the bodies of protesters who were killed and injured, pushing them before they could be added to the death toll.
Most never seen again. Mehdi Nekouee's family, for example, has struggled to find their son since the Revolutionary Guards dragged him out of the hospital where he was treated for gunshot wounds. Until now, there is still no news whether he is dead or alive.
Other families have reported that, when they begged the government to release the bodies, they were asked to pay $ 2,500 for the opportunity to bury their children.
"There are so many injured," said an eyewitness. "They can't be counted."
1
Police Attacks Family Grieving at Funeral
On December 26, 2019, families around Iran gathered at the cemetery to mourn the lost.
The Iranian government is trying to stop it before it happens. The Bakhtiari family, which is holding a ceremony in their city of Karaj, have told reporters that the Ministry of Intelligence is attracting them to be questioned twice and, each time, demanding that they cancel the ceremony.
Their son had been shot in the head by police while marching in the protests. His mother had been beside him when it happened and tried to rush him to the hospital. She watched him die in her arms.
They didn't cancel the event - and so, on Dec. 25th, the day before the ceremony, police dragged the family off to prison.
Those who still came out to mourn their children on Dec. 26 found police waiting for them. Mourning families were beaten, dragged by their feed, and arrested. There are videos of police officers shooting tear gas and bullets at mourning parents.
But for those who have lost their children, there is little left to lose. Protests in Iran continue to this day.
"You killed my son," Manouchehr Bakhtiari declared before the police arrested him. "Execute me, too."
On December 26, 2019, families around Iran gathered at the cemetery to mourn the lost.
The Iranian government is trying to stop it before it happens. The Bakhtiari family, which is holding a ceremony in their city of Karaj, have told reporters that the Ministry of Intelligence is attracting them to be questioned twice and, each time, demanding that they cancel the ceremony.
Their son had been shot in the head by police while marching in the protests. His mother had been beside him when it happened and tried to rush him to the hospital. She watched him die in her arms.
They didn't cancel the event - and so, on Dec. 25th, the day before the ceremony, police dragged the family off to prison.
Those who still came out to mourn their children on Dec. 26 found police waiting for them. Mourning families were beaten, dragged by their feed, and arrested. There are videos of police officers shooting tear gas and bullets at mourning parents.
But for those who have lost their children, there is little left to lose. Protests in Iran continue to this day.
"You killed my son," Manouchehr Bakhtiari declared before the police arrested him. "Execute me, too."
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