Six women detained during protests in Tehran have been transferred to the women’s ward of Evin prison, US-based rights group Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said.
The women were moved late on Wednesday after spending a day in intelligence custody, HRANA reported, citing an informed source.
They were identified as Elnaz Kari, Negar Ghanbari, Helena Rostami, Masoumeh Nouri, Fatemeh Hashempour and Aida, who was identified only by her first name.
Israel's Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology Gila Gamliel voiced support for nationwide protests in Iran, urging international backing for the demonstrators.
“You are not alone. I call the world to hear your cry for freedom and to support you,” said Gila Gamliel in a post on X, accompanied by a video addressed to the Iranian people.
“Let’s make Iran great again,” she added, tagging Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi.

Dariush Ansari Bakhtiarvand, a 37-year-old protester from Fooladshahr in Iran’s Isfahan, was killed by direct gunfire during overnight demonstrations on Wednesday, according to information received by Iran International.
Ansari, sources said, was shot by government forces during the protests and died before reaching hospital. Iran International had verified his identity and reviewed video footage showing his body.
He was targeted while participating in the demonstrations, a relative told Iran International. The head of Isfahan province’s criminal police confirmed the death of a “37-year-old citizen” in Fooladshahr on Wednesday night, without giving details.
The human rights group Hengaw also said he was killed by direct fire from security forces.
Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said she hopes 2026 will mark the end of what she called the “dark prefix” of the Islamic Republic from Iran’s name.
In a New Year message posted on Instagram, Ebadi described 2025 as “a year of successive hardships” for Iranians, saying living standards deteriorated, children suffered more harm, and women faced “double discrimination and wider insecurity,” with femicide becoming “a harsher reality than ever under the law.”
Writing amid the fifth day of protests in Iran, Ebadi said universities had become more unsafe for students, medical staff were under greater pressure, and workers, retirees and teachers endured relentless economic strain.

Nearly 2,000 people, she said, were executed in Iran in 2025, calling the figure not a statistic but an “official record of state violence.”
Despite the suffering, Ebadi said 2025 was also “a year of resilience,” expressing hope that 2026 would bring lasting freedom, kindness and hope to the Iranian people.
Iranians are openly rejecting the Islamic Republic, Israel’s foreign ministry said on Thursday, commenting on ongoing protests across the country.
In a post on X, the ministry’s Persian-language account said: “The people of Iran are present in the streets with a loud voice and declare that they do not want this government.”
The authorities have poured public funds “into the throats of terrorist groups Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis,” while pushing Iran’s economy “to the brink of collapse” in pursuit of nuclear ambitions, the account added.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday that his government would stop distributing a heavily subsidized exchange rate, blaming the system for encouraging rent-seeking and failing to protect households despite billions of dollars in state support.
Speaking at a meeting with political and social activists in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari province, Pezeshkian said the 28,500-toman dollar – one of several preferential exchange rates used in Iran – would no longer be allocated.
“Anyone who received the 28,500-toman dollar pocketed it, so we will not give it out anymore,” Pezeshkian said, arguing that multiple exchange rates had benefited intermediaries rather than consumers.
Iran has long used subsidized exchange rates to support imports of basic goods and curb inflation, but critics say the system has encouraged corruption and widened inequality, particularly as sanctions and high inflation have strained the economy.
Pezeshkian said the government had spent about $18 billion on subsidies, adding that the funds could be used more effectively to improve living standards.
“We have given $18 billion in subsidies, when with this amount we could plan so that everyone’s table is the same,” he said.
Late last month, Hossein Samsami, a member of parliament’s economic committee, said more than $116 billion in export earnings had not been repatriated since 2018, citing official non-oil export data.
The president added that subsidies would not be eliminated but redirected to end consumers rather than producers or intermediaries. He said foreign currency allocations for sectors such as livestock feed would be moved to the final stage of the production chain.
“We are not removing subsidies; we are giving them to the final consumer,” Pezeshkian said.
Iran operates several exchange rates, including a market rate that trades far weaker than official or subsidized levels, creating price gaps that economists say incentivize arbitrage.
The preferential exchange rate system was introduced in April 2018 under former president Hassan Rouhani, when the dollar was fixed at 42,000 rials in an effort to stabilize prices amid mounting sanctions.
Iran’s economy has been under sustained pressure from US sanctions, high inflation and currency depreciation, complicating repeated efforts by successive governments to reform subsidies and unify exchange rates.





