Expanding the "No to the Islamic Republic" campaign and supporting this campaign from various organizations, parties, and institutions

Some Iranian political and civil organizations and parties, cultural and research institutions, media, and publishers supported the "No to the Islamic Republic" campaign and called for greater coverage of the campaign, announcing that "the cry of "No to the Islamic Republic" has resonated throughout Iran."
More than 115 political and civil organizations and parties, cultural and research institutions, media and publishers, in support of at least 1,500 political and civil activists, artists and athletes, writers and university professors, and Iranian citizens who have joined the "No to the Islamic Republic" campaign, issued a statement announcing: "The expansion of the No to the Islamic Republic campaign in conjunction with other political and civil movements promises greater alignment and convergence of the freedom-seeking and justice-seeking struggles of the Iranian people for liberation from the Islamic Republic."
Abdolreza Ahmadi, a member of the liberal students and graduates of Iran and a supporter of the "No to the Islamic Republic" campaign, told VOA that this campaign is supposed to be a loud voice for the thoughts that are the main demand of Iranian society today and the category of "overthrow". "If this demand was in the mind of every Iranian until yesterday, today it is shouted out as a voice in the public arena, and what this letter does is actually a reflection of this voice."
He continued, while pointing out the success of this campaign, and added: "No to the Islamic Republic has become a thread that connects all thoughts with every tendency... This diversity and this plurality that exists among all people confirms this."
Among the supporters of this statement are the names of organizations and parties such as the Constitutional Party of Iran (Liberal Democrats), the Transitional Management Council, the Secular Democratic Party of Iranians, the Farshgerd Network, the United Student Front, Solidarity for Democracy and Human Rights in Iran, the National Union for Democracy in Iran (NUFDI), the Middle East Women's Organization, the Center for Iranian and Arab Studies, the Center for Baluchistan Studies, and many others.
With the launch of the "No to the Islamic Republic" campaign, prominent artistic and political figures, as well as a large number of Iranian citizens inside and outside Iran, have joined the campaign and called for a change of government in Iran.
In previous reports, VOA has reported on prominent figures joining the campaign. The campaign initially began with the release of a statement by hundreds of Iranian activists and artists, including Prince Reza Pahlavi, artist and art philosophy researcher Shahin Najafi, and political activist Shahla Entesari, in the early days of 1400.
Just a few days after the campaign began, dozens of political activists inside Iran published another letter to the United Nations, calling the Islamic Republic's government a "thief" and calling for support for the Iranian people in transitioning to a new government through a referendum.
The Islamic Republic of Iran has faced a series of widespread protests over the past two years, but according to Reuters and other human rights groups, these protests have been violently suppressed.
The United States has repeatedly and on various occasions condemned the Islamic Republic's violent confrontations and widespread repression of protesters and civil activists, as well as the repeated and persistent violations of the rights of Iranian citizens.
Source: Voice of America




