Iran

Despite the ongoing protests against the mullahs, an Iranian activist reveals the suppression of the mullahs’ regime


It seems that the Iranian regime sold the air to the international and local press, after it released a number of prisoners of conscience. The regime started a new mass arrest campaign, as part of its campaigns for more than a year after the emergence of daily demonstrations demanding the overthrow of the regime.

Yesterday, after the release of activist Sepideh Qolian, she was arrested by a police group on the Qom-Arak road after an argument with her family, just eight hours after the activist was released from the notorious Evin Prison.

Citizens re-arrested

Citizens filming the Sepideh Qalyan kidnapping scene were also arrested, and according to a report, the activist said: “Mom, don’t worry, let me go, what can they do?Shortly after her release from prison, Qalyan posted a video of herself on Twitter, in which she was screaming moments after her release, in front of the prison: “Khamenei, oppressor, we will bury you under the dirt.”

“Four years and seven months later, I am out of the ‘Haft Tappeh’ affair. This time I am out hoping for Iran’s freedom,” Qalyan wrote.

Qalyan continued her activities of publicizing irregularities from Evin Prison during protests across Iran, writing in a letter from that prison: “Forced confessions continue, but it is the voice of the revolution that is heard. Evin’s walls can’t stop the voice of “Woman, Life, Freedom” from reaching.

She was also one of seven female political prisoners in the women’s section of Evin Prison, writing an open letter protesting “death sentences and death threats against prisoners in solitary confinement”.

As for her re-arrest, human rights sources told Khabar that “the re-arrest of activist Sepideh Qolian is likely because of her chants against Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei yesterday after her release in front of Evin Prison.”

The Iranian authorities have carried out torture and sexual violence against detainees in connection with the protests, including children as young as 12 years old, Amnesty International said.

Qalyan was one of those convicted in the case of a sugar cane company workers’ protest in the Arab city of Shuosh in the southern province of Khuzestan.

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