The first court session was held for Ehsan Hosseinipour Hessarloo, Matin Mohammadi and Erfan Amiri, three detained protesters facing charges including arson and murder, Mizan, a news agency affiliated with Iran’s judiciary, reported on Saturday.
The three are accused of setting fire to a mosque in Pakdasht and of involvement in a killing, according to the report.
The judiciary also listed charges of “assembly and collusion with the intention of acting against [national] security,” alleging that the defendants responded to calls on social media platforms, including from the US President Donald Trump and Israel.
Maintaining the status quo in Iran risks further migration to Europe and deprives European countries of energy and economic opportunities, Prince Reza Pahlavi said.
“We have now a possibility of even more migration to Europe as a result of any continuation of the status quo,” he said, arguing that a democratic Iran could become a reliable energy supplier and strategic partner.
“A free Iran that would be able to supply Europe with its energy needs would certainly be an alternative to the only source that you have right now,” he added, referring to Europe’s reliance on Russia.
Pahlavi said political change in Iran would create a “win-win” outcome, opening the door to trade and investment while strengthening regional stability.
He also stressed that his objective is not to seek office. “I’m not running for office. I’m not running for a job. I’m not seeking a power or a title,” he said. “The day that happens, I consider that the end of my political mission in life,” referring to the establishment of an elected democratic government in Iran.

Further restricting the Islamic Republic’s access to revenue would weaken its ability to sustain its security forces and prolong its rule, Iran's exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi said on Saturday on the sidelines of Munich Press Conference.
“One way to weaken the regime even further is to impose more restrictions so that their source of revenue is cut off so they can no longer sustain their own elements,” he said, arguing that financial pressure would accelerate its collapse.
Pahlavi described the government as fragile and said it would attempt to circumvent sanctions, adding that monitoring enforcement is the responsibility of the international community.
“Any source of revenue to the regime will contribute to its ability to sustain itself a little bit longer, but at the end it will fall,” he said, urging faster action to limit what he called the negative regional consequences of its continued existence.
Instability across the Middle East is rooted in radical Islamist movements, including forces linked to Tehran, Prince Reza Pahlavi argued and said Iran’s current leadership poses a threat both at home and beyond its borders.
“This regime has only one purpose which is to export this ideology. It is a threat to its own people,” he said, adding that neighboring countries understand the consequences of its policies.
A future Iranian government committed to peaceful relations, Pahlavi said, would be welcomed in the region. “The only way to eliminate all the problems at once is for this regime to be no longer there and instead have a country where its people… will prove that unlike this regime, they are peacemakers and they believe in stability first and foremost,” he said.
Democracy is about inclusion, not eliminating options in advance, exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi said at a press conference on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, arguing that Iran’s future political system should be decided by voters rather than predetermined by political factions.
“Democracy is not about exclusion, it’s about inclusion, unless you are not in conformity with democratic principles,” Pahlavi said, adding that both republics and constitutional monarchies can succeed or fail depending on how they are practiced.
Responding to criticism that he does not represent all Iranians, Pahlavi said he does not claim unanimous support but argued that his name has been widely chanted inside Iran. “I’m not saying that I have 100% of people on my side. Of course, I have my enemies,” he said.
He said groups that do not adhere to his four stated principles, including separatists, pro-regime reformists and Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK), are not part of his coalition. However, he described his supporters as diverse, including republicans and monarchists, people across the political spectrum and representatives of ethnic and religious communities.
“My position is neutral towards the outcome,” he said, adding that Iranians should determine their preferred system “by the ballot box” in a free election whose results all sides respect.
Pahlavi also criticized the Islamic Republic’s electoral system, saying there are no genuine free elections in Iran and that presenting them as such is “a mockery of democracy.”

Iranians continue to resist despite a sweeping crackdown, Prince Reza Pahlavi said, warning that delays could cost more lives.
“When my compatriots came to the streets, they were only met with this brutal genocidal level, industrial level massacre,” Pahlavi said, adding that many were forced to retreat but “people are still out there chanting” in recent nights.
He said tens of thousands are imprisoned, and accused authorities of continuing arrests, threats and executions, including targeting hospital workers and nurses.
“The importance of strike to neutralize the regime forces of repression is the element that could get people back into the streets,” he said, arguing that negotiations with Iran would not yield results and that “every day that goes by, more people could die.”






