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09:41
Watchdog Warns Of Coordinated Wikipedia Editing Amid Iran Crackdown
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RFE/RL's Radio Farda
Neutral Point of View (NPOV), a UK-based investigative outlet focusing on the coordinated manipulation of digital knowledge platforms, says that as Iran's authorities violently suppress nationwide protests, a group of editors supporting the Islamic republic have been simultaneously engaged in efforts "to control how these events, and Iranian history more broadly, are recorded on Wikipedia."
"The dual strategy is deliberate," the watchdogsays in its report. "Kinetic violence silences dissent at home. Digital propaganda shapes the narrative abroad. Together, they form what Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei calls vindication jihad -- a soft war in the information space designed to rewrite reality itself."
NPOV says that Wikipedia's page for the latest protests in Iran, which erupted last month, "remains well-sourced" but the pattern established in previous cases is clear: once protests fade from headlines -- once internet blackouts prevent real-time documentation and bodies are quietly buriedcoordinated editors move in to reshape the historical record."
"This is what authoritarian information warfare looks like in 2026," the organization warns, adding that the Islamic republic "isn't just killing protesters. It's erasing the evidence that they existed at all."
NPOV also noted that in a previous investigation it identified editing patterns on Wikipedia consistent with a coordinated, multiyear campaign to whitewash the Islamic republics human-rights record.
A Wikipedia editor RFE/RL's Radio Farda spoke to said that they had not observed such activity on the Persian-language edition of the online encyclopedia, suggesting instead that the effort was likely focused on English-language or other foreign-language Wikipedia pages.
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08:19
Iran Among 'Worst Jailers Of Journalists,' Says Media Watchdog
The Committee to Protect Journalists has included Iran on its list of the "world's worst jailers of journalists" in aspecial reportpublished on January 21.
The media rights watchdog also said that "nearly one-third of imprisoned journalists profiles included reports of mistreatment, including 20% with claims of torture or beatings" and that the "greatest number of torture and beating claims since 1992 have occurred in Iran."
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07:41
Elsewhere, the NetBlocks digital rights watchdog says the Internet blackout in Iran had now passed the two-week mark.
It also had this point to make about The Wall Street Journal's decision to publish an op-ed from Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi on Tuesday, defending Iran's crackdown on protesters.
Read more on Iran's ongoing nationwide blackouthere.
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07:30
Good morning. We'll start the live blog today with the news that the US-based rights organization HRANAsaysthe death toll in the Iranian protests has now passed 4,900 and that there are more than 9,000 more cases under review.
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22:39
21.1.2026
We are now closing the live blog for today. We'll be back again tomorrow morning at 7:30 a.m. Central European time to follow the latest developments in Iran.
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22:38
21.1.2026
Trump Says He Hopes There Won't Be A Need For 'Further Action' On Iran
US President Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 21.
In aninterview with CNBCafter his speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 21, US President Donald Trump addressed the situation in Iran, saying he hoped further action by the United States would not be necessary following the recent protests.
We hope theres not going to be further action, he said. But you know they are shooting people indiscriminately on the streets
Trump went on to reiterate that he had intervened to prevent the execution of hundreds of protesters.
They were going to hang 837 people on Thursday [January 15], he said. I told them you cant do that. If you do that, its going to be bad. I dont want to go with exactly what I said, but nasty and they canceled it, hopefully permanently.
Turning to economic pressure, Trump reaffirmed that he would still be "going forward" with plans to impose a 25 percent tariff as well as sanctions on countries doing business with Iran.
He then returned to the question of Irans nuclear program.
Referring to US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites in June, Trump suggested Washington would be prepared to take similar action again if he believed Iran was continuing to pursue a nuclear weapon.
Theyve got to stop with the nuclear, he said. They keep experimenting with nuclear and at some point theyre going to get the idea that they cant do that. Theyre just not going to be able to do that. Cant let them have it.
