Accessibility links

Breaking News
Members of the Iranian police stand guard on a street in Tehran, next to a large banner featuring Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on March 12.
Members of the Iranian police stand guard on a street in Tehran, next to a large banner featuring Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on March 12.

live Oil Tops $100 Again As Gulf Attacks Rattle Markets

As the US-Israeli war with Iran continues to impact and shape the region, journalists from RFE/RL deliver ongoing updates and analysis.

Key Takeaways:

  • US ⁠President Donald ‌Trump claimed the United States has "won" the war against Iran ‌but says its forces will continue to attack until the job is finished, while Tehran has hit at least six vessels in the region and vowed further strikes.
  • US and Israeli attacks on Iran continued for a 13th day on March 12, with reports from inside the country indicating that several cities -- including Tehran, Karaj, Isfahan, Kashan, and surrounding areas -- have been targeted by strikes.
  • Asian stock markets fell on March 12 as oil prices surged more than 9 percent above $100 a barrel after reports of further attacks on ships in Persian Gulf waters and the shutdown of key oil terminals.
  • All 23 Georgian crew members aboard a Malta-flagged tanker struck by Iran off the Iraqi coast have been rescued, a relative of one of the sailors told RFE/RL's Georgian Service.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on March 11 that Ukrainian counter-drone experts had begun work in three Gulf countries that have been targeted by Iranian attacks.
  • US Central Command has warned Iranian civilians to avoid port facilities where Iranian naval forces are operating, saying the Islamic republic is using civilian ports along the Strait of Hormuz for military activity.
17:44 7.1.2026

Video Footage Shows Protesters Massing In Bojnourd, North Khorasan

Videos sent to RFE/RL's Radio Farda show large-scale protests being held in the city of Bojnourd, the capital of Iran's North Khorasan Province.

Two different videos of the January 7 protests in Bojnourd show large numbers of protesters chanting anti-government slogans.

16:36 7.1.2026

Interview: Could There Be A 'Venezuela-Like Situation' In Iran?

RFE/RL's Radio Farda spoke to Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official who is a senior fellow at the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute, about the significance of the current protests in Iran and whether the United States might intervene militarily.

Michael Rubin
Michael Rubin

"What I worry about is a Venezuela-like situation where Trump will try to hand off power, transfer power to someone like [former moderate Iranian President Hassan] Rohani, who has been putting his finger into the wind as I interpret it, as someone who [Trump] believes could handle a transition but might not want an end to the Islamic republic," Rubin says.

"It goes back to this old debate which we've had in the United States about whether the reformists are truly reformist."

To read the interview, click here.

15:58 7.1.2026

Foreign Intervention Not Welcome, Say Activists Within Iran

What initially started as protests over economic grievances has snowballed into the biggest threat to Iran's clerical rulers in several years.

Prominent activists inside the country who spoke to RFE/RL's Radio Farda said the nationwide demonstrations suggest many Iranians want the clerical establishment gone.

But they added that change must come from within, not as the result of foreign intervention. The United States has threatened to intervene militarily if the authorities continue their brutal crackdown on demonstrators.

"What we're seeing is a sign that people have reached a shared understanding," said Mehdi Mahmoudian, a Tehran-based political activist and human rights defender. "This is no longer just teachers protesting or a single social group. This time, the voiceless have formed an alliance."

To read the rest of the story, click here.

13:25 7.1.2026

Police Officer Killed in Iranshahr

Iranian media have reported that a member of the police force has been killed in Iranshahr in southeastern Iran.

According to a statement by the information center of the police directorate in Sistan-Baluchistan Province, an economically deprived predominantly Sunni and ethnically Baluch region, the officer was killed early this morning after being shot by “unknown armed individuals.”

News agencies have identified the officer as Mahmud Haqiqat, reporting that members of Jaish al-Adl, a Sunni militant group, fired on his vehicle.

No further details were released regarding the circumstances of the killing, but the Popular Resistance Front (which includes Jaish al-Adl and other Baluch paramilitary groups), later claimed the attack on its social media accounts.

12:25 7.1.2026

Here's some verified UGC video of demonstrations that have been happening today in Torbat-e Heydariyeh in the northeastern Razavi Khorasan Province:


10:09 7.1.2026

Here's some video footage (verified by RFE/RL) of events at Tehran's Grand Bazaar yesterday:

10:04 7.1.2026

Social Media Praise For Protesters' 'Rice Shower' In Abdanan

Protesters scatter rice on the streets of Abdanan last night.
Protesters scatter rice on the streets of Abdanan last night.

Protests last night in Abdanan have attracted widespread attention on social media -- not only because of the number of participants, but also because of how residents handled sacks of rice that fell into their hands.

Images and videos shared on Persian-language social media show protesters in the western city scattering the contents of rice sacks into the air in the streets as an act of protest after storming a store affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

Other widely shared images show demonstrators standing on streets literally covered with rice.

The act has been dubbed the “rice scattering” or “rice rain” on social media. Many users praised the residents of Abdanan -- one of Iran’s most deprived places -- for not taking the rice home. Commentators described the gesture as a symbol of “dignity” and framed the protest as “the revolt of those hungry for freedom, not the poor.”

09:36 7.1.2026

Leading Actors Voice Support For Protesters


Iranian actresses Katayoun Riahi (left) and Pantea Bahram (composite file photo)
Iranian actresses Katayoun Riahi (left) and Pantea Bahram (composite file photo)

Pantea Bahram, a well-known Iranian actress who ran foul of the authorities after removing her hijab in support of protesters during the Women, Life, Freedom demonstrations two years ago has posted a message of support for the protesters on her Instagram account.

"Because of you, I have been waiting for the light, in my homeland," she said.

As a result of her head scarf protest in 2023, Bahram was banned from any professional activity and says she is not even allowed to teach.

Another prominent actress, Katayoun Riahi has also posted a message of support for demonstrators, saying 'Brave women, brave men, the light is near."

You can read more about both women's brush with Iranian authorities here.

More than 70 Iranian screenwriters have also voiced their support for the protests, emphasizing that their role is to write about the realities of life and that they cannot “remain silent in the face of the hardships that are being imposed on people’s lives more violently every day.”

They warned that “a violent response to these protests is not the solution and will only deepen the problem,” adding, “Security is not achieved by silencing voices, and stability is not achieved by denying reality.”

08:24 7.1.2026

Meanwhile, Iran's former crown prince, Reza Pahlavi has made a direct appeal to Iran's security forces, saying that they are facing a 'historic choice.' He called on them "to use your weapons not to fire on the people, but to protect them." You can see his full statement with subtitles here:

08:12 7.1.2026

Good morning. We'll get the live blog rolling this morning with this update:

The head of Iran’s judiciary once has again called those taking part in the ongoing protests "rioters" and threatened that if anyone took to the streets they would be acting "in line with the enemies' goals" and that there would be “no room for any more leniency."

Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei also praised the performance of the police and security forces in confronting the protesters on January 7, claiming that government agents had been tackling demonstrators "with tact," despite killing two people.

In the 10 days since a new wave of anti-government protests in Iran erupted on December 28, human rights sources are reporting that at least 30 protesters have been killed, including teenagers. They have also published images and videos showing that in many cases government forces have been trying to disperse the gatherings by firing directly at the protesters.

Also on January 7, the semiofficial ISNA news agency is reporting that the Iranian parliament has been holding a closed-door session to discuss the country’s economic situation. The latest protests have been triggered by economic grievances as Iran grapples with inflation, a currency collapse, and declining living standards.

Load more

XS
SM
MD
LG