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What Ziya Sadr is sharing is terrifying but also crucial for understanding the scale of what is happening in Iran right now. The combination of an information blackout and a government with a long history of suppressing and distorting the truth means that outsiders will almost always be working with incomplete or delayed data. That makes firsthand accounts from people like Ziya and those on the ground not just valuable but essential for constructing any accurate picture of events.

The numbers being cited will naturally be met with skepticism by some, but as we have seen in countless authoritarian crackdowns the true figures rarely surface immediately. They tend to emerge months or years later through survivor testimony leaked documents defectors and independent investigative work. By then the damage is irreversible and thousands of lives may have been lost or destroyed while the world waited for confirmation.