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13.2.26

An artist, a geophysicist and a fruit seller: Accounts of Iran's brutal crackdown emerge

5:42:00 AM
From left, Negin Ghadimi, Ilya Ghodsi and Yasin Mirzaei Ghalazanjiri.

A fruit seller and father of two killed during his first protest. A biotechnology graduate with a passion for art who bled to death in her father's arms. A distraught family ordered to pay morgue officials $7,000 for a loved one's body unless they lie and say their relative died at the hands of anti-government rioters.

These are a tiny fraction of the thousands of Iranians killed or wounded when the governmentcracked down on protestsa month ago. With the nation still reeling, details about victims are trickling out and the world is gradually getting a clearer picture of the violence used to suppress the nationwide demonstrations.

Most of the killing happened during a two-day period between the night of Jan. 8 and Jan. 10, withover 7,000 people killedacross the country, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency.

"This was a very rapid48-hour massacre. I can't think of anything in Iran's own history that's comparable, unless I go back to the 18th century," said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran, a New York-based advocacy group.

The demonstrations, sparked in late December as the rial currency crashed and inflation soared, turned into one of the biggest challenges faced by the Islamic Republic in its 47-year history as thousands of people across the country, including members of the country's many ethnic minority groups, took to the streets todemand an end to clerical rule.

Communicating with journalists can be very dangerous for protesters' families, and Iran is in the middle of a communications blackout with severe restrictions on the internet and cellphone service. So to report on those killed by security forces, NBC News relied on sources outside Iran who were in touch with the families of victims inside the country.

These are the stories of four killed during January's carnage.

Negin Ghadimi

Negin Ghadimi studied biotechnology, but her real passion was art. In avideo posted on Instagram, 26-year old Ghadimi shows a sketch of a woman's dress covered with mirrors that she has designed. She wanted people to see their own reflections, she said.

"My view of my future is very bright," Ghadimi, a former competitive swimmer, says in a separate Instagram video.

Negin Ghadimi. (Obtained by NBC News)

She lived in the city of Sari in northern Iran and would sometimes visit family in Tehran, according to a relative who is not being identified for security reasons. "She was full of life, loved nature, loved art," the relative said in a telephone interview.

On Jan. 9, Ghadimi's family decided to attend a protest while on a visit to Tonekabon, a small city in northern Iran on the Caspian Sea.

"I told her, 'Baba, dear — you stay. Don't come. I'm going out,'" Ghadimi's father saysin an Instagram videoof a commemoration ceremony for her, his voice cracking.

"She said, 'No my dear, I'm coming to look out for you.'"

Protests in Iran January 2026 (Mahsa / Middle East Images via AFP-Getty Images)

When Ghadimi and her family arrived at the protest, security forces began shooting tear gas at the crowd and the family was separated, her relative told NBC News. Again, Ghadimi's father tried to get her to leave, the family member said.

Ghadimi and her father were holding hands as they walked with other protesters when security forces began shooting at an intersection. A bullet hit the side of Ghadimi's body.

Ghadimi told her father she was burning, the source said.

Her father screamed for help and laid her on the ground, the family member added. Soon a crowd gathered and helped carry Ghadimi into a nearby house.

Ghadimi licked her lips over and over. Her shoes were covered in her own blood, according to the relative.

Negin Ghadimi was a passionate artist. (Obtained by NBC News)

Nearby, the shooting continued unabated as Ghadimi's father, who had been shot in the hand with pellets, begged for help to get her to a hospital, according to her relative.

After around 45 minutes, a woman driving a car past the house stopped and agreed to take a heavily bleeding Ghadimi to the hospital. The medical staff tried to revive her, but it was too late.

"She lost her life in my arms, but I couldn't do anything for her," her father says in the Instagram video of the commemoration ceremony.

On Ghadimi's death certificate, a copy of which was seen by NBC News, her cause of death is listed as "Impact from a high speed projectile object to the body," rather than being shot by a bullet which would ordinarily be noted.

"It's ridiculous," her relative said.

Ghadimi's body was taken to Behesht-e Zahra, Iran's largest cemetery, located about 5 miles south of Tehran's southern suburbs, for burial. Nearby, crowds chanted anti-government slogans, her relative recounted.

Videos circulated on Jan 13 showed more than 200 bodies in bags outside Iran's largest cemetery near Tehran. (via X)

Yasin Mirzaei Ghalazanjiri

A geophysics graduate student, Yasin Mirzaei Ghalazanjiri was studying in Italy when he decided to visit family in Kermanshah, a city in western Iran home to a large population of fellow ethnic Kurds, during his New Year's university break. He joined friends and family at a large protest in Kermanshah on Jan. 8.

It did not seem dangerous at first, but that changed quickly. Ghalazanjiri was shot in the chest by a sniper bullet and died on the spot.

"When they shot Yasin, his family and friends were around him," said a relative, who asked not to be identified because he was afraid Iranian security forces would harass or harm him outside the country or his family inside Iran.

