French, British and German leaders on Friday condemned the killing of protesters in Iran and called on Iranian authorities to halt the use of violence, according to a joint statement released by the office of French President Emmanuel Macron.
“The Iranian authorities have the responsibility to protect their own population and must allow for freedom of expression and peaceful assembly without fear of reprisal,” the statement said, stopping short of outlining specific consequences
The coordinated response from France, United Kingdom and Germany comes amid mounting international concern over a widening crackdown in Iran, where internet disruptions and restrictions on reporting have made it increasingly difficult to verify the full scale of casualties.
The Taliban’s Ministry of Information and Culture has instructed private media outlets and state television in Kabul to refrain from airing any supportive coverage of protesters in Iran or broadcasting negative reports about the Iranian government.
Sources from two private media outlets and Afghanistan’s national television confirmed the directive to Afghanistan International Pashto on Friday.
Several senior editors and managers at different news outlets in Afghanistan also confirmed the order, saying it specifically requires media to avoid any supportive coverage of protests in Iran.

At least 51 protesters, including nine children, have been killed during Iran’s latest wave of nationwide unrest, according to figures released on Friday by the Norway-based Iran Human Rights Organization, as authorities imposed a total internet blackout.
The organization said the deaths have been confirmed over 13 days of anti-government protests, which began on Dec. 28 at Tehran’s Grand Bazaar over economic grievances and quickly spread nationwide with explicitly anti-regime slogans.
According to the group’s verified data, the protesters have been killed across 11 provinces, with hundreds more wounded. Only cases confirmed directly by the organization or by at least two independent sources are included in the current toll.
Among the confirmed fatalities are nine minors under the age of 18, though the organization said documentation confirming the precise ages of all child victims is still being collected.
The rights group also reported receiving unverified accounts of dozens more deaths in Tehran, Mashhad, Fardis in Karaj, and Hamedan. Those cases are undergoing verification and are not yet reflected in the official tally.
"The Iranian regime is doing what it has always been doing: subjugating the people of Iran," Republican Senator Bill Hagerty told Iran International on the killing of protesters.
"I think the American people are for the people of Iran. We always have been."
Asked whether he supports a regime change in Iran, Hagerty said the Iranian people will make the decision.

An eyewitness report from Tehran shows widespread protests continued on Friday night, marked by chants of “Death to the dictator,” the torching of police and IRGC vehicles, gunfire by IRGC forces, blocked streets, and nonstop car horn honking.
"The internet has been completely shut down, card payment terminals are not working, phone calls are impossible, and only Rightel users are able to send text messages," the eyewitness told Iran International.

Dozens of people have been killed in protests across Iran in recent days, according to human rights groups and witness accounts, with the full scale of casualties from Thursday night still unknown after authorities imposed a nationwide internet blackout.
Before communications were cut, Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based monitoring group, said at least 45 protesters had been killed between December 28 and January 8, and that more than 2,000 people had been arrested.
Those figures are likely to rise following Thursday’s nationwide protests and reports of further unrest on Friday night, but verification has become increasingly difficult as images and firsthand accounts from inside Iran have largely disappeared.
One video that circulated online on Thursday appears to show at least seven bodies lying on the ground in what looks like an underground parking area.
The footage, which has not been independently verified, is said by the narrator to have been recorded in Fardis, near the city of Karaj, west of Tehran. The narrator claims the victims were killed by live fire.
Warnings from the top
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who has appeared rarely in public since last month’s 12-day war, addressed the nation on Friday, a day after the mass protests. He referred to demonstrators as “saboteurs” and said he would not retreat in the face of unrest.
Soon afterward, the Secretariat of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council issued a statement warning that security forces and the judiciary would show “no leniency toward saboteurs.”
Similar statements later issued by the national police force and the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence arm described the protests as a “joint design” by Israel and the United States to undermine Iran’s security and vowed retaliation.
The remarks heightened concerns among activists and rights groups that the authorities were preparing for further violent crackdowns.
Recasting the dead
Alongside the use of force, Iranian authorities have in several cases sought to portray slain protesters as government supporters or as victims of protesters’ violence—a pattern seen in previous waves of unrest.
One such case involved Amir-Hessam Khodayari, 22, who was wounded by security forces on December 31 in the western city of Kouhdasht, in Lorestan province, and later died after being transferred to a hospital in the provincial capital, Khorramabad.
Little is publicly known about his education or occupation, but his family is described as working-class Kurds who follow the Yarsan faith, a religious minority.
The Revolutionary Guards issued a statement describing Khodayari as a member of the Basij, a pro-government militia, and as one of the “forces defending security.” State media echoed the claim, and local officials visited his family.
That account was contradicted after his family rejected efforts to identify him as a Basij member.
In a widely shared video, his father is seen telling mourners that his son had been a protester. Other videos showed crowds forcing security forces to retreat from his funeral, despite attempts by authorities to control the ceremony.
Family members and activists said they faced pressure, including threats to withhold his body and offers of financial compensation, to accept the official version of events.
A similar pattern was documented during the 2022 Woman, Life, Freedom protests, including in the case of Hamid-Reza Rouhi, another protester initially portrayed by authorities as a Basij member after his death.
Many more to come?
Another recent case involved Shayan Asadollahi, 28, who was killed in the city of Azna, also in Lorestan province. Authorities withheld his body for five days, pressuring his family to say he had been a Basij member or that he had died in a traffic accident.
He was eventually buried quietly in the remote village of Deh Haji.
Asadollahi worked as a hairdresser and was the sole breadwinner for his mother and sister after his father died in an accident last year. Friends described him as an avid supporter of the Persepolis football club.
Like many young Iranians, he was active on Instagram, where he shared photos of his work, daily life and football fandom—an online presence that fell silent after his death.
The stories that have emerged so far may represent only a fraction of what occurred, with many more accounts expected to surface if and when full internet access is restored.






