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Inside Tehran: Iranian Woman Shares Harrowing Experience Amidst Strikes, Checkpoints, and Human Shield Tactics

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An Iranian woman, choosing to remain anonymous, has courageously shared insights on the current situation in Tehran, as President Donald Trump’s two-week ceasefire with Iran cautiously commenced on Tuesday.

In her essay featured in The Australian, she paints a vivid picture of the nightly explosions, numerous checkpoints, and communications outages that have become the norm in Iran since the United States and Israel began their operations in February.

“In essence, civilians have been transformed into human shields amidst an expansive militarized environment,” she explained, noting that “a widespread feeling of anger, paranoia, and fatigue has gripped the population.”

The Iranian regime’s blatant public executions of thousands of protesters in January prompted citizens to initially welcome the strikes from U.S. and Israeli forces when Operation Epic Fury was launched on February 28.

Iranians gathering in Enqelab Square to react to a ceasefire announcement.

Following the ceasefire announcement, Iranians gathered at Enqelab Square in Tehran on Wednesday. The U.S. and Iran reached a two-week ceasefire agreement on Tuesday, just an hour before President Donald Trump’s deadline for potential military action was set to expire. As part of the agreement, Tehran temporarily reopened the crucial Strait of Hormuz. (AFP via Getty Images)

“They say they’ve hit the leader’s residence,” the author’s daughter was quoted saying. “All the children were screaming and cheering. … Even our teacher was quietly snapping their fingers and dancing.”

The author described everyday Iranians celebrating the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei that same Saturday, and the streets of Tehran filling with cheers of “death to the dictator.”

“Perhaps for the first time,” the anonymous author recalled, “we allowed ourselves to believe our long-held dream was beginning to take shape.”

A woman sitting on rubble in front of a building in Tehran.

A woman sits on rubble across from a building damaged during airstrikes March 12 in Tehran, Iran. (Vahid Salemi/AP)

But soon enough, the reality of day-to-day life under a threatened, crumbling regime and ongoing attacks took a toll. One of the harshest realities those on the ground in Iran face is the internet blackout, effectively ending communications with the outside world and leading to great uncertainty at the hands of the regime.

“So far, none of those close to us have suffered physical harm, but no night is calm,” the Iranian woman wrote. “What weighs most heavily is not only the war itself, but the possibility that it may end leaving behind a regime even more authoritarian, more repressive and more violent.”

According to the author, a stubborn faction of regime supporters remain, blasting propaganda on loudspeakers nightly through the streets of Tehran and reinforcing its authority to those who support the revolution.

Rescue workers searching rubble of collapsed residential building in Tehran

Rescue workers search through the rubble of a collapsed building after an airstrike March 27 in Tehran, Iran.  (Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)

“The streets are now covered with checkpoints,” she wrote. “Under bridges and along main roads, movement is restricted. Long traffic lines form. Young people are stopped, their phones inspected under the pretext of routine checks.”

After the announcement of the ceasefire between U.S. forces and the Iranian regime Tuesday, the author said, most of her country went to sleep that night in a “state of deep anxiety.”

“What weighs most heavily is not only the war itself, but the possibility that it may end up leaving behind a regime even more authoritarian, more repressive, and more violent,” the author notes.

She urged a ceasefire that is not “abandonment,” but peace, destabilizing the Iranian regime.

“A ceasefire that stabilizes the current order, without addressing the demands that have brought Iranians into the streets for years, risks being experienced not as peace, but as abandonment,” the author wrote.

Negotiations between Iran and the U.S. are scheduled to begin Friday in Pakistan.

“We wait, and we continue, in whatever ways possible, to insist that light will eventually overcome this darkness,” she concluded.

The Australian notes the author remains anonymous for “fear of retribution.”

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