Iranian wrestler condemns sister’s arrest over Women's Day speech
Women's Day gathering in Sanandaj on March 7, 2025. Photo: KHRN
Former Iranian world wrestling champion Sardar Pashaei has condemned the arrest of his sister for speaking out against the Islamic theocracy's discriminatory laws on International Women’s Day.
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“My sister, Leila Pashaei, was arrested a few days after giving a speech on March 8, International Women’s Day, where she stood alongside many brave Kurdish women to speak about women’s rights and equality,” Pashaei told Iran International.
“Security forces raided her home, arrested her, and took her to Sanandaj prison. She has been charged with ‘acting against national security.’ But all she did was speak out peacefully for basic human rights—for women to live free from discrimination and oppression.”
Women's rights activist Leila Pashaei
Pashaei criticized the Iranian government’s restrictions on women, saying, “Speaking for equality is not a threat to national security. It is a rightful demand.”
He added that the real threat to Iran’s security comes from the government’s policies, including its nuclear ambitions and financial support for foreign armed groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.
“The Islamic Republic has isolated Iran from the world, spent billions of dollars on nuclear programs that have brought heavy sanctions, and continues to support terrorist organizations,” he said. “These actions have put the safety and future of Iran and its people at risk.”
Referring to the Woman, Life, Freedom protest movement that began after the death of a young woman name Mahsa Amini in morality police custody in 2022, Pashaei said the fight for justice would not be silenced.
“Arresting my sister and other courageous women will not stop this movement. Iranian women and people will keep standing up until they achieve democracy, equality, and freedom—for themselves and for future generations.”
Leila Pashaei was also detained during the Women, Life, Freedom protests and, according to her brother, was jailed for four weeks.
Their other brother Saman was also detained by the Iranian agents in September.
Mahsa Amini’s death ignited Iran’s longest protest movement in four decades, which evolved into an anti-government uprising amid a violent crackdown. Over 500 people were killed and thousands arrested.
Iranian authorities have ramped up an effort to control female singers, blocking Instagram accounts belonging to multiple artists in recent days under judiciary orders.
The latest to be affected is Golsa Rahim-Zamani, an Iranian singer known for sharing her performances online.
The Islamic Republic is a theocracy which bans women from singing in public and enforces the Islamic veil or hijab on women.
The social media accounts of two other singers, Rayhaanoo and Parisa Bagheri—who performs under the name Baby Drawgon—have also been taken down, with all content removed.
This comes as part of a broader effort to limit the visibility of women vocalists, whose performances have been banned in public settings since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
According to social media reports, she was performing at a concert in central Tehran when plainclothes security forces interrupted the event and detained her.
Two days later, ISNA news agency reported that Seyfizade had been released on bail, but it remains unclear which security body was responsible for her arrest.
On March 2, the same day news emerged of her conditional release, Seyfizade’s Instagram page was blocked. The platform displayed a message indicating that the action had been taken by Iran’s cyber police.
A UK-based Iranian activist criticized Meta, the parent company of Instagram, writing on X: “It is truly disappointing that Mosseri, Instagram, and Meta are unable to take action against the Islamic Republic’s activities on Instagram, where it acts as a police force against the people, threatening users and seizing their accounts.”
Prominent Iranian dissident Hossein Ronaghi also responded to the account closures, saying on Telegram, "If we have committed a crime, a security institution must refer us to a court. Before that, they cannot take over our Instagram accounts under the pretext that ‘if you hand over your page, your case will be closed.’”
Despite the official ban, female singers in Iran continue to find ways to share their music—whether in private gatherings, underground performances, or online.
One such artist, Zara Esmaeili, gained widespread attention last year when a video of her singing Amy Winehouse’s Back to Black went viral. However, shortly after the video gained traction in July, Esmaeili was arrested on August 1. Since then, no further updates have emerged regarding her fate, raising concerns among women's rights advocates. Her Instagram account was also deleted after she was arrested.
The suppression of female singers is not something new in the Islamic Republic. In December, authorities detained Parasto Ahmadi and her band after they staged a performance at a caravanserai without adhering to Iran’s mandatory hijab rules.
