Iranian farmer hangs himself in public over economic woes, rights group says
A farmer hanged himself on Monday outside the local agriculture department headquarters in Kahnuj in southeastern Iran in protest over mounting economic pressures, local rights group Haalvsh reported.
Canada-based activist Hamed Esmaeilion on Sunday urged Iranians worldwide to take part in protests marking the third anniversary of the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini, whose killing in police custody in 2022 sparked the Woman, Life, Freedom uprising.
Esmaeilion, a human rights activist and member of the board of the Association of Families of Flight PS752 Victims, said demonstrations will be held simultaneously in more than 20 cities across the globe.
In a video posted on X, he confirmed he would join a Toronto rally on September 14, marking the third anniversary of the 2022 protests that erupted nationwide following the death of Mahsa Amini.
He said similar gatherings were being organized in Berlin, Frankfurt, Cologne, Nuremberg, Geneva, Gothenburg, London, Barcelona, Turku, Ghent, Ottawa, Montreal, Houston, San Francisco, Sydney, Wellington and Christchurch. Events are scheduled between September 13 and 16.
Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman, was arrested by Iran’s morality police on September 13, 2022, for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict hijab law. She collapsed in custody and died two days later, igniting months of nationwide unrest that rights groups say left at least 551 people dead, including dozens of women and children.
In his video, Esmaeilion said he would also attend a marathon in Toronto in memory of political prisoners and victims of executions, naming Sharifeh Mohammadi, Varisheh Moradi and Pakhshan Azizi among those he wished to honor.
He also expressed solidarity with Kurdish teachers dismissed or exiled in recent months, prisoners on hunger strike, and Mehran Bahramian, who was executed earlier in the month.
Last year, the second anniversary of Amini’s death saw protests from Melbourne and Tokyo to European capitals, with diaspora groups chanting Woman, Life, Freedom and calling for international sanctions on Iran’s leadership. The Los Angeles City Council renamed an intersection in the city’s Iranian district to mark the anniversary.
Rights organizations, including Amnesty International, have said Iran’s crackdown on the protests amounted to crimes against humanity. A UN fact-finding mission said widespread and systemic repression, particularly against women and girls, has continued since 2022.
Esmaeilion, whose wife and daughter were killed when Iran’s Revolutionary Guards shot down a Ukrainian passenger plane in 2020, has become a prominent voice among the Iranian diaspora.
He urged Iranians abroad to use the anniversary to amplify calls for justice and to ensure, he said, that “the world does not forget.”
US counter-narcotics operations off Venezuela are part of a broader drive to dismantle an Iran- and Hezbollah-linked drug-finance network, officials told Fox News Digital on Sunday.
Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang works closely with the Cartel of the Suns, a network of military elites long accused of moving cocaine in collaboration with Hezbollah, the report said.
“President Trump has taken numerous actions to curtail Iran’s terrorist proxies like Hezbollah,” State Department spokesperson Anna Kelly said.
“The president has proven that he will hold any terrorist group accountable that threatens the national security of our country by smuggling narcotics intended to kill Americans.”
Hezbollah’s role: laundering and logistics
Brian Townsend, a retired DEA special agent, called last week’s US maritime strike near Venezuela “a decisive blow against narco-terrorists.” He said Hezbollah’s role is pivotal yet often out of view.
“They don’t get their hands dirty. Instead, they launder and provide networks to help cartels send money through the Middle East. Simply, they take a cut from the drug trade, which then funds their operations in the Middle East,” he said, adding that Hezbollah has become “a main finance and money launderer for narco-terrorism groups like Tren de Aragua.”
Venezuelan National Guard personnel stand guard during the presentation of confiscated cocaine to the media in Maracaibo April 25, 2013.
Townsend and other experts pointed to state complicity as the key enabler. Under Nicolás Maduro and Hugo Chávez, Venezuelan officials and infrastructure have been tied in US indictments and sanctions designations to cocaine shipments protected by senior officers in the Cartel of the Suns, they said, with Hezbollah-linked facilitators processing portions of the proceeds.
Diaspora links and state support
Danny Citrinowicz, a senior fellow at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies, said Hezbollah’s reach hinges on the region’s Lebanese Shia diaspora. “Hezbollah is the connector between the diaspora and Iran,” he said.
Through family ties, imams, religious centers and educational programs, he added, the group forges contacts with local cartels, sells drugs and channels profits back to Lebanon via elaborate schemes.
