Satellite photos show activity at Iran nuclear sites
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Iran’s water crisis and toxic air are exploding into mass protests
Iran’s latest wave of unrest is not only about inflation, repression, or factional politics. It is about people who can no longer drink clean Water, breathe safely, or trust that the taps will run tomorrow.
In the industrial and residential suburbs of Iran's central Isfahan Province, three eyewitnesses have described scenes of extraordinary violence during the recent wave of anti-regime protests.
New satellite images have revealed renewed and suspicious activity at Iran’s key nuclear facilities, including Natanz and Isfahan, just months after they were heavily damaged in U.S. and Israeli airstrikes during the June 2025 conflict.
Iran has fired air defenses at a major air base and a nuclear site near its central city of Isfahan after spotting drones.
Shortages of water and power as well as rising air pollution in Iran are at the centre of why citizens are telling their government they want change.
Iran’s tourism industry continues to attract international interest, an expert said, following the country’s participation in the FITUR international tourism fair in Madrid last week.