Stabilizing the country and preventing chaos would be the top priorities in the first 100 days of a post-Islamic Republic transition, Prince Reza Pahlavi said, calling for broad participation and defections from within the system.
He said the immediate focus during a transition would be to “stabilize the country, stabilize the economy” and ensure security, arguing that encouraging “maximum defections” would help avoid the kind of collapse seen in Iraq after Saddam Hussein.
Those “criminally responsible” with “the blood of people on their hands” would face accountability in court, he added.
Millions of Iranians have chanted his name and called for his return, exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi said on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference, describing the calls as both humbling and a responsibility.
“Millions of Iranians chanted my name and called for my return. That humbles me and gives me a lot of responsibility at the same time to answer their call and to be the leader of this transition as they have asked for,” he said at a press conference.
Pahlavi added that anyone who agrees with “those four core principles, irrespective of their political affiliation or viewpoints, can be part of this national struggle for freedom.”
He outlined a roadmap in which a transitional government would prepare the ground for a constitutional assembly elected by Iranians to determine the country’s future system. “At the end of this process, once the constitution is approved and the nation votes in a referendum to adopt it, we will have the election of the first new parliament and the first new government of that future democracy,” he said, adding that the temporary government would then hand over power to elected officials.
Canada imposed new sanctions on seven individuals under its Special Economic Measures (Iran) Regulations, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand announced on Saturday.
“The imposition of these sanctions sends a clear message that Canada will not tolerate the Iranian regime’s attempts to intimidate, harm or silence voices inside or outside Iran,” Anand said.
The Canadian government said those designated are linked to Iranian state bodies responsible for “intimidation, violence and transnational repression” targeting dissidents and human rights defenders.
Iran’s use of proxy agents and criminal networks to silence critics, “including through harassment, surveillance and planned acts of violence in Europe and North America,” has raised serious concerns, the statement said.
Canada will “continue to take concrete action to counter Iran’s destabilizing activities” and stand with Iranians seeking freedom and respect for their rights, Anand added.

Berlin illuminated the Brandenburg Gate with the message “Freiheit für Iran / Freedom for Iran” in a show of solidarity with people in Iran.
The official X account of the governing mayor of Berlin said the projection was intended to express support for Iranians who have taken to the streets against violence and in support of fundamental rights.
The lighting of the landmark comes amid continued international reactions to developments in Iran.
Videos sent to Iran International show Iranians living in New Zealand gathering in Auckland on Saturday, in response to a call by exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi to protest against the Islamic Republic. A similar protest was also held in Wellington.
Participants chanted “The Revolutionary Guards are terrorists” during the rally.
The bodies of 50 women killed during protests remain unidentified in Kahrizak morgue near Tehran, a member of parliament’s social committee said on Saturday.
“These bodies have not yet been identified due to a lack of documentation or because families have not come forward,” Mohammad Seraj told local media.
Mizan News Agency, affiliated with the judiciary, later denied the presence of 50 unidentified women’s bodies in Kahrizak, citing the Legal Medicine Organization as saying that only “seven bodies” were unidentified and that all were men.







