"This is the last battle, Pahlavi will return," protesters were heard chanting in the holy city of Mashhad in northeastern Iran on Friday night.
Iran’s Supreme National Security Council has instructed domestic media to explicitly condemn what it called foreign interference by US President Donald Trump and to distinguish between protests over economic grievances and "violent riots", according to a document seen by Iran International.
In the directive addressed to editors and newsroom managers, the Supreme National Security Council praised outlets that swiftly reacted to comments by Donald Trump, describing his statements as interventionist and contrary to diplomatic norms.
The Council commended media organizations that framed their coverage around “national unity,” published interviews and commentary from political, academic and economic figures, and drew a clear distinction between public economic demands — including protests over currency instability — and what it labeled organized, violent disturbances.
The directive also urged media to continue reflecting people’s livelihood concerns while avoiding what it called raw, emotional or tension-fueling content. It praised outlets that, in the council’s words, sought to inform public opinion about foreign interference and hostile efforts to exploit unrest, and said calm, professional reporting that “draws boundaries with the enemy” helps preserve social cohesion and national stability.
"President Trump, thank you for your strong leadership and support of my compatriots," Prince Reza Pahlavi said in a post on his X account on Friday.
"This warning you have issued to the criminal leaders of the Islamic Republic gives my people greater strength and hope—hope that, at last, a President of the United States is standing firmly by their side."

"We're following the ongoing protests, and reports of violence, with concern," United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said on Friday.
"I call on the authorities to uphold the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly."
All individuals must be able to protest peacefully and express their grievances," he told
Families of the passengers of Ukraine International Airlines flight PS752 which was shot down by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in 2020 expressed support for Iran protests, called for an end to the violent repression of protests.
In a statement on Friday, the Association of Families of PS752 Victims said strikes, protests and market closures are lawful civic acts, and condemned the use of force, mass arrests and live fire against unarmed citizens.
The group said protesters are openly calling for the overthrow of the Islamic Republic from the outset, with demands going beyond mismanagement and systemic corruption.
The families said news of protesters being killed has deepened their anger and grief ahead of the sixth anniversary of the PS752 shootdown on January 8, stressing that human lives must not be the cost of state misrule.
Citing their own experience, they warned that denial of truth, refusal to accept responsibility and impunity for perpetrators inevitably pave the way for further disasters.
The association voiced solidarity with protesters and called for an immediate halt to violent repression, transparent and independent accountability for those killed, injured or detained, the release of all detainees, and respect for the right to peaceful assembly and free expression.

Teacher unions and labor groups from multiple Iranian provinces publicly backed nationwide protests on their sixth day, warning that economic hardship, repression and inequality have pushed society toward open confrontation with the authorities.
Statements of support were issued by teachers’ unions in Mazandaran and Fars provinces as well as Eslamshahr and Nurabad Mamasani, with the Mazandaran teachers’ association using particularly stark language to describe a society driven to protest by hunger, repression and loss of dignity.
Labor groups, including the Free Union of Iranian Workers and the Tehran and Suburbs Bus Workers’ Syndicate, also voiced support for mass strikes and demonstrations, calling for nationwide unity.
Analysts and labor activists said the growing involvement of organized teachers and workers reflects grievances that go beyond wages, pointing to systemic injustice, shrinking livelihoods and sustained crackdowns that have turned professional demands into a broader social challenge to the Islamic Republic.