Harrowing goodbye messages leak from inside Iran as citizens are ordered ‘to bring children to the streets’ ahead of Trump’s doomsday ultimatum


As the clock ticks toward President Trump’s 8 p.m. Eastern deadline for Iran to come to the negotiating table, panic has gripped the nation.

Facing the threat of devastating military strikes, terrified civilians tell the Daily Mail they are frantically evacuating major cities and saying goodbye to loved ones – even as defiant government leaders deploy a chilling tactic: ordering their own citizens onto the streets as human shields.

The call to gather at infrastructure sites came directly from an Iranian official, captured in an Associated Press video clip. 

Speaking in Farsi, he urged ‘youth, athletes, artists, students and professors’ to assemble at power plants the following day at 2 p.m. local time, arguing that their presence would expose any American strike as a war crime.

Trump himself has left no room for ambiguity about what non-compliance to his demands means. He’s demanding the Islamic Republic completely open up the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping, lifting a blockade that has triggered a cascade of disruptions on energy supplies.  

‘A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will,’ he wrote on Truth Social.

With the President openly pledging a ‘Power Plant Day’ and ‘Bridge Day’ to dismantle Iran’s infrastructure, sources in Tehran and Isfahan describe scenes of chaos – road blockages, mass evacuations, and state television brazenly instructing citizens to gather around key sites with their children.

‘They are announcing on national TV – come to the streets and bring your children,’ one source with family inside Iran tells the Daily Mail. ‘It’s their thing to use people as human shields. Same pattern as in Palestine. They do this instead of surrendering or making a deal.’

Harrowing goodbye messages leak from inside Iran as citizens are ordered ‘to bring children to the streets’ ahead of Trump’s doomsday ultimatum

‘In Iran, they are gathering in groups and sheltering around infrastructures, just because they know Trump said we will bomb these facilities. They are announcing this on national TV in Iran – to come to the streets and bring your children. It’s their thing to use people as human shields. Same pattern in Palestine. They do this instead of surrendering or making a deal,’ a source who communicated with family inside Iran tells the Daily Mail

Trump said he would target power plants and civilian bridges

Trump said he would target power plants and civilian bridges 

Iranians gathered at infrastructure sites including bridges and power plants as they taunted Trump's message of annihilation

Iranians gathered at infrastructure sites including bridges and power plants as they taunted Trump’s message of annihilation 

Video showed women and children waving flags as chanting blared on a loudspeaker at a power plant

Video showed women and children waving flags as chanting blared on a loudspeaker at a power plant

He added: ‘Government supporters will go. They are barbaric. They believe even if they die – even if their children die for the sake of Islam – they will end up in Heaven. My mom says every night they come onto the streets, chanting death to America, death to Israel. Even until midnight.’

Despite the terror, some anti–regime citizens see a glimmer of hope that the new Ayatollah’s grip on the country might finally be loosened, if not shattered.

‘At the end of Trump’s message, you can clearly see he mentioned that 47 years of death and corruption will end – so that means no more Islamic tyranny,’ the source added.

But Trump’s ultimatum appears to be explicitly about Iran’s blockade and nuclear program, not regime change. His public messaging has framed a successful deal in terms of denuclearization, not necessarily toppling the entire Islamic Republic.

Trump’s rhetoric has left many Iranians conflicted. One points to the tension at the heart of his message: ‘It’s paradoxical – he says a whole civilization will die tonight, but also blesses the great people of Iran.’

Across the country, citizens are bracing for the worst. Supermarket shelves are being stripped bare as people stockpile ahead of threatened rolling blackouts and severed supply chains. One Iranian says he and his family have already stocked up on water and supplies – but fear cuts both ways.

‘They are very stressed,’ the source says, ‘but at the same time, if this war ends now, it would literally be a living hell – because the government would retaliate.’

For many, the regime is as frightening a prospect as American airstrikes. The government’s crackdown on communications has prompted a wave of digital self-erasure: two Iranians – one in Tehran, one in Isfahan – are already saying their goodbyes and frantically deleting message threads with contacts abroad.

