Clerical Regime at Impasse vis-à-vis the People’s Uprising
Since the start of the war, they have been executing political prisoners one after another. This includes eight members of the People’s Mojahedin, who were part of the Resistance Units. They have also executed 20 young people for taking part in the uprising or fighting against the Revolutionary Guards.
The chief of the regime’s State Security Force announced that 6,500 people have been arrested since the war began. He noted that 567 of them were connected to the PMOI.
They are trying to hide their weak position and fear of collapse behind the noise of war. But they have no answer for a society that is ready to rise up, especially because the Resistance Units in many Iranian cities are fighting the Revolutionary Guards and preparing for the next uprising.
At the same time, the remnants of the Shah’s regime, which was overthrown by a popular revolution in 1979, are advocating for a return to the past dictatorship and the return of the Shah’s notorious secret service, SAVAK.
These actions undermine today’s anti-dictatorial movements. However, Iranian society will neither accept the status quo nor return to the past. Instead, it is moving toward establishing a democratic republic based on the separation of religion and state, autonomy for oppressed nationalities, and gender equality.
As the regime enters a point of no return, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, which is the democratic alternative to this regime, announced the provisional government based on the Ten-Point Plan of the Iranian Resistance.
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