Nobel laureate hopes ‘Islamic Republic’ label removed from Iran’s name in 2026
Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said she hopes 2026 will mark the end of what she called the “dark prefix” of the Islamic Republic from Iran’s name.
In a New Year message posted on Instagram, Ebadi described 2025 as “a year of successive hardships” for Iranians, saying living standards deteriorated, children suffered more harm, and women faced “double discrimination and wider insecurity,” with femicide becoming “a harsher reality than ever under the law.”
Writing amid the fifth day of protests in Iran, Ebadi said universities had become more unsafe for students, medical staff were under greater pressure, and workers, retirees and teachers endured relentless economic strain.

Nearly 2,000 people, she said, were executed in Iran in 2025, calling the figure not a statistic but an “official record of state violence.”
Despite the suffering, Ebadi said 2025 was also “a year of resilience,” expressing hope that 2026 would bring lasting freedom, kindness and hope to the Iranian people.