Citrinowicz cast Venezuela as Iran’s anchor in the Western Hemisphere, pointing to deepening military and economic ties -- from Iranian-assembled UAV production for the Venezuelan army and regular Quds Force flights via Africa, to training on sanctions evasion and billions in capital injections.
He said Tehran’s footprint is effectively tethered to Nicolás Maduro’s rule and would lose its most important Latin American stronghold if he left office.
“As long as Maduro is there, the Iranians will be there,” he said. “If Maduro goes, Iran will lose the most important stronghold of its activity in Latin America.”
Townsend argued the most effective leverage is financial: target facilitators, disrupt logistics, pursue indictments, and squeeze the money flows so cocaine shipments become less profitable.
“The priority is to attack the financial and logistical networks, indict everyone we can and pressure Maduro,” Townsend said. “If we can cut off the financial arteries, the cocaine won’t be as profitable.”
Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Monday that Tehran is committed to Islamic unity and has no disputes with other Muslim nations, urging countries in the region to resist efforts by outside powers to sow division.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of the 39th International Islamic Unity Conference in Tehran, Pezeshkian said, “We have no quarrel with any Muslim country and are not seeking conflict. We are committed to the unity of the Islamic Ummah.”
He told participants that external powers sought to profit from discord among Muslims. “The enemy sells weapons to Islamic countries, takes their resources, and wants to set us against each other,” Pezeshkian said. “If the Islamic community were united, could America, Israel or any other country violate the rights of Muslims?”
“The problem is us, not America or Israel. The problem lies in the disputes, divisions and quarrels we have among ourselves.”
The president said Iran considered all Muslims as brothers, including Palestinians, Iraqis, Egyptians, Qataris and Emiratis. “This is not only a slogan, but our belief,” he added, pointing to what he described as Iran’s resilience during the recent 12-day war with Israel.
A view from the International Islamic Unity Conference in Tehran on September 8, 2025
He said Iran’s unity had prevented its adversaries from achieving their goals.
“The enemy thought a few missiles would make our people turn against the system, but instead the people showed solidarity,” Pezeshkian said. He added that while military power was important, the stronger “slap” to Iran’s enemies had come from national unity.
He also urged Islamic leaders and scholars to promote justice and brotherhood. “You are the elders of religion and must spread the Prophet’s message of justice and unity. We may have differences of opinion, but we must not act against unity,” he said.
The president said Iran appreciated condemnation by Muslim countries of US and Israeli actions but insisted more collective action was needed. “If we act sincerely and on the basis of justice and piety, the other side will surrender,” Pezeshkian said. “This conference is a beginning to break division and establish the brotherhood ordered by the Prophet.”
The 39th International Islamic Unity Conference will run from September 8-10 in Tehran with the theme “The Prophet of Mercy and the Islamic Ummah.” Organizers said more than 1,000 participants, including 80 scholars, 210 foreign guests and 2,800 activists from across the Muslim world, are attending.
Chicken has become a measure of the Islamic Republic’s failure to stabilize basic goods, parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said Sunday, amid reports of a sharp drop in average meat consumption, with some citizens eating none at all.
“Today the price of chicken has turned into a symbol of mismanagement and poor coordination in execution and policymaking,” Ghalibaf said.
The rising costs “have made life hard for families and left fathers ashamed.”
He pressed the Pezeshkian administration to “urgently and in full coordination reorganize the market for essential goods, especially chicken.”
Once the affordable alternative to red meat, chicken has grown harder to access for many Iranian citizens.
Protein staple turns costly
A whole slaughtered bird is about 1,250,000 rials per kilo (≈$1.25); breast around 2,500,000 (≈$2.5); thighs roughly 1,150,000 (≈$1.13); and fillet near 3,500,000 (≈$3.43). Retailers often sell above official rates, narrowing access to animal protein for low-income households. The average income in Iran is roughly $200.
Official data show food inflation in May 2025 rose 41.5% year-on-year, with the food, beverages and tobacco basket up 3.9% month-on-month.
Annual inflation hit 36.3% in August 2025. These figures reflect a persistent surge that daily market directives have failed to contain.
Ghalibaf cited international sanctions as a driving force behind rising prices. “Main remedy is to neutralize sanctions through domestic measures and that waiting for their removal is no solution."
“Sitting and waiting idly for the optimistic lifting of sanctions is no solution,” he said, adding that diplomacy has its place but cannot substitute for internal fixes.
