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WINTERFYLLETH Sign To Napalm Records, Announce New Album The Unyielding Season

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Napalm Records has announced the signing of UK black metal legends Winterfylleth, marking a major new chapter for the long-running band. To celebrate the partnership, the group have revealed details of their ninth studio album, The Unyielding Season, set for release on March 27, 2026.

Described as both a reflection and a rebellion, The Unyielding Season is positioned as a bold social commentary, wrapped in Winterfylleth‘s signature blend of meticulously crafted poetry and prose. Where the band’s previous album, The Imperious Horizon, focused on “an ominous, malevolent force, lurking in the distance,” the new record explores what happens when that looming threat becomes reality.

If The Imperious Horizon was calculating and ice-cold, The Unyielding Season is presented as its raging wildfire counterpart — a furious response to the pressures and fears weighing down modern life. The album stands as a cry against “the unsustainable weight of fear and pressure being pushed into the world, by the agents of an unresting, and unyielding force for evil.”

The first glimpse of the new era arrives in the form of “Heroes of a Hundred Fields”, a rousing battle hymn that weaves an epic narrative of unity and resistance. The track frames its message through a wartime lens, depicting individuals joining together against a powerful oppressor in the fight for freedom.

Winterfylleth say of the song: “‘Heroes of a Hundred Fields’ is framed in a wartime, battlefield setting and uses the premise of soldiers coming together, united as brothers, to fight against a foe who are powerful, oppressive, and domineering. It talks about how people should come together and fight for the freedoms they have and not succumb to those who would attack them and try to weaken them (or take them away entirely).”

They continue: “There have been so many ideas and schemes pushed into the world over the last few years that only serve to erode people’s personal freedoms, slowly, little-by-little, until they are gone. This song talks about ‘lighting the beacons of rebellion’ against those who would seek to undermine the way of life and freedom that we all – hopefully – hold dear.”

An official video for “Heroes of a Hundred Fields” accompanies the release, offering the first visual insight into The Unyielding Season‘s infernal world.

Looking at the album as a whole, Winterfylleth frame 2026 as a pivotal moment in their history. “2026 marks a year of big changes for Winterfylleth! A new label, a new member, a new album, and the landmark of 20 years making music together,” the band explain. “We are enthused by what this new chapter will bring, and as a result, we are now able to share our ninth album, The Unyielding Season, with the world.”

They add that the album serves as both warning and source of strength: “In many ways, the new album is a reflection on – and a rebellion against – the turmoil’s and fears that are tearing the lives of many individuals apart. It is a cry against the unsustainable & constant weight of malevolence and pressure being pushed into the world by agents of an un-resting and unyielding force for evil.”

Concluding, the band express their hope for how the record will resonate: “We hope the album resonates with you, stirs your soul, and gives you a source for hope. But, we also hope it makes you ask questions of your own circumstances and gives you pause to consider the unnerving state of the world we all share.”

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Adidas Shares Gain After Buyback Plan, Revenue Rise

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The €1 billion share buyback reflects positive brand momentum and cash-flow generation, robust fundamentals and management confidence, the company said.



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Tennis expert reveals Australian Open men’s semifinal picks, bets, predictions

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The 2026 Australian Open men’s semifinals continue at 3:30 a.m. ET on Friday morning, as 10-time champion Novak Djokovic faces defending champion Jannik Sinner. Djokovic is currently in the longest Grand Slam title drought of his career, and he has not won a set since the third round. He got a walkover in the fourth round before Lorenzo Musetti retired up 2-0 in the quarterfinals. Sinner is on a 12-match winning streak against top-10 opponents, losing just two sets across those matches.    

Sinner is the -1400 favorite in the Australian Open odds, while Djokovic is the +800 underdog. Before locking in your Australian Open picks for the first Grand Slam of the season, be sure to check out the top tennis betting picks from SportsLine expert Jose Onorato.

New users can target the all-new DraftKings promo code, which offers $300 in bonus bets if your first $5 bet wins:

Onorato has gone 168-106-8 (+107.12 units) on his best bets since 2022. He correctly called Jannik Sinner in the 2025 Australian Open (+160), Carlos Alcaraz (+130) in the 2025 French Open and Sinner again at 2025 Wimbledon (+180). He also called Coco Gauff (+700) in the 2025 French Open and Iga Swiatek (+1200) at 2025 Wimbledon. Anybody following his tennis betting picks at sportsbooks and on betting sites could have seen strong returns.

