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Slain Iranian protester’s gravestone damaged as family faces pressure to say he was Basij

Azadeh Akbari
Azadeh Akbari

Iran International

Jan 30, 2026, 07:01 GMT+0Updated: 09:48 GMT+0

Iranian security forces have vandalized the gravestone of slain protester Sajad Valamanesh and continued pressuring his family to portray him as a Basij member, a source familiar with the matter told Iran International.

The source said intelligence and IRGC officials had repeatedly threatened the family over the wording on the headstone, warning they would destroy it if it was not changed. “Yesterday, several people went and covered the inscriptions with glue and plaster,” the source said, adding that the family had earlier been forced into coerced confessions and is now being pressured to say Valamanesh was a Basij member killed by “rioters.”

Valamanesh, from Lordegan in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari province, was shot dead by security forces during protests on January 1.

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US will keep pressure on Iran and remain open to talks - State Department

Jan 30, 2026, 02:03 GMT+0

The United States is maintaining its maximum pressure policy on Iran to restrict the government’s funding for military and nuclear programs, while keeping all diplomatic options open, State Department spokesperson Tommy Piggott said on Thursday.

"Instead of funding water, food, energy infrastructure, the regime there has wasted their wealth on terrorist proxies, on a nuclear weapons program that was obliterated by the President," Pigott told News Max.

"We're seeing a maximum pressure policy from day one of this administration to deny the regime the revenues to do those malign activities. And we see a force posture in the region, as the Secretary said, in order to defend America's interests," he added.

Trump says US in talks with Iran as military assets move to region

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President Donald Trump said the United States has held and is planning further discussions with Iran, as Washington deploys significant military assets to the region.

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US declares national emergency over Cuba due to ties to Iran, militant groups

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The United States declared a national emergency over what Washington described as threats posed by the Government of Cuba on Thursday, including its support for hostile states such as Iran, Russia and China and armed groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

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The United States’ ambassador to the United Nations, Mike Waltz, said on Thursday that Iranian officials and their families should no longer be able to live in the United States while, he said, people in Iran face repression.

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The remarks followed a State Department announcement earlier that Washington had taken action to revoke the privilege of Iranian senior officials and their family members to be in the country, though no details were provided on how many people are affected or how the measure would be implemented.

UK moves to outlaw Iran’s IRGC after EU terror designation – The Times

Jan 29, 2026, 23:51 GMT+0

Britain’s government is preparing legislation that would allow ministers to ban Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), The Times reported on Thursday, as pressure grows to respond to the group’s role in suppressing anti-government protests.

According to the report, the proposed law would enable the proscription of hostile state-linked organizations, including the IRGC.

The Times said the initiative follows growing international pressure on Iran, including recent European Union action against the IRGC, which has drawn an angry response from Tehran.

"Britain’s Home Office confirmed it is preparing legislation but said the bill would not be fast-tracked, despite the IRGC’s role in the recent crackdown on protesters in Iran," the report said.