"They wanted to take his body so it wouldn't be grabbed by security forces. But at that same time, another one of our family members was shot in the face with pellets," he added during a telephone interview.

Yasin Mirzaei Ghalazanjiri. (Obtained by NBC News)

The group decided to pull the wounded man to safety before going back for Ghalazanjiri's body. By the time the gunfire had subsided, Ghalazanjiri had disappeared.

When family tried to find the body at the city morgue, they encountered rows and rows of unzipped body bags.

The security forces at the morgue gave the family a choice: either say that Ghalazanjiri was killed by "rioters" among the protesters or pay 700 million toman, approximately $7,000. They called it "haq-e tir," or bullet price.

The family refused to accept the version of events pushed by the authorities and paid the money to get the body back. Even though the family paid, the security forces said they should keep quiet about the circumstances of his death or else they would rebury Ghalazanjiri in an undisclosed location.

A crowd showed up for Ghalazanjiri's burial at a family plot in a rural area outside Kermanshah and chanted anti-government slogans despite the threats, according to his relative.

On Jan. 15, the rector of the University of Messina, where Ghalazanjiri studied, expressed her condolences ata gathering of students, and Ghalazanjiri's picture was placed on an empty chair.

The entire family is heartbroken by the loss of a vibrant young man who had so much potential, his relative said.

"It's not only Yasin. Anytime we see the protest videos, it makes us cry," the relative said. "We're human after all. We're agonizing for everybody."

From left, Ilya and Sadegh Ghodsi appear on a death notice created by their family. (Obtained by NBC News)

Sadegh Ghodsi and Ilya Ghodsi

Sadegh Ghodsi, a 38-year-old Tehran fruit seller, was not politically active. But on Jan. 8, the father of two decided to attend a protest with his cousin's son Ilya, 17, according to a source close to the family.

They were among other protesters in the Qaleh Hassan Khan neighborhood in western Tehran when security forces opened fire on the crowds, he said on condition of anonymity out of fear that Iranian security forces would harm him or his family.

Both were killed.

The family searched desperately for their bodies and eventually found them at the Kahrizak Forensic Medical Center south of Tehran. Videos that have leaked out of Iran and were verified by NBC Newsshow rows and rows of body bagsinside and outside the facility as families try to identify their relatives.

When family members found the bodies of Sadegh and Ilya, the authorities would not allow them to be removed. They, like other families, were offered a choice: pay a bullet price of 800 million toman, or about $8,000, or sign a document stating the two were members of the Basij, a paramilitary force overseen by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who were killed by "terrorists."

"They didn't have the financial resources to pay. They didn't have a choice, so they accepted," the source close to the family said in a telephone interview.

"When the family received the bodies, there were so many other bodies they were only given half an hour in the mosque for a funeral service," he added.

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Journalist Don Lemon to enter plea in Minnesota ICE protest case

5:42:00 AM
Journalist Don Lemon to enter plea in Minnesota ICE protest case

By Jack Queen

Reuters

MINNEAPOLIS, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Former CNN anchor Don Lemon is due in federal court in Minnesota on Friday to enter a plea in a criminal case stemming from ‌his coverage of a protest at a church against President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown.

Lemon, now an ‌independent journalist, livestreamed a protest against Trump's deployment of thousands of armed immigration agents into Democratic-governed Minnesota's biggest cities. The protest ​disrupted a January 18 service at Cities Church in St. Paul.

He was charged with conspiring to deprive others of their civil rights and violating a law that has been used to crack down on demonstrations at abortion clinics but also forbids obstructing access to houses of worship.

He is set to appear in federal court in St. ‌Paul at 1:00 p.m. (1900 GMT).

Lemon's lawyer has ⁠called the case an attack on First Amendment free speech rights.

Trump has frequently lashed out at the media, stripping journalists of access-granting credentials and suing some news outlets ⁠over their coverage of him. The president praised the Justice Department for bringing the charges against Lemon, calling the disruption of the church service a "horrible thing."

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Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a January 30 social media video that ​prosecutors ​will come after anyone who threatens the "sacred right" to worship ​freely and safely.

Thousands of protesters took to ‌the streets of Minneapolis and other U.S. cities in January to denounce an immigration crackdown in which federal agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens.

Trump has since agreed to end his deportation surge in Minnesota, with many agents set to return to their home states over the next week.

Organizers of the Cities Church protest told Lemon they chose the church because they believed a senior pastor there was working with U.S. Immigration and ‌Customs Enforcement.

In a livestream archived on his YouTube channel, Lemon ​can be seen meeting with and interviewing the activists before ​they go to the church. He then records ​the disruption inside and interviews congregants, protesters and a pastor, who asks Lemon and ‌the protesters to leave.

Independent local journalist Georgia Fort ​was also arrested and ​charged with the same crimes. Fort has denied wrongdoing and said she was reporting on the protest, not participating. She is scheduled to enter a plea on February 17.

