Filmmakers Condemn The Violence Against Protesters
The Cinema House, Iran's film industry trade union, has said that it "stands in solidarity...with the oppressed people" of Iran.
In a statement, the trade union said,"The streets are the only option left for people who find no escape or outlet to express their protests."
The Cinema House emphasized that "violence against peaceful protesters is neither legitimate, nor legal, nor rational."
In reference to senior officials calling the protesters "rioters," the trade union said that the real "rioters have been profiting from plundering national wealth without any punishment, from untying foreign policy knots, even at the cost of war, and living under the shadow of security."
Meanwhile, 184 Iranian filmmakers have issued a statement supporting the protesters saying, "We condemn the suppression of the people's protests under any pretext."
Shooting at unarmed protesters, the filmmakers said, is "a crime against the right to life and has no justification."
Radio Farda Confirms 25 Deaths So Far
RFE/RL's Radio Farda has so far verified the deaths of 25 protesters. Some human rights groups say the actual number is higher, and that over 2,000 people have been arrested.
Here's a map showing where the protesters were killed:
Video: Protesters Rip Up Iranian Flag In Mashhad
As nationwide protests continued for an 11th night across Iran, protesters in Mashhad tore down the national flag and ripped it to shreds. Iran's current national flag was adopted after the Islamic Revolution in 1979, and critics of the Islamic republic refer to this flag as the regime's flag's, not the country's.
Veteran Reformist Politician Says Iranian Government 'No Longer Sustainable'
Azar Mansuri, a prominent reformist politician known for her long-standing advocacy for women's rights, says the recent protests in Iran have shown that even just living a "normal life" in Iran has become a "fundamental issue" that is "directly linked to national security, political stability, and public trust."
Mansuri is the head of the Reformists' Front, a political alliance of smaller reformist parties, and the leader of the Nation's Union, a large reformist party that has held seats in parliament and on city councils.
Speaking at the 11th National Congress of the Nation's Union Party, she condemned any "negative confrontation" with the protesters and said that the "government in this situation is no longer sustainable."
Mansuri expressed sadness over the recent deaths of several protesters and called for the release of all those who have been detained by the authorities, especially women, teenagers, and students.
The crisis in Iran, she said, is "above all, a crisis of governance" that encompasses "all spheres."
Mansuri emphasized that "no system -- even if it has the most powerful instruments of military power -- can survive in the long term without the relative consent and active participation of the people."
Regarding Iranian foreign policy, Mansuri said that Iran is "more trapped in strategic isolation than ever before."
Video Footage Shows Security Forces Firing Tear Gas In Neyshabur
A video sent to RFE/RL's Radio Farda shows protests in Neyshabur, the second-largest city in Khorasan Province, which began in the morning on January 7 and continued past 9 p.m.
The footage, recorded mostly at the Daraei intersection in Neyshabur, shows government forces firing tear gas and a police station on fire.
US Lawmakers Warn Iranian Government Over Protest Crackdown
A majority of the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee has warned the Iranian government about its violent treatment of protesters.
In a post on X on January 7, the group of US lawmakers stated that the Iranian people have courageously risen up against a "repressive regime."
In this note, the GOP majority of the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee wrote to the leaders of the Islamic republic: "If Tehran violently kills peaceful protestors, it will be swiftly met with justice."
Meanwhile, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham also repeated US President Donald Trump's recent warning to Tehran.
Graham, while publishing part of his recent interview with Fox News, emphasized that Trump "is not Barack Obama and is not turning his back on the people of Iran who are demanding that their oppression end."
He also issued a stark warning, saying to "the Ayatollah and his thugs: If you keep killing your people, in defiance of President Trump, you're going to wake up dead."
Graham went on to add that the Iranian government is "on the verge of falling."
He was referring to Trump's explicit warning to Iran about using violence against protesters. On January 4, Trump told reporters about Iranian officials: "If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they're going to get hit very hard by the United States."
On January 3, he issued a similar warning to the Iranian government in a post on Truth Social.
