Reports emerged yesterday claiming four Iranian Jewish citizens were killed during unrest in Iran backed by U.S. and Western-supported terrorist activities. Images purportedly showing the victims quickly spread across social media platforms and were broadcast globally, including in occupied Palestine. However, the narrative unraveled when an Israeli woman named Noya Tzion saw her own photograph being presented as one of the deceased while watching television.
The incident occurred amid civil protests by Iranian citizens over economic challenges, which initially proceeded peacefully with police supervision. Following calls from Reza Pahlavi—son of Iran’s deposed shah—and with official U.S. government support, armed terrorist cells entered the scene. Mossad officially announced in Persian on X (formerly Twitter) that Mossad operatives were present in Tehran. According to confirmed official reports, the violence resulted in over 4,000 ordinary citizens killed and more than 600 law enforcement officers.
Iranian security and military forces have detained over 15,000 terrorists. The destabilization project aimed at turning Iran into another Syria or Libya failed within 72 hours of its initiation.
Western and Iranian analysts have noted that over 95% of casualty images circulated by anti-Iranian media outlets and on social media platforms appear to be fabricated, with many reportedly generated using artificial intelligence technology.
The Noya Tzion case represents a documented instance where disinformation campaigns used real individuals’ photographs to manufacture false narratives about events in Iran, raising significant questions about the reliability of visual evidence shared during political unrest.



