Iran News in Brief – June 15, 2026 – National Council of Resistance of Iran – NCRI

Home Latest News Iran News in Brief – June 15, 2026 – National Council of Resistance of Iran – NCRI
Iran News in Brief – June 15, 2026 – National Council of Resistance of Iran – NCRI

UPDATE: 2:00 PM CEST
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Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), reacted to the news of a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran on Sunday. “The Iranian Resistance, which for nearly five decades has sought freedom and peace, welcomes any understanding to end the war and the suffering of the Iranian people. In Iran, no one except the remnants of the mullahs and the Shah has wanted or wants war,” she said in a statement obtained by Just the News.
“The effort to produce nuclear weapons, warmongering, and meddling in the countries of the region are part of the survival strategy of the religious fascism ruling Iran, and it will not abandon them as long as it can,” she added.
She said that war is the regime’s “shield against popular uprisings, while peace and a ceasefire are, as Khomeini put it, like ‘poison’ for it.”
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UPDATE: 7:00 AM CEST

On June 12, 2026, the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) Resistance Units launched a widespread, highly coordinated anti-repression campaign across Iran. Marking the 45th anniversary of the historic June 20, 1981 uprising, these activists took to the streets to express their solidarity with the upcoming rally of the Iranian Resistance.
Operating under an atmosphere of severe domestic suppression, the Resistance Units and rebellious youth successfully executed simultaneous operations in Tehran and 16 other major cities. This nationwide campaign spanned across key provincial capitals and cities, including Karaj, Mashhad, Isfahan, Shiraz, Zahedan, and Qazvin. The actions serve as a stark reminder to the ruling clerics that the resistance movement remains deeply rooted inside the country and possesses the operational capacity to openly challenge the regime’s authority.
During the June 12 campaign, Resistance Units members utilized a variety of tactics to broadcast their anti-regime messages in public spaces, parks, and highways. Their activities included holding placards, installing posters of Iranian Resistance leader Massoud Rajavi and NCRI president-elect Maryam Rajavi, painting graffiti, and distributing flyers.
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Forough Khosravi, a primary school teacher from Behbahan who worked in schools in Aghajari, has been dismissed from the Ministry of Education. According to her newly issued employment ruling, her employment status has been terminated under the designation “contract cancellation.”
The decision was communicated even though Khosravi had previously been sentenced in a separate case to a four-month temporary suspension from her teaching position. Her dismissal was carried out without following standard legal procedures and was based solely on a confidential letter. According to individuals close to her, she was never provided with a copy of the document.
Forough Khosravi had previously faced both judicial and security-related cases. A 15-year prison sentence issued against her in one case was suspended, while in another case she was sentenced to a four-month temporary suspension from public service due to her online activities and the expression of her views.
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MEK demonstration
For more than four decades, the Mullahs’ regime has relied on a single narrative to explain the events of June 20, 1981: that the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) abruptly abandoned politics and launched an armed uprising against the state. This account has been repeated through state media, school textbooks, official speeches, and regime-sponsored films, becoming a central pillar of the regime’s historical propaganda.
Yet a closer examination of historical documents, eyewitness testimonies, and even statements made by former regime officials paints a very different picture. Rather than demonstrating that the PMOI initiated violence, the historical record suggests that armed resistance emerged only after years of systematic repression, political exclusion, and state-sponsored violence had effectively eliminated all peaceful avenues of opposition.
Between February 1979 and June 1981, a period commonly referred to by supporters of the Iranian Resistance as the “political phase,” the PMOI pursued a strategy based on peaceful political participation. The organization took part in elections, published newspapers and political analyses, organized public meetings, and sought to operate within the political framework that emerged after the fall of the Shah.
During this period, however, the newly established clerical regime increasingly moved to monopolize power. Political pluralism was gradually suppressed, independent voices were marginalized, and opposition organizations faced growing restrictions.
According to numerous historical accounts, by the late 1970s and early 1980s dozens of PMOI members and supporters had already been killed in attacks by security forces and pro-regime vigilante groups. Thousands more were arrested, assaulted, or injured while selling publications, participating in meetings, or engaging in political activities.
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How Iran's Regime Profits From a Housing Crisis That Is Tearing Society Apart
Iran’s rental housing market has become one of the most severe sources of economic pressure on households, as soaring rents, declining purchasing power, and years of inflation continue to erode living standards across the country. For millions of Iranians, securing adequate housing has evolved from a basic necessity into a daily struggle for survival.
In the latest acknowledgment of the crisis, Abdoljalal Iri, a member of the Iranian Parliament’s Civil Engineering Commission, stated that in some cities more than 70 percent of household income is now spent on rent. His remarks highlight the growing burden facing tenants and underscore the extent to which housing costs have outpaced earnings.
According to Iri, the relentless rise in rental prices has significantly reduced families’ ability to pay for other essential needs, including food, healthcare, education, and transportation. He also noted that many tenants have been forced to leave their neighborhoods and relocate to suburban areas, smaller apartments, or lower-quality housing in an effort to reduce costs.
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As reports of a final agreement between Iran’s regime and the United States grow louder, signs of a deep political crisis within the ruling establishment have also become more apparent. Disputes over the terms of a potential agreement have moved beyond closed-door discussions and have now spilled into street gatherings, official regime platforms, and media outlets affiliated with various regime factions.
On the evening of June 13, groups of hardline supporters of the regime held nighttime gatherings in Tehran and several other cities, strongly opposing the negotiation process and the officials involved in it. At Ibn Sina Square in Tehran, slogans such as “Ghalibaf, Araghchi, what about my leader’s blood?”, “Araghchi, have some shame, leave America alone,” “Death to Araghchi, dishonorable infiltrator,” and “Ghalibaf, Araghchi, resign, resign” dominated the gathering.
The anger of the regime-aligned protesters reached such a level that some speakers and participants accused government officials and the negotiating team of “treason” and attacked them with unusually harsh language. One protester outside the Foreign Ministry angrily insulted Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s regime foreign minister, blaming him for the country’s political deadlocks.
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Aarhus, Denmark – June 13, 2026: In the lead-up to the grand June 20 rally in Paris, supporters of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) have launched activities in Aarhus to promote the event. Meanwhile, supporters in Aarhus are urging freedom-loving Iranians to join the June 20 Free Iran Rally, where 100,000 participants are expected to gather at Place Vauban in Paris’s 7th district, calling for an end to executions and expressing support for a democratic republic in Iran.
The June 20 Free Iran rally in Paris, to be held under the slogan “A Democratic Republic for Iran,” will reject both monarchical and theocratic dictatorships, emphasizing a third alternative based on democracy and popular sovereignty.
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Malmö, Sweden – June 13, 2026: Supporters of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) held a rally to protest the execution of political prisoners in Iran, including PMOI members and protesters detained during the January 2026 uprising.
Supporters of the Iranian Resistance expressed full backing for the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and the provisional government framework presented by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the NCRI. This framework is based on the Iranian Resistance’s Ten-Point Plan for establishing a democratic republic in Iran.
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Also, read Iran News in Brief – June 14, 2026
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