Tehran’s Bloody Night: What Really Happened at Police Station 126? – The Media Line

Amir, a protester at the scene, told TML that, despite state-run media claims, it is inconceivable that a preplanned, three-person armed group could have attacked a police station heavily staffed with armed personnel

On the evening of Jan. 8, one of the most horrifying incidents occurred as live fire began to be directed at civilians in eastern Tehran, in the Tehranpars area. Nearly three weeks later, however, profound ambiguity remains over what actually happened at Police Station 126. The government claims that gunfire from the station toward civilians only began after police officers came under armed attack.

That night in Tehranpars, in addition to police forces, Basij units, various branches of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and affiliated proxy paramilitary troops opened fire on protesters. It is reported that at least 100 people in the area were killed that night alone.

Amir, one of the protesters present near Police Station 126 that night, strongly rejects the regime’s narrative. He told The Media Line that it is inconceivable that a preplanned, three-person armed group could have attacked a police station heavily staffed with armed personnel. The only plausible scenario, he argues, is that weapons belonging to officers who were overpowered by protesters may have fallen into the hands of a few young people, who then used them in self-defense. According to Amir, the authorities have instead constructed a far less plausible, imaginary storyline.

He says that as soon as tens of thousands of people poured into the streets, security forces attacked them with everything they had on hand. The intensity of tear gas deployment and shotgun fire loaded with metal pellets on Soleimani Street, which was crowded with people, was so severe that it was visibility was obscured.

Pellets struck protesters indiscriminately; Amir himself was hit by several, one of which struck his ear. He says people immediately fled into nearby streets, which were also filled with protesters, where they began erecting makeshift barricades and lighting fires. Suddenly, live ammunition was fired at them from all directions.

Amir says he clearly saw armed officers, including snipers who had been stationed on rooftops hours beforehand, firing at protesters. A large number of police officers, Basij members, and IRGC special units were also positioned on the roof of Police Station 126. As clashes intensified —and some IRGC personnel were reportedly trapped while retreating—these forces joined those already on the streets and began firing as well.

Several officers continued shooting at protesters amid fierce clashes on West 164th Street. Amir insists that during the entire time he was engaged in running battles near the area, he never witnessed gunfire coming from anywhere other than regime forces near the police station, though he concedes it is possible that officers’ weapons fell into civilians’ hands.

In a long, exclusive video recently released by Simaye Azadi, affiliated with the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK), footage of gunfire near the police station appears, though several aspects are notable. At one moment, it seems shots are fired toward the police station’s sign.

The Islamic Republic’s state media claim that during the armed attack on Police Station 126, one Basij member and two police officers were killed. According to these reports, hundreds of bullets were fired at the station in an attempt to seize it. Fars News Agency, affiliated with the IRGC, says several officers were killed or wounded during the attack. State broadcaster IRIB aired a video it claims shows two young men firing at the station with a handgun and a Kalashnikov rifle.

Amir told The Media Line that, despite the intense clashes nearby, if armed individuals had truly fired some 800 rounds at the station, they would almost certainly have been killed by snipers, unless the incident itself was part of a state-orchestrated scenario. Fars News further claims that the attackers attempted to enter the station, killing two police officers and one Basij member and injuring several others.

Meanwhile, regime police released a video alleging that an officer on the rooftop, while firing at protesters, was shot and killed by armed attackers. The video includes audio of gunfire toward an unclear target and an officer calling for help, saying, “We’ve had fatalities at 126.” Another officer on the same rooftop claims the attackers sprayed the rooftop with automatic fire, causing four officers to fall. How attackers from the street could have targeted officers simultaneously protected by rooftop positions, surrounding rooftops, and continuous gunfire from the station itself remains a perplexing question.

That officer further claims the attackers were trained and fired with precision, asserting that one weapon was likely an Israeli-made Uzi and the other a Kalashnikov. While the Kalashnikov is a standard IRGC weapon, the Uzi is largely obsolete; in recent years, IRGC special forces have reportedly used a compact Korean-made firearm of similar size instead. In another unusual claim, the officer says a detained protester alleged he knew the attacker, who was drunk while firing at both the police station and civilians.

The newspaper Hamshahri, however, claims a three-person armed group attempted to seize the station and distribute weapons to the public. The story grows more extraordinary, alleging that two members of this group were killed the following night by another “riotous group” wielding machetes, while the third was killed during arrest, leaving no witnesses alive. Subsequently, the Ministry of Intelligence issued a statement claiming it had arrested four members of an armed group that entered the country via the western borders, who were responsible for the attack on Police Station 126, and also announced the arrest of MEK members in Tehran.

These claims appear designed to justify the sustained use of automatic gunfire against civilians over two nights in Tehranpars, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 8 and 9, in what many describe as the deadliest area of Tehran. In some alleys, three families reportedly lost loved ones, and in recent days, the entire district has been draped in mourning.