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Iran in shutdown as protesters storm governor’s office, crowds chant ‘Death to Khamenei’

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Iran ground to a near standstill Wednesday as businesses, universities and government offices closed under a government-ordered shutdown amid protests caused by a growing political and economic crisis.
A 21-year-old volunteer member of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard was killed Wednesday in a western province, Iranian state media reported, marking the first death among security forces during the protests.
The death was reported in Kouhdasht, a city in Iran’s Lorestan province roughly 250 miles west of Tehran.
Saeed Pourali, a deputy governor in the Lorestan province, said the guard member «was martyred … at the hands of rioters during protests in this city in defense of public order,» according to Iranian Student News Network.
IRAN REPORTEDLY DEVELOPING CHEMICAL, BIOLOGICAL MISSILE WARHEADS AS PROTESTS SPREAD OVER COLLAPSING ECONOMY
Iranian protests force nationwide shutdown as President Masoud Pezeshkian closes businesses and offices across 21 provinces amid mounting public anger. (MEK)
Video footage circulating online and shared by the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK) shows intense clashes between protesters and security forces in cities, including Shiraz, Isfahan, Kermanshah and Tehran.
In the videos, protesters chant anti-regime slogans and confront security forces in crowded streets.
Footage included scenes of screaming and apparent gunfire, with demonstrators throwing objects and shouting, «Death to the Dictator» and «Proud Arakis, support, support.»
Additional footage shared by MEK shows crowds chanting, «Death to Khamenei!» and «Shame on you, shame on you!» as anger appears to spread across the country, with a particular focus on bazaar-led protests in Tehran.
Some of the most dramatic scenes were reported in the city of Fasa in south-central Iran. Video circulating online shows demonstrators hurling objects at the gates of a government complex and shaking them until they opened.
Opposition groups also reported that protesters stormed the governor’s office, prompting Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces to open fire, per Reuters.
IRANIAN PRESIDENT SAYS HIS COUNTRY IS AT ‘TOTAL WAR’ WITH THE US, ISRAEL AND EUROPE: REPORTS

Widespread protests grip Iran as President Pezeshkian faces mounting economic and political crisis. (MEK)
Military helicopters were seen flying over the city, apparently to intimidate residents and prevent the unrest from spreading.
In Kermanshah, in western Iran, bazaar merchants were seen confronting security forces while chanting, «Dishonorable, dishonorable,» according to video footage.
The one-day shutdown affected 21 of Iran’s 31 provinces, including Tehran, as President Masoud Pezeshkian sought to contain mounting public anger fueled by inflation, currency instability and declining living standards.
IRAN KILLING SPREE CONTINUES AS REGIME SETS NEW RECORD FOR 2025 EXECUTIONS, DISSIDENT GROUP SAYS

Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, sitting next to a senior military official in Iran. (Getty Images)
Demonstrations, strikes and clashes with security forces continued for a fourth consecutive day in cities across the country.
The unrest has unfolded alongside a series of high-level leadership changes that have added to uncertainty.
On Wednesday, Pezeshkian appointed Abdolnaser Hemmati, a former economy minister, as the new head of Iran’s central bank after the resignation of Mohammad Reza Farzin.
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State media quoted the president as acknowledging the role was «extremely difficult and complex,» warning that the new central bank chief would face intense pressure and criticism amid ongoing economic turmoil, according to IRNA.
Separately, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei announced the appointment of IRGC Brig. Gen. Ahmad Vahidi as deputy commander in chief of the Revolutionary Guards.
iran,world protests,middle east,government shutdown,armed forces
INTERNACIONAL
El día que Robert Plant pagó para “vetar” su clásico “Stairway to Heaven” en la radio

