Drinking Water Facilities Hit by Strikes in Iran, State Media Reports
The state broadcaster said two water tanks serving thousands of people were damaged. The U. S.
The state broadcaster said two water tanks serving thousands of people were damaged. The U. S.
An imploding economy is causing hopelessness among both pro- and anti-government Iranians. And for those who wished for regime change, the letdown is palpable.
In a quietly devastating new book, two journalists chart the protest movements fighting for change inside the country.
Iranians started to reconnect to the global internet after the government began lifting a monthslong shutdown, an official said on Tuesday.
After three months, the government is letting people connect with the world again. But not everyone has access, and those who do wonder how long it will last.
Organizations that track online traffic confirmed an uptick in activity on Tuesday, as Iranians reconnected to the global internet after a government-imposed shutdown.
Guido Reichstadter was protesting the U. S. -Israel war in Iran on top of the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.
Vice President JD Vance appeared to express sympathy with critics of the war with Iran: “I recognize that young voters do not love the policy we have in the Middle East, OK. I understand.
The protesters sat in the middle of Third Avenue in Midtown Manhattan and blocked traffic for about an hour.
Iranians enduring the latest communications shutdown warn that it’s crippling businesses. Critics say officials flagrantly use the internet they block citizens from.
With a tenuous cease-fire in place, Iranians are left picking up the pieces of their lives. Some fear the government will crack down on its domestic critics.
Government officials and anti-government activists alike denounced the attacks on the Sharif University of Technology in Tehran, the latest Iranian center for higher education to be targeted.
Amid months of protest, repression and war in their native country, Iranians living abroad are navigating their biggest rifts yet.
These groups’ dream has long been to establish federal autonomy, akin to that of their fellow Kurds in Iraq. With Iran’s leaders battered and degraded, they hope their moment has come.
The current restrictions on the internet in Iran are coinciding with Nowruz, the observance of the Persian New Year.