Women and children are forming human shields at Iranian infrastructure sites

Women and children are forming human shields at Iranian infrastructure sites 

The regime's paranoia has led to severe crackdowns on communications, prompting many to sever ties with the outside world. Two Iranians, one in Tehran and one in Isfahan, are already saying goodbye to their friends and family and frantically deleting messages

The regime’s paranoia has led to severe crackdowns on communications, prompting many to sever ties with the outside world. Two Iranians, one in Tehran and one in Isfahan, are already saying goodbye to their friends and family and frantically deleting messages

US Navy fighter jets take off from USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) during Operation Epic Fury

US Navy fighter jets take off from USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) during Operation Epic Fury

Global oil markets have spun out of control as Trump's deadline nears and Iran refuses to reopen the strait

Global oil markets have spun out of control as Trump’s deadline nears and Iran refuses to reopen the strait

The US hit dozens of military targets on Kharg Island, a crucial Iranian oil export hub, overnight

The US hit dozens of military targets on Kharg Island, a crucial Iranian oil export hub, overnight

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‘My internet connection keeps cutting out for long periods. If our chat stays on Instagram, it could put me in serious danger – the regime randomly connects people’s phones to the internet in the streets and checks their apps. I have to delete our chat. Wishing you a path full of success.’

That was Bahareh’s last message. She asked that her surname not be published.

For those with the means, leaving the city is the only option. Major roads are jammed with families fleeing to remote areas, far from the power grids and military installations likely to be in the crosshairs. 

One Iranian says his entire family has relocated to his uncle’s villa in the countryside. ‘They are safer there, it is a pretty calm and peaceful place,’ he said, declining to say where.

With hours left until the 8 p.m. deadline, the world is watching to see whether last-minute diplomacy can pull back from the brink – or whether Iran goes dark tonight.


NHS doctor accused of supporting Hamas shouts ‘game on’ as she addresses crowd of supporters outside court after being released on bail


An NHS doctor charged with posting on social media in support of Hamas shouted ‘game on’ today after being released on bail. 

Dr Rahmeh Aladwan appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court where she indicated not guilty pleas to four counts of inviting support for the proscribed group. 

The court heard the charges date from July 23 to December 31 last year, and relate to comments or material posted online.

The 31-year-old also indicated not guilty pleas for stirring up racial hatred using words or behaviour at a speech she allegedly made at a protest on July 21 in King Charles Street, Westminster, and stirring up racial hatred through the publishing and distributing of written material on November 19.

Following the hearing, Aladwan was greeted by more than a dozen protesters waving Palestinian flags, carrying placards and banging a drum. 

After being handed a microphone, she directly addressed the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, shouting: ‘Let me tell you again Wesley Streeting, game on! Game on! Free Palestine!’

NHS doctor accused of supporting Hamas shouts ‘game on’ as she addresses crowd of supporters outside court after being released on bail

Dr Rahmeh Aladwan addressing a crowd outside Westminster Magistrates’ Court this afternoon 

The alleged incidents, which saw the doctor (pictured) charged under the Terrorism Act, happened on four separate occasions - July 23, August 23, October 7 and December 31

The alleged incidents, which saw the doctor (pictured) charged under the Terrorism Act, happened on four separate occasions – July 23, August 23, October 7 and December 31

Aladwan was arrested at her home in Pilning, south Gloucestershire, yesterday morning for allegedly breaching police bail conditions imposed after previous arrests, police said.

She was taken to a central London police station and charged with the six offences.

Aladwan, who is British Palestinian and appeared in the dock wearing a beige hoodie and a black jacket, was released on conditional bail ahead of a next hearing on April 24 at the Old Bailey.

She spoke only to confirm her identity and indicate her pleas.

Carl Kelvin prosecuting said: ‘Between July and December she posted a large quantity of material on social media and took part in a number of protests against Israel and in support of people in Gaza.’

One of Aladwan’s posts called Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis a ‘genocidal murderer,’ it is claimed.

She also allegedly said Mr Streeting taking money from the Israeli lobby was a sign of ‘Jewish supremacy’.

