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Live Blog: First Public Trial Of Protesters Begins In Iran

Thousands of Iranians are dead or detained in a brutal crackdown after they took to the streets in what is seen as the biggest threat to the Islamic regime in years. Journalists from RFE/RL’s Iranian service, Radio Farda, bring you the latest developments, analysis, and reporting from on the ground.

Key Takeaways:

  • In an interview with the Axios website, US President Donald Trump said the situation with Iran is "in flux" because the US has sent a big "armada" but thinks that Tehran wants to cut a deal.
  • According to the latest aggregated data compiled by the US-based human rights agency HRANA, as of January 26, the total number of confirmed deaths in Iran has reached 6,126.
  • The ongoing Internet and telecommunications blackout across Iran is costing the economy as much as 50 trillion rials ($35.7 million) a day, according to an Iranian official.
  • The United States has deployed jet fighters, air defenses, and an air carrier with thousands of troops to the Middle East.
  • An official from the Iranian Health Ministry has acknowledged that injured protesters are afraid to visit medical centers in the country following a brutal crackdown that has seen security forces targeting hospitals.
22:11 23.1.2026

Video Emerges Of Bodies In Rasht After Crackdown By Iranian Security Forces

Images of bodies in the northern Iranian city of Rasht have emerged on social media following reports of a massacre by security forces during protests earlier this month. An exiled Iranian human rights attorney who spoke to witnesses inside Iran told RFE/RL that security forces fired at people trapped inside a bazaar. He also said Iranian lawyers were being rounded up as part of a wave of mass arrests and disappearances. More than 5,000 people have been killed in the crackdown, according to the human rights group, HRANA.

Video Emerges Of Bodies In Rasht After Crackdown By Iranian Security Forces Video Emerges Of Bodies In Rasht After Crackdown By Iranian Security Forces
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18:33 23.1.2026

UN Fact-Finding Mission Leader Says Iran Death Toll 'Shocking'

Sara Hossain, head of the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Iran, said on January 23 that Iranian security forces have used "assault weapons and heavy machine guns" against protesters since the evening of January 8, leaving a "shocking" death toll.

Speaking online and remotely to an emergency session of the UN Human Rights Council, Hossain said the information gathered by the mission indicated serious human rights violations, "including the disproportionate use of force that has resulted in arbitrary killings and injuries, torture, sexual violence, arbitrary arrest and detention, and forced confessions."

Referring to statements by Iranian officials, the Bangladeshi lawyer recalled that the Islamic republic's judiciary had called for detainees to be punished "as soon as possible and without leniency" and had threatened to prosecute "rioters" on charges of "enmity against God," which carries the death penalty.

"International law demands an end to gross human rights violations, protection for those at risk, and a real path to truth, justice and accountability for women, men and children in Iran," said Hossain.

17:32 23.1.2026

Tehran Prayer Leader Threatens 'American Investments' In Region

Tehran’s interim Friday Prayers leader threatened in this week's sermon on January 23 that if the United States takes military action against Iran, the Islamic republic may target "American-related investments" in the region.

It is not clear exactly what Mohammad Javad Haj Ali Akbari meant by this threat, but he told US leaders: "That $1 trillion you have invested in the region is within the range of our missiles."

On the evening of January 22, while returning to Washington from Davos, Switzerland, US President Donald Trump reiterated his previous warnings to the leaders of the Islamic republic against the execution of protesters and resuming the nuclear program, emphasizing that he has an "armada" and military equipment on the way to Iran but hopes "not to have to use them."

Meanwhile, Iran's Attorney General Mohammad Movaheddi rejected the US president's claim that the execution of 800 detained protesters had been "canceled."

"This claim is fundamentally false, because neither such a figure existed nor has the judiciary made such a decision," Mizan, the Iranian judiciary's news agency, quoted Movaheddi as saying.

Last week, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqhchi claimed in an interview with Fox News that "there is no plan to hang protesters."

17:25 23.1.2026

US Aims Sanctions At Iran's 'Shadow Fleet'

US Aims Sanctions At Iran's 'Shadow Fleet'

The US Treasury Department on January 23 also announced sanctions on nine ships that are part of what it called Iran's "shadow fleet" that carry embargoed Iranian oil and petroleum products around the world.

"Today's sanctions target a critical component of how Iran generates the funds used to repress its own people. As previously outlined, Treasury will continue to track ⁠the tens of millions of dollars that the regime has stolen and is desperately attempting to wire to banks outside of Iran," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

15:24 23.1.2026

With US Strike Group On Way To Middle East, Deputy IRGC Leader Remains Defiant 

Ahmad Vahidi
Ahmad Vahidi

Just hours after US President Donald Trump said the US has "a massive fleet heading" to Iran, the deputy commander of the IRGC, Ahmad Vahidi, has said that "the enemy should know that it can not hurt the Islamic revolution of Iran."

Vahidi, a former interior minister, also said on January 23 that the IRGC are here "to drive ISIS and terrorists out" and "thwart all their efforts."

