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      Swedish EU diplomat Johan Floderus freed from Iranian jail in prisoner swap

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 June, 2024

    Iranian-Swedish citizen Saeed Azizi also exchanged for Hamid Noury, who was serving life in Sweden for role in death of political prisoners

    Johan Floderus, the Swedish EU diplomat held in captivity for two years in Iran, has been freed and is on his way home, the Swedish prime minister announced.

    Ulf Kristersson said on Saturday that the Iranian lifer Hamid Noury was being exchanged for Johan Floderus and the Iranian-Swedish citizen Saeed Azizi.

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      The Guardian view on Iran’s presidential election: more choice, but little real hope of change | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 June, 2024

    The regime is allowing a reformist to run because it wants to ensure more of the same. It will take a better offer to win back the people

    The death of Iran’s president, Ebrahim Raisi, in a helicopter crash last month was a shock. The 63‑year‑old hardliner was not only expected to run for a second term, but to be part of the looming transition: the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is 85 and has health problems. Some had even thought Raisi might succeed him.

    Yet the repercussions have been muted. The first round of the presidential election is scheduled for 28 June, but no one expects Raisi’s replacement to bring significant political change . The regime’s priorities are continuity and stability. It knows it may soon have to reckon with the hostility of a second Trump administration and it faces widespread discontent at home, following the suppression of the massive Woman, Life, Freedom protests. The evidence of recent years suggest that it is more worried about conservative consolidation at the top than legitimacy from below.

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      Mohammad Reza Zahedi: who was the Iranian commander killed in an Israeli strike in Syria?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024

    Zahedi was a commander of al-Quds force and the most senior Iranian military official to be killed since the assassination of Qassem Suleimani

    Israeli strikes on Iran’s consulate in Syria have left at least 11 people dead – among them Brig Gen Mohammad Reza Zahedi, the highest-ranking Iranian military official to be killed since the January 2020 assassination of Gen Qassem Suleimani in Baghdad.

    Zahedi was a senior commander in al-Quds force, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’ (IRGC) clandestine foreign intelligence and paramilitary wing. He commanded units in Lebanon and Syria and was most likely a critical figure in Tehran’s relationship with Hezbollah and Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad.

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      Iranian journalist stabbed in London discharged and ‘residing at safe place’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Pouria Zeraati ‘ feeling better’ and recovering under supervision of Met police

    The Iranian International TV presenter who was stabbed outside his home in west London last week has said he has left hospital and is staying in a safe place.

    Pouria Zeraati, 36, said he was on the mend after his traumatic ordeal on Friday afternoon and thanked people for the kind messages and “love” they had sent him during his stay in hospital.

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      Iran vows revenge after two generals killed in Israeli strike on Syria consulate

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Several people killed in airstrike, including Revolutionary Guards Corps commander Mohammad Reza Zahedi and his deputy

    Iran has vowed revenge after Israeli war planes destroyed the Iranian consulate in Damascus, killing at least eleven people, including a senior commander in the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds force.

    Iran’s leaders in Tehran described the targeting of a diplomatic mission late on Monday as unprecedented and promised a harsh response.

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      Israeli airstrike hits Iranian consulate in Damascus – live updates

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Iran state media report senior Iranian Guards commander Mohammad Reza Zahedi killed after strike in Syrian capital

    Emergency services have been working at the scene of the site in the Mezzeh district of Damascus, where several people have been killed after Israeli warplanes destroyed the Iranian consulate in the Syrian capital.

    Reporters at the scene saw smoke rising from the rubble of a building that had been flattened, and emergency vehicles parked outside.

    I intend to act immediately in accordance with the new law to stop the channel’s activity.

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      Israeli airstrike on Iranian consulate in Damascus kills six including IRGC commander

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Mohammad Reza Zahedi of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps among fatalities in Syria attack

    Israeli warplanes have struck the Iranian consulate in Damascus, killing six people reportedly including a senior commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps.

    Reporters at the scene in the Mezzeh district of the Syrian capital saw smoke rising from the rubble of a building that had been flattened, and emergency vehicles parked outside.

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      Scientists link 2019 Iranian landslide to building of dam

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 27 March, 2024

    Researchers studying satellite data show slope near village of Hoseynabad-e Kalpush moved after reservoir began to be filled

    In recent decades there has been a dramatic rise in the number of dams being built, to keep pace with demand for water or to provide power. Concerns have been raised about increased landslide activity near new dams, and now a study has demonstrated a conclusive link in at least one incident.

    In March 2019 a landslide tore apart Hoseynabad-e Kalpush village in north-central Iran, damaging 300 houses and severing the road to the nearby dam. Local authorities blamed the landslide on heavy rainfall and insisted that the dam did not play a role.

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      Fighting VPN criminalization should be Big Tech’s top priority, activists say

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 March, 2023 • 1 minute

    Fighting VPN criminalization should be Big Tech’s top priority, activists say

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

    “Women, life, freedom” became the protest chant of a revolution still raging in Iran months after a 22-year-old Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, died while in custody of morality police. Amini was arrested last September for “improperly” wearing a hijab and violating the Islamic Republic's mandatory dress code laws. Since then, her name has become a viral hashtag invoked by millions of online activists protesting authoritarian regimes around the globe.

    In response to Iran's ongoing protests—mostly led by women and young people—Iranian authorities have increasingly restricted Internet access. First, they temporarily blocked popular app stores and indefinitely blocked social media apps like WhatsApp and Instagram. They then implemented sporadic mobile shutdowns wherever protests flared up. Perhaps most extreme, authorities responded to protests in southeast Iran in February by blocking the Internet outright, Al Arabiya reported . Digital and human rights experts say motivations include controlling information, keeping protestors offline, and forcing protestors to use state services where their online activities can be more easily tracked—and sometimes trigger arrests.

    As getting online has become increasingly challenging for everyone in Iran—not just protestors—millions have learned to rely on virtual private networks (VPNs) to hide Internet activity, circumvent blocks, and access accurate information beyond state propaganda. Simply put, VPNs work by masking a user's IP address so that governments have a much more difficult time monitoring activity or detecting a user's location. They do this by routing the user's data to the VPN provider's remote servers, making it much harder for an ISP (or a government) to correlate the Internet activity of the VPN provider's servers with the individual users actually engaging in that activity.

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