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Iran summons 10 over protests against power and water shortages

Sep 15, 2025, 12:04 GMT+1Updated: 00:41 GMT+0
A scene of protests over water and power cuts in Sabzevar, Razavi Khorasan province, July 2025
A scene of protests over water and power cuts in Sabzevar, Razavi Khorasan province, July 2025

Iranian authorities have summoned 10 citizens in the northeastern city of Sabzevar to face charges linked to protests over repeated power and water cuts, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reported on Monday.

HRANA listed their names adding that they were ordered to appear before the third branch of the Sabzevar public and revolutionary prosecutor’s office within 10 days to present their final defense.

According to the report, the individuals face charges of “propaganda against the Islamic Republic,membership in a group aimed at disrupting state security, and assembly and collusion against national security.”

They were previously detained during July demonstrations in Sabzevar against rolling blackouts and water shortages, and later released on bail.

At the time, videos verified by rights groups showed residents rallying outside the governor’s office, chanting “Water, electricity, life — our absolute rights” and “If we don’t get our rights, we won’t leave.”

The summons comes amid mounting public frustration. Over the summer, Iran faced its second-driest year in five decades, with rainfall 43% below average. Widespread outages have disrupted daily life, industrial production and the economy, triggering protests in several cities such as Shiraz and Kazeroun.

In Sabzevar, protests entered a second night in July, with security forces firing tear gas at demonstrators. Footage sent to Iran International showed crowds chanting “Shameless, shameless” as they fled the crackdown.

Authorities have attributed the shortages to drought and surging demand, while critics cite years of mismanagement, sanctions and neglected infrastructure.

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Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan faces irreversible collapse as Hamoun wetlands dry up

Sep 15, 2025, 10:47 GMT+1

Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan province is grappling with a worsening environmental crisis as drought and intensifying dust storms devastate the Hamoun wetlands, with experts warning of farmland collapse, forced migration and irreversible ecological damage, local media reported.

“Caught between drought and choking dust storms, Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan province faces an escalating environmental crisis as the Hamoun wetlands dry up and 120-day winds turn into walls of sand,” Tasnim news agency reported on Monday.

Experts warn more than 85% of Hamoun has vanished, driving mass farmland loss, biodiversity collapse, and waves of forced migration.

Studies say 65% of croplands around the wetland are already barren, while dust storms now last over 200 days a year, cutting visibility to a few hundred meters and worsening respiratory illness.

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Officials blame water shortages from Afghanistan’s dams on the Helmand River, which deprive Hamoun of its lifeline. Local researchers say completion of the Bakhshabad dam could “deal the final blow” to the wetland.

With little hope of receiving the agreed water rights from Kabul, Iranian specialists are pushing homegrown fixes.

Despite pilot projects and pledges, locals complain of empty promises. “They say they will revive Hamoun, but nothing happens -- every day it dries more,” a resident told Tasnim.

Environmentalists warn time is running out: without immediate action, the region risks irreversible collapse, with fallout for Iran and its neighbors.

Diaspora rallies mark third anniversary of Woman, Life, Freedom

Sep 15, 2025, 09:46 GMT+1

Iranian communities abroad staged demonstrations across Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand on Sunday to mark the third anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s death and to honor those killed in protests since 2022.

The gatherings followed a first wave of commemorations the previous day.

In Toronto, Hamed Esmaeilion, a board member of the Association of Families of Flight PS752 Victims, told demonstrators: “Who is more deserving than the people of Iran to determine the fate of the country? Who is more deserving than the people of Iran to bring the perpetrators of crimes to trial? Who is more deserving than the people of Iran to drag Khamenei and other criminal clerics out of hiding?”

Amini, 22, died on September 16, 2022, after being detained by Iran’s morality police for allegedly violating mandatory hijab rules. Her death sparked months of unrest in which at least 551 protesters, including 68 children, were killed, according to rights groups, and thousands detained.

Voices in London

Several rallies also took place in London, called by around 15 political and civil groups. Videos sent to Iran International showed protesters chanting the names of Mahsa Amini and others killed in the 2022 protests.

Mahsa Piraei, daughter of protest victim Minou Majidi, addressed one gathering. “Today we have come together to shout the names of the victims and not let their memory be forgotten, because what dictatorships do is erase memories. We are heirs to a wounded truth, and we will not let the Islamic Republic bury justice,” she said.

Protests worldwide

Events were held in The Hague, Brussels, Frankfurt, Nicosia, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Auckland, Calgary, Montreal, Los Angeles, and Washington.

In Sydney, demonstrators urged the Australian government to designate the Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organization, days after Canberra closed Iran’s embassy and expelled its diplomats over involvement in terror operations.

Alongside the street demonstrations, a two-day National Dialogue for Iran conference was convened in Washington. The 13-panel event gathered former political prisoners, journalists, activists, and victims of state violence.