The IRGC was established after the 1979 Islamic revolution on the orders of Ruhollah Khomeini, the first supreme leader who overthrew the shah. The group's aim was to guard the "Islamic revolution and its achievements."

In his comments, Vahidi did not specifically mention the involvement of IRGC forces in the unprecedented and deadly suppression of the January protests.

A recent statement from the Intelligence Organization of the IRGC referred to the unrest as "terrorist riots" and announced that this "sedition and chaos were thwarted by the preparedness of the security and law enforcement institutions."

As for the high number of protester deaths, the IRGC attributed the blame to "terrorist rioters" and, without offering evidence, claimed they were part of a "grand American-Zionist plan to disintegrate Iran's identity and geographical integrity."

The IRGC's security agency said that, during the protests, 735 people had been arrested or summoned, 743 "illegal combat and hunting weapons" had been seized, and 46 people had been identified as collaborating with foreign powers.

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says that the number of confirmed fatalities has reached 5,002, while the number of deaths still under investigation has risen to 9,787. Different activist groups have put the death toll far higher, but an internet blackout has made it difficult to verify the information.

The EU is currently weighing more asset freezes and visa bans against members of the IRGC thought to be responsible for the crackdown. The bloc has been under pressure for a while to designate the IRGC a terrorist organization. To do that, however, a consensus of all EU members is required, and reports indicate that France, Italy, and Spain have so far opposed such a move.

11:27 23.1.2026

Joint British-Qatari Air Squadron Departs For Persian Gulf

The UK has announced that a joint British-Qatari Royal Air Force squadron, known as Squadron 12, has been deployed to the Persian Gulf region with Typhoon fighter jets.

In a January 22 press release, the British Ministry of Defense announced the news, adding that "this action was taken in the wake of regional tensions" and "for purely defensive purposes."

According to the UK's Ministry of Defense, the deployment was made at the invitation of the Qatari government and aims to showcase the "strong and enduring defense relations" and to "maintain regional stability."

British Defense Secretary John Haley, in remarks quoted in the press release, said that Qatar and the UK are "close partners with historic defense ties" and that this cooperation strengthens "the national security of both our nations" and supports "stability in the Gulf region."

Squadron 12 has been regularly deployed to Qatar and has participated in joint training and exercises, the press release said.

The USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group (CSG) is expected to arrive in the Middle East in the coming days.

The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, along with its planes and flight crews, was rerouted from the South China Sea and is accompanied by destroyers and a cruiser.

11:21 23.1.2026

Grieving Mother Of Protester Calls Khamenei An 'Executioner'

In a video being widely shared, the mother of Daniyal Diani, a victim of the authorities' crackdown in the southeastern city of Kerman, can be seen clutching a photo of her son at his funeral.

Seemingly resigned to her fate and the high death toll, the mother calls Khamenei an executioner and appeals for him to "rule over the blood of our children."(It isn't an invitation to rule per se but an implication that Khamenei rules over a system that sustains its power through bloodshed.)

According to various media reports, Daniyal Diani was a native of Kerman and a law student at Razi University in Kermanshah, a city in western Iran. He was reportedly shot and killed when security forces attempted to quell the protests in Kerman on January 8.

09:57 23.1.2026

Iran Protest Deaths Could Reach 20,000

Mai Sato
Mai Sato

Mai Sato, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Iran, has said that the number of people reported killed in Iran’s protest crackdown has surged, with one estimate suggesting the total could be more than 20,000.

In an interview with ABC News this week, Sato estimated that the number of civilians killed was at least 5,000. However, she also said that figure could be 20,000 or more, according to reports she had received from doctors inside Iran.

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says that the number of confirmed fatalities has reached 5,002, while the number of deaths still under investigation has risen to 9,787.

In addition, at least 7,391 people have suffered serious injuries during the protests, and the total number of arrests has increased to 26,852, according to HRANA.s

08:30 23.1.2026

Good morning. We're opening the live blog now with US President Donald Trump speaking to reporters on Air Force One while flying back from Davos.

Trump said that the US is watching Iran closely:

"You know we have a lot of ships going that direction, just in case. We have a big flotilla going in that direction, and we’ll see what happens."

"I said, if you hang those people, you're going to be hit harder than you've ever been hit. It will make what we did to your Iran nuclear [infrastructure] look like peanuts."

"And they actually said they canceled [the hangings], they didn't postpone it, they canceled it -- so that was a good sign."

"We have a massive fleet heading in that direction and maybe we won't have to use it, we'll see."

Meanwhile, NetBlocks reports that Iran's national internet blackout continues, now in its third week. The monitoring group noticed only a slight rise in overall connectivity and "tunneled users," which refers to Iranians who have managed to bypass the blackout.

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says that the number of confirmed fatalities has reached 5,002, while the number of deaths still under investigation has risen to 9,787. In addition, at least 7,391 people have suffered serious injuries during the protests, and the total number of arrests has increased to 26,852, according to HRANA.

22:12 22.1.2026

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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