The restrictions on female artists have escalated since the protests following Mahsa Amini’s death in custody in 2022 over hijab, as many female performers supported the demonstrations. Several have been arrested or barred from professional activities.
Artistic defiance has become a hallmark of Iran’s protest movements, with musicians such as Shervin Hajipour, Saman Yasin, and Toomaj Salehi facing arrest for their roles in mobilizing dissent.
An Iranian researcher has named a newly discovered praying mantis species Sinaiella azadi, or freedom mantis in Persian, to highlight the importance of scientific freedom as domestic repression and obstacles to cross-border collaboration mount.
Mahmood Kolnegari, a PhD researcher at the University of Córdoba in Spain, discovered the insect in central Iran's mountainous region in 2022 according to a Monday report by Mongabay, an independent media organization reporting on nature.
Iranian researchers' work is often hindered by political oversight and travel restrictions while international sanctions limit scientists ability to work with peers abroad.
"Ecologists and naturalists ... need to be free to travel across these man-made boundaries," Kolnegari said, "to explore, to find species, and this is the first step of conservation."
Decades of sanctions have disrupted funding, hindered equipment procurement, and blocked access to international services. Domestically, the government's security focus restricts free inquiry, with censorship and political oversight prevalent.
The discovery of the mantis, detailed in a study published in February, marks the first recorded presence of the Sinaiella genus in Iran and Armenia, expanding its known range beyond the Arabian Peninsula and Egypt.
"Freedom is the essence of human life," Kolnegari said, explaining his choice of name. "Taxonomists require freedom to communicate, cooperate, and collaborate across geographic and political boundaries to correctly place species within the taxonomic tree of life."
The discovery involved an international team of scientists from Iran, Armenia, Germany, and Switzerland, demonstrating the potential for cross-border scientific partnerships despite political challenges.
"Good professional and personal relationships between scientists from all countries are especially important now, with so many wars and political divisions going on," said Evgeny Shcherbakov, a mantis expert from Lomonosov Moscow State University, who was involved in connecting the researchers.
Kolnegari found the new species, Sinaiella azadi, in the Zagros Mountains of Iran’s Markazi province at an elevation of 2,130 meters. The insect, characterized by dark back wings and a twig-like camouflage, exhibits a defensive behavior known as thanatosis, mimicking fallen vegetation when disturbed.
"I saw that slender, very tiny mantis, and I thought it couldn’t be here, because it is originally from the southern part of Asia," Kolnegari told Mongabay. "It is a ‘completely morphologically new type of mantis and completely different from other types of mantises known from central Iran."
The discovery also raises conservation concerns, as the mantis's habitat is outside protected areas and faces threats from livestock grazing and human development.
The Trump administration will ensure the enforcement of sanctions on Iranian oil exports in a bid to return to the levels seen in the President's first term after sales rose under Biden, according to the country's energy minister.
“When he was president last time, Iranian oil exports shrunk down to very modest levels. Biden didn’t remove those sanctions, but he stopped enforcing them," Chris Wright told Bloomberg on Monday.
“That enriched Iran. And now we’ve seen what’s happened with the Houthis, Hezbollah and Hamas. It’s been mayhem. So is President Trump looking to stop the mayhem and bring peace to the world? Absolutely. Can we afford the squeezing off of Iranian oil exports? Absolutely.”
The move would be part of Trump’s renewed "maximum pressure" campaign, aimed at cutting Iran’s oil exports to zero in a bid to force Tehran into talks over its nuclear program.
Last week, Reuters reported that the Trump administration is considering a plan to inspect Iranian oil tankers under an international accord designed to curb the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
Washington has blacklisted more than two-thirds of the 150 vessels that transported Iranian crude last year.
More than half of the tankers sanctioned by the United States have ceased operations outside Chinese or Iranian terminals, an investigation by Iran International revealed last month.
US sanctions on tankers and companies involved in Iran's oil trade are slowing shipments to China but trade with one of Iran's most important allies continues in 'dark mode' in spite of maximum pressure, according to a Bloomberg report on Sunday.
