The migration highlights growing domestic pressure on Iran’s government and the limits of external intervention as a solution, with implications for regional stability, refugee flows into Turkey, and international diplomatic calculations. This dynamic could reshape policy responses from neighboring states and Western governments dealing with humanitarian and security fallout.
BBC reporters on the mountainous Iran-Turkey border documented around 1,000 Iranians crossing into Turkey each day, many fleeing fear and disillusionment with the regime. Interviewees described a mix of desperation and hope: some called for the regime’s removal, while others rejected foreign military intervention as a path to freedom. Several migrants expressed a desire for normalized relations with the West and regional neighbors, and insisted that meaningful change must come from Iranians themselves. The scenes underscore a steady exodus driven by political repression and violence at home.
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