Aladwan indicated not guilty pleas to four counts of inviting support for the proscribed group

Aladwan indicated not guilty pleas to four counts of inviting support for the proscribed group

A small crowd of supporters outside the court waved Palestine flags and banged a drum

A small crowd of supporters outside the court waved Palestine flags and banged a drum 

District Judge John McGrava said today: ‘There is clearly a very substantial public interest in this case.’

Aladwan is also currently the subject of an investigation by the General Medical Council (GMC).

In November she was suspended from practice for 15 months. 

The GMC’s social media guidelines state clinical personnel have ‘freedom of belief, privacy and expression’.

It adds they must be ‘balanced with the possible impact on other people’s rights and interests’.

Hamas killed around 1,200 Israelis and abducted 251 hostages on October 7, 2023.

A UN report found Hamas attackers raped women at the Nova music festival site, used ‘sexualised torture’ against hostages and raped women’s corpses.

Aladwan will next appear at the Old Bailey on April 24. 


NYC’s first lady Rama Duwaji celebrated Palestinian terrorists in resurfaced social media posts: report



Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, celebrated Palestinian terrorists in a flurry of resurfaced social media posts she made as a teenager and in her early 20s, a shocking new report said.

The Big Apple’s first lady — already under fire for her problematic past social media activity — used her Tumblr account to boost Palestinian plane hijacker Leila Khaled and other members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, according to posts reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon.

In a series of unearthed social media posts, Rama Duwaji reportedly celebrated Palestinian plane hijacker Leila Khaled.
In another post, Duwaji seemingly reposted an attack against American soliders.

Duwaji, 28, used the now-inactive account while she was living in the Middle East, according to the Beacon, which linked the posts to her, in part, using facial recognition technology.

The Post was unable to independently verify the account or posts.

The discovery comes a week after reports revealed that Duwaji once liked a celebratory Instagram post on the day of Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack that shared images of the murderous assault on Israel.

The Big Apple’s first lady is already under fire for her problematic past social media activity. Paul Martinka

She also liked a social media post claiming Hamas’ rapes of Israelis during the terror rampage were a “mass hoax.”

Mamdani, a staunch critic of Israel, claimed his wife “has held no formal position on my campaign or in my City Hall” and that she shouldn’t face scrutiny over her social media activity.

City Hall did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.


Javier Bardem is slammed for using Oscars to attack Israel: ‘Why was he even on the stage?’



Oscar award-winning actor Javier Bardem is facing backlash over comments he made during the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday when he presented the Best International Feature award.

“No to war and Free Palestine,” Bardem said before announcing the winner while wearing a “No a la Guerra” (No to War) pin — a symbol he previously wore to oppose the U.S.’s “illegal war” against Iraq.

Critics quickly slammed the actor for what they described as anti-Israel stances.

“It’s no secret that Javier Bardem has spent years vilifying Israel on the world stage,” one user wrote on X.

Some even questioned why he was on stage.

Presenter Javier Bardem wears accessories reading “no to war” and “Palestine.” REUTERS
Bardem spoke on stage during the Oscars show at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S., March 15, 2026. WireImage

“Did he have a new film that earned him a spot on the Academy Award stage tonight? No. The Oscars chose him anyway, during an era that can only be described as open hunting season on Jews worldwide,” Samantha Ettus noted.

While Bardem was not directly nominated for an Oscar, his movie — the Formula One racing drama F1, directed by Joseph Kosinski — was up for awards. The film, an Apple Original starring Brad Pitt, received four nominations at the 98th Academy Awards, winning Best Sound. It was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Editing, and Best Visual Effects, marking a major showing for the racing film.

“You know who didn’t deserve a spot at the awards today and didn’t get it? You,” another user wrote.

Some viewers were also frustrated that the ceremony had become political, with many attendees wearing “Artists for Ceasefire” and “ICE Out” pins.

“I can no longer bear to watch the Academy Awards, which used to be an event of interest; now I know it will be an anti-Israel fest,” one frustrated fan on X wrote. “Who would dare to buck the trend of supporting Palestine, Hezbollah, Hamas & the Iranian regime, among the lustrous celebs at the Dolby Theatre?”