New users can also target the BetMGM bonus code, which offers up to $1,500 in bonus bets if your first bet loses:

Australian Open men’s semifinal best bets:

  • Sinner -2.5 sets vs. Djokovic (-130) 

Sinner -2.5 sets vs. Djokovic (-130)

“Sinner has completely taken control of this rivalry, winning the last five meetings and doing so convincingly, including three straight-set wins,” Onorato said. “His level in Melbourne has once again been flawless. He is the two-time defending champion, riding a 20-match winning streak at the Australian Open, and has not dropped a set in this tournament. Sinner has dictated from the baseline with depth and pace, consistently taking time away from opponents and forcing errors early in rallies. 

“Djokovic, on the other hand, has not looked like the same physical force we are used to seeing in Melbourne. His path to the semifinals was helped by Musetti’s retirement, and even before that his movement and consistency showed cracks, especially in longer exchanges. Against Sinner, those margins matter. Sinner’s improved serve, elite returning, and ability to absorb and redirect pace neutralize Djokovic’s strengths and push him into defensive positions. Unless Djokovic finds a level we have not yet seen, this matchup strongly favors Sinner controlling the match from the start.”

New users can get a first bet matched up to $250 with the latest Caesars promo code. You can claim the offer here:

Want more Australian Open picks?

You’ve seen Onorato’s top bets for the 2026 Australian Open men’s semifinals. Now, get access to the exclusive SportsLine Discord, where Onorato and Blake Von Hagen (+60.3u in 2025) share daily tennis best bets and analysis. Click here to join SportsLine and link your account with Discord. 





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Jordan Chiles Olympic medal dispute goes back to Swiss court

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A gymnastics medal disputed by the United States and Romania at the 2024 Paris Olympics is heading for a fresh legal review in a Swiss court.Switzerland’s supreme court said on Thursday its judges sent the “highly exceptional circumstances” of the bronze medal awarded in the women’s floor exercise back to the Court of Arbitration for Sport to examine new evidence.Video above: USA Gymnastics pursuing all avenues to keep Jordan Chiles’ bronze medal after appeal deniedThe outcome of an event that created a celebrated Olympic photo featuring bronze medalist Jordan Chiles and silver medalist Simone Biles rests on just a handful of seconds: Can the U.S. team prove it made a timely appeal in the Olympic arena on behalf of Chiles?The federal judges’ ruling suggested Chiles could regain the bronze medal she originally got in Paris after challenging her judged score.At the medal ceremony, teammates Chiles and Biles kneeled to acclaim gold medalist Rebeca Andrade of Brazil as she stepped on the podium.Chiles’ third-place finish was overturned within days on appeal by the Romania team to the CAS’ Olympic court in Paris. The medal was awarded in Bucharest the next week to Ana Maria Barbosu.The federal court wants CAS to examine a recording that could show the original U.S. challenge of the judged score was within a one-minute deadline on the field of play.”In the highly exceptional circumstances of the case in question,” the Swiss Federal Tribunal said in a statement, “it considers that there is a likelihood for the audio-visual recording of the final on Aug. 5, 2024 to lead to a modification of the contested award in favor of the applicant (Chiles).”The CAS said in a statement Thursday it “can now ensure a thorough judicial review of the new evidence that has since been made available.”The court based in Lausanne, across the Olympics’ home city from the supreme court, gave no timetable for the review. It likely will take at least one year to prepare and process before a verdict is ready.Still, the federal court’s decision has given Chiles renewed hope of keeping her medal and putting the controversy behind her.”We are delighted that the Swiss Federal Supreme Court has righted a wrong and given Jordan the chance she deserves to reclaim her bronze medal,” Maurice M. Suh, part of the legal team representing Chiles, said in a statement. “As the Court recognized, there is ‘conclusive’ video evidence that Jordan was the rightful winner of the bronze medal.”Suh added that Chiles will “fight vigorously” and is grateful to have a “full and fair opportunity to defend her bronze medal.”Chiles, now 24, has pressed forward with her life after dealing with significant online backlash — some of it racially tinged — in the immediate aftermath.She returned to compete collegiately at UCLA while also leaning into her burgeoning celebrity, participating on the reality competition “Dancing With the Stars,” posing for the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, and is currently featured in a commercial for a female athleisure apparel line that also includes tennis icon Serena Williams and track star Sha’Carri Richardson.Graves reported from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

A gymnastics medal disputed by the United States and Romania at the 2024 Paris Olympics is heading for a fresh legal review in a Swiss court.

