
On June 18, the Iranian regime will hold its rigged presidential election. All indications so far imply that Ali Khamenei, the regime’s Supreme Leader, has already picked his favorite, Ebrahim Raisi.

On June 18, the Iranian regime will hold its rigged presidential election. All indications so far imply that Ali Khamenei, the regime’s Supreme Leader, has already picked his favorite, Ebrahim Raisi.

The Iranian dictatorship conducted its presidential debates, ahead of the June 18 rigged election. The performance confirmed Iranians’ determination to boycott the poll and support regime change.
As Tehran prepares for the Sham presidential elections on 18 June, victims of the regime’s brutality have spoken out against torture and abuse by candidate Ebrahim Raisi, the current head of the judiciary. He is accused of being a key figure in the massacre of Iranian political prisoners in 1988. Raisi was a member of the so-called “Death Commission” in the prisons of Evin and Gohardasht.
The national boycott of the Iranian regime’s rigged elections is still going on across the country. Various sections of Iran’s society, particularly families of those killed in the November 2019 nationwide protests, have stated that they will not vote in the election in honor of their loved ones’ blood, and have urged their fellow citizens to do the same in defiance of the Iranian regime’s tyrannical rule.
The Henry Jackson Society, a London-based think tank, released a 60-page report on Monday that outlines some of the techniques used by the Iranian government to spread its own rhetoric and undermine Western policy through the media, relying on a channel of fake news websites with a facade of legitimacy.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), and the People’s Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI / MEK Iran), reported that in this year’s presidential “election”, Iran is on the verge of a turning point.

Iran’s state-run media, officials, academics, and even international news organizations have been warning about the country’s impending water emergency in recent days. Yet, the Iranian regime has remained inactive.

While Iran’s rigged presidential election isn’t scheduled until 18 June, it’s widely assumed that Ebrahim Raisi, the country’s current judiciary chief, will be the regime’s next president.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), and the People’s Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI / MEK Iran), reported that one of the challenges facing Iran’s health system these days is a significant scarcity of medical experts, which is becoming increasingly apparent during the coronavirus crisis.
No other dictatorship has perpetrated as many acts of terrorism around the world, from Argentina to Thailand, or plotted the assassination of foreign diplomats on American soil as Iranian agents did in 2011.