Several killed as Iran protests over rising cost of living spread

As demonstrations against Iran’s rising living costs spread to wider areas, at least five people were killed.

At least three people were killed and 17 others were hurt in protests in the Lorestan province city of Azna, which is located 300 kilometers (185 miles) southwest of Tehran, according to Iran’s semiofficial Fars news agency on Thursday.

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Online videos that were shared appeared to show gunfire emitted from the streets as people yelled, “Shameless! “Shameless” !

In the Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari provinces of Lordegan, about 470 kilometers (290 miles) south of Tehran, two people were reported to have been killed during protests.

According to Fars, “some protesters began throwing stones at the city’s administrative buildings, including the mosque, the Martyrs’ Foundation, the town hall, and banks,” with tear gas in response.

Online videos showed gunfire robbing as demonstrators gathered on a street.

A security force member was killed overnight during protests in the western city of Kouhdasht, according to an earlier report from Iranian state television earlier on Thursday.

According to Said Pourali, the deputy governor of Lorestan province, a 21-year-old Basij member was killed last night by rioters while defending public order.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is a volunteer organization that includes the Basij.

The reports come days after shopkeepers began protesting the government’s handling of a falling currency and rapidly rising prices on Sunday.

Iran’s economy is being hit by 40% inflation, and the country’s nuclear infrastructure and military leadership are the targets of the unrest.

Tohid Asadi, a reporter from Tehran, stated that the government has viewed the protests this week with more caution than it has previously done so.

According to Asadi, “the government says it’s working hard to find a solution to the economic strains that people are experiencing.”

Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who was taken into police custody after being arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s strict dress code, died in those same years as mass demonstrations in Iran.

The most recent protests started in Tehran peacefully and spread to Tehran on Tuesday as students from at least 10 universities joined in.

Masoud Pezeshkian, the president of Iran, has urged the government to take action to improve the economic situation and acknowledges protesters’ “legitimate demands.”

At a ceremony held on state television, Pezeshkian said, “From an Islamic perspective, we will end up in hell” if the issue of people’s livelihoods is not resolved.

Without providing any further details, government spokesman Fatemeh Mohajerani announced on Thursday that the authorities would engage in direct dialogue with representatives of trade unions and retailers.

The authorities have nevertheless pledged to take a “firm” stand and warned against stoking chaos by exploiting the circumstance.

The prosecutor general of Iran stated on Wednesday that “any attempt to use economic protests as a tool of insecurity, destruction of public property, or implementation of externally designed scenarios will inevitably be met with a legal, proportionate, and decisive response.”

Meanwhile, seven people were detained on Wednesday evening according to the Tasnim news agency, who it described as belonging to “groups hostile to the Islamic Republic based in the United States and Europe.”

Brazil’s Supreme Court rejects Jair Bolsonaro’s request for house arrest

Former President Jair Bolsonaro’s defense team requested that he be put on house arrest, but the Brazilian Federal Supreme Court has once more rejected that request.

Bolsonaro, 70, has had numerous hospital stays and stays since last week after receiving numerous treatments for hernia and aggressive hiccups.

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However, a day after filing, his request for “humanitarian grounds” for house arrest was denied on Thursday.

Justice Alexandre de Moraes argued that Bolsonaro already had access to round-the-clock medical care while being held in police custody in explaining the court’s decision.

After serving a 27-year sentence for attempting to overturn his 2022 electoral defeat, the former right-wing leader is currently being held in Brasilia’s federal police headquarters.

De Moraes also questioned Bolsonaro’s health’s need for “humanitarian” adjustments.

The justice stated in his decision that “contrary to what the defense claims, Jair Messias Bolsonaro’s health condition has not improved.”

Instead, his clinical condition improved in the discomfort he was experiencing following elective surgeries, as noted in the report from his own doctors.

Dr. Brasil Caiado speaks after Dr. Mateus Bonomi’s operation on December 29, 2025.

multiple requests

Bolsonaro has reportedly suffered from lingering conditions, including hiccups, related to an abdominal stabbing he survived on the campaign trail in 2018, and this is not the first time the court has rejected a similar petition.

Bolsonaro was taken into custody in November after breaking an ankle monitor, which made it possible for him to stay at home while appealing. In September, he was found guilty.

However, his defense team requested house arrest shortly after Bolsonaro was remanded in custody and issued a warning about the potentially life-threatening conditions that might exist behind bars.

His attorneys wrote that “it is certain that placing the petitioner in a prison setting would pose a serious and immediate risk to his physical integrity and even his life.”

Both that request and a subsequent request in December have been rejected.

However, the Supreme Court granted Bolsonaro’s request to leave prison on December 23 so that he could have hernia surgery.

To treat his persistent hiccups, he traveled to Brasilia’s DF Star hospital for treatment, where he has since gone through additional procedures, including an endoscopy and a phrenic nerve block.

Unrest in the election

Bolsonaro, a former army captain, rose to prominence in Brazil’s far right and presided over the country’s elections from 2019 to 2023.

He was under fire for remarks he made while serving in Brazil’s military dictatorship, which oversaw the country’s ongoing hostility and murders.

