The mother of Siavash Mahmoudi, a teenage protester killed during the "Woman, Life, Freedom" uprising, has voiced her criticism of the ongoing indirect talks between Iran and the United States, questioning their significance in light of the sacrifices made by those demanding justice and freedom.
Speaking about the negotiations, the grieving mother said, "Thousands of young men and women were killed for shouting for justice, freedom, and liberty, and now we sit and see if the negotiation is direct or indirect?"

The visit of Steve Witkoff to Tehran could recalibrate how both he and Donald Trump perceive Iran, said Abolfazl Zohrevand, a member of Iran’s parliamentary national security committee.
“If Witkoff visits Iran and sees the reality for himself, it may reset his mindset—and through him, Trump’s—for more rational decision-making on how to deal with Iran,” he said.
Zohrevand called the visit beneficial to Iran’s national interests if it aligns with a constructive negotiation path.
He dismissed prospects of future US investment in Iran as unrealistic while stressing that the priority is correcting what he called Washington’s miscalculations about Iran.

The United States uses negotiations to escape military and ideological defeat, Gholamreza Mirzaei, an Iranian lawmaker said on Sunday.
“Americans know they will lose against the faith of the Iranian people and the modern weapons of Iran’s armed forces, so negotiations are their way to avoid failure,” he said.
The government’s decision to resume nuclear talks contradicts Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s past warnings, Iranian hardline lawmaker Amirhossein Sabeti said.
“We don’t know what changed after Khamenei clearly said negotiations were neither wise nor honorable,” Sabeti said on Sunday.
He added that while the government could pursue talks to lift sanctions, “experience shows this path will not succeed, and the United States won’t give in.”
Khamenei had previously called negotiations with US “unwise, undignified, and dishonorable.” However, he later agreed to indirect negotiations.

Lawmakers have been informed about indirect nuclear negotiations in Oman, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Sunday, rejecting remarks by Tehran ultraconservative MP Mehdi Kouchakzadeh during an open session of parliament.
“You cannot speak on behalf of the parliament and say it has not been informed. Parliament has definitely been in the loop,” Ghalibaf said.
“No action takes place outside legal procedures, and what you said was neither correct nor accurate.”
“People of Iran, know that the parliament has no information about these negotiations, but now that this action is to be carried out in full bitterness, we do not oppose it,” Kouchakzadeh told the chamber earlier in the day.
A hardline Iranian lawmaker said on Sunday that the indirect nuclear talks with the United States in Oman were authorized by the Supreme Leader to illustrate the unreliability and unreasonable conduct of American officials to those within Iran who remain optimistic about engagement.
Addressing the parliament, Tehran representative Hamid Rasaei said the purpose of the talks was to make "some of the elite and some officials who are still optimistic once again understand the breach of promises and the illogicality of the American authorities."