A principios de los años 2000, Robert Plant, cantante de Led Zeppelin, conducía por la costa de Oregón. Mientras escuchaba una emisora local, se encontró ante una situación inusual. El locutor propuso a los oyentes donar dinero con el fin de vetar “Stairway to Heaven” de la programación. Plant llamó, ofreció una suma considerable y la emisora aceptó el trato.
El músico, célebre por su voz en Led Zeppelin, explicó después que esta decisión respondió a su hartazgo. Llevaba décadas escuchando el tema en todos lados y quería poner fin a esa repetición. Esa acción marcó un punto de inflexión en su relación con la canción que lo acompañó durante gran parte de su carrera.
El episodio ocurrió en KBOO, una radio comunitaria de Oregón. Plant donó USD 10.000 para que el tema no volviera a sonar. “Estaba harto de escucharla”, confesó en una entrevista a NPR. No se trató de enojo ni desprecio, sino de saturación pura: su propio clásico se había convertido en una carga.
De acuerdo con Rock FM, Robert Plant enfatizó que la canción es una obra maestra en el aspecto musical. Sin embargo, con los años, se distanció del significado de sus propias letras. En 2019, reconoció que ya no podía identificarse con ellas. “Ya no escribiría esas líneas abstractas”, señaló. El cantante llegó a comparar la relación con su tema más célebre con la de un antiguo amigo: una figura cercana con la que no siempre se desea compartir momentos.
En 1988, Plant reafirmó esa postura. Declaró que sentía rechazo ante la posibilidad de tener que cantar “Stairway to Heaven” en todos los conciertos. Explicó: “Tuvo su importancia, pero después de tantos años, ya no es para mí”. Así justificó su negativa a interpretar el tema en vivo durante mucho tiempo, salvo en ocasiones excepcionales.

La reacción de la emisora ante la donación también sorprendió. KBOO solía recibir discos de Atlantic, la discográfica de Led Zeppelin, pero no dudó en aceptar el reto de Plant. Incluso, cuando Ahmet Ertegun, presidente del sello, conoció la historia, la consideró graciosa y la tomó con humor, según el propio Plant, en testimonios recogidos por Rock FM.
El contexto personal de Plant en esa época ayuda a entender su decisión. Después de años de giras multitudinarias y éxito global, el artista buscaba renovar su rumbo creativo. Iniciaba un nuevo capítulo junto a la banda Strange Sensation, con la que exploró raíces del blues y otros sonidos alejados de la nostalgia de Zeppelin.

Foto: REUTERS
Durante la gira Dreamland, Plant evitó la presión de recrear grandes éxitos del pasado. Eligió enfocar su energía artística en propuestas diferentes y así quedó reflejado en ese gesto simbólico: un portazo a “Stairway to Heaven”, pagando una suma para nunca oírla en esa emisora.
La historia confirma la relación singular que muchos artistas desarrollan con sus obras más famosas. En ocasiones, la demanda del público y de los medios puede volver agotador un éxito que, en su día, representó un hito en sus carreras.

Según Kenwyn House, guitarrista del evento benéfico en el que Plant volvió a cantar el tema en 2023, la interpretación en Oxfordshire partió de una subasta entre donantes. Alguien ofreció una suma significativa para escuchar la canción en vivo y el dinero benefició a una causa solidaria.
“Me gustaba la ideología de la canción, pero odiaba la idea de convertirla en un himno estático en cada concierto”, aseguró Plant. En 2007, durante el Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert de Londres, Led Zeppelin se reunió y él accedió a interpretarla, comprendiendo el valor excepcional del momento.

