Over 300 Iranian journalists and photojournalists denounced the mass arrest of journalists during ongoing protests against the regime in Iran.

"There are currently over

20 journalists in prison

, mostly from Tehran, and several others have been summoned to the prosecutor's office," reads the note from the Iranian reform media, adding that those arrested were interrogated and sentenced without trial and private. their rights, including access to legal protection.

The group appealed for the immediate release of detained colleagues calling the arrests "illegal and contrary to press freedom" and deplored the "police approach" to information.

In Evin prison there are thousands of protesters arrested during the last 6 weeks of protests in the name of Mahsa Amini.

Among them also the Italian blogger

Alessia Piperno

.

Her release "is at the top of the work these days, we are all busy every day," Foreign Minister

Antonio Tajani

told Corriere della Sera.

Also in Evin, which went on fire just a few days ago, two other Iranian journalists,

Niloofar Hamedi

and Elaheh Mohammadi, would have ended up. 

The authorities accuse them of "writing lies" and of being "007 special agents" trained by the US, because they were investigating the death of Mahsa Amini. 

Oslo-based NGO

Human Rights Watch reports

nearly three hundred victims since the protests began over 40 days ago.

They are young and very young, even willing to die to change the strict rules of the Shiite-led Islamic regime to which they no longer want to submit.

The pasdaran continue to shoot at eye level even at the funeral of the victims and throw tear gas to disperse the crowds.

It happened at Mahsa Amini's funeral but also at that of

Reza Shahparnia,

killed 40 days ago in Kermanshah, he was only 20 years old.

On social media the video of the story of the father who had begged him not to participate in the protest: “

How can you ask me this dad?

Mahsa Amini was one like us, our revolution will not be successful without bloodshed "

Reza had replied.

LaPresse

Demonstration for Mahsa Amini, in Piazza San Giovanni in Rome

"Do not come to the square. Today is the last day of riots"

, warned the commander of the Pasdaran, Hossein Salami two days ago, suggesting that the security forces could further intensify the repression of the riots.

"What is happening in our country these days is the result of a conspiracy, the product of adherence to the policies of the United States, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia and the Zionist regime

," Salami explained.

But the protests and arrests do not stop.

Students

are opposed to the

segregation

wanted by the regime which wants them to be divided according to gender, men on one side and women on the other.

Now, heedless of the fury of the Revolutionary Guard and university officials, they are breaking down the barriers that the strict

Islamic Sharia

Shiite regime would like to impose on them.

"Your hands are stained with blood"

they write on social media, also addressed to the supreme guide Ali Khamenei.

The same blood color that today appeared in the waters of the

waterfall of the city of Izeh

, in the southwest of the country - where the majestic "romantic cave" of Shekaft-e Salman ("Solomon's Cave") is located.

When the lights came on in the morning, the red colored water appeared.

The city of Izeh was among those that have seen widespread protests in recent weeks and also violent clashes with demonstrators in the city. 

The BBC in Farsi announces another arrest among the well-known faces of the Iranian show, that of

rapper Tomaj Salehi

.

The regime's media reported that Salehi was arrested "because he illegally left the western borders of the country".

On the web, there is also a photo of the blindfolded rapper being taken to the car.

Salehi, who harshly criticized the regime, had published videos of his presence among the demonstrators during the protests and has always remained very active in the world of social media, alongside the feminist battles.

Parades and demonstrations in the name of Mahsa Amini take place all over the world.

Yesterday in Rome thousands took to

Piazza San Giovanni

shouting "Woman, Life, Freedom", and even the first Canadian minister, Justin Trudeau, marched through the streets of the capital

Ottawa

"We will continue in our fight for a better future, especially for women in Iran who have suffered, Trudeau said. 

And even on the social account of

Angelina Jolie, UNHCR ambassador,

a poem by the famous Iranian poet Hamid Mossadeq appears, in support of the protest that began with women that is now shaking all of Iran.