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A dissident in Tehran says she feels helpless and under immense psychological pressure.
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"Whenever I hear a disturbing sound, my body reacts involuntarily. The psychological pressure that entered my mind has numbed this part of my left hand. It doesn't work. I still have anxiety that the war might start again, and that is a terrifying thing."
On the streets the regime stages shows of strength, including parades by women driving jeeps mounted with heavy machine guns, others with automatic rifles.
The BBC uses trusted sources inside Iran to speak with those whose voices are silenced by the regime.
As a political activist living under severe repression Shirin suffers a feeling of helplessness.
"Things [have] happened that we could do nothing about — for example, the execution of those arrested during the January uprising. The executions happened and the detainees were hanged… we have now lost the streets."
She listens for the sound of cars pulling up outside. The knock on the door. The phone call summoning her to interrogation. When they've come for you once already, the fear never goes away.
The first time she was on the phone to her mother when the car pulled up beside her on the street. It was back in 2024 during the long fallout from the "Woman, Life, Freedom" protest movement after the death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, arrested by the Morality Police for allegedly not wearing her hijab properly.
A man and a young woman got out and stood in front of Shirin.
"I said 'yes'. I told my mother I would call her back later and hung up."
They had been in the middle of talking about finding food for their evening meal.
As a political activist Shirin understood what was happening. The couple confronting her were secret police.
"I asked: 'What
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