Critics quickly slammed the actor for what they described as anti-Israel stances. Getty Images
Javier Bardem attends the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards at Peacock Theater on September 14, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

This is not Bardem’s first display of political advocacy at awards shows.

Bardem said the pin was the same “No a la Guerra” badge he wore in 2003, linking his past anti-war activism to current events. In September 2025, he also used the Primetime Emmy Awards to spotlight the situation in Gaza, CNN reported. In February 2026, he joined more than 80 others in signing an open letter urging the Berlin International Film Festival to condemn Israel’s actions.

Critics said Bardem was not the only one to blame, but also the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences itself.

“Bardem’s record is ugly, but the most reprehensible actor here is @TheAcademy itself, which decided that this is the moment to hand him a microphone and a global platform,” Ettus said.

“@TheAcademy handed him the platform, knowing full well he would use it to amplify his message of Jew hatred,” another user said.

This is not Bardem’s first display of political advocacy at awards shows. Gregory Bull/Invision/AP


Shabana Mahmood Bans Pro-Palestine Al Quds Day March Amid ‘Public Disorder’ Fears


Shabana Maymood has approved a Metropolitan Police request to ban a pro-Palestinian march “to prevent serious public disorder”.

The annual Al Quds Day demo had been due to take place in London on Sunday.

It had drawn criticism over apparent backing for the Iranian regime after its organisers expressed support for the country’s late leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in US-Israeli air strikes earlier this month.

Several counter-protests had also been planned for the day.

Announcing her decision to ban the march, Mahmood said she was “satisfied doing so is necessary to prevent serious public disorder, due to the scale of the protest and multiple counter-protests” amid the ongoing Iran war.

The home secretary added: “Should a stationary demonstration proceed, the police will be able to apply strict conditions.

“I expect to see the full force of the law applied to anyone spreading hatred and division instead of exercising their right to peaceful protest.”

The Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC), which organises the protest, has previously insisted the demonstration is always “good natured and peaceful”.

In a statement on the organisation’s website, the IHRC said it “strongly condemns” the decision to ban the march and was seeking legal advice.

Confirming a “static protest” will go ahead on Sunday, the statement said: “The police have brazenly abandoned their sworn principle of policing without fear or favour. They cannot present evidence because there is none.

“In essence, this is a politically charged decision, not one taken for the security of the people of London.”

It is the first time a protest march has been banned since 2012.

The Metropolitan Police said previous Al Quds Day marches resulted in arrests for supporting terrorist organisations and antisemitic hate crimes.

In a statement, the force said: “The decision to ban it this year is purely based on a risk assessment of this specific protest and counter-protests – we do not police taste or decency or prefer one political view over another, but we will do everything we can to reduce violence and disorder.”

The Met said the “uniquely complex” international situation and “severe” risks meant merely placing conditions on the protest “will not be sufficient to prevent it from resulting in serious public disorder”.

It added that it would place “strict conditions” on any static protest, which the law does not allow the police or Government to ban, but “given the tensions, we have to accept that confrontations could still take place”.

The decision follows calls from Labour and Conservative MPs to ban the march.

Earlier on Tuesday, courts minister Sarah Sackman said people expressing support for “the malign regime in Iran” should not be “on the streets of London calling for hate and hostility against this country”.

Shadow Home Office minister Alicia Kearns also called for the march to be cancelled, saying there was “no place in our country for the celebration of terrorists”.

A spokesman for the IHRC, Faisal Bodi, told the BBC’s The World Tonight that it was “a sad day for freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and the right of people to legitimately protest about issues they feel strongly about”.

He added: “This demonstration has taken place for the last 40 years peacefully.”

The IHRC has previously expressed support for Iran’s former supreme leader, the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Following his death in a US-Israeli airstrike last month, the group said Khamenei “chose to stand on the right side of history” and described him as “a rare role model” who would be “mourned by freedom loving people all over the world”.

The Campaign Against Antisemitism welcomed the decision to ban the march, saying it was “a positive development” and adding: “Allowing this hate-fest to go ahead would have sent the message that Islamists rule the roost in Britain.”




