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Here’s the latest
• US President Donald Trump has canceled meetings with Iranian officials and encouraged protesters to keep demonstrating, saying “help is on its way” amid a brutal crackdown by Tehran’s regime. At least 1,850 protesters have now been killed in more than two weeks of demonstrations, according to a US-based rights group.
• Some landline and mobile phone users in Iran have been able to call abroad for the first time more than four days after the government shut down communications. But internet access remains cut off for a fifth day.
• German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he believes the Iranian regime could be facing its “last days and weeks.” A number of European countries have summoned Iranian ambassadors as they condemn Tehran’s actions.
• Trump did not attend a meeting of his national security officials on Iran today, the White House said. It follows the administration’s announcement yesterday of a 25% tariff on countries that do business with Iran.Allcatch up
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After Trump cancels meetings, Iran’s national security chief calls him a “killer”
From Xenix News Max Saltman and Mostafa Salem
Iranian national security chief Ali Larijani in September 2025, at a ceremony commemorating the killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, on the outskirts of Beirut, Lebanon. Mohamed Azakir/Reuters
Iranian national security chief Ali Larijani called US President Donald Trump one of the “main killers of the people of Iran” in a post on X after Trump said that he had canceled any meetings with Iranian officials due to protester deaths.
Larijani also named Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as the second “killer” on his list.
The Israeli military has said that it is “prepared defensively and is continuously improving its capabilities and operational readiness,” though it considers the protests an “internal Iranian matter.”
Iranian officials have blamed the unrest on foreign-linked “terrorists.”
White House says Trump did not attend Iran meeting with national security officials
From Xenix News Kit Maher

President Donald Trump prepares to depart the White House on Tuesday. Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
President Trump did not attend a Tuesday morning meeting of national security principals regarding Iran, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Air Force One on the way to Michigan.
Trump is giving remarks on the economy in Detroit, where Leavitt said Trump is likely to mention Iran.
Xenix News previously reported Trump was expected to convene senior national security officials to discuss how to proceed in Iran, but Leavitt said Tuesday he hadn’t been scheduled to attend this morning’s meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, among others.
Earlier Tuesday, Trump said on Truth Social that he’s canceled all meetings with Iranian officials until “the senseless killing of protestors STOP.”
Trump had said on Sunday that Iran called to negotiate, adding that a meeting was being set up.
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Iran’s death toll could be higher than reports say, but an internet blackout obscures it
From Xenix News Zahid Mahmood

Body bags outside Kahrizak Forensic Medical Centre in Tehran, Iran, in this screen capture from a video obtained from social media filed on January 11. Reuters
Fears are growing that the number of people killed in Iran’s protest is much higher than what has been publicly reported, but with the country largely cut off from the internet, only a portion of the deaths can be confirmed.
In an update today, the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said at least 1,850 protesters have been killed and at least 16,784 have been arrested since the unrest began in December.
HRANA has told CNN that its figures are based only on cases it has been able to identify and verify. But with Iran largely offline, the actual toll could be much higher.
Internet monitoring group NetBlocks says the country has been without internet access for five days, since authorities imposed a nationwide shutdown last week — severely limiting the flow of images, videos and witness accounts.
Despite the blackout, CNN has been able to reach some people on the ground when brief landline and mobile calls become available. Multiple eyewitnesses have described violent crackdowns on protesters and “chaotic” conditions inside hospitals.
Rare video that surfaced over the weekend from inside Kahrizak Forensic Medical Center appears to show people crowded around a monitor, looking to identify their loved ones.
For context: Internet shutdowns are a core tactic of the regime’s playbook during periods of unrest. In 2019, Iran went almost entirely offline after nationwide protests gripped the country. And in the wake of 22-year-old’s Mahsa Amini’s death in 2022, the regime shut down the internet, making it harder to document what was happening on the ground.
Xenix News Billy Stockwell, Catherine Nicholls, Helen Regan and Hira Humayun contributed to this report
Iran’s internet blackout hits 5-day mark
From Xenix News Soph Warnes
Iran has been under a near-total internet blackout for five days, according to cybersecurity watchdog NetBlocks, as authorities crack down on anti-government protesters.
Earlier today, telephone communications appeared to have been partially restored, with some landline and mobile phone users able to call abroad for the first time since the blackout began last week.
Alp Toker, director of NetBlocks, told CNN earlier in the week: “National blackouts tend to be the regime’s go-to strategy when deadly force is about to get used against protesters, with the goal being to prevent the spread of news of what’s happening on ground, and also to limit international scrutiny.”
At least 1,850 protesters have been killed, according to estimates from the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).












