Iranian doctors bravely risk their lives and freedom to provide medical care for injured protestors, facing arrests, torture, and even death, as they uphold their ethical and humanitarian obligations amidst oppression in Iran.
Authorities in the Iranian city of Kashmar have shut down a clinic after a confrontation between two women over wearing a head scarf, a topic that has been at the center of months of unrest since a young woman died while in police custody after being detained over how she was wearing hers.
Protesters in several Iranian cities, including the capital, Tehran, have set fire to government banners commemorating the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution as rights group Amnesty International chided the country's leaders for "decades of mass killings and cover-ups."
A new novel by Salman Rushdie will be published on February 7, nearly six months after a man repeatedly stabbed the writer onstage during a lecture in New York state.
Doctors have been tortured in Iranian prison amid the country's 20-week protests. Their "crime"? Treating demonstrators wounded by Iran's security forces.