Gila Gamliel, Israel’s minister of innovation, science and technology, said there was no need to fuel public anxiety over a possible confrontation between Israel and Iran, saying authorities would have sufficient warning if tensions escalated.
“False presentations create unnecessary public stress,” Gamliel told the Ynet news website. “When things happen, we receive sufficient warning time.”
A group of protesters chanted “Death to the principle of velayat-e faghih,” a reference to Iran’s system of clerical rule, during a rally in the Haft Hoz area of Tehran on Sunday night, according to a video received by Iran International.
Haft Hoz is a neighborhood in eastern Tehran.
Dutch politician Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius said Iranians who stand up to the country’s ruling clerics show exceptional courage and deserve support from the international community.
“The courage of the people in Iran to rise up and resist the Iranian regime and the mullahs is unprecedented,” she wrote on X. “They deserve the support of the international community.”
Yeşilgöz-Zegerius leads the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and previously served as justice and security minister.
A senior adviser to Tehran’s mayor said on Monday that police were exercising restraint during nationwide protests and were barred from using weapons, despite reports of protesters being killed in recent days.
Abdollah Ganji, an adviser to Tehran’s mayor and former editor-in-chief of the state-run Hamshahri newspaper, wrote on X that law enforcement was implementing what he described as a policy of “security containment with tolerance and leniency.”
He said police officers were prohibited from using weapons.
Ganji also sought to minimize the scale of demonstrations, writing that aside from what he described as peaceful gatherings by bazaar merchants in Tehran, no protest had exceeded 150 people.
Protests were held across Iran for the eighth consecutive day, with demonstrations, strikes, and student unrest reported at 222 locations across 78 cities in 26 provinces, a US-based human rights group reported, as the overall death toll rose to 20.
Despite intensified security measures, increased deployment of police and security forces, and continued confrontations in several areas, the geographic spread of protests has remained intact, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said.
Over the past eight days, at least 19 civilians and one member of security forces have been killed, based on the data verified by HRANA. At least 51 people were also injured, most caused by pellet and rubber bullets.
Protests initially began with labor strikes and professional gatherings and have continued with broader street demonstrations, limited trade stoppages, and student protests openly calling for regime change.


Protests were held across Iran for the eighth consecutive day, with demonstrations, strikes, and student unrest reported at 222 locations across 78 cities in 26 provinces, a US-based human rights group reported, as the overall death toll rose to 20.
Despite intensified security measures, increased deployment of police and security forces, and continued confrontations in several areas, the geographic spread of protests has remained intact, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said.
Over the past eight days, at least 19 civilians and one member of security forces have been killed, based on the data verified by HRANA. At least 51 people were also injured, most caused by pellet and rubber bullets.
Protests initially began with labor strikes and professional gatherings and have continued with broader street demonstrations, limited trade stoppages, and student protests openly calling for regime change.
HRANA said 17 universities have seen student activism during the unrest.
In the past 24 hours alone, unrest was reported in more than 20 cities, including Tehran, Mashhad, Shiraz, Karaj, Qazvin, Yazd, Bandar Abbas, Tabriz, Kermanshah, Khorramabad, Shahrud, Dorud, Gachsaran, Yasuj, Bushehr, Lahijan, Nishapur, Mahallat, Rudbar, Borujerd, and Marvdasht, alongside heightened security deployments in several areas.
The protests have not been confined to major urban centers, with smaller cities and regional towns also affected—an indication of the horizontal spread of unrest across different social and geographic layers.
Reports and verified videos from multiple cities showed continued use of force by security services, including tear gas, live fire, pellet guns, and mass arrests.
The deadliest crackdown took place in the city of Malekshahi in Ilam province, western Iran, on Saturday where security forces opened fire on protesters, killing at least five and injuring 30 others, according to information obtained by Iran International.






