• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Sport
  • Cricket
  • Odisha
Widespread Arrests Continue In Iran Weeks After Security Forces Crushed Protests

Widespread Arrests Continue In Iran Weeks After Security Forces Crushed Protests

4 hours ago
BLO Arrested On Charge Of Murdering Lover’s Husband In West Bengal

BLO Arrested On Charge Of Murdering Lover’s Husband In West Bengal

16 minutes ago
Rs 5 Crore Digital Fraud Racket Busted In Odisha’s Balangir; 2 Held For Mule Accounts

Rs 5 Crore Digital Fraud Racket Busted In Odisha’s Balangir; 2 Held For Mule Accounts

18 minutes ago
Rahul Gandhi Is ‘Immature’ With No Understanding Of Economy: Piyush Goyal

Rahul Gandhi Is ‘Immature’ With No Understanding Of Economy: Piyush Goyal

31 minutes ago
Mumbai Metro Pillar Collapse: At Least 1 Dead, 3 Injured; CM Fadnavis Orders Probe

Mumbai Metro Pillar Collapse: At Least 1 Dead, 3 Injured; CM Fadnavis Orders Probe

52 minutes ago
Excise Officials Seize Expired Liquor From Bar In Odisha’s Balangir

Excise Officials Seize Expired Liquor From Bar In Odisha’s Balangir

1 hour ago
Cash & Gold Looted From Cop’s House In Odisha’s Jajpur

Cash & Gold Looted From Cop’s House In Odisha’s Jajpur

1 hour ago
Odisha CM Lays Stone For Rs 100-Cr Textile Park & Rs 187-Cr Disaster Recovery, Data Centre In Keonjhar

Odisha CM Lays Stone For Rs 100-Cr Textile Park & Rs 187-Cr Disaster Recovery, Data Centre In Keonjhar

2 hours ago
Rahman Poised To Be New B’desh PM After Jamaat-e-Islami Concedes Defeat

Rahman Poised To Be New B’desh PM After Jamaat-e-Islami Concedes Defeat

2 hours ago
4 Injured As Speeding Van Rams Auto In Bhubaneswar

4 Injured As Speeding Van Rams Auto In Bhubaneswar

2 hours ago
Three CRPF Personnel, Civilian Killed After Car Rams Into Stationary Truck In Chhattisgarh

Three CRPF Personnel, Civilian Killed After Car Rams Into Stationary Truck In Chhattisgarh

2 hours ago
Sikh Separatist Pannun Murder Plot: Nikhil Gupta Pleads Guilty In US Court

Sikh Separatist Pannun Murder Plot: Nikhil Gupta Pleads Guilty In US Court

2 hours ago
Alin Sherin Abraham Becomes Youngest Organ Donor In Kerala; Five Beneficiaries Receive Organs

Alin Sherin Abraham Becomes Youngest Organ Donor In Kerala; Five Beneficiaries Receive Organs

3 hours ago
  • Home
  • About us
  • Career
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Usage
Saturday, February 14, 2026
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
No Result
View All Result
Home World

Widespread Arrests Continue In Iran Weeks After Security Forces Crushed Protests

by OB Bureau
February 14, 2026
in World
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Widespread Arrests Continue In Iran Weeks After Security Forces Crushed Protests

Oplus_131072

491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Cairo: Iranian security forces continue mass arrests weeks after crushing protests, targeting reformists and citizens in a widening crackdown across the country amid economic fallout.

According to reports, in one such incident security agents came at 2 am, pulling up in a half-dozen cars outside the home of the Nakhii family. They woke up the sleeping sisters, Nyusha and Mona, and forced them to give the passwords for their phones. Then they took the two away.

ADVERTISEMENT

The women were accused of participating in the nationwide protests that shook Iran a week earlier, a friend of the pair told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity for her security as she described the January 16 arrests.

Such arrests have been happening for weeks following the government crackdown last month that crushed the protests calling for the end of the country’s theocratic rule. Reports of raids on homes and workplaces have come from major cities and rural towns alike, revealing a dragnet that has touched large swaths of Iranian society. University students, doctors, lawyers, teachers, actors, business owners, athletes and filmmakers have been swept up, as well as reformist figures close to President Masoud Pezeshkian.

They are often held incommunicado for days or weeks and prevented from contacting family members or lawyers, according to activists monitoring the arrests. That has left desperate relatives searching for their loved ones.

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency has put the number of arrests at more than 50,000. The AP has been unable to verify the figure. Tracking the detainees has been difficult since Iranian authorities imposed an internet blackout, and reports leak out only with difficulty.

Other activist groups outside Iran have also been working to document the sweeps.

“Authorities continue to identify people and detain them,” said Shiva Nazarahari, an organizer with one of those groups, the Committee for Monitoring the Status of Detained Protesters.

