Islamic Regime's Cover-Up The Islamic Republic is systematically wiping victims of the January 2026 protests from existence — not just from memory, but from official records. New investigations reveal that Iranian authorities have been deleting burial and death records of protest victims from the Behesht-e Zahra database, Tehran's main public cemetery. Families searching for their loved ones find nothing — no names, no dates, no trace. Yet records of other individuals buried in the same cemetery remain fully searchable, exposing the erasure as deliberate and targeted. The cover-up goes beyond the digital. Physical headstones have been vandalized, altered, or sealed under layers of cement. Families report being threatened and pressured to remove inscriptions reading javidnam — "eternally remembered" — or risk having the graves destroyed entirely. This is not an administrative error. It is a calculated campaign to erase evidence of a massacre. Following the January protests, security forces coerced families into falsifying cause-of-death records, suppressed funerals, and imposed sweeping internet blackouts to prevent the truth from spreading. The deletion of cemetery records is the next phase of that same operation. The dead cannot speak. But the empty database entries, the cemented headstones, and the silenced families speak for them. Share this video. The world must know. Sources: Iran International, EA WorldView, The Jerusalem Post #Iran #IranProtest #BeheshteZahra #IranCoverup #HumanRights #IranMassacre #JavidNam #IranianRegime #IslamicRepublic #IranRising #FreeIran #IranRevolution #Mahsa #WomanLifeFreedom #IranHumanRights #PoliticalPrisoners #IranCrackdown #IranProtest2026 #CemeteryRecords #ErasingHistory #AccountabilityForIran #IranTruth #NeverForget #IranNews #MiddleEast