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Iranian protesters say revolution is just around the corner: ‘Everyone is waiting’

Two Iranian protesters who survived the regime’s brutal crackdown in January told The Post that it’s only a matter of time before the people take back their government.

“The protest that will happen will be something extraordinary, because the hatred people have for [the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] after the massacre is extremely intense,” a woman currently living in Tehran told The Post.

The woman, 43, said the horrors she witnessed from her own government during the protests will haunt her for the rest of her life.

Two Iranian protesters spoke to The Post about the brutality of the regime. AP

“Brains and intestines and internal organs had been splattered all over people’s faces . . . things that no one could forget for a very, very long time,” she said.

“It was the most brutal crackdown imaginable,” said a second protester, a 37-year-old Tehran tattoo artist. “They were just shooting people. They didn’t really care if someone was part of the protest or not, or just passing by.”

Both Iranian citizens spoke on the condition of anonymity because they fear for their lives. They were interviewed by The Post this week by phone via an interpreter.

The Islamic regime is estimated to have killed more than 36,500 protesters during massive demonstrations that broke out across the country in January. The woman said as many as 2 million people were in the street the night she was out.

The Iranians told The Post that the vast majority of the country supports the U.S. and Israel as they continue to dismantle their repressive regime.

“We are totally, one hundred percent, thankful and grateful for this. . . . I would say more than 90 percent of the people are grateful to Trump and thankful to the USA,” the man said.

The protesters said they are thankful for the U.S. war against the regime. AFP via Getty Images

“The only time people become worried is when the number of missiles [decreases], when the noise stops — then for several hours everyone gets stressed thinking [a ceasefire] is going to happen again,” the woman said.

The woman, who runs an animal rescue, said she learned that her country’s longtime oppressor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had been killed by a U.S.-Israeli airstrike Feb. 28 from the sounds of people cheering.

“Everyone had their heads out the windows, shouting with joy. They were setting off fireworks. Then I turned on the television and understood that Khamenei was dead. That is how happy people were — they were celebrating,” she said.

The two said the regime’s crackdown on public protests has gotten even more repressive as the U.S. and Israel continue to lay waste to its top leaders and military installations.

They said the regime has become more brutal since the strikes. Getty Images

“Every night [regime forces] come into the streets, shouting and roaring, threatening people, cursing at them, saying, ‘If you come into the streets, we will kill you,’” the woman said.

However, she believes the Iranian government’s threats are a sign of weakness, and that the unarmed populace will rise up once the U.S. and Israel have sufficiently degraded the regime.

“They have become weak and are very close to collapse; everyone [in Iran] is just waiting to come into the streets and finish the job,” she said.

People trying to carry a victim after an airstrike in Tehran. Parspix/ABACA/Shutterstock

The cat rescuer said most Iranians are waiting for Iran’s exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi to give the signal to rise up.

“People are only waiting for Reza Pahlavi’s call,” she said.

The man agreed. “We’re waiting for the word from the Crown Prince. If he says we should go take over the national TV building or government buildings, we’ll go and do it,” he said.

Despite their support for the war, the prolonged bombing campaign has upended normal life for Tehran’s 9.8 million residents.

“Nobody goes to school. Whether you’re a student or you work, there are no shelters and there are no sirens, so the only way we know if we need to take cover is when you hear the explosions,” the man said.

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