Switzerland’s supreme court said on Thursday its judges sent the “highly exceptional circumstances” of the bronze medal awarded in the women’s floor exercise back to the Court of Arbitration for Sport to examine new evidence.

Video above: USA Gymnastics pursuing all avenues to keep Jordan Chiles’ bronze medal after appeal denied

The outcome of an event that created a celebrated Olympic photo featuring bronze medalist Jordan Chiles and silver medalist Simone Biles rests on just a handful of seconds: Can the U.S. team prove it made a timely appeal in the Olympic arena on behalf of Chiles?

The federal judges’ ruling suggested Chiles could regain the bronze medal she originally got in Paris after challenging her judged score.

At the medal ceremony, teammates Chiles and Biles kneeled to acclaim gold medalist Rebeca Andrade of Brazil as she stepped on the podium.

Chiles’ third-place finish was overturned within days on appeal by the Romania team to the CAS’ Olympic court in Paris. The medal was awarded in Bucharest the next week to Ana Maria Barbosu.

The federal court wants CAS to examine a recording that could show the original U.S. challenge of the judged score was within a one-minute deadline on the field of play.

“In the highly exceptional circumstances of the case in question,” the Swiss Federal Tribunal said in a statement, “it considers that there is a likelihood for the audio-visual recording of the final on Aug. 5, 2024 to lead to a modification of the contested award in favor of the applicant (Chiles).”

The CAS said in a statement Thursday it “can now ensure a thorough judicial review of the new evidence that has since been made available.”

FILE - Silver medalist Simone Biles, of the United States, left, and bronze medalist Jordan Chiles, of the United States, right, bow to gold medalist Rebeca Andrade, of Brazil, during the medal ceremony for the women's artistic gymnastics individual floor finals at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France.

Abbie Parr

FILE – Silver medalist Simone Biles, of the United States, left, and bronze medalist Jordan Chiles, of the United States, right, bow to gold medalist Rebeca Andrade, of Brazil, during the medal ceremony for the women’s artistic gymnastics individual floor finals at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France.

The court based in Lausanne, across the Olympics’ home city from the supreme court, gave no timetable for the review. It likely will take at least one year to prepare and process before a verdict is ready.

Still, the federal court’s decision has given Chiles renewed hope of keeping her medal and putting the controversy behind her.

“We are delighted that the Swiss Federal Supreme Court has righted a wrong and given Jordan the chance she deserves to reclaim her bronze medal,” Maurice M. Suh, part of the legal team representing Chiles, said in a statement. “As the Court recognized, there is ‘conclusive’ video evidence that Jordan was the rightful winner of the bronze medal.”

Suh added that Chiles will “fight vigorously” and is grateful to have a “full and fair opportunity to defend her bronze medal.”

Chiles, now 24, has pressed forward with her life after dealing with significant online backlash — some of it racially tinged — in the immediate aftermath.

She returned to compete collegiately at UCLA while also leaning into her burgeoning celebrity, participating on the reality competition “Dancing With the Stars,” posing for the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, and is currently featured in a commercial for a female athleisure apparel line that also includes tennis icon Serena Williams and track star Sha’Carri Richardson.

Graves reported from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania



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Rubio says U.S. doesn’t expect to take further military action in Venezuela “at any time”

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Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat, reminded Rubio that the purpose of congressional oversight is to “encourage, if necessary to compel, consultation between the administration and Congress.”

“Of course, the commander in chief has, under Article II, the power to defend the American people against an imminent threat, or an incoming attack. How else could we be kept safe,” Coons said. “But our Article I power requires consultation.”

Coons called the Maduro capture “flawlessly executed,” but also said that it was a “dangerous and high risk maneuver.”

“I am glad that it ended as well as it possibly could,” Coons said. “But the point here, that I want to make first, is that it was rehearsed for months.”

Coons emphasized, “if there was time to practice, there was time to consult.”

Rubio acknowledged that consultation with Congress has been a “point of tension” in this administration and others. But he argued that “this is a very unique situation that we faced here.”

“The truth of the matter is that this mission could not have been briefed to Congress because it wasn’t even in the realm of possible until very late in December, when all of our efforts to negotiate with Maduro had failed, and the president was finally presented these options that made these decision,” Rubio said.

Rubio added, “it was also a trigger-based operation. It may never have happened. It required a number of factors to all align at the right place, at the right time, in a very limited window.”

