A week has passed since the prosthetics in Iran broke out and there has been a nearly five-day silence from the country.

Access to the internet has been around five percent, but since Thursday it has slowly but surely begun to re-open in several places in Iran.

As the internet becomes available, videos show how protesters are being shot, reports, among others, the human rights organization Amnesty International on Twitter.

BBC Persia has also been given access to videos showing clashes between police and protesters in the capital, Tehran, although it has not yet been verified exactly what day this should have happened.

"US will reveal oppression"

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo writes on Twitter that the US will impose sanctions on Iran's Minister of Information and Communications Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi. Pompeo wrote that the reason is that he "helped shut down Iran's internet".

This comes a day after Pompeo called on the Iranians to begin sharing pictures and other evidence of repression that occurred during the days they were cut from the outside world. In both Persian and English, he also wrote that the US will reveal Iran's oppression and respond with sanctions.

Over a hundred dead

Amnesty International claims to be able to confirm at least 106 deaths, a figure dismissed by Iran as pure speculation, writes Al Jazeera.

Iranian authorities have admitted that several people perished during the week's unrest, but did not go out with an exact number. In addition, the deaths are blamed on "foreign enemies".

"Can be sentenced to death penalty"

Over a thousand people have been arrested during the week's protests, according to Iranian authorities who call them "insurgents".

According to a spokesman for the Iranian judiciary, about 100 leaders of the protests have been arrested by the country's Revolutionary Guard, Reuters reports.

In the Iranian, and very conservative, newspaper Kayhan, earlier this week it was alleged that some of those arrested could be sentenced to death sentence, the AP reports. Something that now worries many both inside and outside the country.