Pahlavi discusses Iran with German foreign affairs chair
Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi met Armin Laschet, chair of the German Bundestag’s Foreign Affairs Committee, on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference to discuss the situation in Iran.
“Very productive meeting with Armin Laschet… to discuss the situation in Iran, the ongoing killings, and what more Germany can do to support the people of Iran,” Pahlavi said on X.
A tightening security atmosphere inside schools across several Iranian cities has prompted a new wave of student absences, according to messages sent to Iran International, with families saying classrooms no longer feel like safe spaces for their children.
In recent weeks, parents and students from Mashhad, Gorgan, Tehran and other cities across Iran have described schools shifting from educational environments to spaces marked by heightened monitoring and questioning.
A student in the religious city of Mashhad said school officials and affiliated forces had searched students’ mobile phones and, in some cases, searched schoolbags.
After this started, a few of my classmates stopped coming to school, the student added.
Similar accounts have emerged from girls’ schools in Gorgan, northern Iran. Several students told Iran International that inspections were accompanied by what they described as an atmosphere of intimidation, leading some families to temporarily withdraw their children from classes.
Rising absenteeism amid safety fears
No official figures have been released on attendance rates, but interviews with teachers in Tehran and Alborz province suggest that classroom numbers have dropped in some schools.
“In a class of 25, some days fewer than half are present,” a high school teacher in Tehran said, requesting anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue. “Parents say they do not consider the situation safe.”
Schoolgirls in Iran raise fists in protest; a handwritten sign reads, “This is the final battle, Pahlavi will return.”
A mother of an eighth-grade student in eastern Tehran said she had allowed her child to stay home for several days. “School should be the safest place for a child,” she said. “When I hear about inspections and questioning, it is natural to hesitate.”
The latest reports follow earlier accounts of security forces and Basij members entering schools in cities including Abadan in the south, Arak and parts of Mazandaran province, north of Iran.
Families previously reported that students were asked to sign written pledges without their parents present. In Bandar Abbas, Malayer and Gorgan, students were questioned about their families and protest-related activities. In Arak and Sari, some educational facilities were said to have been used as bases for security forces.
‘Deep rupture' between families and schools
Saba Alaleh, a Paris-based clinical psychologist and socio-political psychoanalyst, told Iran International that the developments point to a structural break in trust.
“We are witnessing a profound psychological and social rupture between families and schools,” she said.
“This rupture is not limited to recent events; it is the result of years of accumulated distrust.”
Experiences during the Woman, Life, Freedom protests in 2022, when schools were described as spaces of fear and pressure, intensified that mistrust, Alaleh said.
“A school should provide a sense of security. When it becomes associated with surveillance and threat, it transforms into a source of anxiety,” she added.
She warned that exposure to inspections and questioning could have lasting consequences for children. “When students experience constant monitoring, education can lose its meaning,” she argued.
“This can lead to declining motivation, deeper distrust and even identity confusion.”
Healthy psychological development, Alaleh explained, depends on a functional partnership between family and school.
“When that bond collapses, children may find themselves caught between conflicting value systems, complicating their social and identity development,” she added.
Long-term consequences for education
Nahid Husseini, a London-based researcher on women’s affairs and education, said the recent developments reflect a broader crisis within the education system.
“When an educational environment is perceived as unsafe, it is natural for parents to withhold their children,” she told Iran International. “But the result is the deprivation of millions of students from their right to education.”
With Iran’s student population estimated at more than 15 million, Husseini said sustained absenteeism and declining trust in schools could have far-reaching social and economic consequences.
“Schools should be spaces of stability and growth. When they become associated with fear, the cost is borne not only by students but by society as a whole.”
A sanctuary no longer certain
For many families, the issue is no longer limited to temporary absences but to a broader shift in how they view the institution of schooling.
“In the past, even if there were problems, we still believed school was fundamentally safe,” a mother in Tehran said. “Now I feel my child is under pressure there.”