He said despite the efforts to keep the mission “quite constrained,” it was ultimately leaked by a Pentagon contractor. And had it been published, he said lives would have been endangered or the ability to carry out the mission forfeited.

“This is a real tension and one that I’m doing the best that I can to manage,” Rubio said. 

Coons responded that “the Gang of Eight has never leaked.”

“It is critical that you consult with Congress,” Coons said. “For us to be safe our allies have to trust us, and for this committee to do our work, we have to trust you.”



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‘McArthur’ Mystery Revealed — We Missed a Big Clue!

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Hardy shared a little bit more detail about the top-secret mystery that he, Morgan Wallen, Eric Church and Tim McGraw have been teasing this week.

And, well — in hindsight, it seems so obvious that we should have known all along what was coming.

On Thursday morning (Jan. 29), the four artists shared a social media update that seemed to reveal a song snippet, plus some lyrics, from a new collaborative song dropping at midnight.

The cover art, bearing the last name McArthur and a design of the heartbeat pattern of an ECG, goes along with the song teases all four artists posted to their social accounts earlier in the week.

“When you pass on, what you gonna pass down?” the caption reads.

The Obvious Clue That We All Missed About Morgan Wallen, Tim McGraw, Eric Church + Hardy’s New “McArthur” Project

When the teases first started rolling in, we guessed that the foursome had a song in store — and that guess now seems correct, with a snippet of that unreleased song now posted.

Read More: 5 Guesses About What Tim McGraw, Eric Church, Morgan Wallen + Hardy Are Teasing

We also knew that a song called “McArthur” was registered to ASCAP, with Hardy credited as a songwriter and no performers publicly attached. That tidbit was first discovered by a German Morgan Wallen fan account.

Hardy Morgan Wallen Eric Church Tim McGraw Song Tease

@wallanteers_germany, Instagram

But the song tease brings something else to light. This is a song about fatherhood, and about what you pass down to your kids and grandkids after you die.

Even before the lyrics highlighted that theme, we should’ve been able to put two and two together. The last name, McArthur, was a tip-off that this song is a family story.

Caleigh Hardy, Instagram

Caleigh Hardy, Instagram

We knew that Hardy was a writer on the song, and we also knew that he’s a new dad. He and his wife Caleigh welcomed their first child, baby girl Rosie, last March. Though Hardy’s said he “doesn’t want to force” writing songs about being a dad, he has admitted “the ideas are there” and all but said that parenting would probably work its way into his songwriting at some point.

Read More: Morgan Wallen Confronts His Past in a Song For His Son

It also makes sense that he would take a song inspired by parenthood to these specific three collaborators. McGraw, Church and Wallen are all dads, too. They’ve all written or recorded dad-centric material in the past.

We’ve Still Got One Big Question About Morgan Wallen, Eric Church, Tim McGraw + Hardy’s Collab

According to the artists’ first posts teasing the collaboration, the four McArthur characters lived during mostly-overlapping time periods between the 1920s and today.

But they’re not a direct father-son line.

Here’s the breakdown of everybody’s dates, complete with the artist who posted each corresponding character:

John McArthur (Tim McGraw): Nov. 2, 1920 — Nov. 22, 1963
Junior McArthur (Eric Church): Sept. 20, 1945 — Apr. 4, 1967
Jones McArthur (Hardy): June 5, 1968 — Jan. 5, 2025
Hunter McArthur (Morgan Wallen): May 13, 1993

Junior could easily be John’s son, born when John was in his mid-20s. Same goes for Hunter and Jones. But Jones is definitely not Junior’s son. If Junior died in April 1967, there’s no way he could have fathered Jones, who was born the following June — 14 months later.

Intriguingly, all four artists (except for Wallen, who posted his character’s tease on Instagram Stories instead of to the grid) have now deleted those initial posts of their page.

What does it all mean, and what’s the family tie between Junior and Jones? We’ll need to wait until midnight to find out.

The 50 Saddest Country Songs of All Time

Each one of the 50 saddest country songs of all time tells a story. Some of those stories are about the pain of heartbreak, while others explore the grief of losing a loved one. Some are about more unconventional subject matter — from infertility to the loss of the beloved family dog — while others tap into the universal subjects of heartbreak and loneliness. Flip through the gallery below for a list of the saddest country songs, ever.





