"The World Must Stand with Iran's Bravest Protesters"
Nasrin Parvaz knows the horrors of speaking out against human rights abuses and state executions in Iran. She spent eight years behind bars, including time in the notorious Evin prison, where she was tortured into silence. Her voice has been silenced before, but now she's crying out to the world to listen.
Protesters in Iran, particularly women, have taken to the streets for decades, demanding an end to poverty, corruption, and unemployment. But their pleas often fall on deaf ears. The regime responds with brutal force, shooting into crowds of largely peaceful protesters, arresting thousands, and forcing confessions through torture.
The scale of the crackdown is staggering. According to Human Rights Activists news agency, 18,434 people have been arrested and 97 forced confessions have been broadcast on state television. The true death toll remains unknown, but reports suggest over 2,000 people have lost their lives.
For those who have survived, the trauma is all too real. Nasrin Parvaz remembers her friends who were executed during her own imprisonment, and the faces of the protesters she's seen are forever etched in her mind.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, Iran has plunged into an internet blackout, preventing the world from seeing the full extent of the regime's brutality. But Nasrin Parvaz refuses to be silenced. She urges the international community to raise its voice for Iranian protesters, demanding an end to executions, torture, and repression.
"We must stand shoulder to shoulder with the Iranian people," she writes. "We must insist that the use of torture ends right now." The world cannot afford to turn a blind eye to Iran's human rights crisis. It's time to listen to Nasrin Parvaz and the countless others who are fighting for their lives, freedom, dignity, and a future without fear.
Nasrin Parvaz knows the horrors of speaking out against human rights abuses and state executions in Iran. She spent eight years behind bars, including time in the notorious Evin prison, where she was tortured into silence. Her voice has been silenced before, but now she's crying out to the world to listen.
Protesters in Iran, particularly women, have taken to the streets for decades, demanding an end to poverty, corruption, and unemployment. But their pleas often fall on deaf ears. The regime responds with brutal force, shooting into crowds of largely peaceful protesters, arresting thousands, and forcing confessions through torture.
The scale of the crackdown is staggering. According to Human Rights Activists news agency, 18,434 people have been arrested and 97 forced confessions have been broadcast on state television. The true death toll remains unknown, but reports suggest over 2,000 people have lost their lives.
For those who have survived, the trauma is all too real. Nasrin Parvaz remembers her friends who were executed during her own imprisonment, and the faces of the protesters she's seen are forever etched in her mind.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, Iran has plunged into an internet blackout, preventing the world from seeing the full extent of the regime's brutality. But Nasrin Parvaz refuses to be silenced. She urges the international community to raise its voice for Iranian protesters, demanding an end to executions, torture, and repression.
"We must stand shoulder to shoulder with the Iranian people," she writes. "We must insist that the use of torture ends right now." The world cannot afford to turn a blind eye to Iran's human rights crisis. It's time to listen to Nasrin Parvaz and the countless others who are fighting for their lives, freedom, dignity, and a future without fear.