Many off duty physicians rush back to work during emergencies, the president of Iran’s Medical Sciences University said, highlighting a strong culture of volunteerism among hospital staff during the U.S.-Israeli-backed riots. 

Why it matters: 

The U.S.-Israeli-backed riots have made the Iranian nation, including the medical staff, more unified and signals the message to the instigators of the brawls that there again they failed to reach their anti-Iranian goals. 

 

What he's saying: 

Nader Tavakoli says, "I have witnessed crises where a large number of injured people arrived and only two emergency physicians were on duty. But when I went in to check, I saw that more than five or six emergency doctors had come in after hearing about the situation, in order to continue providing care and support."

Tavakoli highlights the calculated shots by the armed rioters as he unfolded the fact that the people and security forces were mainly shot in their eyes. 
 


He also touched on the internet networks limitations: "This is indeed one of our challenges, but fortunately, apart from the first few hours of certain incidents, we have not faced any major issues."
 

 

The big picture:

In recent days, Iran has witnessed a new wave of unrest involving armed terrorists and rioters. These groups are supported by the United States and Israel.  

Following the failure of Washington and Tel Aviv to incite public unrest or destabilize the Islamic Republic through previous political and media efforts, these armed terrorists and rioters attempted to fuel internal chaos and insecurity through violent means.

 

On the ground:

Nationwide rallies were held across Iran after recent unrest backed by U.S.-Israeli-backed terrorist acts and were marked by large public participation in support of national sovereignty and resistance against foreign pressure.

 

Go deeper:

Iran’s Defense Minister Warns of a Harsher Response to Any Foreign Attack

 

seyed mohammad kazemi