A hundred days have passed since the protests began, and these protests have become the longest-running anti-government movement in Iran. At least this record has occurred since 1979 during the Iranian revolution. Widespread rallies have shaken the regime, but there is a huge price for its people to pay.
More than 500 demonstrators including 69 children were killed, according to a report by the Activist News Agency for Human Rights (HRANA).
Two demonstrators were executed, and at least 26 others faced the same fate, which Amnesty International called it a "reckless trial".
Although protests have occurred in Iran before - once in 2017 to early 2018, and others in November 2019 - but this time the protests are unique, as they involve people from different walks of life and women.
Those who take a leading role through the slogan "Women, Life, Independence".
Taraneh Alidoosti, a well-known Iranian artist, has been held in the notorious Evin prison. He was detained after condemning the execution of a young demonstrator.
Earlier, she published a photo of herself without wearing a hijab - a government-mandated thing - while holding banners bearing protesters' slogans.
"I've worked with Taraneh for four films, and now he's in jail for his rights supporting his compatriots, and defying unjust punishment," Asghar Farhadi, Alidooski's director in the Oscar-winning film The Salesman, wrote on Instagram.
"If showing support like this is considered criminality, it means that tens of thousands of people in this country are criminals," Farhadi added.