Lemon spent 17 years at CNN, ​becoming one of its most recognizable ‌personalities, and frequently criticizes Trump in his YouTube broadcasts. Lemon was fired by CNN in ​2023 after making sexist on-air comments for which he later apologized.

(Reporting by Jack Queen in ​New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Nia Williams)

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Shooting at South Carolina State University leaves 2 dead, 1 wounded

5:42:00 AM
Shooting at South Carolina State University leaves 2 dead, 1 wounded

Orangeburg, S.C.— Two people are dead and another is wounded after a shooting at a South Carolina State University residential complex, the university said Thursday.

University officials haven't confirmed the victims' identities or the condition of the person wounded, the school said in a news release.

There was no word about the whereabouts of any suspect or suspects.The school put the campus on lockdown at about 9:15 p.m. when a report of the shooting came in. The lockdown was lifted early Friday, the university said.Investigators were on site and law enforcement was patrolling the campus and areas nearby. The university canceled Friday classes and was making counselors available to students.

Kaya Mack had just finished making a food delivery on campus when she heard gunshots and saw lots of police officers coming through a gate. She said she wasn't sure where the shots were coming from."Their loud sirens kind of shook me," she told CBS affiliate WLTX-TV. "We were looking around, me and other people on campus, we're all looking around like 'What's going on?'"

The Thursday night shooting happened a little over four months after two shootings during homecoming celebrations on Oct. 4. One, which happened near the same residential complex, killed a 19-year-old woman. A man was injured in the other shooting. Several people have been arrested on gun-related charges in connection with the those shootings.

Watch: Rep. Lieu accuses Bondi of lying under oath on Epstein files surrounding Trump

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Caleb Wilson breaks hand, will be sidelined for North Carolina basketball

4:22:00 AM
Caleb Wilson breaks hand, will be sidelined for North Carolina basketball

Caleb Wilson, North Carolina men's basketball's superstar freshman forward, broke his left hand in a loss at Miami on Tuesday and will be out for a yet-to-be-determined period of time,the university announcedon Thursday, Feb. 12.

USA TODAY Sports

Wilson suffered the injury in the first half of the75-66 loss. X-rays taken during the game came back negative, which prompted him to return to the contest, but additional imaging that was done after the No. 13 Tar Heels returned to Chapel Hill, North Carolina revealed a fracture.

"The evaluation process is ongoing to determine the timetable for Wilson's return," North Carolina said in a statement.

REQUIRED READING:Bracketology projection for NCAA Tournament field has new No. 1 seed

Wilson has been one of the brightest stars in what has been widely hailed as one of the best freshmen classes in the sport's recent history. The 6-foot-10 Atlanta native is averaging 19.8 points, 9.4 rebounds, 1.5 steals and 1.4 blocks per game for North Carolina, which is 19-5 after a disappointing 2024-25 season in which it barely snuck into the NCAA Tournament field.

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Wilson has been integral in that improvement. He has set North Carolina program records for scoring in double figures in each of his first 24 career games and for his 17 games with at least 20 points. He's fourth in the ACC in scoring, third in rebounding and fifth in field goal percentage (at 57.8%).

In athrilling 71-68 win last Saturday over archrival Duke, he had a team-high 23 points and helped keep the Tar Heels' offense afloat in a game in which it fell behind by as many as 13 points.

The former five-star recruit is widely projected as one of the top five picks in the 2026 NBA Draft.

Three of North Carolina's seven remaining regular-season games come against teams ranked in the latestUSA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll: No. 23 Louisville (on Feb. 23), No. 18 Clemson (March 3) and the rematch with No. 6 Duke (March 7), as well as a Feb. 17 game at an NC State team that's receiving votes in the poll.

The Tar Heels are a No. 4 seed in thelatest mock NCAA Tournament bracket from USA TODAY Sports.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Caleb Wilson breaks hand, out indefinitely for UNC basketball

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Kansas State coach Jerome Tang erupts after 29-point loss as fans wear paper bags

4:22:00 AM
Kansas State coach Jerome Tang erupts after 29-point loss as fans wear paper bags

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State coach Jerome Tangblasted his playersafter Cincinnati beat the Wildcats by 29 points Wednesday on a night many fans showed up with bags on their heads.

The Wildcats dropped to 10-14with the 91-62 loss, including 1-10 in the Big 12 Conference.

"This was embarrassing," Tang said. "These dudes do not deserve to wear this uniform. There will be very few of them in it next year. I'm embarrassed for the university, I'm embarrassed for our fans, our student section. It is just ridiculous. We've got practice at 6 a.m. tomorrow morning, and we will get this thing right. I have no answer and no words."

He then said he would take only two questions from the media, adding, "Right now, I'm like pissed."

Kansas State went 26-10 in Tang's first season and came a three-point loss to Florida Atlanticfrom making the 2023 Final Four. His record since then is 45-46.

The Wildcats have lost three home games in a row by at least 20 points, a big reason fans showed up with paper bags on their heads.

"I'd wear a paper, too, if I were them," Tang said.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphere. AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

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