By Editors of The Free Iran Herald
Now bringing you daily updates on the events unfolding in Iran

More Iranian protesters who were brutally murdered by the Khomeinist regime during recent days are being identified.
While the Khomeiniist regime appears to have stabilized its internal situation, for now, after several days of massive repression, Iranians are still using their newly restored Internet access to upload videos of atrocities committed by regime officials and their forces.
In one, a member of the security forces in the northern city of Gorgan is seen smashing a protestor’s head with an axe before shooting and killing him, at close range.
In Sirjan, scene of some of the worst violence last week, the county manager there has confirmed that he himself gave the order to fire on and kill demonstrators.
Amena Shahbazi, a brave woman, lost her life, while simply trying to help a man who had been mortally wounded by regime forces. She was then shot to death, in return.
Proof has also emerged that it was the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) that attacked homes and cars at random, while posing as protestors, to turn everyday Iranians against the demonstrators.
The number of those arrested last week remains unclear. Amnesty International is citing 4,800 detained, but opposition activists inside Iran are providing numbers as high as 10,000 people, over 165 cities. According to these reports, the detainees are being held at Fashafouyeh Prison in Shahr’e Rey, south of Tehran, and in Eslamshahr, Quds Town, Shahriar, Karaj and Shadeghiyeh. In Fashafouyeh Prison, the detainees are said to have been subjected to brutal torture, and other prisoners have stated that they’ve heard the screaming from the torture sessions. Hassan Khalilabadi, head of the local council in Shahr-e Rey, said that not only the prisoners, but even wardens and other prison staff are living in extremely difficult conditions at Fashafouyeh Prison.
In the past, political prisoners have gone on hunger strike to protest the horrific conditions inside Fashafouyeh.
Arrests are still continuing. Regime media announced the detention of 34 yesterday, 15 in Shiraz, where some of the heaviest fighting occurred, two in Hamedan, and 17 in Lorestan province, which has seen heavy protesting after hundreds of inhabitants of a village there were infected with HIV because of contaminated needles used by the regime’s health service.
In Mahshahr, in Khuzestan, on Saturday, one detainee died while under torture. Hamid Sheikhani, a 35-year-old husband and father, had no prior health problems, and according to his family, upon receiving the body, they could see obvious marks of torture.
#BREAKING: 35 years old Hamid Sheikhani, father of one was killed by the Police of #Iran‘s Islamic Regime in detention in #Mahshahr today. He was one of protesters who were arrested during #IranProtests. He was tortured to death. pic.twitter.com/7h320nvKJY
— Babak Taghvaee (@BabakTaghvaee) November 25, 2019
According to an eyewitness in Mahshahr, who saw the IRGC shooting and killing across the entire city, even targeting women and children, members of the IRGC’s ethnic-Afghan Liwa Fatemiyoun (also known as the Afghan Hezbollah) were brought into Mahshahr to quash the uprising there.
Despite the momentary lull, once can be sure that protests will quickly resume in Iran. As a fallout from the rise in gasoline prices, the issue which caused the protests to erupt on the 15th, prices of other commodities in Iran, including fruit and vegetables, are now increasing by 25% to 50%, according to regime-controlled media, which is probably understating it. Iranians were already malnourished as a result of the previous price inflation of the past two years, and this means the lives of the average Iranians will only become even more difficult.
Knowing that he his organization has little support from living Iranians, an IRGC General, Ali Fadavi, on Saturday, asked female IRGC and Basij members to each have five children, in order to produce more “Shi’ite soldiers.”
Yet scenes like the below Instagram posts continue. People in Shiraz, gather in front of the Revolutionary Guards corporate headquarters (aka Khatam Al-Anbiya) tearing down the dictator’s banners and action against the regime continues.
Also, in areas where they are able to fight back against the security forces, they have and continue to do so. The below photo is of Revolutionary Guards commander Morteza Khosravani who was attacked by protesters in Shiraz. He is one of the main perpetrators of the suppression and killing protesters. He was caught and severely beaten by the protesters who broke his right arm and head, just as he was about to order further suppression of the people.

Revolutionary Guards commander Morteza Khosravani
Meanwhile, in neighboring Iraq, the month-long uprising against the Khomeiniist regime’s domination and interference there is continuing unabated, with no end in sight. This weekend 13 people were killed and over 150 were injured.
Last night, in response to the killing of 4 protesters in Nasriya, southern Iraq, their compatriots burned the governor’s building in the city. pic.twitter.com/pvYPLRUViP
— Mike (@Doranimated) November 25, 2019
What a sight: A sea of young students heading to Tahrir square in Baghdad and singing the national anthem #Iraq .pic.twitter.com/FM8yUmqD6o
— Mohamed Al Ajil (@M_Ajil) November 24, 2019
Tonight is exactly a month since Iraqi protesters started a nationwide #IraqProtests against the government and corruption. After 30 days, 330 dead & 15,000+ wounded, Tahrir Square in #Baghdad is still packed demanding reforms.
Video via Telegram#Iraq #العراق pic.twitter.com/vZK4usyPS9
— Lawk Ghafuri (@LawkGhafuri) November 24, 2019
Additionally, during the weekend, the meeting of the Manama Security Dialogue in Bahrain brought more discord between the United States and the European Union over how to respond to the Tehran regime’s provocations. The French defense minister, Florence Parly, claimed that the US was failing to respond to Tehran’s hostile actions against Saudi Arabia and other countries in the Persian Gulf over the past few months, stating that “We’ve seen a deliberate gradual US disengagement.” This was quite a reversal of policy, and a hypocritical one, for France, which had always opposed retaliating against Tehran-sponsored terrorism, and had up until very recently tried to preserve the 2015 nuclear agreement that had enabled Tehran’s virtual near-conquest of the region. For its part, the US, represented by Central Command chief General Kenneth McKenzie, asserted that only with international cooperation could Tehran be confronted. “Sometimes the Iranian regime has proved itself to be the bully in the neighborhood. And the only way to stand up to a bully is to do it together.” McKenzie also warned that Tehran might use its proxies to conduct more terrorist attacks, “The Iranian regime has conducted many non-attributable attacks in the past when they didn’t think anyone was looking. They prefer the darkness, where their activities can be hidden.”
Finally, on a lighter note, as noted by Iranian activists on Instagram, on Sunday, @SnoopDogg who was driving by shot a little video of the Iranian-American Los Angelinos rallying in support of the protesters in Iran and said: “It’s deep out here!”
We know it is Snoop. Next time, get out of the car and join us!
The post Iran Protests Update: Police Shoot Democracy Protesters Point Blank in the Street – The World Leaders Must Condemn Oppression! appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.