Yet the pricing and inflation data he cites highlight problems that sanctions rhetoric may not resolve: official rates routinely flouted at retail, uneven enforcement, and a sustained rise in staple costs despite repeated announcements of market reorganization.
In June, secretary of the Meat Production and Packaging Association said Iran’s average meat consumption had dropped to as little as seven kilograms per person annually from an average of 18, with some citizens eating none at all.
“Meat consumption in Iran is deeply unequal—some eat nothing, while others manage 20 kilograms a year,” Masoud Rasouli said a few days before the beginning of Israeli war, pointing to the vast economic inequalities in the country.
Iran once averaged 18 kilograms of meat consumption per person annually, while the global average remains around 32 kilograms, he added.
Iran plans to launch four satellites by the end of the Iranian year in mid-March 2026 and open its new spaceport in its southeastern city of Chabahar, the head of the country’s space agency said on Sunday.
“The [development of] Chabahar spaceport has made good progress, and we should soon expect the first satellite launch from this base,” Hassan Salarieh, head of the Iranian Space Agency told reporters.
By mid-March, he said, the country will launch four satellites including Zafar, Paya, the second model of the Kowsar satellite — an Earth observation satellite designed and built by the private sector — along with test models of the Soleimani narrowband satellite constellation.
“Our forecast is that at least by the end of this [Iranian calendar] year, these launches will take place,” Salarieh added.
Last month, Salarieh told IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News website that Iran plans to launch the first satellites in its new Soleimani constellation by March 2026.
The constellation is named after Qassem Soleimani, the late commander of Iran’s Quds Force, the overseas branch of the Revolutionary Guards, who was killed in a US drone strike in Baghdad in 2020.
Western governments have repeatedly voiced concern over Iran’s satellite launches, warning that the same rocket technology can be used for ballistic missiles. Tehran, however, says its space program is peaceful.
A 2019 report by the US Defense Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon’s military intelligence arm, concluded that Iran’s expertise in space launch vehicles “can be used as a test bed for developing an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).”
In January 2024, the European Troika, Britain, France, and Germany, condemned Iran’s launch of the Soraya satellite aboard a Qaem 100 rocket, warning it "uses technology essential for the development of a long-range ballistic missile system."
Such launches allow Iran to test technologies that could be used to further develop its ballistic missile program, the statement said, warning that such activities pose a threat to regional and international security.
The farmer was identified as Reza Qalandari, a resident of Langabad village in Kahnuj, Kerman province.
"He had come under severe pressure due to his inability to pay the fine for renewing his agricultural motor permit and the denial of his fuel quota by the agriculture department," Haalvsh reported, citing an unnamed source.
The report added that his death shocked locals, with many describing it as a symbol of the authorities’ failure to address the struggles of farmers from the ethnic Baluch minority from which he hailed.
Sanctions, corruption and economic mismanagement have contributed to widespread economic hardship and market instability as Iran's currency the rial has lost over 90% of its value since US sanctions were reimposed in 2018.
A poll by Iran's leading economic newspaper Donya-ye Eqtesad last month showed that a vast majority of Iranians are dissatisfied with the government's economic policies, as costs of living soar and the value of the Iranian currency slips.
Specialist doctor dies by suicide
On the same day in Saravan, Sistan and Baluchestan province, Dr. Akram Shiri, an internal medicine specialist at Iranmehr Hospital, was found dead in her dormitory after taking medication, Haalvsh reported, marking the second suicide reported in southeastern Iran on Monday.
"The doctor’s body was found around 12:00 noon in the hospital dormitory. Reports indicate she went into cardiac arrest after taking medication and lost her life," Haalvsh reported, citing an unnamed source.
Her death is the latest in a series of suicides among Saravan medical staff over difficult working conditions, the report added.
In 2023, two emergency physicians, Dr. Fatemeh Rezaeipour and Dr. Mehran Khosravanian, also died by suicide within a month, and in April this year a Baloch nurse at Iranmehr Hospital took his own life.
Haalvsh's report said that their colleagues blame heavy workloads and punishing conditions for the repeated tragedies.
Experts have attributed the increased suicides in Iran to the systemic reluctance and neglect of Iranian authorities to address workers' conditions.
Last year, The Iranian Psychiatric Scientific Association highlighted an increase in suicides among medical professionals, saying that 16 medical residents took their own lives the previous year.