Journalists In Iran Summoned Over Protest Coverage
As the protests spread in Iran, reports have emerged of some protesters, civil society activists, and journalists being summoned by anonymous phone calls and text messages with the aim of warning them against taking a stance on the protests and limiting their coverage.
Marzieh Mohebbi, a lawyer living outside Iran, wrote on X, "These messages are sent to all those whose mobile phones were found within the area of the demonstrations, and they have no legal value or validity, and do not constitute a source of legal effect."
Addressing those who received the messages, she wrote: "The Islamic Republic's judiciary lacks legitimacy, is corrupt, and is untrustworthy. No one knows what will happen to you after you appear, so do not even pay attention to the official summons."
There have also been reports that journalists were required to sign written pledges barring them from expressing views or posting about the protests on social media.
Some of these journalists have even been threatened with arrest if they ignore the security forces' demands.
In recent days, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) condemned the Iranian security agencies' actions in "summoning and threatening journalists" amid the ongoing nationwide protests.
According to the committee's post, following recent statements by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei about the crackdown on protests, "reporters were contacted and ordered to appear before security bodies, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)."
"Authorities must immediately halt their intimidation which seeks to silence independent reporting at a critical moment," CPJ added.
MEP: 'We Must Shine A Light On What Is Happening'
Hannah Neumann, a member of the European Parliament, once again voiced support for Iranian protesters on January 8.
"Today, people all over Iran are back on the streets. They know that they may face bullets. But for many, silence is now more dangerous than courage," she wrote in a post on X.
"We have a duty here to shine a light on what is happening in Iran. This regime has lost every last inch of legitimacy," Neumann added.
The German representative, who also heads the European Parliament's Iran relations delegation, had previously said Europe has a responsibility to stand firmly with the Iranian "people who [are] asking for rights that should never require courage & to insist on accountability when those rights are denied" and support the latest round of protests, which began on December 28.
Widespread Strike Of Traders Reported In Kurdish Parts Of Country
Images and videos released from Kurdish cities in Iran on January 8 showed markets and shops shuttered and closed.
Traders have reportedly gone on strike in Ilam, Kermanshah, Sarpol-e Zahab, Rawansar, Paveh, Kamyaran, Sanandaj, Qorveh, Bijar, Marivan, Baneh, Saghez, Divandarreh, Urmia, Mahabad, Bokan, Oshnavieh, and Sardasht.
The strike was called by political parties and civil society organizations in Iranian Kurdistan.
Seven Iranian Kurdistan parties issued a joint call for a general strike in Kurdish-dominated areas of the country on January 8 in support of nationwide protests and condemnation of the regime's "crimes in Kermanshah, Ilam, and Lorestan."
The statement called the new wave of nationwide protests in Iran a clear, loud, and public "no" to the Islamic republic and a response to "all the disasters" that the regime has imposed on Iran during its rule.
Internet Disruptions Reported Across Iran
According to reports from Iran, as popular protests continued into their 11th night on January 7, users in various cities reported slow and unstable Internet connections.
It has been reported that in Tehran, Karaj, Isfahan, Shiraz, Mashhad, and Tabriz, both fixed-line and mobile Internet access have been experiencing severe disruption or brief outages.
The technology news website CITNA reported that in various cities across Iran the quality of Internet access has noticeably declined, and that in Tehran and Karaj the use of messaging apps and Internet-based calls has been disrupted.
As of 11 p.m. Iran time on January 7, there were no reports of a nationwide Internet shutdown.
Amir Rashidi, director of digital rights and security at the US-based group Mian, told RFE/RL's Radio Farda that the Iranian government is preparing to cut off Internet access. He added that according to sources in Iran's technology sector, the so-called national Internet -- a state-operated internal network providing a limited form of Internet access that enables greater government oversight and the option to sever connections to the global web in times of unrest -- will be enforced.
The Iranian government cut citizens’ access to the global Internet in June 2025 during the 12-day war between Iran and Israel. Internet quality did not return to normal for weeks after the cease-fire.
During the Woman, Life, Freedom protests in 2022, users’ access to the Internet was also disrupted for months, and in 2019 the government completely blocked the Internet in Iran for about two weeks amid a widespread and violent crackdown by security forces.