Mahsa Amini and the Western Media deception

The widely reported protests of the past few weeks in Iran were sparked by the death of a young Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, allegedly at the hands of the police.

Faraan: According to prevailing Western narrative, Mahsa Amini was murdered in police custody after being savagely beaten in a police van. In reality, as quickly released CCTV footage shows, the young Kurdish woman collapsed after a conversation with a female police officer inside the police station.

She was then attended to and taken directly to an ambulance. Photographs of her in hospital show no sign of head injuries while medical staff quickly released CT scans showing no recent injuries, though confirming that she had had brain surgery some years previously. The Mahsa Amini deception According to prevailing Western wisdom Mahsa Amini was “murdered” in “police custody” after being savagely beaten in a Police van.

Nevertheless, the allegation that she was killed, or murdered, was the apparent spark used to whip up a frenzy of anti Iranian government propaganda and reporting. Demonstrators have taken to the streets in many Iranian cities and protests in support have erupted in the UK and elsewhere.

But who suddenly pushed the riot button and why?

The US immediately activated its assets and agents to foment subversion. This involved direct attacks on the police and other security services, with 11 killed in the first 10 days of protests, as well as extensive attacks on ambulances, which appeared to have been directed externally.

On the first of October there was an armed terrorist attack on a police station in the city of Zahedan. There were 19 deaths, including 4 IRGC officers, 32 IRGC members were also wounded. Ali Mousavi was injured by a bullet in the chest and was taken to the hospital, where he succumbed to his wound. Unsurprisingly, both the National Endowment for Democracy and the Open Society Foundation of George Soros advertise that they are active in relation to Iran, both engaged in attempting to foment regime change in Iran, as they do elsewhere.

Standing behind the US on this question is the Zionist regime. The official Twitter account of the regime openly states that it stands with the protesters and launched a cynical #remember_Mahsa campaign featuring Israeli settlers claiming that they stand in solidarity. Israel funds two US lobby groups pushing for more sanctions on Iran, including The Foundation for Defense of Democracies, United Against a Nuclear Iran, which is stuffed with Zionists.

Both groups are effectively assets of the so called State of Israel. Meanwhile, Israel continues to directly support Kurdish separatist groups, which are currently engaged in subversion and terrorism against Iran. So we see that both the US and Israel via assets, agents and proxies, came together to push the riot button in Iran.

David Miller is an academic and former professor at Bristol University and a leading British scholarly critic of Israel. He’s also a co founder and co director of the lobbying watchdog initiative Spin Watch. Mona Issa is a journalist and editor from Almayadeen English joining us from the Lebanon. She’s the author of “Dirty Money”, a revelatory article on how the largest color revolution attempt in recent Iranian history is led by a woman on Washington’s payroll.

Your article was one of the few that highlighted the absence of any evidence that Mahsa Amini was murdered. Tell us what you found out. I’d like to start with how surprised I was with the accessibility of evidence that was present online and how much big media has bombarded us with narratives with no factual basis whatsoever. And then, in an interview by Masih Alinejad, basically a CIA asset who works for the US government, an Iranian exile, she openly admits that she is leading the so called “Revolution in Iran”. So that’s how I started out my investigation.

Basically, what the article reveals is that she has been operating from an FBI safe house, on the (US) payroll over the past seven years making over half a million dollars. Now for a career in journalism that is a huge number.

 

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