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Iranians in Hamburg Voice Support for Iran Uprising and a Free, Democratic Republic
THIS PAGE WILL BE UPDATED WITH THE LATEST NEWS
UPDATE: 08:00 AM CET
Ahvaz in flames: Rebellious youth defy live ammo and drones in anti-regime protests
Despite the Iranian regime’s desperate attempts to conceal the scale of the nationwide uprising through severe internet blackouts and censorship, reports continue to leak out, revealing a volatile society determined to overthrow the religious dictatorship. New field reports obtained from Ahvaz, the capital of Khuzestan province, detail two weeks of intense confrontations in early January 2026, showing that the rebellious youth are holding their ground against heavily armed suppression forces, burning symbols of the regime, and forcing security units to retreat.
Join the Berlin Free Iran Demonstration on February 7, 2026 – No to Shah, No to Mullah
Berlin, Germany – February 3, 2026 –In January 2026, Iran rises. 400 cities, 31 provinces, one demand, one voice: regime overthrow by the Iranian people themselves, with a clear rejection of both monarchy and theocracy.
Media Admissions of Systematic Arrests of Doctors, Lawyers, and Artists Following the January 2026 Uprising
The nationwide uprising of January 2026 has propelled the Iranian regime into a new paradigm of repression, which can be defined as the “absolute criminalization of the right to protest.” By employing hostile rhetoric and “security labeling” against citizens, the Iranian regime has effectively transformed the “inherent right to protest” into “action against national security” to pave the way for the physical elimination of dissidents. Based on explicit admissions by domestic media (such as Jahan-e Sanat newspaper), this report reveals that the state, in a “systematic survival strategy,” has extended arbitrary arrests to the heart of civil society—including doctors, lawyers, and artists—to sever the people’s support networks. Simultaneously, the execution of 72 individuals in less than a week and the threat of a “digital siege” through internet shutdowns indicate a state-sponsored campaign of intimidation.
Leaked Plans Reveal Iran’s Crackdown as Detainees Disappear
In the weeks following Iran’s January 2026 protests, a growing body of evidence points to a crackdown that has moved well beyond crowd control. Leaked security documents, combined with findings from Iranian human rights organizations, reveal a coordinated campaign marked by mass arrests, enforced disappearances, pressure on medical professionals, a sharp rise in executions, and the refusal to return the bodies of some protesters—particularly women—to their families. What emerges is not a series of isolated abuses, but a system operating across multiple institutions, from security forces and prisons to hospitals and burial authorities.
Iran Loses 1.56 million Dollars Every Hour Due To Internet Shutdowns
A privacy and internet security analyst says that Iran, due to internet shutdowns imposed by the Iranian regime, loses 1.56 million dollars every hour, further damaging its already stagnant economy and disrupting the lives of more than 90 million people. Simon Migliano, head of research at the privacy company Privacy, told Fox News about Iran’s prolonged internet shutdowns that the losses caused by these disruptions continue even after partial internet connectivity is restored. In this interview, which was published on Wednesday, February 4, he noted: “The current blackout is costing Iran an estimated $37.4 million per day, or $1.56 million every hour.”
Khamenei’s White Flag: Why the Regime’s Call for “Direct Talks” Signals Weakness, Not Peace
After months of regional and international pressure—and particularly following the European Union’s designation of the IRGC as a terrorist organization—Iran regime’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei has been forced into an unmistakable retreat. The regime’s sudden willingness to consider “direct negotiations” is not a diplomatic breakthrough; it is the raising of a white flag by a system under siege. The regime’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, acting as the executor of the Supreme Leader’s line, attempted to reframe this retreat as prudence and dignity. In a carefully staged statement, he claimed that talks would proceed only if they were “fair,” “non-threatening,” and consistent with so-called “national interests.” This rhetoric is designed less to convince foreign interlocutors than to mask capitulation at home.
Also, read Iran News in Brief – February 5, 2026




