Women inside Iran: ‘We’ve been turned into human shields’

An Iranian woman described a “pervasive sense of anger, paranoia and exhaustion.”

By Vered Weiss, World Israel News

An anonymous Iranian woman described daily life under US-Israel military operations as marked by fear, exhaustion, and moments of defiance in a letter published by The Australian in April 2026, two days into the ceasefire in the Iran conflict.

The writer, who remained unnamed due to fear of retribution from the regime, depicted Tehran as heavily militarized, with checkpoints, disrupted communications, and recurring nighttime explosions.

“In effect, ordinary people have been turned into human shields within a vast militarized landscape,” she wrote. “A pervasive sense of anger, paranoia and exhaustion has taken hold.”

She described a shift in public sentiment as strikes intensified, with some residents reacting with relief and even celebration at reports that key regime sites had been hit.

Recalling her daughter’s reaction, she wrote: “They say they’ve hit the leader’s residence. All the children were screaming and cheering. … Even our teacher was quietly snapping their fingers and dancing.”

The author said such moments reflected a broader desire among some Iranians for change. “Perhaps for the first time, we allowed ourselves to believe our long-held dream was beginning to take shape,” she wrote, describing scenes of people chanting against the leadership.

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The account comes against the backdrop of protests that began in late December 2025 over economic collapse, spreading nationwide from Tehran’s Grand Bazaar.

The unrest culminated in a January 8-9 crackdown, with estimates ranging from about 3,117 deaths reported by authorities to more than 30,000 from health officials and higher figures from opposition sources.

Despite hopes tied to the conflict, the writer expressed concern about the outcome. “What weighs most heavily is not only the war itself, but the possibility that it may end, leaving behind a regime even more authoritarian, more repressive and more violent,” she wrote.

She warned that a ceasefire without broader change could deepen frustration. “A ceasefire that stabilizes the current order, without addressing the demands that have brought Iranians into the streets for years, risks being experienced not as peace, but as abandonment,” she wrote.

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