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Swatch Posts 2025 Revenue Decline Despite Second-Half Sales Recovery

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The Swiss watchmaker said sales fell on year despite growth in the back half of the year, adding that momentum has continued this month.



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Knueppel, Hornets overcome Flagg, Mavs in rookie showdown

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DALLAS — This was a night Cooper Flagg figures he’ll be talking about with his former Duke roommate Kon Knueppel for decades.

That’s probably true for almost everyone at the American Airlines Center who witnessed the thrilling display Thursday night in the first NBA meeting between the Rookie of the Year front-runners.

Flagg, the No. 1 pick, had 49 points, the most in NBA history by a teenager, breaking the Dallas Mavericks‘ rookie record he shared with Mark Aguirre, whose No. 24 was retired in a halftime ceremony during the game.

But Knueppel, the No. 4 pick, finished with 34 points and made the critical plays in the final moments to help the Charlotte Hornets earn a 123-121 win, their fifth straight. He forced Flagg into committing a turnover with 7.6 seconds remaining and hit the winning free throws after drawing a foul on his friend in transition.

Flagg’s tightly contested jumper bounced off the back of the rim at the buzzer.

“Just a crazy ending to a phenomenal game,” Knueppel said. “He was the best player on the floor tonight. Probably, I mean, that’s the best player that’s played against us all season. It’s just fun competing against the best, and obviously, being close with him, that kind of adds to the competitiveness. So, it was really fun.”

Flagg (-400) and Knueppel (+280) entered the night with the best odds to win Rookie of the Year, according to DraftKings Sportsbook, creating a unique buzz around a late-January game between two teams below .500. Flagg and Knueppel more than met the anticipation by becoming the first pair of college teammates to each score at least 30 points while playing against each other as rookies.

According to ESPN Research, their combined 83 points are the most by a pair of rookies in a game since Tiny Archibald and Pete Maravich combined for 91 in 1971.

“It’s incredible,” Flagg said of competing with Knueppel for Rookie of the Year. “I wouldn’t want to be in any other position. We’ll both be looking back on this night and this whole year in general for the rest of our lives, and we’ll be talking about it and stuff like that. It’s just so special to have this opportunity in general.”

Knueppel anticipates his odds to win that honor took a hit after Flagg’s record-setting performance.

“We’d both like to win, but we don’t talk about it,” said Knueppel, who is averaging 18.9 points with an effective field goal percentage of 61.1%, the best efficiency by a rookie who scored that much. “I mean, this was a heck of a game. I think he’s probably going to jump me with 49 and 10 [rebounds], but it is what it is. An award like that is cool, but whoever gets it, I’ll be happy for him.

“Who knows? I’m just glad we got the win. That matters more to me than anything else.”

Knueppel, who was 10-of-16 from the floor, set a Hornets franchise rookie record with eight 3-pointers on 12 attempts. He made his first three long-range attempts in the opening four-plus minutes of the game.

“It’s not good,” Flagg said, recalling his thoughts as Knueppel got off to a hot start. “I played with him last year, and when he sees some easy ones go in to start the game, it’s never a good thing. That’s how it is with a lot of great shooters. You never want to let him tee up open shots and start a game and get into a rhythm.”

Flagg, who moved past Knueppel as the rookie scoring leader at 19.5 points per game, got rolling in the second quarter with 23 points. He had 40 by the end of the third, joining LeBron James and Anthony Edwards as the only teenagers in NBA history to record multiple 40-point performances.

The stage was set for Flagg to finish his spectacular performance in storybook fashion. He hit a pull-up 3 with 33.5 seconds left to tie the score at 121-121 and grabbed a defensive rebound on the ensuing possession. But the Hornets schemed to keep Flagg from being the hero, doubling him to force the ball out of his hands as he dribbled several feet above the 3-point arc. Knueppel timed his double-team well, deflecting Flagg’s pass, and their fellow former Duke teammate Sion James saved the ball to Knueppel to start a fast break.

“By no surprise, our guy ends up making the biggest play of the game down the stretch and just continue to impact winning,” said Hornets coach Charles Lee, who praised Knueppel’s defensive effort pregame. “[He had] the instincts to come and double-team, seeing a situation where the floor is balanced in a way that that’s probably the right spot to bring a double. A guy has 49 points, so you want to try to slow him down, obviously, and make somebody else have to beat you at that point of the game.”

Flagg, the league’s youngest player at 19, took fault for poor execution with the game on the line.