La reacción de Plant en Oregón representa un ejemplo inusual del poder transformador de la música en la vida de sus propios creadores. Optó por el humor y la decisión firme, priorizando el presente sobre la nostalgia. El episodio deja ver el lado humano detrás de la leyenda: la preferencia de seguir adelante antes que quedar atrapado en la repetición de un único éxito.
Esta experiencia destaca la singular conexión de Plant con su mayor clásico. Tras medio siglo de impacto cultural, el músico eligió el silencio sobre la repetición y confirmó, una vez más, la esencia inquieta que guía a los grandes artistas.
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Jack Smith says key Jan 6 witness relied on hearsay, lacked firsthand evidence

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Former special counsel Jack Smith undercut claims made by Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide and Jan. 6 Committee witness, while testifying in a recent deposition to Congress.
Smith told the House Judiciary Committee this month that he evaluated Hutchinson’s explosive claims as part of his investigation and prosecution of President Donald Trump related to the 2020 election, according to a transcript published Wednesday.
Smith said they had deficiencies because Hutchinson did not offer firsthand information.
Asked during the deposition how he would have approached cross-examining Hutchinson, Smith said he would have moved to prohibit a portion of her testimony from being used.
JACK SMITH DENIES POLITICS PLAYED ANY ROLE IN TRUMP PROSECUTIONS AT HOUSE HEARING
Jack Smith, former special counsel, arrives for a closed-door deposition before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C., Dec. 17, 2025. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
«If I were a defense attorney and Ms. Hutchinson were a witness, the first thing I would do was seek to preclude some of her testimony because it was hearsay, and I don’t have the full range of her testimony in front of me right now, but I do remember that that was a decent part of it,» Smith said.
Smith was also asked about specific claims Hutchinson had made, including that Trump was aware that some of his supporters would be armed at his rally and that Trump attempted to grab the steering wheel of his driver out of anger.
Hutchinson «was a second or even thirdhand witness,» Smith said, adding that other witnesses gave «different perspectives» than her.

Cassidy Hutchinson, an aide to Mark Meadows when he was White House chief of staff in the Trump administration, gestures toward her neck as she retells a story involving President Trump during House Jan. 6 select committee hearing on Capitol Hill June 28, 2022. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
«We interviewed, I think, the people she talked to, and we also interviewed, if my recollection is correct, officers who were there, including the officer who was in the car,» Smith said. «And that officer, if my recollection is correct, and I want to make sure I’m right about this, said that President Trump was very angry and wanted to go to the Capitol, but the version of events that he explained was not the same as what Cassidy Hutchinson said she heard from somebody secondhand.»
Smith noted that «a number of the things that she gave evidence on were secondhand hearsay, were things that she had heard from other people and, as a result, that testimony may or may not be admissible, and it certainly wouldn’t be as powerful as firsthand testimony.»
Hutchinson became a key witness in the Democrat-led Jan. 6 Committee’s investigation into the U.S. Capitol attack, testifying privately several times and publicly. Her testimony dominated headlines, but her claims became a point of scrutiny for Republicans, who found the committee’s work lacked credibility because its only Republican members were two vocal anti-Trump lawmakers.
Hutchinson served as a top aide to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in the final months of Trump’s first presidency, giving her an inside look at internal discussions among White House officials in the aftermath of the 2020 election.
JACK SMITH SUBPOENAED FOR DEPOSITION WITH HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE

The Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol in 2021. (Julio Cortez, File)
In a highly publicized hearing in June 2022, Hutchinson testified under oath about what she said were warnings inside the White House about the possibility of violence on Jan. 6 and Trump’s alleged awareness that some supporters attending his rally would be armed.
In another claim that was later disputed by other witnesses, Hutchinson also recalled conversations about how Trump attempted to grab the steering wheel from a U.S. Secret Service agent because he wanted to go to the Capitol and not the West Wing.
Hutchinson testified that she was told that the president «said something to the effect of, ‘I’m the effing president, take me up to the Capitol now,’ to which [the agent] responded, ‘Sir, we have to go back to the West Wing.’ The president reached up towards the front of the vehicle to grab at the steering wheel.»
Hutchinson had not mentioned that particular story in any of her prior interviews with the committee. She later said she withheld it at the direction of her former lawyer, Stefan Passantino.
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Smith was asked about Hutchinson as part of a more than eight-hour closed-door deposition this month that centered on his investigations and prosecutions of Trump related to the 2020 election and Trump’s alleged retention of classified material.
Smith defended his investigative practices, including subpoenaing Senate and House lawmakers’ phone data. He also defended some of his prosecutorial decisions, including seeking gag orders against Trump and bringing an unusually slimmed-down superseding indictment against Trump after the Supreme Court ruled that Trump had some presidential immunity protections.
justice department,capitol protests,congress,washington dc,politics
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Netanyahu warns of ‘eighth front’ ideological battle for American hearts and minds with Christian leaders