In the absence of transparent communication about the scope and purpose of security measures inside schools, distrust appears to be widening.
Experts warn that once a school loses its standing as a safe haven, rebuilding that trust may prove far more difficult – with implications that could shape a generation’s relationship with formal education for years to come.
Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said Tehran would respond with force if the United States used force against it and would target American bases in the event of an attack.
“If the Americans use force against us, they will receive force in return. The Islamic Republic is fully prepared but is not seeking war, and if war is imposed on us, we will respond,” Ali Larijani told Al Jazeera.
“If the Americans attack Iran, we will strike their bases. But based on past experience, I doubt the other side is seeking war again,” he added.
Larijani said negotiations between Tehran and Washington were ongoing but accused Israel of trying to undermine the process.
“We are negotiating with the United States, but Israel has jumped into the issue barefoot to try to sabotage it,” he said.
Residents in multiple Iranian cities chanted anti-government and pro-Pahlavi slogans from their homes on Sunday evening, responding to a call for chants by Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi for a second consecutive night.
In Tehran’s Jannat Abad district, residents chanted slogans including “Long live the Shah,” “Death to Khamenei,” “Death to the traitorous IRGC,” and “IRGC killers.”
Residents in the northern Iranian city of Rasht voiced support for Pahlavi, chanting “Long live the Shah” and “This is not the final battle, Pahlavi will return.”
In the southern Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas, chants included “Khamenei the tyrant, we will bury you underground,” alongside “Long live the Shah” and “This is the final battle.”
Residents in Shiraz chanted anti-government slogans around 8 p.m. local time, including “Death to Khamenei,” while similar chants were reported in Arak, where residents shouted “Death to Khamenei” and “Death to the dictator” from their homes.
In Karaj, west of Tehran, residents chanted anti-government slogans including “Until the mullahs are buried, this homeland won’t prosper.”
Residents in Mehrshahr and the Baghestan neighborhood of Alborz province also joined the chants, with slogans such as “Long live the Shah” and “Shout out for your Shah” broadcast over loudspeakers.
The chants followed calls by Pahlavi urging people inside Iran to voice protest slogans from their residences as demonstrations and diaspora rallies continued abroad.
Urgent intervention is needed to stop ongoing killings in Iran, exiled prince Reza Pahlavi said on Sunday, saying violent repression is continuing in the country.
“One thing I will simply add to what the president (Donald Trump) said — when he says the regime has kept on talking and talking and talking — (is that) they have also kept on killing and killing and killing as we speak,” Pahlavi said in an interview with Fox News.
“There are people who are being arrested and tortured in Iran — that hasn’t stopped — and that’s why an intervention is so necessary, because the first ask of Iranians today, at home and abroad, is (for) help,” he said.
“This intervention is a humanitarian intervention to save lives that will otherwise continue to be lost. This is how important and critical this intervention can be,” Pahlavi added.
“Irrespective of the regime buying time to negotiate — which will never pan out because it’s been a pattern of behavior by them that’s simply buying time — meanwhile, people in Iran are dying,” he said.
“I hope the president (Donald Trump) realizes how urgent the intervention could save lives and also help us put an end to this unwanted regime,” Pahlavi said.
A man was arrested in Canada over an online threat targeting a rally held in support of protests in Iran, part of a worldwide Global Day of Action demonstrations, Toronto police said.
The Toronto Police Service said it became aware on Friday of a social media threat directed at participants attending the rally on Sautrday.
Police said it is alleged the accused made a threat on social media to cause harm to rally participants and stated intentions of attending the demonstration with a firearm to prevent the gathering.
Officers from 32 Division, Intelligence Services and the Emergency Task Force executed a Criminal Code search warrant at an address in Burlington prior to the event.
Michael David Holland, 56, of Burlington, was arrested and charged with uttering threats causing death or bodily harm, police said. He was scheduled to appear at the Toronto Regional Bail Centre on February 14.