A hundred days passed since Iranian authorities took the passport of Ayatollah Sayyid Hussein al-Shirazi, the eldest son of the supreme religious authority, Grand Ayatollah Sayyid Sadiq al-Husseini al-Shirazi, imposing a travel ban on him. The government continues in its pressure on his eminence to prevent him from speaking and to keep him silent.
Forty-eighth days passed since the protests began in Iran, and it seems that the iron fist used by the Iranian government, calling upon its supporters to the streets and speeches of the Iranian leader and the threats of military officials seem to be unable to mitigate these protests.
In the midst of protests, a government agent on the case of Ayatollah Seyyed Hossein Al-Shirazi, in a direct conversation with the representative of Ayatollah Al-Shirazi, said: Ask Seyyed Hossein Al-Shirazi to stop criticizing the government in his speeches and on satellite channels so that we can return his passport.
According to travel laws of Iran, no person should be prevented from leaving the country except by a judicial ruling from the Iranian courts, allowing the authority to seize his passport and prevent him from leaving the country, and this violates the Iranian constitution and the laws in the case of his Eminence.