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used a meeting with Evangelical Christian leaders in Florida today to underscore Israel’s reliance on faith-based allies in the United States, as divisions inside the U.S. over Israel’s war and U.S. support continue to surface.
The meeting came days after Netanyahu held talks on Monday with President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, amid growing debate within conservative circles over the scope of American backing for Israel and the direction of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.
Speaking to the leaders, Netanyahu said Israel has emerged «in many ways victorious» from what he described as a «seven-front war,» but warned that an additional front now looms in the West.
ISRAELI HOSTAGES FREED, IRAN HIT, CEASEFIRE HELD — 2025 SHATTERED IDEA THAT US WAS EXITING THE MIDDLE EAST
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with leaders of the Evangelical Christian community in Florida, accompanied by members of the Israeli delegation. (Amos Ben Gershom / GPO)
«There’s an eighth front,» he said, describing a struggle «for the hearts and minds of people, especially young people in the West, and for me especially in the United States.» He framed that effort not only as Israel’s fight, but as a broader one. «It’s our common Judeo-Christian civilization’s battle,» he said.
The prime minister argued that this ideological front requires the same resolve as military action. «There are some people who believe that faith should be silent and terrorism should be understood,» Netanyahu said. «Faith should speak its voice and terrorism should be confronted, not understood, confronted and defeated.»

Pro-Palestinian Muslim protesters hold a banner saying «From the river to the sea..» and chant at a demonstration calling for an end to Israeli attacks on Gaza. London, UK, Dec. 9, 2023. ( Andy Soloman/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Netanyahu repeatedly emphasized the historical and ideological bond between Christian Zionists and Israel. «You are representatives of the Christian Zionists who made Jewish Zionism possible,» Netanyahu said, crediting U.S. Christian support as central to the reestablishment of the Jewish state. «I can say that we have no better friends.»
TRUMP PICK FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM ENVOY VISITS HOLY LAND, CITES STRONG US-ISRAEL BOND

President Donald Trump listens as Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during an arrival at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, on Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (Alex Brandon/AP)
Netanyahu told the group he had spoken with Trump the day before and described what he sees as global threats facing Israel and its allies. He pointed to «two forces,» identifying «radical Shiite Islam,» led by Iran, and «radical Sunni Islam,» which he said is led by the Muslim Brotherhood.
He also highlighted persecution of Christians in multiple regions, saying Christians are being targeted «in Syria, in Lebanon, in Nigeria, in Turkey, and beyond,» while arguing that Israel plays a unique protective role. «One country protects the Christian community, enables it to grow, defends it, and makes sure that it thrives,» Netanyahu said. «That country is Israel. There is no other. None.»
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People hold an Israeli and US flag in front of a large group of anti-Israel protesters march outside The Grove shopping center on Black Friday, carrying a giant banner reading «Shut it Down for Palestine» in Los Angeles, Nov. 24, 2023. (David Swanson/AFP via Getty Images)
Netanyahu said Israel is working toward broader cooperation to assist Christian communities under threat worldwide. «We are joining an effort to have basically a United Nations of countries that support Christian communities around the world,» he said, adding, «Just as you are helping us, we want to help back.»
Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, who attended the meeting, later wrote on X that Evangelical leaders’ commitment to Israel was «inspiring» and said shared values would «fortify the bond between both our nations.»
benjamin netanyahu,israel,donald trump,evangelical,christianity,wars
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