Islamic Occupying Regime in Iran Exposed: Morgues Overflow Amid Brutal Crackdown
Tehran, Rasht, Iran – January 2026
Four days into a nationwide internet blackout, the Islamic occupying regime in Iran has attempted to silence the country. Its goal: hide the bodies, hide the blood, and crush outrage before it spreads. But hospitals, morgues, and families are telling the truth the regime cannot erase.
Rasht: Seventy Bodies in One Night
In Rasht, seventy bodies arrived at Poursina Hospital on a single Friday night. The morgue could not hold them. Families were forced to pay 700 million tomans to reclaim their loved ones—a charge officials called a “bullet fee.” As one hospital worker, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, “They were billing families for the bullets that killed their children. It was grotesque, humiliating, and unbearable.”
Bodies bore clear signs of live ammunition and pellet gun wounds. With refrigeration units full, hospital staff stacked the dead in hallways and prayer rooms.
Tehran: Families Take a Stand
In Tehran, forty bodies arrived at one hospital in a single night. Families, terrified the regime would seize or secretly bury their dead, blocked ambulances and refused to surrender the bodies. A nurse described the scene:
“Families were ready to sit on the bodies. They would not let the regime take them. Some stayed in the courtyard for hours until private ambulances could be found.”
Medical staff were forced to prioritize survival over care. With mass casualties, resuscitation was often impossible; once a pulse was lost, the body was removed immediately.
Escalation of Violence
Witnesses describe deliberate, calculated attacks. After protesters set several security motorcycles on fire, officers briefly withdrew, then returned with military rifles and opened direct fire on civilians. One injured protester told reporters, “They came back with rifles. They aimed at us. There was no warning, only shooting.”
Hospitals, already overwhelmed, turned prayer halls and corridors into temporary morgues.
Families Confront the State
Families were often the only barrier to the regime’s control over death. In many cases, they forced open morgue doors and retrieved bodies from state ambulances headed for Behesht-e Zahra cemetery. One father explained, “We could not trust them with our children, our siblings. If we did not take the bodies ourselves, we would never see them again.”
The Islamic occupying regime in Iran is showing its true face: killing citizens, charging families for the deaths, hiding bodies, and fearing the dead as much as the living. Four days of internet blackout cannot erase what hospitals and families are witnessing. Overflowing morgues, makeshift storage, and public resistance make clear the scale of repression.
The world can see it. Even in darkness, the truth cannot be hidden. From the Caspian Sea to the Persian Gulf, from eastern deserts to western mountains, all Iranians will stand united and free, casting off the tyrannical Islamic chain that has bound them since the 1979 Islamic Coup.
