Iran Protests Surge Despite Death Threats

Iran Protests Surge Despite Death Threats

> At a Glance

> – Protesters hit streets after Friday prayers despite threats of death-penalty charges

> – 51 killed across 11 provinces since demonstrations began

> – 100 arrested in Tehran province for “disrupting public order”

> – Why it matters: Iran faces its biggest internal challenge in 47 years

Iranians poured into streets late Friday after prosecutors warned protesters would be charged as “enemies of God”-a death-penalty offense-while security forces opened fire in multiple cities.

Violence Escalates

President Trump warned Tehran:

> “You better not start shooting because we’ll start shooting, too.”

crackdown

Secretary Marco Rubio posted:

> “The United States supports the brave people of Iran.”

51 people have died since demonstrations erupted two weeks ago over currency collapse and inflation. 8 children are among the dead.

Crackdown Spreads

Prosecutor General Mohammad Movahedi Azad declared:

> Protesters will be considered “enemy of God”

Amnesty International reported:

> “Iranian authorities deliberately blocked internet access to hide crimes”

Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam of Iran Human Rights told NBC:

> “We are very concerned that after the internet shutdown the brutality will increase”

Reza Pahlavi called for:

  • Nationwide strikes targeting oil, gas, energy
  • Preparing to seize city centers

British PM Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged restraint.

Key Takeaways

  • 100 arrested in Tehran province
  • Internet blackout masks crackdown
  • Satellite internet bypasses shutdown
  • Protests now challenge 47-year Islamic Republic

Ali Vaez of International Crisis Group texted:

> “It can repress the discontent, but fails to address underlying grievances”

Caroline Kenny, Sarah Dean, Megan Shannon, Nollaig O’Connor contributed.

Author

  • Natalie A. Brooks covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Fort Worth, reporting from planning meetings to living rooms across the city. A former urban planning student, she’s known for deeply reported stories on displacement, zoning, and how growth reshapes Fort Worth communities.

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