Iranian opposition leader Taghi Rahmani: The regime is becoming increasingly aggressive and needs to silence dissenting voices'
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Iranian opposition leader Taghi Rahmani: The regime is becoming increasingly aggressive and needs to silence dissenting voices'
"I know nothing about my wife. Not me, nor any of my family. She is weak and ill, and although the doctors recommend her hospitalization, the authorities refuse to transfer her. With this new sentence, it is very likely that her health problems will worsen. I am very worried."
"Her commitment to the people of Iran is unbreakable. No matter how many times she is arrested, she dreams of freedom for Iranians and feels a responsibility to the people and to democracy."
"People no longer want any candidate, even if they claim to be reformist. The people want the regime to fall, and no one from the opposition is acceptable to them anymore."
Narges Mohammadi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Iranian activist of Kurdish origin, received a seven-and-a-half-year prison sentence on February 7 for assembly, conspiracy, and propaganda. Her husband, Taghi Rahmani, expressed grave concerns about her deteriorating health, noting that doctors recommend hospitalization but authorities refuse transfer. Rahmani, himself imprisoned for 14 years for pro-democracy activism, emphasized his wife's unwavering commitment to Iranian freedom and democracy despite repeated arrests. The couple has organized public events denouncing regime abuses, often resulting in violent police repression. Rahmani argues that Iranians no longer support reformist candidates but seek the regime's complete fall, as most opposition politicians have been imprisoned or killed.
Read at english.elpais.com
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