
THIS PAGE WILL BE UPDATED WITH THE LATEST NEWS
UPDATE: 9:00 PM CEST
Iran’s Barbaric Brutality Is Spiraling Out of Control – Regime Is Powder Keg with One Way Out, Says Resistance Fighter
THERE is “no doubt” Iran would use a nuclear bomb on its enemies, a female activist has revealed.
IT researcher Fereshteh, from Tehran, warned the “crisis-stricken regime” is clinging on to power by forcing its people to live in extreme poverty and ramping up executions.
Speaking to The Sun, Fereshteh, 35, revealed that she joined a resistance unit of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran after the regime tortured and executed her beloved sister.
Hundreds of resistance units have been set up all over the country – aimed at undermining the regime’s authority.
Members organise and lead protests, destroying statues and images of regime leaders and documenting human rights abuses.
UPDATE: 9:00 AM CEST
How Regime Corruption Fuels Nationwide Protests across Iran
The Iranian regime is facing a “tsunami of internal crisis,” driven by a collapsing economy, widespread public discontent, and deepening social challenges that have turned the Iranian people’s daily lives into a struggle for survival, Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), declared in her speech at the second day of the Free Iran 2025 Conference.
This is not a temporary downturn but a systemic failure engineered by a corrupt clerical dictatorship that prioritizes its nuclear ambitions and regional warmongering over the welfare of its people. This growing chasm between the rulers and the ruled was starkly illustrated by the popular boycott of the regime’s sham elections following the death of former regime president Ebrahim Raisi, where more than 90% of the population refused to participate, signaling a nationwide rejection of the ruling establishment.
Exhibition in Paris Exposes Surge in Executions and Human Rights Abuses in Iran
Paris, France – June 6, 2025 – Supporters of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) held an exhibition in Paris to condemn the Iranian regime’s escalating human rights abuses, with a particular focus on the sharp rise in executions across the country. The exhibition featured striking photographs and detailed documentation of the regime’s intensified crackdown on dissent, including the growing number of political prisoners—many affiliated with the PMOI —facing execution. Firsthand testimonies exposed the use of arbitrary arrests, torture, and death sentences as instruments of state repression.
Exhibition in Paris Exposes Surge in Executions and #HumanRights Abuses in #Iran#StopExecutionsInIran #FreePoliticalPrisoners #FreeIran2025 https://t.co/dmo2qtUgdh
— Iran Freedom (@4FreedominIran) June 7, 2025
Organizers called for urgent international attention to the worsening human rights crisis in Iran. They urged democratic governments to speak out and hold the regime accountable for its systematic violations.
Trump: Iran Will Not Enrich Uranium; Otherwise, I Will Do Something I Don’t Like
U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters about the Iranian regime’s nuclear issue saying: “They won’t be enriching. If they enrich then we’re going to have to do it other way and I don’t really want to do it the other way but we’re going to have to. There is not going to be enrichment.”
He added that after the end of his first presidential term, there were no problems. There were no wars, ISIS was 100% defeated, Iran was bankrupt, there was no issue with Hamas and Hezbollah, Israel had not been attacked, the Russia-Ukraine war had not happened, and there was no inflation in the U.S.
Warning Resolution by IAEA Board of Governors: Tehran Has Violated Its Safeguards Commitments
In a new and escalating development in the Iranian regime’s nuclear case, four Western countries — the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany — have submitted a draft resolution to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Board of Governors, accusing Tehran of “violating its safeguards commitments.”
According to the Associated Press, this draft resolution, which was shared with the Board members on Thursday, June 5, stresses that since 2019, the Iranian regime has repeatedly refused to fully and promptly cooperate with IAEA inspectors regarding undeclared nuclear material and suspicious activities at hidden sites.
U.S. Treasury Targets Iranian Shadow Banking Network Laundering Billions for Regime
June 6, 2025 – Washington, D.C. — In a major escalation of its pressure campaign against the Iranian regime, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) today announced sweeping sanctions on more than 30 individuals and entities tied to a sprawling shadow banking network run by three Iranian brothers — Mansour, Nasser, and Fazlolah Zarringhalam. The network has laundered billions of dollars through global financial channels to fund Iran’s oil exports, nuclear and missile programs, and terrorist proxies, despite international sanctions.
Simultaneously, the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued an updated advisory to help financial institutions detect and report suspicious activity linked to Iran’s illicit financial operations, including oil smuggling, shadow banking, and weapons procurement.
The Iran Regime’s Growing Threat: Espionage, Intimidation, and Violence on British Soil
The British government’s top adviser on state threats has issued a stark warning about the Iranian regime’s growing use of criminal networks to carry out espionage, intimidation, and acts of violence within the United Kingdom.
According to a recent New York Times report published on June 6, Jonathan Hall—who serves as the current Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation and Independent Reviewer of State Threats Legislation—has labeled the current threat level from hostile actions by Tehran as “extraordinary.”
Unlike terrorism, which often shocks the public with large-scale destruction, Hall emphasized that state threats tend to operate in the shadows. These covert operations are less visible but no less dangerous, involving a complex web of surveillance, infiltration, and targeted aggression.
Iran in Deadlock: Protests Surge Across the Country Amid Deepening Crises
As the Iranian regime grapples with suffocating internal and external crises, public unrest has reached new heights. Nearly a year after Masoud Pezeshkian assumed the presidency, it has become evident that his government remains paralyzed—unable to offer solutions to the mounting political, economic, and social challenges facing the country. Ongoing nuclear negotiations with the United States, once a focal point of the regime’s strategy, have failed to address or ease these problems. In this climate of stagnation and uncertainty, protests across various sectors of Iranian society have surged.