He allegedly used his office to doubt Brazil’s electronic voting system’s validity.

Bolsonaro will be unable to hold office for eight years in Brazil’s Supreme Electoral Court in 2023, citing instances in which he made erroneous claims about the electoral process on state television and social media.

Bolsonaro faced two-term incumbent President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in the presidential election in 2022, despite being viewed as the frontrunner.

An October 30 run-off will be held after the race has advanced. With 50.9 percent of the vote, Lula came out on top in the polls, defeating Bolsonaro by less than two percentage points.

Bolsonaro refused to declare his defeat in the aftermath, despite rumors that he might have done it in secret.

In the meantime, he and his supporters filed a legal challenge to the election result, which was quickly rejected due to the “total absence of any evidence.” For the “bad faith” petition, Bolsonaro’s coalition was fined nearly $4.3 million.

However, Bolsonaro’s supporters took to the streets because they unfounded the idea that his defeat was somehow illegitimate. Some roads are blocked. The federal police headquarters was attacked by other people.

A week after Lula’s inauguration, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed Brasilia’s Three Powers Plaza and seized the Supreme Court, Congress, and the presidency.

Some supporters expressed hope that Lula’s ouster would result in a military coup.

Flavio Bolsonaro holds bobble heads of his father and Donald Trump
On December 19, 2025, US President Donald Trump and Senator Flavio Bolsonaro pose with bobble-head dolls.

Federal police released a comprehensive report accusing Bolsonaro and 36 allies of trying to “violently dismantle” Brazil’s constitutional order in November 2024.

The report provided alleged instances in which Bolsonaro and his supporters discussed assassinating Lula or modifying the election results.

In February, Bolsonaro and numerous other defendants were formally charged with trying to overthrow the 2022 election.

His trial took place despite significant international pressure from right-wing figures like US President Donald Trump, who imposed severe tariffs on Brazil in August in response to the prosecution’s prosecution.

Bolsonaro was found guilty of five counts in September, including a coup d’etat, an armed conspiracy, an attempted abolition of the rule of law, the destruction of public property, and damage to the country’s heritage.

Bolsonaro has consistently denied wrongdoing in the case and compared his prosecution to a political rival’s purges.

Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, his eldest son, announced last month that he would be running against Lula for president in October, and he continues to be a well-known figure in the right.

Donald Trump pauses US tariff hike on furniture, cabinets for one year

In response to growing concerns over cost-of-living issues, Donald Trump, president of the United States, has announced that he will delay the implementation of tariffs on upholstered furniture, kitchen cabinets, and vanities for a year.

Trump canceled a planned 50% tariff on cabinets and vanities and a 30% tariff on upholstered furniture by signing an order on Wednesday night during the New Year’s Eve holiday.

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However, the order kept up the 25% tariff he had in place for those goods in September.

The furniture tariffs were intended to “bolster American industry and safeguard national security,” according to the US president.

As the US prepares for its 2026 midterm elections, which are scheduled for November, rising prices and the cost of living are major concerns for Americans, according to polls.

Voters blame President Trump’s policies, and particularly his tariffs, at least in part for their economic woes. According to a Politico poll conducted in December, 32 percent of respondents said that Trump bears “full responsibility” for the state of the economy, while 30 percent cited tariffs as the main cause of high prices.

The cost of living was cited as the main concern for the nation by the majority of respondents, and 32 percent cited the state of the economy. Democrats have fought back against Trump and his Republican Party over concerns about affordability, which he has rejected as a “hoax” perpetuated by his political rivals.

The US agreed to slash proposed import duties on pasta products from 13 companies, according to the Italian foreign ministry’s statement on Thursday.

Prior to this, the Trump administration had threatened to impose 92 percent import taxes on European Union products on top of the tariffs already in place.

The US Commerce Department, according to the Italian government’s foreign ministry, agreed to lower the rates for La Molisana and Garofalo, both of which had been accused of undercutting other pasta producers by charging unfairly low prices.

The other businesses will experience a rate of 9.09 %.

Israel faces widespread condemnation as NGO ban comes into effect

As dozens of international aid organizations are prohibited from working with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, which is under siege, Israel is receiving more and more international condemnation.

A group of 17 human rights and advocacy organizations in Israel on Thursday criticized the prohibition, saying it “undermines principled humanitarian action, endangers staff and communities, and compromises effective aid delivery.”

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As the occupying power, Israel is required to provide Palestinian civilians with adequate supplies. The groups claimed that it prevents others from filling the gap by failing to do so in addition to failing to do so.

For breaking new government rules, Israel has suspended the operating licenses of 37 aid organizations, including Doctors Without Borders, which is known by its French names as MSF and the Norwegian Refugee Council.

International NGOs operating in Gaza and the occupied West Bank are required to provide detailed information about their funding and operations in accordance with the new regulations.

Israel has defended the action by denying any evidence that Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad are related to international organizations that operate in Gaza.

However, experts claim that the requirements violate humanitarian guidelines and are in violation of a long-standing Israeli government campaign to demonize and ultimately thwart the efforts of Palestinian aid organizations.

