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VOICES FROM IRAN

Prices soar, basics scarce: Iranians struggle to fill the cart

Dec 3, 2025, 10:14 GMT+0Updated: 23:47 GMT+0

Iranians report rising prices and sporadic shortages of everyday goods and groceries, making it harder to cover basic needs and put food on the table, according to messages sent to Iran International.

Iran International asked ordinary shoppers in Iran to share their experiences of price hikes, the falling value of money, and the daily affordability challenges they face. A series of videos, audio clips, and text messages show mounting hardships.

Relentless price increases and runaway inflation have pushed families to the brink, forcing many to fight to survive rather than live any kind of normal life.

Their messages describe thinning shelves, collapsing purchasing power, and a growing sense that while ordinary people sink deeper into hardship, only profiteers and those connected to power continue to thrive.

“Everything is expensive and people are exhausted from all this inflation. There are no sales, businesses are dead. Only a miracle can save us from this situation,” one message said.

“In Iran, the government doesn’t care about these problems. Right now there is no business. Even if you work 24 hours a day, you’ll still come up short at the end of the month – unless you earn 3 million tomans (about $25) a day, which almost no one does, perhaps only 10% of the population,” another message said. Average Iranian income is about 100 to $150 per month.

Purchasing power

Local media tracking shows that in the past year, food prices in Iran have risen by an average of more than 66%.

Bread and grains are up 100%, fruits and nuts 108%, vegetables 69%, beverages 68%, fish and seafood 52%, and dairy products like milk, cheese and eggs 48%.

“Small retailers are either shut down or semi-closed because prices rise daily and the purchasing power of the middle class and the poor has completely collapsed. Only profiteers and those connected to the corrupt government benefit,” one message said.

“Prices for food, clothing, medicine, doctor visits, car parts – everything – are extremely high. Ninety percent of people fight just to survive, not to live.”

Daily rise

Other messages said conditions worsened after the 12-day war with Israel in June and the subsequent return of UN sanctions.

“I swear I haven’t bought red meat for a year. Same with chicken. After the 12-day war, I lost my job and my wife and children left me,” one message said.

Based on the accounts, some families have eliminated dairy except for cheese, stopped buying seasonal clothing, and cut out snacks entirely.

Dining out, visiting coffee shops, and even holding family gatherings have all but disappeared. For many, buying birthday gifts for children is no longer possible.

“This is our situation as a semi-affluent family above the poverty line. I can’t even imagine what life is like for those below it,” another message said.

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Iran taekwondo athlete quits tournament to avoid Israeli rival

Dec 3, 2025, 09:24 GMT+0

An Iranian taekwondo athlete withdrew from the world under 21 championships in Kenya after the competition draw placed her against an Israeli opponent in the first round.

Rozhan Goudarzi, who won a bronze medal last month in the women’s under 51 kilogram category at the Islamic Solidarity Games in Riyadh, pulled out in line with Iran’s long standing policy that bars its athletes from competing against Israelis.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei repeated in a speech last year that athletes must not face Israeli opponents and called on sports bodies to compensate those who withdraw, describing such decisions as a “sacrifice” for national and religious ideals.

He said “we must not neglect the well being of this athlete,” urging officials to support competitors who refuse to take part.

The policy has been in place since 1979 and has led to athletes forfeiting matches or intentionally losing to avoid Israeli rivals. Authorities have punished athletes who violate it, including a lifetime ban issued against a weightlifter who shook hands with an Israeli competitor at an event in Poland.

Rights groups and sports analysts say the stance has contributed to a rise in Iranian athletes leaving the country in recent years, with several competing abroad under new flags or joining the International Olympic Committee’s Refugee Team.

Iran-linked hackers target infrastructure in Israel, cyber firm says

Dec 3, 2025, 08:52 GMT+0

Cybersecurity firm ESET said it found new activity by the Iran aligned MuddyWater group that targeted critical infrastructure in Israel and one organization in Egypt.

MuddyWater, also known as Mango Sandstorm or TA450, has links to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and National Security and has targeted government and infrastructure in the Middle East and beyond since at least 2017.

Researchers said victims in Israel included technology, engineering, manufacturing, local government and education sectors. They said the group used new custom tools to improve its ability to hide and stay active inside networks, including a backdoor called MuddyViper that can gather system data, run commands, move files and steal Windows credentials and browser data.

  • US offers reward for information on two Iran-linked cyber actors

    US offers reward for information on two Iran-linked cyber actors

The report said the attackers used Fooder, a loader that reflects malware into memory and at times imitates the classic Snake game, to deploy MuddyViper. It said the group also used several credential stealers and avoided interactive sessions to reduce detection.

Researchers said the campaign relied on spearphishing emails that sent victims to installers for remote monitoring tools hosted on free file sharing sites. They said the operators used a range of malware, including VAX One, which imitates products such as Veeam and AnyDesk.

Past MuddyWater operations include attacks in Saudi Arabia and campaigns that overlapped with Lyceum, suggesting the group may serve as an initial access broker for other Iran linked actors.

US offers reward for information on two Iran-linked cyber actors

Dec 3, 2025, 08:32 GMT+0

The US State Department said Rewards for Justice is offering up to 10 million dollars for information that helps identify or locate two Iran linked cyber actors tied to operations against US critical infrastructure.

