Brave youths in different cities across Iran have been involved in an expanding campaign of attacks against various regime sites. These attacks, targeting security bases and buildings of the regime’s so-called judiciary, are being coordinated in response to the mullahs’ crackdown of popular protests and the horrific recent surge in executions. And across the globe, the Iranian Diaspora has been active in voicing their solidarity with their compatriots inside the country and redoubling their efforts in obtaining global political support for their compatriots’ ongoing struggle against the mullahs’ regime.

People throughout Iran continue to specifically hold the mullahs’ Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei responsible for their miseries, while also condemning the oppressive the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and paramilitary Basij units, alongside other security units that are on the ground suppressing the peaceful demonstrators.

Protests in Iran have to this day expanded to at least 282 cities. Over 750 people have been killed and more than 30,000 are arrested by the regime’s forces, according to sources of Iranian opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK). The names of 675 killed protesters have been published by the PMOI/MEK.

Brave youths in the city of Bavi in Khuzestan Province located in southwest Iran launched an attack targeting a local State Security Forces site. This attack, taking place early Sunday morning local time, resulted in at least one explosion at the site and was in response to the regime’s recent wave of executions. More information will be provided when available.

Locals in the Ekbatan and Shahrak-e Bagheri districts of the Iranian capital Tehran were chanting anti-regime slogans on Sunday night, including:
“Down with Khamenei!” referring to regime dictator Ali Khamenei.

Freedom-loving Iranians and supporters of the Iranian opposition coalition NCRI, and its cornerstone member the PMOI/MEK, have been holding an increasing number of demonstrations and rallies across the globe over the past week in solidarity with the Iranian revolution, relay the Iranian people’s opposition to any form of dictatorship, and celebrate the 34th anniversary of the death of mullahs’ regime founder Ruhollah Khomeini on June 3. The many activists and MEK supporters have also been reiterating their long-lasting support for NCRI President-elect Maryam Rajavi’s ten-point plan for the future of Iran and reemphasizing on the Iranian people’s opposition to a return to a monarchical rule.

These rallies have been held in many cities, including London, Oslo, Vienna, Stockholm, The Hague, Aarhus, Zurich, Hamburg, Cologne, Bremen, Leipzig, Magdeburg, Stuttgart, and Göttingen in Germany; and Ottawa, Toronto, and Vancouver in Canada.

The majority of members in the Parliament of Iceland, with a 1,100-year history being one of the world’s oldest elected bodies, have joined the expanding international campaign to stop the horrific wave of executions in Iran.

The majority of Iceland MPs have issued a statement emphasizing that the dictatorship ruling Iran, aiming to confront the Iranian revolution and establishing a climate of fear across the country’s society, has in recent months intensified mass and extrajudicial executions. More than 100 inmates were executed in just the first 19 days of May, the statement explains.

Three party leaders, six parliamentary committee chairs, one former minister, a current minister, and four members of the parliamentary presidium committee are among the signatories of this statement.

The majority of Iceland MPs recognize four decades of constant resistance by the brave women of Iran for democracy, adding that the ten-point plan of Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the Iranian opposition coalition National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), deserves the support of Iceland MPs. Nearly half of the signatories of this statement are women. In Europe, Iceland has the highest percentage of women taking part in their country’s parliament.

The Iceland MPs reiterate the fact that they stand shoulder to shoulder with the Iranian people’s demand for a democratic republic based on separation of religion and state, in which no single individual enjoys privilege over others for their religion or family relations.

Through their slogans the Iranian people have made it clear that they denounce all forms of dictatorship, including the sacked Shah or the current religious dictatorship, and reject any ties with these dictatorships, the Iceland MPs highlighted.

The statement calls on the international community to stand alongside the Iranian people in an effort for change, designate the IRGC as a terrorist organization, and hold the regime’s ruling officials accountable for their crimes against humanity.

The protests in Iran began following the death of Mahsa Amini. Mahsa (Zhina) Amini, a 22-year-old woman from the city of Saqqez in Kurdistan Province, western Iran, who traveled to Tehran with her family, was arrested on Tuesday, September 13, at the entry of Haqqani Highway by the regime’s so-called “Guidance Patrol” and transferred to the “Moral Security” agency.

She was brutally beaten by the morality police and died of her wounds in a Tehran hospital on September 16. The event triggered protests that quickly spread across Iran and rekindled the people’s desire to overthrow the regime.

Source » mojahedin