Iranian security forces in the central city of Isfahan have summoned shopkeepers who joined recent strikes, and some of those involved have seen their bank accounts frozen, according to messages received by Iran International.
Several business owners said they were called in for questioning after taking part in the work stoppages.

Iran’s parliament has halted impeachment proceedings against several cabinet ministers, a member of the parliament’s presiding board said on Monday, citing guidance from the Supreme Leader to support the administration.
Alireza Salimi said the impeachment process had been suspended but not removed from the parliamentary agenda, according to comments reported by the Tasnim news agency.
He said the decision was taken in light of remarks by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei calling for cooperation with the government and urging the executive branch to intensify efforts to address the country’s problems.
Salimi said parliament would continue its oversight role and would monitor the government’s performance closely, adding that lawmakers could resume using supervisory tools if the cabinet failed to meet expectations.


According to Tasnim, impeachment motions against the ministers of labor, oil, roads and urban development, energy, culture and Islamic guidance, sports, and agriculture had been referred to the presiding board. Proposals to impeach the ministers of industry and higher education had also been registered and were in the signature-gathering stage.
Separately, an impeachment motion against Labor Minister Ahmad Meydari was referred last week to parliament’s social affairs committee for review, Tasnim reported.
The move comes as protests that began over economic grievances have evolved into calls for regime change, with the country still largely under an internet blackout and reports of more than 12,000 people killed in the ensuing crackdown.

Iran’s Judiciary Chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said on Monday that authorities would seek to prosecute not only foreign governments but also individuals whom he accused of helping fuel recent unrest, both inside Iran and overseas.
He said those he described as having “caused” the protests, as well as those who he said supported them financially, politically or militarily, would be treated as criminals.
“Those who called for it, those who provided financial support, propaganda support or weapons — whether the United States, the Zionist regime or their agents — are all criminals and each of them must be pursued,” Ejei was quoted as saying by state media.
Iran’s national police chief Ahmadreza Radan said on Monday that authorities would continue to pursue those involved in recent protests, using language that labeled them as “rioters” and “terrorists.”
“We promised the people that we would pursue the rioters and terrorists to the last person,” Radan was quoted as saying by state media.
He said many had already been detained and claimed they had confessed.

Iran’s second-largest mobile phone operator removed its chief executive amid a dispute over enforcement of the government’s internet blackout during widespread protests.
MTN Irancell failed to promptly enforce authorities’ shutdown orders as demonstrations spread, Iranian media reported.
Alireza Rafiei was dismissed after about a year in the job because he “disobeyed orders from security bodies and violated issued regulations under crisis conditions” to restrict internet access during the uprising, IRGC-linked Fars news agency said.
The move could signal “defections at the most senior levels” of the government, Mehdi Saremifar, a science and technology journalist, told Iran International.
The dismissal followed remarks by MP Hamid Rasaei,who criticized what he described as a delay in shutting down the internet during a parliament session on Monday.
Iran cut off communications nationwide on January 8 without warning as calls intensified for anti-government protests across the country.
“While it was clear that riots were about to start and despite a request by the supreme national security council, why was the Internet shut down with delay and at 10:00 pm?” Rasaei said. “If some people had not refused, the losses and casualties would not have reached this level.”
Iran’s authorities have faced sustained criticism from activists, rights groups and some foreign governments for cutting or throttling internet access during protests, a tactic critics say hampers organizing, documentation of abuses and communication with the outside world.
Officials have framed restrictions as necessary for security and public order, while critics say shutdowns isolate communities and heighten risks for protesters during periods of violence and mass arrests.
On Monday, internet monitor NetBlocks said Iran’s nationwide blackout has entered its twelfth day, with national connectivity still at minimal levels.
“In recent days, the filternet has occasionally allowed messages through, suggesting that the regime is testing a more heavily filtered intranet,” NetBlocks added.
Iranian lawmakers on Monday likened US President Donald Trump to the biblical Pharaoh and praised Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as Moses, in rhetoric aired during a parliamentary session amid heightened tensions with Washington.
In a statement read aloud in Iran’s parliament, lawmakers said Khamenei would “make Trump and his allies taste humiliation.”
Addressing Trump directly, the statement said Iran’s leader would “drown you in the sea of the anger of believers and the oppressed of the world, to serve as a lesson for the world of arrogance.”