“I’m trying to learn still end-of-game situations,” said Flagg, who swapped jerseys postgame with Hornets rookie Liam McNeeley, his high school teammate at Montverde Academy. “I’m always trying to get better. That’s something I don’t want to say I struggle with, but I have seen a ton of double-teams and stuff, so just figuring out how I can be effective in those moments. It’s got to be a lot better.”

Flagg finished 20-of-29 from the floor, becoming the first rookie with at least 20 made field goals since Milwaukee‘s Brandon Jennings had 21 in his 55-point performance in November 2009. Flagg was 3-of-5 from 3-point range, but he did the majority of his damage in the paint, where he scored 28 points.

“He’s not about numbers. He’s about wins and losses,” Mavs coach Jason Kidd said. “That’s who he is. For a young man who thinks that way, he’s going to be a champion sooner than later. He continues to keep working. He tried to will his team to a win tonight.”



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Quiet weather continues across New Mexico

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Temperatures will remain mild with dry weather across most of New Mexico. A couple of cold fronts will bring cooler air into the eastern part of the state heading into the weekend. Temperatures climbed significantly today in Roswell, where highs reached the 50s for the first time in about a week. Much of the rest […]



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Through the eyes of Iranian protesters, glimpses of disorder, disarray and death

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BEIRUT — This time felt different.

The 25-year-old Iranian fashion designer hoped that mass protests nearly four years ago — the ones that erupted after a young woman was arrested and died in custody for not wearing the hijab properly — would improve civil rights in the Islamic Republic.

Not much changed, though. Being on those streets, she felt, may have been for nothing. But it didn’t deter her.

In early January, she protested again. The sea of people across Tehran’s busy streets lifted her spirits. This time, the spark was inflation and the plummeting value of the Iranian rial — though chants soon targeted the country’s theocratic leaders.

The crowd was larger, more diverse, she said. Protests in Iran erupt every few years. But this momentum felt unprecedented, she said.

The response by security forces would be, too.

Activists estimate that over 6,000 people, mostly protesters, were killed in the bloodiest crackdown on dissent since the Islamic Republic was created in 1979. They worry the number will increase as information trickles out.

The Associated Press spoke with six Iranians, each on condition of anonymity through secure channels as security forces continued to crack down on dissenters after the protests. They said they demonstrated and witnessed state violence against protesters. Four of them took risks to circumvent an internet shutdown to share what they saw, while two spoke from abroad.

They described a rare sense of hope among protesters, a consensus that the current status quo was no longer sustainable. The younger, more defiant generation was there, they said, but so were older residents, people from well-to-do families, even some children. All said they expected the state to respond aggressively but were horrified by the extent of the brutal crackdown.

“When we went out, I couldn’t say I wasn’t stressed, but there was no way I could stay at home,” the designer said. “I felt that if I stayed home — if anyone stayed home — out of fear, nothing would move forward.”

No group of interviews — no matter how illuminating — can reflect the experiences of an entire population or even a segment of it. They’re not representative of the large country of over 85 million people and its diverse ethnic and religious makeup. But these Iranians offer a rare glimpse of life in the Islamic Republic at a pivotal moment in its history.

Iran was battered by Israeli and U.S. jets during a 12-day war in June and has been under the grip of Western-led sanctions, compounding economic problems. People say the government has not responded to their concerns of economic mismanagement and interference in their personal lives. They want rights, they say. Dignity.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said several thousand have been killed — a rare admission that indicates the scale of the movement and the government’s response. Officials and state media repeatedly refer to demonstrators as “terrorists,” showing images of buildings and state property they say protesters have burned or damaged. Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not respond to questions from AP about these witnesses’ recollections. Iran’s U.N. ambassador, Amir Saeid Iravani, has previously said security forces “firmly and responsibly” confronted protesters, whom he called “violent separatists.”

During the peak of the protests, the fashion designer said, people poured into the streets of Tehran. She described the events of Jan. 8, a turning point in the mood and crackdown on demonstrations.

“When I was outside in the evening, the city was still and empty,” the fashion designer said. Then came a call to protest from Reza Pahlavi, the exiled crown prince. By 8 p.m., she said, she was in a sea of thousands — a crowd larger and more diverse than she’d ever seen.

“Everyone was afraid,” she said, but “they kept saying, ‘No, don’t leave. This time, we can’t leave it. We must not leave until they are over.” She and two friends who protested with her spoke to the AP using a Starlink satellite dish because of the internet blackout, devices now being seized by authorities there.

