Tear gas fired as protests over power and water shortages continue in Iran
Government forces fired tear gas at protesters in Sabzevar, northeast Iran, on Tuesday night as demonstrations over prolonged blackouts and water shortages entered a second consecutive day.
Crowds chanted “Shameless, shameless” after the crackdown, according to footage sent to Iran International.
Residents rallied outside the Sabzevar governorate, denouncing outages that have paralyzed daily life amid extreme heat. Videos show men and women shouting, “If we don’t get our rights, we won’t leave,” along with “Only the streets will give us our rights” and “Water, electricity, life—our absolute rights.”
Officials have blamed the crisis on “unprecedented drought.” Iran is experiencing its second-driest year in five decades, with rainfall down 43% from last year. Major dams, particularly those supplying Tehran, are at critically low levels.
In Tehran, residents in districts including Pounak, Amirabad, and Pardis shouted “Death to Khamenei” and “Death to the dictator” from their windows during extended outages. In Sadra, near Shiraz, demonstrators echoed the same chants late Tuesday.
In an unusual move, Tehran’s Water Company announced plans to distribute plastic-bagged water—then withdrew the statement hours later without explanation.
Government data shows 24 of Iran’s 31 provinces are under water stress, affecting cities such as Tehran, Mashhad, Tabriz, and Isfahan.
On Wednesday, amid rising public anger, authorities declared a holiday in 23 provinces, citing “heat and energy management.” Other regions cut working hours to mornings only.
But conditions appear to have worsened following last month’s 12-day war with Israel. Iranians report more frequent and severe outages on the back of a surge in use as more people were forced to stay at home amid the government shutdowns.
Hardline Tehran MP Amirhossein Sabeti warned Wednesday that without major water savings, shutdowns may extend through summer, potentially closing the capital for up to four days a week.
“If necessary, every week may be off from Tuesday or Wednesday [until Saturday],” he said, suggesting the goal is to drive residents out of the city to cut demand.
The IRGC-linked Moj News acknowledged the toll of the crisis, warning that shortages are damaging mental health, fraying family life, and fueling tensions between communities.
The outlet said growing competition for access to water is already triggering local disputes, and without urgent management, broader social unrest could follow.
Iran’s judiciary chief said around 2,000 people were arrested during and after the 12-day war with Israel, with some detainees accused of collaborating with the Jewish state potentially facing the death penalty.
“In our law, anyone who cooperates with a hostile state during wartime must be arrested and prosecuted,” Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said in an interview with state TV.
“Some of these individuals face severe punishments, including the death penalty, while others may receive lighter sentences,” he added.
The country's chief justice added that many of those detained were released shortly after investigations found no evidence of espionage or cooperation with Israel. Others were released on bail despite lingering suspicions.
Some detainees have been accused of direct ties to Israel and are being interrogated to identify potential co-conspirators, Ejei said.
Ejei said the judiciary has ordered expedited handling of these cases under wartime legal procedures. Indictments have been issued for some cases and trial dates set, while others are still under investigation.
Iran’s parliament has passed an emergency bill to increase penalties for espionage and collaboration with “hostile states.”
Last month, UN experts which included UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mai Sato, urged Iran to stop what they described as "post-ceasefire crackdown."
The experts cited the arrests of hundreds of people, including journalists, human rights defenders, social media users, foreign nationals — particularly Afghans — and members of ethnic and religious minorities such as Baha’is, Kurds, Baluchis and Ahwazi Arabs.
Iranians are speaking out with increasing urgency over chronic water and electricity outages that upend daily life and fuel fury at the government.
With temperatures topping 40°C in Tehran and nearing 50°C in the south, many now face all-day water cuts—or near zero pressure—and frequent power failures.
Dozens shared their experiences with Iran International, highlighting the scale of the crisis and its toll nationwide.
“This is a big prison called Iran that has neither water nor electricity,” said a woman from Fardis, a suburb of Karaj.
“Water outage again… People have reached the breaking point. Do something before it’s too late, you irresponsible officials!” another woman pleaded.
A man in Tabriz sent footage of a kitchen sink filled with unwashed dishes. “There has been no water for 12 hours,” he said, ending his message with: “Death to the Islamic Republic, death to Khamenei.”
Even Gilan—a lush, northern province with over 1.2 meters of rainfall—has seen outages, challenging claims that drought alone is to blame.
No water, no power
Low pressure is compounding the crisis. In many buildings, only the lower floors receive water—barely.
Some residents install private pumps to reach upper floors, but these depend on electricity, which is also being cut.
“The lower floors have low-pressure water, but the upper floors, even with a pump, have none,” wrote journalist Maryam Shokrani on X.
A refrigerator technician in Tehran said he hadn’t been able to test appliances for over a week. “There’s either no electricity or no water to check if the cold water and icemaker work,” he said.
Small businesses without backup systems are especially affected.
Tanker distributing water in Tehran
More than a drought
Officials blame the crisis on “unprecedented drought.” Iran is in its second-driest year in five decades, with rainfall down 43% from last year. Key dams, especially those feeding Tehran, are critically low.
Government data shows 24 of 31 provinces are under “water stress,” including major cities like Tehran, Mashhad, Tabriz, and Isfahan.
In response, the government shut down or shortened hours at offices and banks in several provinces on Wednesday, citing peak demand. Spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani said closures may continue.
