Iran threatens crackdown on anniversary of Mahsa Amini's dying - however some refuse to be silenced

"They killed my brother, and now they're coming for us too."

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These are phrases from inside Iran that its rulers don't want the world to listen to.

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WARNING: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS A GRAPHIC IMAGE OF INJURY

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"They're taking us hostage," Reza mentioned. Sky News is just not utilizing Reza's actual title to guard his security.

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Reza's brother was brutally killed in the course of the protests final yr. Armed police pressured the grieving household to bury his physique the identical night time he died - in an effort to cowl up their crimes, he mentioned.

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Reza, who's in his late 20s, and his household have been the goal of a marketing campaign of harassment and threats by the authorities ever since.

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He dangers imprisonment, torture and dying to talk to Sky News. But regardless of the federal government's efforts, Reza is adamant he will not be silenced.

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And he is not alone.

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Reza is talking from a small room in Turkey the place exiled Iranian activist Shilan Mirzai works in hiding.

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She helps victims of the nation's brutal crackdown on protests, which appears to be like set to accentuate because the anniversary of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini's dying in police custody approaches.

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"The harder they're pushing, the harder people fight back," mentioned Ms Mirzai.

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Ms Amini's dying final September within the custody of Iran's infamous morality police sparked an unprecedented rebellion towards the regime, which threatened the very existence of the Islamic Republic.

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The response of the cleric-led authorities was brutal and bloody with greater than 500 folks killed, together with 70 youngsters.

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Almost a yr later, the protests seem to have subsided however the authorities crackdown continues.

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In the previous month, Ms Mirzai has seen a pointy rise within the variety of the households of those that have been imprisoned or killed in the course of the protests reporting threats, harassment and arrests.

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Ahead of Saturday's anniversary, human rights campaigners, activists and lecturers have reportedly been arrested - together with Ms Amini's uncle and lawyer, and the younger journalist who broke the story of her dying.

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"Iran's government is clearly anxious," Ms Mirzai mentioned. "They know that people are preparing to reignite the protests."

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But the widespread crackdown on protesters by authorities is not simply restricted to Iran.

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Activist Shilan Mirrzaee, who lives in Turkey, is usually threatened and harassed.

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Read extra:Teen girl Sonia Sharifi 'abducted' and 'tortured' by Iranian forces for second time Defiant #MahsaAmini protesters push back against strengthened morality police's hijab patrols

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"They're trying to silence me," she mentioned. She hardly ever leaves her home and even stopped her son going to highschool for 3 months out of worry one thing may occur to him.

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Her household in Iran aren't secure both. Shilan mentioned they're being taken "hostage".

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In the previous yr, her father has been arrested six occasions for her activism. Her brother and sister have additionally been arrested. Her sister was threatened with rape.

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But her household has inspired her to not cease being an activist.

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"We can't speak out ourselves," her father mentioned, "but you can be our voice".

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"I'm not scared of the Islamic Republic government. Even if they kill my father, I will keep on fighting," she mentioned.

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"We don't want the Islamic Republic. Dictatorship must end."

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While many protesters put together to take to the streets as soon as once more, others are left grappling with life-changing accidents from final yr. Others look on from afar after escaping Iran in the hunt for security and medical remedy.

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Behzad Hamrahi, 44, and his household have been pressured to hunt asylum in Turkey a number of months in the past.

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"The guards held my arms behind me," the father-of-two mentioned. "Another stood less than a metre away, pointing a gun directly at my face. Then everything went black."

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Mr Hamrahi thought he had died. A guard had shot him in his left eye with a paintball gun that contained a dense ball of pressurised plastic.

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He misplaced his eye - considered one of 600 folks to be injured on this approach in response to docs in simply two provinces. The precise numbers throughout Iran are more likely to be a lot greater.

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Mr Hamrahi was crushed by the guards however earlier than they may take him away, a number of different protesters carried him to a close-by residence block and helped him disguise.

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One of the protesters, a nurse, helped clear the wound. But Mr Hamrahi desperately wanted pressing medical care.

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"I knew [getting medical treatment] would lead to my arrest," he mentioned. But he determined to go to a hospital the subsequent day "regardless of the consequences".

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Most clinics and hospitals refused him because it was clear he sustained his damage within the protests.

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Mr Hamrahi ended up having his left eye eliminated in a hospital that was identified to collaborate with authorities.

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Shortly after he was discharged, he was held in jail for every week the place he was tortured.

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"That's when I decided that I must leave the country immediately," he mentioned.

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He arrived in Turkey a couple of days later along with his spouse and younger youngsters.

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Mr Hamrahi, now dwelling in a modest residence within the nation, mentioned he does not remorse his involvement within the protests "because I fought for a free and prosperous Iran".

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But not everybody feels the identical. Reza tells me that the stress and struggling his household has been by way of since his brother was killed is insufferable.

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"The harassment towards our family has been non-stop from day one and it's only getting worse," he mentioned.

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He promised his household he wouldn't participate in any future protests. "They can't bear to lose another son," he mentioned.

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