Iran Convulsed in Second Night of Nationwide Protests
Large
marches against the government occurred despite an internet blackout and
threats of a severe crackdown.
Farnaz
Fassihi
By Farnaz
Fassihi
Farnaz
Fassihi has covered Iran for three decades, having lived in the country and
traveled there extensively.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/09/world/middleeast/iran-protests.html
Jan. 9,
2026
Tens of
thousands of Iranians poured into the streets on Friday night in a second night
of mass, nationwide antigovernment protests despite a total internet blackout
and threats of a severe crackdown from the senior Iranian leadership.
Videos
posted on BBC Persian Television showed thousands of people on the march in the
capital, Tehran, drawing supporters from what residents said in interviews was
a demographically diverse cross-section of working-class, middle-class and
wealthy neighborhoods.
A
resident of Saada’t Abad, an upscale neighborhood in northern Tehran, described
crowds setting ablaze a mosque and parading the traditional, royalist flag
flown by the government of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, which was toppled in the
1979 Islamic revolution. The resident, Ladan, 60, who asked to be identified
only by her first name for fear of official reprisals, said she was protesting
for the second night in a row.
As in the
previous night, the protests were widespread, erupting in the cities of
Mashhad, Tabriz, Urumiyeh, Isfahan, Karaj and Yazd, among others, according to
witness interviews and videos either verified by The New York Times or
appearing on BBC Persian. In each instance the videos showed large groups
defiantly chanting for an end to the nearly 50 years of the Islamic Republic’s
rule, with the scenes lit by bonfires and blazing trash cans.
People
chanted, “Death to the dictator” and “Long live the shah” in the videos. In a
reference to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, they said, “This is
the year of blood, Seyed Ali will be toppled.” In a speech earlier Friday,
Ayatollah Khamenei had condemned the protesters as “rioters” doing the bidding
of the United States and Israel.
On state
television, an anchor warned that protesters could be risking their lives by
taking to the streets. “Tonight is the night for parents to stop their children
from going out,” he said. “If something happens, if someone is injured, if a
bullet is fired and something happens to them, do not complain.”
Amir
Reza, 42, an engineer, said in an interview from Tehran that he could hear
gunfire and the boom of so-called sound bombs, which make loud noises but are
otherwise harmless. He said he decided to go home after swarms of riot police
officers and militias in plainclothes began firing in the air and chasing the
crowds to disperse them.
The
protests broke out late last month in the central bazaar in Tehran, the pulse
of Iran’s commerce and economy, after the currency plunged against the U.S.
dollar and inflation spiked. But they quickly expanded to broader grievances
over the corruption and mismanagement of the economy and of clerical rule
generally, which many see as having driven the country into a ditch.
“There
are multiple forces coming together that are fueling and facilitating these
protests; on the ground there is a huge amount of momentum, and that momentum
is being driven by the obvious motivation of deep-seeded anger,” said Sanam
Vakil, the director for Middle East and North Africa of Chatham House, a think
tank in London. “People are truly fed up. People are not retreating, and
braving the possibility of further repression.”
Elyar
Kamrani, director of ANT TV, a channel focused on the region of northwestern
Iran near Azerbaijan, said in a telephone interview from Istanbul that more
protests were planned in the area for Saturday by a coalition of political
groups. He said he had been in contact with activists in the Iranian cities of
Tabriz and Urumiyeh who told him the security forces were using a variety of
tactics to quell the demonstrations, mixing attacks with expressions of
sympathy for the economic troubles and urging people to go home for their own
good.
“People
are saying we have nothing left to lose,” Mr. Kamrani said. “We can’t let them
crush this movement.”
The
government shut down virtually all forms of communication on Friday, shuttering
the internet, blocking telephone calls from abroad and disrupting domestic
cellphone service in an effort to prevent the protesters from organizing and
sending news outside the country, said cybersecurity and internet freedom
experts who monitor Iran.
Even
Iranian news agency websites, like the state-controlled news agency IRNA, went
silent. Fars News media and the Mehr News agency, affiliated with the
Revolutionary Guards Corps, were among the few domestic media outlets posting
updates.
On Friday
night, Iranians received a text message from the intelligence wing of the
Revolutionary Guards asking that “suspicious and destructive” people be
reported to a hotline, according to a copy reviewed by The New York Times. The
message also said Iran’s enemies had “a plan to increase naked violence” and
asked parents to prohibit their children from going to the streets.
“Educate
your children that the consequences for cooperating with terrorist agents
amounts to treason against the country,” the message concluded.
Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch said that the Iranian authorities had used
brutal force, including firearms, and arbitrary arrest against protesters and
that so far the crackdown since late last month had killed at least 28
protesters, bystanders and children. Other rights groups that track Iran’s
human rights violations from abroad have put the number much higher.
A video
on Friday verified by The New York Times showed at least seven people lying
motionless on the floor of Al-Ghadir Hospital in Tehran and appearing dead. The
Times verified the video’s location by matching visual details, such as a
mosque’s outer wall and a zebra crossing, with satellite imagery.
A
narrator in the video says, “They killed people, they killed people with war
bullets.”
Despite
the information blackout, videos of protests and witness accounts trickled
throughout the evening from those inside Iran who had access to Starlink
satellite connections, said Mehdi Yahyanejad, a technology expert and internet
freedom activist based in Los Angeles. Mr. Yahyanejad was involved in an effort
after the 2022 women-led uprising to buy 300 Starlink satellites and send them
to activists and citizen journalists in Iran.
“The
number of Starlinks inside are tens of thousands, and a lot of people have
bought it for personal use, for businesses and other reasons,” Mr. Yahyanejad
said, adding, “The government has been trying to jam GPS in Tehran, because
that is how Starlink terminals find their coordinates and connect to the
satellite.”
Farnaz
Fassihi is the United Nations bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
the organization. She also covers Iran and has written about conflict in the
Middle East for 15 years.


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