As American and Iranian officials hold fragile ceasefire negotiations and a watching world awaits the outcome of what may be the most consequential diplomatic confrontation of the decade, Iran's judicial machinery has not paused for a single day. Protesters, political dissidents, and opposition supporters continue to be hanged in prisons across the country — sometimes in the very hours that diplomats debate their fate behind closed doors. The case of Afsaneh Rahimi, a woman reported by rights monitors to have been detained in connection with the wave of anti-government protests that swept Iran in late December 2025 and January 2026, reflects a broader and documented pattern: women swept up in mass arrests, held incommunicado, subjected to what rights groups describe as torture-extracted confessions, and facing accelerated trials before Revolutionary Courts. Her case — like those of thousands of others detained since the uprising — has not been officially acknowledged by Iranian aut...
The Levant Files has crossed a major threshold: over 200,000 visitors in just one year. This isn’t just a number for us — it’s a powerful signal that thoughtful, multilingual journalism focused on the Levant matters, resonates, and travels far beyond borders. From day one, our mission has been clear: to offer sharp, accessible, and reliable analysis of a region too often reduced to headlines. Today, we celebrate not only the growth of our readership but the growth of our voice — now published in five languages, ensuring that our work reaches communities across continents and cultures. And we’re not stopping here. New language editions and fresh content formats are already in development, expanding the ways we tell stories and connect with readers. This milestone belongs to every one of you who reads, shares, challenges, and supports our work. Your engagement fuels our commitment to deepen coverage, broaden perspectives, and keep building a platform worthy of the region’s complexity. Ou...