Visions gone dry
Experts say the real roots lie in chronic mismanagement, flawed policy, and decades of unsustainable water use in agriculture and industry.
Since 2000, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has called for population growth and food self-sufficiency in crops like wheat and rice—both highly water-intensive. In a 2021 speech, he reiterated that producing wheat, corn, and barley domestically was “both necessary and achievable.”
Experts argue these goals have worsened shortages, particularly in arid regions.
In Yazd, among Iran’s driest cities, officials have permitted sturgeon farming—a water-heavy industry—to produce caviar for export. The city has also grown rapidly due to industrial expansion.
Now, Yazd is locked in disputes with Isfahan over scarce water, highlighting how poor national coordination is fueling provincial rivalries. Both cities are major industrial hubs, making the stakes especially high.
Iran’s clerical leadership will fall from within not through any foreign military intervention, Israel’s prime minister said on Tuesday, as his defense minister warned of the possibility of a renewed campaign against the Islamic Republic.
“Everybody talks about regime change and they envision the American army and Israeli forces invading Iran — boots on the ground and all that stuff people spew. No,” Netanyahu said in an interview with the Full Send Podcast, hosted by the Nelk Boys.
“It has to come from within… from the people.”
Netanyahu described Iran’s nuclear and missile programs as a “cancer,” and said Israel had no choice but to act militarily to remove those threats.
He praised US President Donald Trump for authorizing strikes that he said helped roll back Iran’s nuclear capabilities.
“If you don’t remove the cancer, you’re going to be dead,” he said. “We did act. And you know — just with incredibly brave soldiers.”
His comments came as Defense Minister Israel Katz signaled a potential return to military pressure.
“There is a possibility of the campaign against Iran renewing; we need to maintain the achievements and air superiority created following Operation ‘Rising Lion’ while formulating an effective enforcement plan going forward to ensure that Iran does not restore its nuclear and missile projects,” Katz said during a security assessment with top Israeli military officials on Tuesday.
Operation Rising Lion, launched on June 13, was Israel’s largest coordinated military strike on Iran to date, initiating a series of surprise attacks that killed top Iranian military commanders and nuclear scientists and triggered a 12-day war that caused widespread destruction on both sides.
Most regions of Iran could soon face water rationing due to a deepening crisis caused by decades of mismanagement and worsening climate conditions, a senior lawmaker warned on Tuesday.
“Unfortunately, we will probably see rationing in most parts of the country soon,” Reza Sepahvand, a member of Iran’s parliamentary energy committee was quoted as saying by the Iranian outlet Tejarat News
“In some cities, this has already started,” he added.
Reports to Iran International's submissions line indicate worsening water quality and intermittent cuts not only in Tehran but also in West Azarbaijan, Razavi Khorasan and Khuzestan provinces.
Sepahvand said the crisis is the result of long-standing failures to locate water-intensive industries in appropriate areas.
“Industries like steel and petrochemicals should have been built along the Persian Gulf, but instead they were placed in the heart of the desert,” he said. “This has led to expensive and incomplete water transfer projects.”
Sepahvand added that the situation has been worsened by climate change and reduced rainfall.
In a cabinet meeting on Sunday, Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian cited a dire report from the energy ministry and warned that the water crisis was more severe than acknowledged.
“The water crisis is more serious than what is being discussed today, and if we do not take urgent action now, we will face a situation in the future for which no remedy can be found,” Pezeshkian was quoted as saying by state media.
Iran's government declared a public holiday for Wednesday in Tehran Province due to ongoing extreme heat and the need to conserve water and electricity, spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani announced.
Earlier on Tuesday, local media citing a spokesman from the Tehran Water and Wastewater Company reported that drinking water could be distributed in hygienic plastic pouches in case of supply cuts.
However, the company later denied it had any such plans.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has submitted an urgent bill to parliament that would impose harsher penalties on social media users and content creators who publish what authorities describe as false or misleading information.
The draft legislation, developed with the judiciary’s input and approved by the cabinet late in June, includes 22 articles aimed at combating what officials call the spread of “fake news” in digital spaces.
The proposal would introduce prison sentences, fines, and bans on media activity for users found guilty under the new provisions.
According to the bill, penalties will be intensified if the content is shared by people with public influence — such as celebrities, experts, government employees, or those with significant online followings.
The proposed law also criminalizes the use of fake accounts, bots, or automated systems to publish content, and calls for increased penalties for repeated offenses or posts made during crises or wartime that authorities deem threatening to national security.
The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance would be tasked with operating a national platform to receive public reports on digital content and issue warnings. It would also be responsible for forwarding relevant cases to the judiciary for potential prosecution.
In the bill’s preamble, the government cited the rapid spread of online content, the rise of citizen journalism, and the psychological and societal risks posed by misinformation — including alleged damage to public trust, government credibility, and national cohesion.
The bill is now under urgent review in parliamentary committees, following its formal submission on July 20 with signatures from President Pezeshkian and Justice Minister Amin-Hossein Rahimi.
The legislative push comes amid growing concern over a wave of arrests and prosecutions following last month’s ceasefire between Iran and Israel.
Earlier this month, United Nations experts urged Iranian authorities to halt what they described as a post-war crackdown, marked by executions, arbitrary detentions, and online censorship.
Human rights group HRANA reported that at least 823 Iranians have been charged with political or security-related offenses since the war began, with 286 detained for online activities, including posts about the conflict with Israel.