Tables turned on the Pro-Palestine ‘Jew hunters’: Activists planning to go door-to-door asking locals to boycott Israeli products are foiled by counter-protesters making them hide in pub


Activists accused of engaging in a ‘Jew hunt’ as they planned to go door-to-door asking locals to boycott Israeli products were stopped after counter-protesters forced them to hide in a pub. 

Members the Bristol Apartheid-Free Zone (AFZ) campaign had planned a door-knock encouraging people to boycott Israeli businesses amid the country’s ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza.

But more than a dozen activists turned up outside of Sainsbury’s at the pre-planned event and accused the group of engaging in a ‘Jew hunt’.

And chants of ‘Palestine will be free’, ‘Israel is a terror state’ and ‘occupation no more’ were met with shouts of ‘stop the Jew hunt’.

Footage taken at the scene appears to show the two groups clashing while chanting and holding flags, with a police presence in the area. 

The AFZ campaigners ended up in a pub, while activists shouted ‘Jew hunt’ and ‘Nazis’ outside.

The canvassers stopped their planned door knocks to avoid confrontation as well as shouting outside people’s homes.

Holding a placard, Susan, who did not want to show her face or share her surname, told the Daily Mail she was terrified of ‘Jew hunts’.

Tables turned on the Pro-Palestine ‘Jew hunters’: Activists planning to go door-to-door asking locals to boycott Israeli products are foiled by counter-protesters making them hide in pub

Members the Bristol Apartheid-Free Zone (AFZ) campaign had planned a door-knock encouraging people to boycott Israeli businesses amid the country’s ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza

Critics say that groups like these may actually encourage antisemitism - or leave Jewish people frightened if they are confronted on their own doorsteps

Critics say that groups like these may actually encourage antisemitism – or leave Jewish people frightened if they are confronted on their own doorsteps

More than a dozen activists turned up outside of Sainsbury's at the pre-planned event and accused the group of engaging in a 'Jew hunt'

More than a dozen activists turned up outside of Sainsbury’s at the pre-planned event and accused the group of engaging in a ‘Jew hunt’

She said: ‘I am the daughter of a Holocaust survivor and a concerned citizen. I am very worried about Left-wing and Islamic organisations dedicated to Jew hunts.

‘I feel a duty to be here so that haters know people don’t have the support of the general public.

‘As a child of a Holocaust survivor, I grew up hearing these stories with people saying exactly the same thing.

‘This chills me to the bone. I’m standing here for my children, who are going to be here for much longer than I am.’

The AFZ activists say they are advocating for a boycott of Israeli products because Israel ‘thrives on international support’.

But critics say that groups like these may actually encourage antisemitism – or leave Jewish people frightened if they are confronted on their own doorsteps.

Resident Sally Campbell, whose mother was a Jewish refugee, was passing by when she saw the protest outside Sainsbury’s supermarket.

She said: ‘I wouldn’t want someone knocking on my door. I think it’s intimidating and I can choose what and where I buy from.’

Mark Birbeck, founder of ‘Our Fight’ – a group said to be reclaiming Bristol’s streets from the targeted harassment of Jews – told the Daily Mail the door knocks were a ‘purity test’.

Mark Birbeck, founder of 'Our Fight' - a group said to be reclaiming Bristol's streets from the targeted harassment of Jews ¿ told the Daily Mail the door knocks were a 'purity test'

Mark Birbeck, founder of ‘Our Fight’ – a group said to be reclaiming Bristol’s streets from the targeted harassment of Jews – told the Daily Mail the door knocks were a ‘purity test’

Pro-Israel protester outside of the Golden Lion pub in Horfield Bristol

Pro-Israel protester outside of the Golden Lion pub in Horfield Bristol

The AFZ activists say they are advocating for a boycott of Israeli products because Israel 'thrives on international support'

The AFZ activists say they are advocating for a boycott of Israeli products because Israel ‘thrives on international support’

Chants of 'Palestine will be free', ' Israel is a terror state' and 'occupation no more' were met with shouts of 'stop the Jew hunt'

Chants of ‘Palestine will be free’, ‘ Israel is a terror state’ and ‘occupation no more’ were met with shouts of ‘stop the Jew hunt’

Police standing outside of the Golden Lion pub in Horfield Bristol, where pro-Palestinian protesters had gathered

Police standing outside of the Golden Lion pub in Horfield Bristol, where pro-Palestinian protesters had gathered

He said: ‘People are organising activities where they knock on doors of local residents and ask people where they stand on Israel and Gaza. This is not just collecting information about where people stand, it’s a purity test.