In a statement released on Thursday, Israel-based rights organizations including B’Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel said that “the new registration framework violates fundamental humanitarian principles of independence and neutrality.”

“Actions that favor political alignment, penalize support for legal accountability, and require the disclosure of sensitive personal information about Palestinian staff and their families all constitute a breach of duty of care,” warns the organization.

Pattern of unlawful restrictions

Israel has placed restrictions on food, medicine, and other humanitarian aid deliveries to the coastal territory as a result of its ongoing genocidal war against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

In what Human Rights Watch has called “war crimes” and “crimes against humanity,” Israeli violence has increased in the occupied West Bank as well. The military has forced tens of thousands of Palestinians from their homes.

In light of this, Volker Turk, the UN’s human rights representative, claimed earlier this week that Israel’s NGO’s ban was “the most recent in a pattern of unlawful restraints on humanitarian access” in the occupied Palestinian territory.

In a social media post, Doctors Without Borders claimed that it was still waiting for the renewal of its registration to operate in Gaza and the West Bank in accordance with the new Israeli regulations as of Wednesday.

People struggle to meet basic needs in Palestine because the health system has been destroyed, and essential infrastructure has been destroyed. More services are needed, not less, according to MSF.

“Sortens of thousands of Palestinians would be denied access to essential care if MSF and other INGOs lose access.”

Martin Griffiths, a former UN humanitarian chief and member of the Norwegian Refugee Council, stated to Al Jazeera that he had no faith in what would happen next.

‘Only sheets to cover us’: Sudan’s displaced face little shelter in Kosti

On the open sandy ground in Kosti, a city in south-central Sudan, Aziza sits with her children with her. It has become a gigantic way station for the desperate. They are protected from the sun and extreme weather by no roof or walls.

After making the long, agonizing journey to escape the war, Aziza and her family were forced to sleep in shabby, worn-out sheets that had been converted into a basic shelter.

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Aziza only briefly touched on her desperate situation.

Our sons are seated among scattered items, Aziza told Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent Taher Almardi, “There is no man to lead us, and we are in another place.” We are in the heat, “. These bedsheets are the only things that keep us safe.

Another mother weeps as she recounts the violence’s economic collapse hidden beneath a tarnishing fabric sheet.

She cried as she told Almardi, “We picked up these sheets from the street… We have nothing,” referring to the material she had used to construct a small tent to shield her family from the elements. “My situation is challenging.” I already had 10,000 Sudanese pounds [16] on the market when I needed to purchase these items right away.

A bottomless displacement

Similar to Aziza, many Sudanese have emigrated from the Kordofan region, which is located in central Sudan, to Kosti, which is located in the White Nile state south of Khartoum.

In recent months, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have made several gains that their Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) opponents are trying to reverse. The war is now more than two and a half years old and is now focused on those regions.

The RSF has been accused of crimes against civilians, particularly when it seizes El-Fasher, a city in North Darfur, in late October, allegedly killing at least 1,500 civilians, according to monitoring organizations.

Tens of thousands of people have fled RSF areas of control as a result of the killings, many of which have been recorded on video, as well as sexual assaults, robberies, and other attacks on civilians.

Women and children are frequently targeted for killing by fighters or forced to flee in a different direction from their families to avoid colliding with the RSF.

Kosti is currently thought to be largely stable in comparison to the front lines, and there are also a lot of new displaced people moving in.

More than 3,500 displaced Sudanese have recently arrived in Kosti, according to local officials, and Lamia Abdullah, White Nile’s commissioner for humanitarian aid, said the city is taking in between 100 and 150 families daily.

Some have been moved to larger canvas tents, but many more recent arrivals have had to use whatever they can until better shelters are available.

The displacement wave that has swept across Sudan as a result of the displacement of people from Darfur and Kordofan has an exemplified impact on Kosti.

In response to the RSF attacks, more than 100, 000 people reportedly fled El-Fasher and its surrounding villages between late October and early December, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM). During the war, a quarter of those who had been displaced from El-Fasher had already done so.

Between October 25 and December 17, more than 50, 000 people were displaced from Sudan, according to the IOM. More than 9.3 million internally displaced people (IDPs) are currently documented by the IOM in Sudan, with 55% of them children.

According to an IOM report, “at least one member went without eating for the entire month due to insufficient food” in nearly a third of the displaced households.

[Screengrab/Al Jazeera] Displaced Sudanese who are arriving in Kosti have set up tents on the outskirts of the city.

As demand rises, aid costs are expected.

Al Jazeera’s Almardi, who was reporting from the Kosti camp, described a grim reality: needs are rising while the humanitarian response is crumbling.

International humanitarian organizations have announced reductions in aid starting this month as a result of donor governments’ budget cuts. This is in response to the camps’ severe lack of medical facilities.

According to Almardi, “health is the biggest challenge.” There are “a significant lack of medical staff, a lack of medicine, and a desperate need for field hospitals,” the statement reads.

That is particularly crucial given the distances people travel to Kosti.

Many of the newcomers spent up to 20 days in Sudan before heading back to White Nile, where they were safe. They leave feeling frightened, underfed, and frightened of the looming winter.