The program said Mohammad Bagher Shirinkar oversees the Shahid Shushtari cyber group and that Fatemeh Sedighian Kashi is a long time employee who works closely with him in planning and carrying out cyber operations. Shahid Shushtari is part of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Cyber Electronic Command and has operated under names that include Emennet Pasargad, Aria Sepehr Ayandehsazan and Net Peygard Samavat Company.

US officials said the group has caused financial damage and disruption to US businesses and government agencies and has targeted news, shipping, travel, energy, financial and telecommunications sectors in the United States, Europe and the Middle East.

Rewards for Justice said Shahid Shushtari actors ran a multi step operation during the 2020 US presidential election and had earlier carried out cyber enabled information operations that used a false flag persona.

The Treasury Department in 2021 designated the group, then known as Emennet, and six of its employees under an executive order for attempting to influence the 2020 election.

The State Department urged people with information on Shirinkar, Sedighian or the Shahid Shushtari group to send tips through its Tor based reporting channel.

Rising psychotherapy fees push Iranians out of treatment – report

Dec 3, 2025, 02:54 GMT+0

Soaring psychotherapy costs in Iran are forcing many patients to sell personal belongings or take on debt yet large numbers still abandon treatment due to the steep fees, the Tehran-based daily Ham-Mihan newspaper reported on Tuesday.

The paper said interruptions in care have intensified feelings of helplessness, despair and the recurrence of mental health symptoms among those unable to continue.

While the official psychotherapy tariff for the current Iranian year, which began in late March, is set at 5,000,000 to 6,200,000 rials ($4–$5) per session, actual prices in Tehran range from 10,000,000 to 50,000,000 rials ($8–$42), the report said.

It added that the minimum monthly wage for a married worker with two children is about 163,000,000 rials (around $137), while the average monthly income nationwide is 240,000,000 to 250,000,000 rials ($202–$210).

At these income levels, each therapy session costs the equivalent of one-third to one-fifth of a monthly salary for middle- and lower-income households.

Ham-Mihan’s report said that to respond to rising demand, the government has expanded a network of community mental-health centres known as Seraj, with about 100 centres now operating nationwide offering basic support.

However, it added that these centers do not offer psychotherapy and that coverage remains uneven and capacity limited, particularly outside major cities, forcing many patients toward the more expensive private sector.

The report cited a national study published this summer by Iran’s National Institute of Health Research found that 62.5% of people with psychiatric disorders felt they needed treatment in 2021–22, but only 35.7% received services — a rate unchanged from a decade earlier.

Cost was one of the main barriers, alongside stigma and the belief that symptoms would resolve without professional help.

Last December, Iran’s Health Ministry said one in four people in the country suffers from a psychiatric disorder, almost double the global estimate of one in eight according to World Health Organization (WHO) mental-health data.

Global data show Iran carries a heavier mental-health burden than the world average, with mental disorders accounting for 10.3% of total disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in 2019 compared with roughly 8% globally, according to the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD), published by the UK-based medical journal The Lancet.

Meanwhile, last November, Iranian authorities announced plans to open a treatment clinic for women who defy the country's compulsory hijab rules.

The initiative, announced by Mehri Talebi Darestani, head of the Women and Family Department at the Tehran Headquarters for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, would offer what she described as “scientific and psychological treatment for hijab removal,” signaling the government’s focus on behavioral enforcement even as access to mental-health care remains limited.

UN experts urge Iran to halt execution of child marriage victim

Dec 3, 2025, 01:33 GMT+0

UN human rights experts urged Iran to halt the execution of a 25-year-old victim of child marriage whose death sentence is scheduled to be carried out this month after allegedly killing her abusive husband during a domestic dispute.

According to the experts, which include Mai Sato, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, Goli Kouhkan was forced into marriage at the age of 12 to her cousin and endured years of physical and psychological abuse while working as a farm laborer.

Kouhkan gave birth at home at 13 without medical care. Attempts to escape the marriage failed because of her undocumented status a Baloch minority and societal pressure, the experts said.

In May 2018, her husband beat both her and their five-year-old son. After a relative was called to help, a confrontation ensued that resulted in her husband’s death, according to the experts.

"Iranian courts failed to consider the sustained pattern of abuse or assess specific circumstances surrounding her actions," the experts said in their statement.

They added that during interrogation, Kouhkan, an illiterate woman with no legal representation, was pressured into a confession that formed the basis of her death sentence.

“Goli Kouhkan is a survivor of domestic violence and a victim of the justice system,” the experts said.

“Her execution would represent a profound injustice. The State would be killing a woman who endured years of gender-based violence while defending herself and her child,” they added.

The husband's family agreed to forgo execution only if she pays 100 billion rials (USD 85,000) in blood money, “an amount considerably higher than the recommended rate and far beyond her reach, especially as an undocumented woman who has been rejected by her family,” the experts said.

“This is a woman who was sold into marriage as a child, brutalized for years, and then abandoned by her family and the justice system,” the experts said. “Her case starkly illustrates how gender discrimination and ethnic marginalization intersect to create profound injustice.”

The experts said at least 241 women were executed between 2010 and 2024, including 114 sentenced to death for homicide, many of whom had allegedly killed a husband or intimate partner after years of domestic violence or child marriage.

In Iran, the legal marriage age for girls is 13, and even younger with a guardian’s and judge’s approval. Rights groups say girls and women have little protection from domestic violence, and women face major obstacles when trying to divorce.