‘We didn’t oppose marches in London. We’re not against freedom of speech but we think this is harassment.’

He said the attacks in Bondi Beach and Manchester showed the rise of antisemitism and that he himself had been spat on and punched.

Alison Wren, 79, a retired science teacher, is not Jewish but wanted to speak out against harassment of the Jewish community in Bristol.

She said: ‘It’s just ridiculous, knocking on people’s doors and writing down whether they agree to boycott Israel.’

The group says it is expressing solidarity with Palestinians who have been killed and displaced in Gaza, taking inspiration from the Anti-Apartheid Movement that targeted South Africa in the latter half of the 20th century.

The Daily Mail spoke to pro-Palestine supporters, who said they were not antisemitic but simply against genocide in Gaza.

Law student Leo Hill, who made it clear he was speaking as an individual and not on behalf of AFZ, said: ‘It’s not hateful, it’s not anti-Jewish, it’s not even anti-Israel. It’s just about having a heart – standing against genocide and apartheid.’

Another pro-Palestine supporter called Ryan, who also clarified he was not speaking as a member of AFZ, said: ‘I think you should separate state from religion. I understand the historical fear and antisemitism is a horrible thing.’

He said there were large groups of Jewish people supporting Palestine and the actions of the Israeli government should be viewed separately from the actions of Jewish people as a whole.

Law student Leo Hill, who made it clear he was speaking as an individual and not on behalf of AFZ, said: 'It's not hateful, it's not anti-Jewish, it's not even anti-Israel. It's just about having a heart - standing against genocide and apartheid'

Law student Leo Hill, who made it clear he was speaking as an individual and not on behalf of AFZ, said: ‘It’s not hateful, it’s not anti-Jewish, it’s not even anti-Israel. It’s just about having a heart – standing against genocide and apartheid’

The group says it is expressing solidarity with Palestinians who have been killed and displaced in Gaza, taking inspiration from the Anti-Apartheid Movement that targeted South Africa in the latter half of the 20th century

The group says it is expressing solidarity with Palestinians who have been killed and displaced in Gaza, taking inspiration from the Anti-Apartheid Movement that targeted South Africa in the latter half of the 20th century

One member of the counter protest got up close to the faces of AFZ campaigners, shouting 'f*ck you' and 'show us your faces'. He added they were using phones with Israeli technology

One member of the counter protest got up close to the faces of AFZ campaigners, shouting ‘f*ck you’ and ‘show us your faces’. He added they were using phones with Israeli technology

The Daily Mail spoke to pro-Palestine supporters, who said they were not antisemitic but simply against genocide in Gaza

The Daily Mail spoke to pro-Palestine supporters, who said they were not antisemitic but simply against genocide in Gaza

One pro Palestine supporter called Ryan, who also clarified he was not speaking as a member of AFZ, said: 'I think you should separate state from religion. I understand the historical fear and antisemitism is a horrible thing'

One pro Palestine supporter called Ryan, who also clarified he was not speaking as a member of AFZ, said: ‘I think you should separate state from religion. I understand the historical fear and antisemitism is a horrible thing’

One member of the counter protest got up close to the faces of AFZ campaigners, shouting ‘f*** you’ and ‘show us your faces’. He added they were using phones with Israeli technology.

A police officer took him aside to calm the situation.

People passing by and witnessing the unfolding events said there was a lot shouting and not enough conversation.

Passerby Jasmine Frank said: ‘I came here to learn about these issues. People are shouting and I don’t know how this is supposed to help peace.’