Participants included former US State Department spokesperson Alan Eyre, German MEP Hannah Neumann, Swedish-Iranian MP Alireza Akhundi. Writers and activists such as Nazanin Afshin-Jam, Nazanin Boniadi, Azar Nafisi, and Atena Daemi joined, alongside Iranian journalists and survivors of eye injuries sustained during protests.

On Saturday, Iranians in Sweden, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Britain, Denmark, Germany, Cyprus, Canada, and the United States had also rallied to mark the anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s killing in morality police custody.

Iran shuts down Tehran cafe over alcohol use and dancing

Sep 14, 2025, 21:25 GMT+1

Iranian authorities have shut down a cafe-restaurant in northern Tehran for allegedly serving alcohol and permitting dancing, state media reported, the latest in a string of closures targeting businesses accused of violating public morality rules.

Fars News, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards, said Café Kariz in the Nahjul-Balagha Park had become “a venue for serving alcoholic drinks, nudity, violation of trade regulations and dancing.”

It said the establishment was sealed by the Public Security Police, urging authorities to “criminalize the serving of alcohol and mixed-gender parties in commercial venues” and to act without leniency against violators or officials suspected of collusion.

Possession and consumption of alcohol are illegal in Iran, carrying punishments ranging from fines and lashings to prison sentences. Despite the ban, underground networks and discreet venues continue to supply alcohol, often at high cost and under strict secrecy, according to both state and independent reports.

Fars said police inspections would continue to target what it called norm-breaking establishments.

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In recent weeks, authorities have shuttered several cafés and restaurants across Iran, citing reasons ranging from live music and mixed-gender gatherings to customers failing to observe compulsory hijab.

According to the reformist daily Ham-Mihan, official and unofficial reports indicate that over the past two months around 20 cafés, garden restaurants, and wedding halls in Tehran, Dezful, Hamedan, Kashan, and Maragh in Isfahan province have been closed for what officials described as violations related to women’s dress and mandatory hijab.

In Qom, authorities last week permanently closed a café for operating without a license and hosting live music, while in July the provincial Revolutionary Guards announced the closure of three other cafés over “multiple violations including hijab infractions.”

In Dezful, three popular cafés were sealed in early September for what police described as breaches of hijab regulations.

Iran executes Shia cleric for killing secretary’s husband, rights group says

Sep 14, 2025, 16:52 GMT+1

Iran executed a Shia cleric convicted of killing his secretary’s husband in the southwestern city of Behbahan, the US-based rights group Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reported on Sunday.

Javad Mortazavi, who ran a marriage registration office in Behbahan, was in a temporary marriage with his secretary for several years before she married another man.

After her marriage, Mortazavi invited the husband to his office, laced his drink with sedatives, and fatally stabbed him in March 2023, HRANA said.

The cleric was put to death in Sepidar Prison in Ahvaz.

The secretary's husband who was murdered by the cleric
100%
The secretary's husband who was murdered by the cleric

In a 2023 report, Iranian newspaper Etemad said that Mortazavi had invited the woman’s husband to his office under the pretext of handing over a marriage certificate and killed him by poisoning his coffee.

The report said another account suggested he first drugged the man unconscious and then stabbed him to death on a street in Behbahan.

Some reports claimed Mortazavi even led the funeral prayer over the body before burying the victim in a deserted area, according to Etemad.

At least 818 people, including 21 women, have been executed in Iran this year in Iran according to HRANA.

Iran accounted for 64% of all known global executions in 2024, with at least 972 people executed, according to Amnesty International.

Mahsa Amini’s death sparked irreversible change in Iran, Jafar Panahi says

Sep 14, 2025, 15:00 GMT+1

Iranian dissident filmmaker Jafar Panahi says the death in custody of Mahsa Amini in 2022 spurred a generation in Iran that no longer remains silent in the face of repression.

Panahi added that she continues to live on through acts of defiance and calls for freedom, as he marked the third anniversary of her death which ignited nationwide protests.

“When they took her life, a veil of lies was lifted and a generation rose up that decided to remain silent no longer,” Panahi said in a post on Instagram.

“With killings and intimidation, they wanted to impose silence, but a greater cry echoed. Since that day, nothing has been the same…We are no longer those former people. The blood of Mahsa and hundreds of others does not allow anything to appear normal again."

“Mahsa has not died; she lives in every defiant glance, in every image that breaks censorship, in every cry demanding freedom. She breathes in the eyes of the girls who have let their hair fly in the wind,” he said.

Panahi, who has faced imprisonment and a 15-year travel ban for his outspoken criticism of the Islamic Republic, received the Palme d’Or at the 78th Cannes Film Festival earlier this year in May.

In his acceptance speech, he urged unity among Iranians striving for democracy: "Let's set aside our differences. The important thing now is the freedom of our country, so that no one would dare to tell us what to wear or what film to make."

Panahi, one of Iran’s most acclaimed directors, was arrested in July 2022 after he protested against the arrest of two fellow filmmakers who had voiced criticism of the authorities. He was sentenced to six years in prison before being released on bail in early 2023.