They marched up Shariati Street, a commercial road that connects some of northern Tehran’s most bustling neighborhoods to one of the country’s busiest bazaars. But shops were closed. The three said they sprayed graffiti and yelled anti-government chants at the top of their lungs.

They described teenagers and elderly people joining Iran’s regular dissenting voices in chants of defiance and anger. Some chants called for the death of Khamenei — a cry that can bring the death penalty.

Then came the security forces.

Anti-riot police and members of the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard’s all-volunteer Basij force arrived, the three friends said, blocking the road and lobbing tear gas and firing pellet guns into the crowd. Protesters panicked and scrambled as the stench of tear gas swept across the crowd.

The group told AP that many pushed forward, throwing rocks at the security forces. Some younger people, veterans of previous protests, donned scarves or masks to protect themselves and hide their identities, expecting a violent pushback.

The protesters built momentum. Some security forces that had arrived on motorcycles appeared to have retreated. But, the fashion designer said, the forces returned, charging at protesters. She knew she and her friends had to run.

They dashed into alleys and side streets, away from the chaos. Residents cheering on protesters had thrown rags and antiseptics from their windows as security forces fired pellets at the crowd.

Soon, tear gas canisters fell into the alley. The fashion designer remembered lessons from other protests: “I thought I’d kick it back,” she said, to protect the wounded. But as she did, she said, security forces were firing paintballs and pellets. She described being pierced in the hand and leg.

Fortunately, she said, her mask softened the blow of the paintball that hit the side of her face.

When protests reached her part of the country, the doctor said, she wasn’t surprised. But the extent was a different story.

“This had never happened before at this scale,” said the doctor in Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city and home to an important Shiite shrine. She spoke to AP while visiting family abroad.

Days before a hospital night shift, the physician said, she had attended protests in the northeastern city, hearing gunfire from a distance and feeling tear gas burn her eyes. She saw graffiti on walls and buildings afire, even mosques believed to be used by government forces as rally points.

Once she clocked in at the hospital, Iranian security forces had escalated their response.

“I was not afraid for myself,” the doctor said. “I was afraid for others.”

She didn’t work in the emergency room but tried to see what was going on as ambulances and protesters delivered bodies. Colleagues told her 150 bodies were brought in that night. As she tried to move in closer, she managed a glimpse at some of them, she said: a boy and a young woman lying on stretchers, bearing gunshot wounds.

Security agents in the hospital, both in uniform and plainclothes, took over the command of the hospital emergency room, the doctor said. Doctors protested, she said of the colleagues’ account, but they were told to stop speaking or asking questions.

“They were standing over their (ER workers) heads with a gun, telling them not to touch (the wounded),” the doctor recalled of the experience relayed by one colleague. It was “as if they wanted those injured people to die on their own.”

Khamenei told the nation that the protesters were either collaborators working for American or Israeli intelligence agencies or misguided members of the public trying to sabotage the country. Authorities held a counterdemonstration showing people loyal to the country’s theocratic leadership.

Crackdowns continued. Momentum ebbed. Iran remains cut off from the world. For some, rage and grief over the violence have grown.

“What I fear is that these events will be treated as something ordinary by the world, that people will simply move on and no one will pay attention,” the doctor said. “The fact that the voices of so many of those who were killed never reaches anyone is truly the most painful thing for me.”

She described observing a family arrive at the hospital to retrieve the body of a relative— a young woman. Agents refused to hand over her body, the doctor said, unless the family gave them her national identification and let them identify her as a Basij volunteer and government supporter. An argument started, and her family was arrested, the doctor said, and the woman’s body was taken to the cemetery with the others.

The family said, “Our daughter was killed by your forces,” the doctor recalled. “I can’t get the picture of that day out of mind, even for an hour.”

As January comes to an end, tensions on the streets have cooled, the three Iranians in Tehran told AP. Some daily life peeks through. But everywhere they go, they said, they remain watchful — in case something sets it all off again.

They can’t connect with Iranians outside their circles because of the internet blackout, but in their area, they said they see large deployments of security forces in public places.

“I don’t know how the other places are,” one of the three said. “But on every square in Tehran, there are agents in plain clothing — and even riot police.”

The doctor said she hopes the world won’t turn away from Iran.

“No matter how many times I explain, I truly can’t really convey the extent of the horrible situation,” she said. “No one would believe that a government of a country can so easily kill its own people.”



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