A Western diplomat: Khamenei is dying and the Tehran Iil regime to fall

A Western diplomat: Khamenei is dying and the Tehran Iil regime to fall

After a Western diplomat indicated that Ali Khamenei was “dying,” bringing attention to the challenge of selecting his replacement, the question of his health has come to light.
According to the French weekly “Novil Observer” magazine, the regime’s propensity for “outdated beliefs” that are in opposition to the youth “warns the end of the guide’s rule,” he continued.

In addition, despite the repression that the regime engaged in, which resulted in the deaths of more than 230 young people, the French magazine confirmed in an article titled “Freedom against Mullahs” that “the religious judgement of the fall” is confronting young people who are no longer afraid that they would unite the regime.

In contrast to earlier protests, such as the green movement in 2009, which erupted against the backdrop of faking the results of the presidential elections, and the protests against high fuel prices in November 2019, the magazine claims that the current protests are directed against the totalitarian regime that ruled Iran after the revolution in 1979.

She further stated that since the regime had failed to deny the Iranian people their fundamental liberties and rights, the movement’s key demand was that women serve as its first victims in its quest for independence and human dignity.

The French publication claimed that one of the most significant aspects of the current Iranian uprising is that it has nothing to do with the debt collectors and that the protesters in Iran’s streets today view all clerics as figures who give the country’s religious government legitimacy, including both the government’s supporters and its silent critics.

Another significant aspect of the present Iranian rebellion is the disintegration of the fear barrier among the populace as a result of their realisation that the regime is in decline.
Iranian youths targeted the guide directly through unprecedented slogans, despite the various types of repression and crimes committed by both the Basij and the Revolutionary Guards over the past decade, but this was not dead in the Iranian youth, but rather turned them into heroes that they have not lost.

It is noteworthy that protests have not subsided in the nation since the death of the Kurdish young woman, Muhsa Amini (22 years), on September 16, three days after her arrest by the Ethics Police while visiting Tehran with her younger brother, on the grounds that she had disobeyed the country’s strict dress codes.

According to what many analysts and observers have confirmed over the past six weeks, her death sparked unheard-of protests in Iran three years ago, frequently presented by young people—men, women, and students—in a political message and challenge to the authorities, and an affirmation that the young segment in one valley and the authorities in another valley.

Khamenei is dying, and the Tehran Iil government will topple, according to a Western ambassador.

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