Iran has been the scene of persistent unrest for more than two years, from 2017 to early 2020. The coronavirus pandemic has naturally stopped widespread public events, but it turns out that there is broad consensus that this is just a pause. , mismanagement of coronavirus through the Iranian regime will likely soon fuel even more intense and profound expressions of dissent, especially if estimates of choice mortality succeed in a broad Iranian audience.
On Monday, the plan’s ministry of fitness estimated the death toll at just over 22,400, after acknowledging a large number of daily increases of more than 100, but reports compiled through the People’s Organization of Veryahidines of Iran (WIPO/MEK) verify that the death toll is Covid-19 devastated the country for up to two months before the regime even identified that the virus posed a serious risk. According to hospital records and other leaked documents, as well as testimony from eyewitnesses across the country, WIPO and the Iranian National Resistance Council announced that the number of Iranian pandemic victims had exceeded 100,900 on Wednesday.
More than 100,900 people have been killed by the new #coronavirus in 427 cities in Iran’s 31 provinces, according to Iranian opposition WIPO/MEK.
Https://t. co/DwhdxNki7T full pic. twitter. com/qlYt4Gj6cO
– Organization of the People’s Muyahidines of Iran (WIPO / MEK) (@Mojahedineng) Nine September 2020
This figure alone contributes particularly to the regime’s incompetence with the main threats to public aptitude and well-being, and also highlights the regime’s selfish priorities, as the death toll is largely due to the official cover-up of the law. early cases, and the government’s refusal to put in place a severe blockade or provide money that can help the population maintain social distance while the fitness formula thwarts the disease.
Understood in a broader context, the 100,900 coronavirus-related deaths mean further degradation of society that has led to two national uprisings and countless smaller-scale outbreaks.
In the last days of 2017, economic discontent sparked a demonstration in the city of Mashhad that without delay began to spread to surrounding communities. In the first week of January 2018, demonstrations were observed in more than a hundred cities and towns, where participants attributed their difficulties to the regime’s own disposition and chanted slogans such as “down the dictator” to explain its regime change.
The ideal leader of the regime, Ali Khamenei, responded to the unrest by breaking with 3 decades of regime propaganda to recognize WIPO as the main driving force behind the protests and slogans. Since then, he and various other officials have continually commented to warn others who oppose it. to the growing influence of WIPO and the related prospect of new uprisings.
His considerations were shown through the continued efforts of the PMOI’s “Resistance Units” in Iran. Following the January 2018 uprising, NCRI President-elect Maryam Rajavi suggested the network of Iranian militants turn the rest of this year into “a full year of uprisings. “The protests of the other Iranians in the towns, which kept the provocative anti-government slogans in general, were a positive reaction to this call.
However, it paved the way for a continuation of the initial uprising, the November 2019 national protests proved to be even more spontaneous and geographically and demographically diverse, no doubt guided by its own warnings of such an uprising, the regime’s government responded to its emergency by sending the Revolutionary Guard to open fire to protests and shoot to kill. In just a few days, 1,500 nonviolent protesters were killed and 12,000 arrested. Many now face the risk of execution for national security fees or permanent injuries as a result of prisoner abuse.
However, even the death toll and the threats that followed were not enough to save more riots. In January, two months after the time of the uprising, student activists from several provinces protested against the regime’s attempt to stop the IRGC missile attack that destroyed Ukraine. International Airlines Flight 752, killing everyone on board. The public reaction to this incident is undoubtedly a sign of an imminent uprising, with the ongoing activities of the resistance units questioning the simultaneous dangers posed by the regime’s crackdown on dissent and the regime’s desperate attempt to use COVID-19 to spread fear and depression among people.
If thousands of Iranians were visibly outraged through the canopy of 176 dead, one can believe how much more unrest will arise from Tehran’s efforts to cover up the deaths of more than 100,000 people within Iran at the time. which was salvageable. To be sure, the regime itself is quite capable of imagining it and increases the risk of reprisals in an effort to avoid the next confrontation between the government and the Resistance.
Part of this effort has focused on the imminent execution of personalities whose national popularity threatens to generate more public unrest. Champion wrestler Navid Afkari has appeared in foreign headlines for the past two weeks, while his defenders warned of the option of being killed as a scapegoat. Although he was sentenced to death for killing a security guard, his conviction was based on confessions received through torture, and the maximum genuine motive for his death sentence was his participation in one of the demonstrations that included “the full year of uprisings. “»
– NCRI-FAC (@iran_policy) September 2, 2020
Several other activists were also sentenced to death in connection with the 2019 uprising and the various demonstrations that followed, but it is unclear whether the culprits really have confidence in their ability to save him from the next uprising through those means. who sometimes say that the regime will be able to handle such an uprising once it arises.
“The current situation in Iranian society is intolerable, and every day others are moving further away from the system,” Iranian MP Hashem Harrisi said in an interview with the state media on June 29. “The situation is very fragile and we can not go back and watch the installation die.
Although this warning is now more than two months old, neither Harrisi nor any other Iranian regime official has proposed a concrete plan to prevent him from the establishment’s death, a government-hired sociologist, Amanollah Gharayi Moghadam, said in August. 1 interview that the regime finds a way to “manage people’s depression in the face of life-threatening economic problems even before the coronavirus pandemic, but to do so, senior regime officials, such as Khamenei, would have to radically restructure priorities. which led them to provide virtually no public assistance while 100,000 of their compatriots died. This means ending oppression and exporting terrorism. But the Iranian regime relies on internal oppression and the export of terrorism and chaos abroad, so preventing it will lead to the immediate collapse of the regime.
Moghadam went on and recommended that, in the absence of this change, the regime will face its overthrow, but as far as other Iranians are concerned, this is the only thing that can in all likelihood lead to mandatory changes, or by the way. a national-style end to human rights violations and, fortunately for them, the overthrow of the regime is imminent, as one uprising has led to another, and WIPO’s lifestyle and resilience makes the long dream of others of democracy and “free Iran” a reality.