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19:49
21.1.2026
800 International Filmmakers Condemn Iranian Governments Crimes Against Humanity
Iranian-French actress and producer Zar Amir Ebrahimi is among those who have signed the stateent. (file photo)
Eight hundred filmmakers from various countries -- including well-known figures such as French actresses Juliette Binoche and Marion Cotillard, Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos, and French writer and filmmaker Florian Zeller -- haveissued a statementcondemning the Islamic republics harsh crackdown during recent anti-government demonstrations.
Instead of listening to the peoples voices after widespread and peaceful protestsagainst repression, poverty, discrimination, and structural injustice, the filmmakers said, the Islamic republic has chosen to respond with live ammunition, mass killings, widespread arrests, torture, enforced disappearances, and a nationwide internet shutdown.
The statement also said Tehrans actions represent a blatant and systematic violation of all fundamental human rights, including the right to life, liberty, human dignity, and security, and constitute a clear case of crimes against humanity.
Internationally recognized Iranian filmmakers who signed the statement include Zar Amir Ebrahimi, Goldshifteh Farahani, Sepideh Farsi, and Shirin Neshat.
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19:00
21.1.2026
Former Iranian Empress Calls 'National Day Of Mourning'
Former Iranian Empress Farah Pahlavi
Iran's former empress,Farah Pahlavi, says she is declaring a"National Day of Mourning "on January 23 "to be observed by all freedom loving Iranians throughout the world, and request that we all join in one minute of silence at 12:00 noon, local time, to honor our fallen children."
"The blood that has been shed by thousands of our compatriots in Iran cannot be ignored nor be trampled on," the widow of Iran's last shah said, referencing the recent wave of protests that was brutally suppressed by Iranian authorities. "The brave children of Iran have sacrificed their lives and poured their blood at the roots of the saplings of freedom."
Pahlavi, 87, added that "light will prevail over darkness" and urged Iranians not to rest until their "homeland regains its freedom."
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16:37
21.1.2026
Witkoff: US Not Currently Negotiating With Iran
US special envoy Steve Witkoff, speaking on behalf of the Trump administration, said the US isn't negotiating with Iran now, although "weve had contact with them.
Speaking in an interview with CNBC on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Witkoff said that "Iran is a deal that ought to happen." When pressed on details, he avoided specifics but reiterated the potential for a deal.
Protests in Iran began on December 28, 2025, in markets in the capital, Tehran, by shopkeepers angry over dismal economic conditions, including spiraling inflation and a freefall of the currency.
The unrest rapidly escalated, transforming into widespread demonstrations against the authorities over worsening living standards and the suppression of basic freedoms.
US-Iran Tensions
Long-simmering tensions between Washington and Tehran have neared boiling point during the crisis.
US President Donald Trump initially warned that the United States was "locked and loaded" and prepared to act if Iranian security forces killed protesters. He later vowed "very strong action" if Iran proceeded with any executions.
Trump later said he personally chose not to order military strikes against Iran, attributing his decision to Tehran's reported cancellation of hundreds of planned executions.
In another Davos interview, Witkoff told Arab News that Iran must come and sit at the diplomatic table.
That has to happen [Iran negotiating]," he said. "Its important. If Iran goes, so the region goes, and so we have to get that straight.
Witkoff insisted that the Middle East was moving in the right direction.
I think its amazing whats happening. Everybody is, I think, working together towards peace," the envoy said. "Everyones bought into President Trumps ideas about border peace, and I think Im very hopeful.
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16:12
21.1.2026
Gutted Mosques, Eerie Calm In Tehran After Uprising
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RFE/RL
Photos released on January 19 and 20 show the aftermath in Tehran of massive protests that swept Iran over recent weeks before being crushed by the country's security apparatus.
Photo Gallery:
Gutted Mosques, Eerie Calm In Tehran After Uprising
RFE/RL
Photos released on January 19 and 20 show the aftermath in Tehran of massive protests that swept Iran over recent weeks before being crushed by the country's security apparatus.
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