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In a chilling series of events, a young woman was forcibly removed from her home in the middle of the night. Meanwhile, two teenage brothers faced a brutal fate, killed in their family car for the mere act of honking their horns.
These alarming incidents are part of a broader, severe crackdown by Iran’s embattled regime, which is intensifying its campaign of domestic terror against its own citizens.
The Islamic Republic has stepped up its oppressive tactics following the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the commencement of joint military operations by the United States and Israel.
Reports from sources linked to opposition figure Prince Reza Pahlavi indicate that the regime’s military ranks have dwindled by 20,000 personnel, with many more soldiers abandoning their posts as targeted military strikes eliminate high-ranking commanders.
Despite these losses, estimates suggest that between 150,000 and 200,000 members of the hardline Basij militia continue to operate as critical forces of repression.
However, estimates suggest roughly 150,000–200,000 hardline Basij members are still acting as ‘suppression nodes.’
The remaining military force is reportedly lashing out in its final, violent hours to prevent total collapse, even as a crippling power vacuum opens at the top, with the new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei reportedly at the center of command despite serious injuries.
At the center of this terrifying wave of enforced disappearances is Dasta Farrokhi, a young Dramatic Literature student at Soureh University in Tehran.
At the center of this terrifying wave of enforced disappearances is Dasta Farrokhi, a young Dramatic Literature student at Soureh University in Tehran
Sources in Iran tell the Daily Mail that Iran’s youth are refusing to bow down
Intelligence sources reveal their astonishing objective: to maintain a strategic foothold inside Tehran so they can surge forward and seize key government buildings to finalize the regime’s total overthrow at the perfect moment
The bombing killed 175 people, mostly children, on February 28. People are seen at the site after the strike
Security forces raided her family’s home in the city of Arak on Tuesday. The young student was abducted into the night.
Now her devastated family tells the Daily Mail that they have no idea where she is, who took her, or what charges she faces.
Dasta’s disappearance is a textbook example of the regime’s strategy: mass arrests and information blackouts designed to terrorize a rebellious public into submission.
The reason behind her arrest – and whether it was targeted – remains a mystery.
But sources in Iran say that the country’s youth are refusing to bow down.
A battle is raging behind the closed doors of Tehran’s university dormitories.
Authorities, citing ‘national security’ amid the ongoing war, are aggressively attempting to shut down campuses and forcefully evict students onto the streets.
They are failing.
In a breathtaking display of coordinated resistance, two sources inside Iran tell the Daily Mail that thousands of students from provinces across the country are deliberately barricading themselves inside their dorms in the capital.
Sources inside the resistance movement say the objective is to maintain a foothold inside Tehran so US forces can seize key government buildings and finalize the regime’s overthrow at what they describe as ‘the perfect moment.’
This resistance is happening in the shadows of a near-total internet blackout, making it incredibly perilous for these young men and women to communicate with the outside world.
The regime’s grip on power has already claimed innocent lives.
Two sources inside Iran confirm a so-called ‘celebration crackdown,’ with security forces and plainclothes agents arresting anyone showing signs of joy or gathering in public spaces.
In an escalation of the violence, police opened fire on a family vehicle in the Fardis district of Karaj, roughly an hour from Tehran, after the passengers honked their horn to celebrate Khamenei’s death.
Two teenage brothers were slaughtered in their family car for honking their horns
Iranian high school students sit for their university entrance examination in Tehran
This brave resistance is happening in the shadows of a near-total internet blackout, making it incredibly perilous for these young men and women to communicate with the outside world
Smoke rises on the skyline after an explosion in Tehran, Iran, in the wake of joint US and Israel strikes
According to Iran’s UN Ambassador, Amir Saeid Iravani, and Independent human rights organizations like HRANA, the civilian death toll has surpassed 1,300 since the US-Israeli military campaign first started.
One recent brutal, unprovoked attack claimed the lives of two young brothers: Ahmadreza Feyzi, just 15 years old, and Amirhossein Feyzi, 19.
Witnesses report the horrifying sight of the family car being sprayed with bullets even after it had come to a complete and total stop.
The boys died from gunshot wounds to the torso.
In a final, sickening twist, heavily armed Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps thugs and plainclothes agents have since laid siege to the local morgue.
They are reportedly harassing the grieving, heartbroken family to prevent any photographs or documentation of these war crimes from reaching the outside world.