Total repression and air strikes bring unrelenting dread for Iranians
A woman stands on a rooftop listening to the sounds of the city below.
There is only the dull hum of traffic tonight. But she knows how easily that can change.
It is usually the dogs who notice the sound first and begin to bark furiously.
The noise of aircraft. Then the ominous percussion of explosions. A ball of orange rising from an airstrike in a familiar neighbourhood. The BBC has obtained footage and interviews from Tehran which evoke a city of strained nerves, of constant waiting for the next blast and relentless fear of the state security apparatus.
Baran – not her real name – is a businesswoman in her thirties.
She is now too scared to go to work.
"With the start of the drone attacks, no one dares to go outside.
If I open my door and step out, it is like gambling with my life. "
She lives alone but is in constant communication with her friends.
"My friends and I message each other constantly asking where everyone is…and even when there is no sound the silence itself is terrifying. I am doing everything I can to stay alive and witness whatever lies ahead. " Like
so many young Iranians, Baran saw her hopes of change devastated in recent months.
Thousands of people were killed in a crackdown by regime forces in January after widespread demonstrations demanding change. "I cannot even remember how I used to live in the past without being reminded of the loved one I lost during the protests," she says.
I fear the person I will be tomorrow.
Today, I survive somehow, but how will I get through tomorrow? That is the real question. Will I even live through tomorrow?"
Open dissent is impossible as the state's watchers are everywhere.
The official narrative is the only one allowed.
State television broadcasts footage of demonstrations and funerals. Interviews with pro-regime officials and protestors offer repeated denunciations of America and Israel.
In government propaganda the Iranian people are extolled as willing to suffer martyrdom.
It is only in their homes that some of Tehran's residents feel able to share their feelings. Like
Now he sees the streets around his home filled with security forces. Armed and masked men have set up checkpoints.
"It is painful when I go into the streets.
The city looks like the city of the dead. "
He is taking anti-depressants, to "keep myself normal" he says.
Several Iranians who have spoken to the BBC describe conflicting emotions.
They want the regime out but feel they and their country are under attack.
"The situation is frightening…," says Ali.
"The skies of your country are controlled by enemy forces. But at the same time there is always a hope in people's hearts. It's not that we are supporting America or Israel. But hoping simply that for one moment, something might happen that ends the current Iranian regime, and that the people will be able to create change. "
"Do you know what the difference is between our sky and the sky of the rest of the world?"
she asks. "They sleep under the stars at night, and we sleep under rockets. Both skies give light, but different kinds of light. "
Baran thinks the war may go on for years, and that its psychological effects will last even longer.
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