So far, the committee has verified the names of more than 2,200 people who were arrested, using direct reports from families and a network of contacts on the ground. The arrestees include 107 university students, 82 children as young as 13, as well as 19 lawyers and 106 doctors.

Nazarahari said authorities have been reviewing municipal street cameras, store surveillance cameras and drone footage to track people who participated in the protests to their homes or places of work, where they are arrested.

The protests began in late December, triggered by anger over spiraling prices, and quickly spread across the country. They peaked on January 8 and 9, when hundreds of thousands of people in more than 190 cities and towns across the country took to the streets.

Security forces responded by unleashing unprecedented violence. The Human Rights Activists News Agency has so far counted more than 7,000 dead and says the true number is far higher. Iran’s government offered its only death toll on January 21, saying 3,117 people were killed.

Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejehi, a hard-line cleric who heads Iran’s judiciary, became the face of the crackdown, labeling protesters “terrorists” and calling for fast-tracked punishments.

Since then, “detentions have been very widespread because it’s like a whole suffocation of society,” said one protester, reached by the AP in Gohardasht, a middle-class area outside the Iranian capital. He said two of his relatives and three of his brother’s friends were killed in the first days of the crackdown, as well as several neighbors. The protester spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of being targeted by authorities.

The Nakhii sisters, 37-year-old Nyusha and 25-year-old Mona, were first taken to Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, where they were allowed to contact their parents, their friend said. Later, she said, they were moved to Qarchak, a women’s prison on the outskirts of Tehran, where rights groups reported conditions that included overcrowding and lack of hygiene even before the crackdown.

Other people whose arrests were documented by the detainees committee have disappeared into the prisons. The family of Abolfazl Jazbi has not heard from him since his January 15 arrest at a factory in the southern city of Isfahan. Jazbi suffers from a severe blood disorder that requires medication, according to the committee.

Atila Sultanpour, 45, has not been heard from since he was taken from his home in Tehran on Jan. 29 by security agents who beat him severely, according to Dadban, a group of Iranian lawyers based abroad who are also documenting detentions.

Authorities have also moved to suspend bank accounts, block SIM cards and confiscate the property of protesters’ relatives or people who publicly express support for them, said Musa Barzin, an attorney with Dadban, citing reports from families.

In past crackdowns on protests, authorities sometimes adhered to a veneer of due process and rule of law, but not this time, Barzin said. Authorities are increasingly denying detainees access to legal counsel and often holding them for days or weeks before allowing any phone calls to family. Lawyers representing arrested protesters also have faced court summons and detention, according to Dadban.

“The following of the law is in the worst situation it has ever been,” Barzin said.

Despite the crackdown, many civic groups continue to issue defiant statements.

The Writers’ Association of Iran, an independent group with a long tradition of dissent, issued a statement describing the protests as an uprising against “47 years of systemic corruption and discrimination.”

It also announced that two of its members had been detained, including a member of its secretariat.

A national council representing schoolteachers urged families to speak out about detained children and students. “Do not fear the threats of security forces. Refer to independent counsel. Make your children’s names public,” it said in a statement.

A spokesman for the council said Sunday that it has documented the deaths of at least 200 minors who were killed in the crackdown. That figure is up several dozen from the count just days before.

“Every day we tell ourselves this is the last list,” Mohammad Habibi wrote on X. “But the next morning, new names arrive again.”

Bar associations and medical groups have also spoken out, including Iran’s state-sanctioned doctors council, which called on authorities to stop harassing medical staff.

Share196Tweet123
ADVERTISEMENT
OB Bureau

OB Bureau

Related Posts

Rahman Poised To Be New B’desh PM After Jamaat-e-Islami Concedes Defeat

Rahman Poised To Be New B’desh PM After Jamaat-e-Islami Concedes Defeat

by OB Bureau
February 14, 2026

Dhaka: Bangladesh’s Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) party conceded defeat in elections on Saturday, despite earlier alleging problems with the vote count, clearing...

Change In Power In Iran Would Be Best, Says Trump As US Forces Brace Up For Ops Against Tehran

Change In Power In Iran Would Be Best, Says Trump As US Forces Brace Up For Ops Against Tehran

by OB Bureau
February 14, 2026

Washington: US President Donald Trump has declared that a change in power in the Islamic Republic of Iran “would be...

Sheikh Hasina

BNP Pushes For Hasina’s Extradition From India After Landslide Victory In Bangladesh Election

by OB Bureau
February 13, 2026

  Dhaka: After securing a landslide victory in Bangladesh’s general election, Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) reiterated its demand for ousted...

Reliance to buy Venezuelan oil

Reliance Wins US Licence For Venezuelan Oil

by OB Bureau
February 13, 2026

Mumbai: Reliance Industries Ltd has been issued a general licence by the United States that will allow them to buy Venezuelan...

SAI International School SAI International School SAI International School
OdishaBytes

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • News Feed

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media