Iranian Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi has given an interview to Saudi-owned pan-Arab daily Asharq Al-Awsat that's being quoted from by international agencies.
Here's Reuters:
Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi urged the people of Iran to engage in civil disobedience and press on with nationwide protests that are posing the boldest challenge to its leaders since pro-reform unrest in 2009....
London-based Ebadi, awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 and one of a number of exiled critics of Iran’s leadership, called on Iranians to stop paying water, gas and electricity bills and taxes.
She also urged them to withdraw their money from state banks to exert economic pressure on the government and so force it to stop resorting to violence and to meet their demands.
“If the government has not listened to you for 38 years, your role has come to ignore what the government says to you now,” the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat quoted Ebadi as saying in an interview.
From our newsroom:
Pence Says U.S. Is 'Natural Ally' For Iranians Seeking Freedom
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence is calling on young Iranians involved in street protests against the government in Tehran to view the United States as a "natural ally" in their quest for freedom and democracy.
In an interview at the White House with Voice of America on January 3, Pence said "the American people stand with freedom-loving people in Iran and around the world, and I think this is a very hopeful moment."
"My goal…really my prayer, is that the people of Iran -- a youthful population, a well-educated population -- understand that the United States of America, the people of this country, are their natural ally. We want to see them achieve a free and democratic future. We want to see them step away from a regime that continues to menace the world."
Pence repeatedly contrasted the support for Iranian protesters being offered by U.S. President Donald Trump and his administration to the silence at the White House when antigovernment protests broke out in Iran in 2009, early in the presidency of Barack Obama.
MORE...
More on that news about three deaths from the intelligence forces:
In an unconfirmed report, the semiofficial Mehr news agency said three members of Iran's intelligence forces had been killed in clashes in the western city of Piranshahr.
However, Mehr later reported a statement by Iran's hard-line Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) as saying the clashes were along the border with Iraqi Kurdistan and not thought to be related to the protests.
Just in from RFE/RL's News Desk, with possible new U.S. sanctions and three members of Iran's intelligence forces reported killed:
A senior U.S. administration official says the United States is considering imposing new sanctions on Iran over its crackdown on antigovernment protests, which have led to clashes between demonstrators and security forces and left at least 22 people dead.
The French AFP news agency quoted an unnamed senior U.S. administration official on January 3 as saying, “We are looking across the board.”
"That requires information, but there is a lot of information out there, so we intend to start assembling that and see what we can do."
The official said the United States would "use all the information sources at our disposal to be able to get actionable information about who is doing the crackdown, who is violating human rights, who is using violence against protesters, and to feed that in to our sanctions designation machinery."
Antigovernment protests have led to unrest and clashes since beginning on December 28 in the country's second-largest city, Mashhad, initially over complaints of rising costs. Meanwhile, thousands of people also have begun rallying in support of Tehran's government in many cities.
In an unconfirmed report, the semiofficial Mehr news agency said three members of Iran's intelligence forces had been killed in clashes in the western city of Piranshahr.
The Mehr report cited a statement by Iran's hard-line Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), which said the three died "in a fight with antirevolutionary elements" without providing further detail.
Quiet In Tehran
'Something Bigger?'
Scott Lucas, an Iran specialist at Birmingham University in Britain and editor of the EA World View website:
There is also a demonstration in the Swedish capital, Stockholm in support of the antigovernment protesters in Iran.
Iranian citizens protesting outside the Iranian embassy in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta.
The Hard-Liner Tehran Blames For Igniting Iran's Protest Anger
By Golnaz Esfandiari
Once he decided to publicly address the antiestablishment unrest that's been roiling Iran since late last month, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on January 2 blamed foreign "enemies."
But reports claiming that an ultra-hard-line cleric and Khamenei ally in Iran's fundamentalist heartland has been summoned by the powerful national security council suggested that some elements of Iran's leadership think the initial cause might lie closer to home.
The cleric, Ayatollah Ahmad Alamolhoda, is a staunch critic of President Hassan Rohani, who came to power and won reelection last year pressing for mild social reforms and an opening up of Iranian society.