Sweden faces an escalating security threat from Iran, which has intensified its intelligence activities and use of criminal networks within the country, the Swedish Security Police (SAPO) warned on Tuesday.
In its annual threat assessment, SAPO highlighted Iran’s efforts to monitor and suppress opposition movements abroad, exploit vulnerabilities within the Iranian diaspora, and acquire sensitive technology to circumvent sanctions.
"Iran's primary objective is to secure and strengthen its regime, closely linked to protecting the country from perceived external threats and circumventing sanctions," SAPO's statement said.
"These priorities influence the security-threatening activities carried out by Iranian security and intelligence services against Sweden."
SAPO reported increased Iranian activities in Sweden over the past year, including efforts to pressure opposition figures and their families.
Iranian intelligence services have reportedly used criminal networks to conduct violent acts targeting Israeli interests and groups perceived as threats.
"The use of criminal actors is not new or unique to Iran but has occurred to a greater extent over the past year, with notably younger actors involved during 2024," SAPO added.
Sweden has also been a target for Iran’s attempts to acquire advanced technology and knowledge to bypass international sanctions. SAPO warned that Iran is actively seeking dual-use products, including those that could support its weapons programs.
"Iran is heavily focused on acquiring knowledge and products for the development of weapons of mass destruction or delivery systems," the report said. "This acquisition spans several industries. For instance, machinery intended for civilian use can also be employed in the development of such weapons."
The warning comes amid heightened tensions between Sweden and Iran. Last month, the Swedish government accused Tehran of using a Shiite Muslim mosque in Stockholm to spy on Sweden and the Iranian diaspora there.
"There is a tangible risk that the security situation can deteriorate further and that can occur in a way that is hard to predict," said Charlotte von Essen, head of the security police.
SAPO’s assessment underscores the growing threat posed by Iranian intelligence activities and foreign influence operations in Sweden, as authorities work to counter hybrid threats from hostile state actors which also include Russia and China.
Last year, the relationship between the two countries reached a diplomatic crisis forcing a prisoner swap of Swedish diplomat Johan Floderus and a second Swedish citizen, Saeed Azizi, for an Iranian convicted in Stockholm of committing war crimes over his part in 1988 mass executions in the Islamic Republic.
The US State Department is offering up to $15 million for information that could disrupt financial networks supporting a drone-production arm of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' elite Qods Force.
The company is identified as Kimia Part Sivan Company (KIPAS).
“KIPAS officials have conducted unmanned aerial vehicle flight tests for the IRGC-Quds Force and have provided technical assistance for IRGC-QF UAVs transferred to Iraq for use in IRGC-QF operations,” the State Department’s Rewards for Justice program said in its announcement on Monday.
The company has also sourced key drone components from foreign suppliers, according to US officials.
The IRGC has provided funding and weapons to groups outside Iran, including Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq. The US Treasury has linked the IRGC’s drone sales, including to Russia, to broader Iranian military financing.
In April, Washington sanctioned six senior KIPAS officials—Hasan Arambunezhad, Abolfazl Ramazanzadeh Moshkani, Mehdi Ghaffari Naghneh, Reza Nahar Dani, Abbas Sartaji, and Hadi Jamshidi Zavaraki—for acting on behalf of the IRGC-QF.
The Treasury had previously blacklisted KIPAS in 2021 for its role in supplying drones.
Under the sanctions, all assets linked to KIPAS and its designated officials within US jurisdiction are frozen. Financial institutions engaging with them could also face penalties.
The Trump administration listed the IRGC as a terrorist organization as part of his ‘maximum pressure’ after he withdrew from the JCPOA in 2018.
Last week, Rewards for Justice offered a reward of up to $20 million for information leading to the location, recovery, and return of Robert Levinson, who disappeared in Iran's Kish Island in March 2007.
The reward also included information "leading to the identification, location, arrest, or conviction of any person responsible for his disappearance."
Two Iranian intelligence officers (Mohammad Baseri and Ahmad Khazai) have been named by US authorities in connection to Levison's disappearance.
In 2020, the US treasury sanctioned Baseri and Khazai.